USA Today - 09.08.2019

(Darren Dugan) #1

NEWS USA TODAY z FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 2019 z 5A


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A suspect described as “pure evil”
and “full of anger” killed four people
and injured two in a stabbing and
armed robbery rampage over two
hours Wednesday in Southern Califor-
nia, police said.
“We know this guy was full of anger
and he harmed a lot of people tonight,”
Garden Grove Police Lt. Carl Whitney
said at a news conference.
The unidentified 33-year-old man
was arrested at a 7-Eleven store in
Santa Ana where he had disarmed and
killed a security guard.
Police had tracked his silver Mercedes
to the convenience store’s parking lot af-
ter discovering two stabbing victims at
the suspect’s apartment building.
All victims and the suspect are His-
panic, Whitney said.
The two-hour crime spree played
out over the neighboring cities of Gar-
den Grove and Santa Ana, southeast of
Los Angeles.

Whitney said the suspect also
robbed a bakery, check-cashing busi-
nessand an insurance business,
Police initially responded to a bur-
glary at an apartment complex where
the suspect lived, but found no one in-
jured. Officers then got a call from in-
side the same complex where two
stabbing victims were found. Whitney
said one died on a balcony and the oth-
er at a hospital.
As the carnage unfolded, another
person was injured at a service station
when the suspect almost cut off a
man’s nose and an employee at a near-
by Subway restaurant was stabbed to
death. Along the way, the suspect also
robbed a bakery.
The owner, who asked not to be
identified, told KCAL-TV that she was
charging her cellphone at about 4 p.m.
when the man drove up and apparent-
ly mistook her for a customer.
“He went directly to the register and
tried to open the register ... he showed
me a gun,” she said. “He took all the
money and fled.”
“I think I was very lucky because he
thought I was a customer, not the own-
er,” she said.
Contributing: The Associated Press

Police stand watch at the scene of a stabbing in Garden Grove, Calif., on
Wednesday. A man killed four people and wounded two in a string of
robberies before he was arrested, police say.ALEX GALLARDO/AP

Stabbing suspect

called ‘pure evil’

4 killed, 2 wounded

in California rampage

Doug Stanglin
USA TODAY

WASHINGTON – President Donald
Trump said he may commute the pris-
on sentence of Rod Blagojevich, the
former Illinois governor convicted of
federal corruption charges that includ-
ed efforts to sell Barack Obama’s old
U.S. Senate seat.
Noting that Blagojevich was once a
gueston his television program “The
Apprentice,” Trump said aboard Air
Force One late Wednesday, “I think he
was treated very, very
unfairly, just as others
were.”
Blagojevich, who en-
tered federal prison in
2012, is in the middle of
a 14-year sentence after
being convicted on fed-
eral charges of using his
powers as governor to extract cam-
paign money and other political fa-
vors.
In 2015, a federal appeals court
threw out some of the charges related
to Blagojevich’s attempts to sell an ap-
pointment to the Senate job that Oba-
ma vacated after he won the 2008
presidential election. The appeals
court left the other charges intact.
Trump suggested he might com-
mute Blagojevich’s sentence in May
2018.
A month later, Blagojevich filed pa-
perwork with the Justice Department
formally requesting a commutation.
“I am thinking very seriously about
commuting his sentence so that he can
go home to his family after seven
years,” Trump said Wednesday.
After a trip to Dayton, Ohio, and El
Paso, Texas, Trump cast the prospec-
tive commutation of Blagojevich as a
bipartisan gesture.
“A man who is a Democrat, not a Re-
publican,” Trump said, “who I don’t
know very well, but he was on ‘The Ap-
prentice’ for a couple of weeks.”


Trump may


commute


Blagojevich’s


sentence


David Jackson
USA TODAY


Blagojevich


GOP freezes Twitter spending
after McConnell account locked

The Republican Party, the Trump
campaign and other GOP organiza-
tions said they are freezing their
spending on Twitter to protest the
platform’s treatment of Senate Major-
ity Leader Mitch McConnell.
Twitter temporarily locked McCon-
nell’s campaign account Wednesday
after it shared a video in which some
protesters spoke of violence outside
his Kentucky home, where he’s recov-
ering from a shoulder fracture.
The social media platform said in a
statement that users were locked out
because of a tweet “that violated our
violent threats policy, specifically
threats involving physical safety.”
The account was active Thursday
but no longer contained the tweet.
The Courier Journal reported one
protester said McConnell should have
broken his neck; another spoke of vio-
lence when responding to a reference
about a hypothetical McConnell voo-
doo doll.

Puerto Rico has had 3 governors
in a week, considers its 4th

A day after Puerto Rico got its third
governor in less than a week following
angry street protests, top officials from
new leader Wanda Vázquez’s own par-
ty talked openly Thursday about their
desire to see a fourth take over the po-
sition.
Senate President Thomas Rivera
Schatz,who played a key role in the
successful court challenge to the
swearing-in of Pedro Pierluisi after
Gov. Ricardo Rosselló resigned, public-
ly backed Resident Commissioner Jen-
niffer González – Puerto Rico’s repre-
sentative to Congress – to become gov-
ernor. Party allies fell in line.
For González to become governor,
she would have to be nominated to the
open secretary of state position and
confirmed. Then Vázquez would have
to resign. The new governor said she
did not intend to step down despite
saying she didn’t want the job.
“It’s time that people and not poli-
ticians become the priority,” González
said.
From wire reports

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