Yuma Sun

Payday without pay hits federal workers as shutdown drags on

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Man who fired on police station sentenced to 195 years

UPPER MARLBORO, Md. — A gunman sentenced to 195 years in prison for an attack on a police station apologized Thursday to the parents of an undercover narcotics detective who was mistakenly shot and killed by a fellow officer during the ambush.

Before a judge sentenced him, Michael Ford said he didn’t intend to harm anybody but himself when he opened fire on a Prince George’s County police station in March 2016. In November, a jury convicted Ford, 25, of second-degree murder in the killing of Detective Jacai Colson even though he didn’t fire the shot that killed the fouryear veteran of the county’s police department.

“That man does not deserve to be dead. I should be dead,” Ford told Colson’s parents.

Before hearing Ford’s apology, James and Sheila Colson criticized authoritie­s for not seeking criminal charges against the officer who killed their son. Jacai Colson exchanged gunfire with Ford before Officer Taylor Krauss fatally shot the 28-year-old plaincloth­es detective with a rifle, mistaking him for a threat.

Sheila Colson described Krauss as careless and reckless and said she believes her son was killed because he was black. Ford also is black. Krauss is white.

Sheriff: Jayme Closs found alive, suspect in custody

MADISON, Wis. — A 13-year-old northweste­rn Wisconsin girl who went missing in October after her parents were killed has been found alive in a rural town about an hour from her home, authoritie­s said Thursday.

The Barron County Sheriff’s Department said on its Facebook page that Jayme Closs has been located and that a suspect was taken into custody. Sheriff Chris Fitzgerald said Jayme was expected to be reunited with her family Thursday night.

Fitzgerald said authoritie­s in Douglas County, about 70 miles north of Barron County, located the girl. The Douglas County Sheriff’s Office confirmed on its website that Jayme was found in the Town of Gordon at 4:43 p.m. Thursday, and that a suspect was

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taken into custody 11 minutes later.

Neither statement gave any further informatio­n about the suspect.

Cohen, ex-Trump lawyer, to testify publicly before Congress

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s former lawyer, Michael Cohen, will testify publicly before a House committee next month in a hearing that could serve as the opening salvo of a promised Democratic effort to scrutinize Trump, his conflicts of interest and his ties to Russia.

The House Oversight and Reform Committee announced Thursday that Cohen will appear before that panel Feb. 7, a little more than a month after the Democrats took the House majority.

Although Democrats say the questionin­g will be limited to avoid interferin­g with open investigat­ions, the hearing is still likely to pull back the curtain on key episodes involving Trump’s personal life and business dealings, including hushmoney payments to women and a proposed Moscow real estate deal, that federal prosecutor­s have been dissecting for months.

Venezuela’s Maduro celebrates 2nd term as crisis deepens

CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro was sworn in to a second term Thursday amid internatio­nal calls for him to step down and a devastatin­g economic crisis.

Seventeen Latin American government­s, the United States and Canada rejected the legitimacy of Maduro’s next term in a measure adopted Thursday. Most countries from Europe and Latin American didn’t send representa­tives to the swearing-in.

In a speech after his swearing-in, Maduro vowed to continue the legacy of the late President Hugo Chavez and accused the United States of trying to ignite unrest through its increasing economic sanctions.

OGDEN, Utah — Payday will come Friday without any checks for about 800,000 federal employees affected by the government shutdown, forcing workers to scale back spending, cancel trips, apply for unemployme­nt benefits and take out loans to stay afloat.

IRS employee Krystle Kirkpatric­k and her family, including her two children, ages 6 and 12, aren’t eating out, buying brand-name foods or getting drinks at the gas station. Her husband is working overtime in his job as a machinist to try to make up for her lost paycheck.

Her mortgage company informed her it won’t let her skip a payment, and she still has to pay daycare even though her children aren’t going or she will lose their spot to another family on the waiting list. She has applied for unemployme­nt but doesn’t know when the benefits will begin arriving.

“It’s a very scary feeling to know that your payday is coming and nothing is coming,” the Ogden woman said. “I don’t think the administra­tion and the houses of Congress understand the repercussi­ons of not having a paycheck.”

The shutdown, which enters its 21st day Friday, will be the longest in history by this weekend and is forcing many American families to make tough decisions. It’s especially hard for workers who don’t have enough savings to cover their mortgages and other bills.

Roughly 420,000 federal employees were deemed essential and are working unpaid. An additional 380,000 are staying home without pay. While furloughed federal workers have been given back pay in previous shutdowns, it’s not guaranteed that will happen this time. Government contractor­s, who have been placed indefinite­ly on unpaid leave, don’t get compensate­d for lost hours.

Most of the government workers received their last paycheck two weeks ago, and Friday will be the first payday with no money.

At a rally Thursday in Ogden, about 100 furloughed IRS employees gathered outside the federal building to call for an end to the shutdown, chanting, “We want to work, we want to work.”

Kandice Johns held a sign that read, “Congress do your job. We want to work.” But Tiauna Guerra was more critical of President Donald Trump: “If he wouldn’t be so for the wall and trying to make this happen, maybe we wouldn’t in this situation?”

Around the country, some workers are relying on donations, including launching GoFundMe campaigns. A food pantry has opened up at a Coast Guard base in Boston. Some workers are thinking about taking second jobs.

Michelle Wallace, a 34-year-old mother of four, made a tough decision Thursday after she realized there would be no last-minute deal to end the shutdown, meaning her husband, a federal worker, would miss a paycheck.

A nurse fresh out of school and strapped with student debt, Wallace told her 16-year-old son that the family couldn’t go to his basketball tournament in a neighborin­g town an hour away from their home in the Peoria, Illinois, area because they couldn’t afford to buy tickets or use the half-tank of gas it would take to get there.

“We want to be there to support him,” Wallace said through tears. “But there’s no end in sight for the government opening back up, I don’t know when we’ll have enough money coming in, and I can’t justify spending anything.”

Theodore Atkinson, a furloughed trial attorney in the Justice Department’s civil division, said he is spending “extraordin­arily stressful” days anxiously watching the news at his home in Baltimore.

He was told to stay home during the last government shutdown in 2013. But this time, he had little time to prepare for a missed paycheck or tie up loose ends with the cases he is working on, he said.

With two children and a mortgage, child support and alimony payments, Atkinson said he has taken out a personal loan to cover two paychecks, just to be safe. But if the shutdown stretches into February, he may need to take out another.

“It’s all uncertain and I don’t know how it ends or resolves itself,” he said. “This isn’t a matter of me not going to the movies or out to eat as much. I can’t cut off my power or my cellphone or move out of my house.”

Daniel Lickey, one of 3,750 workers on furlough from the IRS office in Ogden, said he won’t be able to send money to his parents, who are raising his specialnee­ds niece and nephew. He will also have to lean on a single mother he shares a duplex with to pay his share of rent this month.

Most worrisome to Lickey is the possibilit­y he will not be able to buy the medicine he takes for his bipolar disorder, which costs $75 with insurance. He just used his savings to fix his car.

“Without my medication, my suicidal thoughts and tendencies ramp up,” said Lickey, 32. “I don’t want to go to that dark and scary place.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? ON THE 20TH DAY OF A PARTIAL GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN, federal employees rally at the Capitol in Washington on Thursday too protest the impasse between Congress and President Donald Trump over his demand to fund a U.S.-Mexico border wall.
ASSOCIATED PRESS ON THE 20TH DAY OF A PARTIAL GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN, federal employees rally at the Capitol in Washington on Thursday too protest the impasse between Congress and President Donald Trump over his demand to fund a U.S.-Mexico border wall.
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 ??  ?? BY THE NUMBERS Dow Jones Industrial­s: +122.80 to 24,001.92 Standard & Poor’s: +11.68 to 2,596.64 Nasdaq Composite Index: +28.99 to 6,986.07
BY THE NUMBERS Dow Jones Industrial­s: +122.80 to 24,001.92 Standard & Poor’s: +11.68 to 2,596.64 Nasdaq Composite Index: +28.99 to 6,986.07

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