University of Kentucky Takes Student Paper to Court Over Reporting on Sexual-Assault Complaints Against Professor

At the University of Kentucky (UK), a legal battle between campus administrators and student journalists centers on how much privacy is owed to students who’ve accused a professor of sexual misconduct. The University contends that a campus paper publishing even minimal details about the case represents an unconscionable imposition on victims’ privacy and creates a “chilling effect” that discourages future victims from coming forward. Student staffers of the Kentucky Kernel say the school is simply trying to cover-up occurrences that might reflect poorly on U.K.

At the heart of this struggle is Title IX, the federal statute prohibiting sex discrimination in education. The University claims it must zealously guard all information related to campus sexual-misconduct complaints in order to avoid triggering legal and economic sanctions under Title IX. It’s a perfect illustration of the weird tension between the U.S. Department of Education’s efforts to enforce federal anti-discrimination law and the incentives for campus administrators to act reasonably.

Obviously, a professor accused of harassing and assaulting students is of interest to the campus community and relevant for a campus paper to report on. But UK clims that to meet its federal obligation to create a safe and sexism-free campus, the school must carefully guard almost all details about campus sexual-assaults, even if that means fighting student journalists in state court.

In a campus-wide email, University President Eli Capilouto even accused student paper Kernel of creating a chilling effect that stopped sexual-assault victims from coming forward since it started publishing information about James Harwood, a former UK entomology professor who had resigned amid accusations that he sexually harassed and groped students. The campus Violence Intervention and Prevention (VIP) Center “had 59 clients between July and October,” Capilouto noted in his email. “In the same period this year, the number dropped to 38. The decline in the number of clients at the VIP Center underscores the chilling impact that news reports are having on the willingness of victim-survivors to come forward.”

But it’s “not clear that the difference in yearly numbers can be attributed to a particular cause,” McClatchy DC reported. “There was a similar dip between fall 2013 and fall 2014,” with 59 VIP-center clients from July-October ’13 and just 31 clients the following fall. And according to the Herald-Leader, the VIP Center received just eight clients from November 2013 through the rest of the 2013-14 school year. In other words, there’s plenty of fluctuation in accusation numbers from semester to semester, and no particular reason to believe that the Kernel publishing minimal details of complaints against Harwood served to stifle student reports.

The paper claims that Harwood’s student accusers want the story to go public. The two women who had filed official complaints against Harwood “say UK is protecting the professor at the expense of his victims, other students, and the public,” the Kernel reported. Because Harwood resigned before a full investigation into his conduct could be completed, “Harwood could be allowed to continue working at another university without the full results of the investigation following him.”

The feud between UK leadership and the student paper over Harwood’s case began last March, when the Kernel sought to obtain copies of “the Title IX complaints filed by the two female students, any reprimands and any commendations, Harwood’s personnel file, and any documents detailing the University of Kentucky’s investigation into allegations of sexual assault, sexual harassment, or allegations of alcohol abuse committed by Harwood.” The University responded by providing the Kernel redacted records from Human Resources and the College of Agriculture related to Harwood, including his separation agreement and resignation letter, but said the law prohibited disclosure of even redacted documents related to the Title IX complaints or investigation.

Unsatisfied, the Kernel submitted another request, which the school again denied. The paper then appealed to the state Attorney General (AG), Andy Beshear, who asked to examine UK’s Harwood case files to determine what could be redacted and what could be shared. But UK refused to show the files to even Beshears, saying this too was a student-privacy violation. Beshear held in August that UK had failed to meet its burden of proof and must—in a solution the school called “woefully inadequate”—make minimally redacted records available for Kernel staff to view and copy immediately. Instead, the school appealed to a state circuit court.

In an October 24 brief supporting that appeal, UK stated that if the court “concludes that the University is wrong and the correct interpretation of the Open Records Act is that the University is required to disclose materials protected by sexual assault survivors’ fundamental privacy rights and federal privacy laws, then [the court] must address the constitutionality of the Open Records Act.”

“We are asking the courts in Kentucky to re-affirm what courts across the country and the federal Office for Civil Rights have said is necessary for the protection of victim-survivors,” Capilouto wrote in his campus-wide email last week. The UK President explained that a few days prior, the school’s Board of Trustees had “continued its conversation about our legal obligations under Title IX to protect the confidentiality and privacy of victim-survivors of sexual assault and interpersonal violence” and remained “unwavering” in its commitment to protect their confidentiality and privacy.

“We believe strongly in our moral and ethical obligation to protect the privacy of victim/survivors,” Capilouto explained. “And we believe strongly the law mandates that we do so. The U.S. Constitution, federal Title IX law, the federal Violence Against Women Act, the decisions of federal appellate courts as well as the highest courts of two states, the federal Office for Civil Rights, and (until recently) the Attorney General of Kentucky all require us to protect the privacy rights of student victim-survivors.”

But Capilouto oversimplifies the situation. It’s true that laws require more identity-protection for people bringing accusations of sex crimes than they do for, say, robbery victims. But at stake in this case is how much protection is required. The student journalists, and the Attorney General, say that redacting the names and identifying details (such as address, school major, etc.) from Title IX-investigation files before letting press view them should be sufficient. The school maintains that providing any information beyond confirmation that complaints had been made would be a violation of student privacy and leave UK liable under Title IX.

In August, as UK appealed the AG’s decision, the Kernel obtained a redacted copy of Harwood-related files anyway, from a “a confidential source connected to the case.” The paper reported that the seven-month investigation into Harwood, conducted by UK’s Office of Institutional Equity and Equal Opportunity, “covered about three years of allegations made against the professor,” including sexual harassment and sexual assault. Complainants officially included two female students, with two more students providing testimony to add further examples of Harwood’s alleged misconduct. All of the accusers studied or worked in Harwood’s department between 2012 and 2015.

One of the complainants, a former student of Harwood’s, said that during a 2013 conference, the professor had drinks and dinner with some students, during which time he repeatedly grabbed her butt, breasts, and crotch. Another student who was present vouched for these claims. Harwood, however, claimed that both students were lying because he had been critical of their research, according to the Kernel.

The other complainant was also a former student of Harwood’s. She told campus investigators that, at a 2012 conference, Harwood had put his arm around with his hand near her breast and whispered, “You don’t want to know how bad I can be at these meetings.”

In addition, “the investigation recorded witness testimony of two other students who said they and one other student were inappropriately touched by Harwood on the night in which the first victim went out with a group from the department,” the Kernel reported. “Though they did not at the time want to file a complaint, two of the students testified about their own unwelcome and nonconsensual incidents with Harwood that night, as well as what they saw him do to another student who did not testify.” These allegations included him rubbing the chests and grabbing the butts of male students, trying to force students to dance together, pressuring students to drink more alcohol, and urinating on the side of a building.

Harwood was charged by the school’s Office of Institutional Equity and Equal Opportunity with two counts of sexual assault and two counts of sexual harassment. A Title IX coordinator concluded that there was “enough evidence for a reasonable person to believe the alleged behavior occurred and this matter should be presented to the Sexual Misconduct Hearing Board,” according to the Kernel. Harwood, however, resigned before such a hearing could take place.

Yet whether Harwood is guilty—and, if so, whether the conduct in question rises to the level of sexual assault—is practically irrelevant to the fight between UK and the Kernel. The point isn’t that the University should provide the info because Harwood is dangerous, or because he’s not, but so that people can read the relevant facts and draw their own conclusions. That UK argues such a thing would violate federal anti-discrimination law just serves as another great example of the secretive, Kafka-eque, “Kangaroo court” aspect of Title IX investigations, where even talking about Title IX complaints can in itself be a violation of Title IX.

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The Mexican Town That Kicked Out the Cartels—and Told the Police and Political Parties to Get Lost Too

Almost a thousand miles south of Houston, the Mexican town of Cheran was once afflicted by gangsters who had branched into the timber trade. They killed, they kidnapped, and they kept cutting down trees that they didn’t have a right to take. And so, the BBC reports,

on Friday 15 April 2011, Cheran’s levantamiento, or uprising, began. On the road coming down from the forest outside Margarita’s home, the women blockaded the loggers’ pick-ups and took some of them hostage. As the church bells of El Calvario rang out and fireworks exploded in the dawn sky alerting the community to danger, the people of Cheran came running to help. It was tense—hotheads had to be persuaded by the women not to string up the hostages from an ancient tree outside the church….

The municipal police arrived with the mayor, and armed men came to free their hostage-friends. There was an uneasy stand-off between the townspeople, the loggers and the police. It ended after two loggers were injured by a young man who shot a firework directly at them….

The police and local politicians were quickly driven out of town because the people suspected they were collaborating with the criminal networks. Political parties were banned—and still are—because they were deemed to have caused divisions between people….

Meanwhile armed checkpoints were established on the three main roads coming in to town.

Today, five years later, those checkpoints still exist. They are guarded by members of the Ronda Comunitaria—a militia or local police force made up of men and women from Cheran.

Now that the gangsters are no longer raiding the forest, the locals manage the resource, in what sounds like the sort of community-based system that the late Elinor Ostrom frequently wrote about. Meanwhile, the BBC’s writer notes that “in the last year there have been no murders, kidnaps or disappearances” in Cheran, even as such crimes are common in communities just a few kilometers away. The place hasn’t declared independence—various sorts of government funding are still flowing, and when serious crimes do occur the attorney general can prosecute them—but the town of 20,000 has achieved a remarkable level of autonomy.

To read the whole thing, go here. To read about some other efforts in the area to battle the cartels outside the state, go here—and to see how the state eventually absorbed them, go here. And even further south, to read about a village in Colombia that kicked out all armed groups, from right-wing paramilitaries to left-wing guerrillas to officially sanctioned soldiers and cops, go here.

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Billionaire: “Single Digit Millionaires” Are Too Poor to Get Justice In America

Billionaire Peter Thiel said yesterday:

 If you’re a single-digit millionaire … you have no effective access to our legal system.

Thiel is saying even plain vanilla millionaires can’t afford justice in America.

Fordham Law School professor and criminal justice expert John Pfaff notes that – using 2007 numbers – many states’ entire budgets for legal defense for people who can’t afford a lawyer is in the single-digit millions.

(Given that the Great Recession happened shortly afterward, those numbers have undoubtedly declined since 2007.)

In other words, under Thiel’s logic, even if an entire states’ annual budget for legal defense were spent on a single person, it wouldn’t be enough to deliver justice.

Indeed, there are two systems of justice in Americaone for the fatcats … and one for everyone else.

After all, Americans have less access to justice than Botswanans, and are more abused by police than Kazakhstanis.

And the government protects criminal wrongdoing by prosecuting whistleblowers. The Obama administration has sentenced whistleblowers to dozens of times the jail time of all other presidents COMBINED). And the government has framed whistleblowers with false evidence.

And yet the government goes to great lengths to protect the elites against charges of criminal wrongdoing.

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Iraq Threatens Turkey With War After Erdogan Deploys Tanks To Iraqi Border

In the latest provocation between Turkey and Iraq, the Turkish military begun deploying tanks and other armored vehicles to the town of Silopi near the Iraqi border, in a move the defense minister said on Tuesday was related to the fight against terrorism and developments across the border.

As a reminder, Iraq had previously slammed the presence of Turkish troops on its territory, when on October 5 Baghdad warned of “regional war” if Turkey does not withdraw its force.

That threat, however, was lost on the Turkish defense minister, Fikri Isik who said Turkey had “no obligation” to wait behind its borders and would do what was necessary if Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) militants took a foothold in northwest Iraq’s Sinjar region, around 115 km (71 miles) south of Silopi. “We will not allow the threat to Turkey to increase,” he told broadcaster A Haber in an interview.

The army deployment, disclosed by military sources, came after President Tayyip Erdogan said on Saturday that Turkey was aiming to reinforce its troops in Silopi.

Photos from the sources showed a long column of vehicles, including tanks, tank rescue vehicles and construction vehicles in single file on a dual carriageway.

As Reuters reports, the deployment coincides with an Iraqi operation to drive Islamic State from the northern Iraqi city of Mosul and after Iraqi Shi’ite militias launched a related offensive to push the jihadists out of the town of Tal Afar further west. Erdogan said on Saturday Ankara would have a “different response” for Shi’ite militias if they “cause terror” in Tal Afar, home to a sizeable ethnic Turkmen population with historic and cultural ties to Turkey.

Sinjar, where Ankara believes the PKK is developing a presence, is situated some 50 km west of Tal Afar. Additionally, Sirnak province, where Silopi is located, is also one of the main areas of conflict between Turkey’s army and the PKK, whose main bases are in the mountains of northeast Iraq.

Iraq’s response, as expected, came fast, and in a tweet by the official Twitter account of the Iraqi Popular Mobilization Units fighting ISIS in Iraq, the PMU said that “Any Turkish invasion of Ezidi Sinjar will face the full force of the Iraqi PMU to defend our lands from Turkey”, effectively threatening Turkey with war should Turkey’s tanks cross the border.

In July, the Iraqi government officially incorporated the Iranian-supported Popular Mobilization Front (PMF) as an “independent military formation” in Iraq’s security forces. The move, which was approved by Iraq’s prime minister in February, is disturbing as it establishes the PMF as a parallel security organization akin to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC). Influential PMF commanders have openly expressed their affinity for Iran’s supreme leader and the head of IRGC’s Qods Force.

The establishment of the Popular Mobilization Front, or Hashid al Shaabi, as a permanent and separate security entity was codified by Prime Minister Haidar al Abadi on Feb. 22, 2016, according to an official government document published by Al Arabiya.

In other words, should Erdogan proceed with another “preemptive” land invasion in Iraq, not only will the Iraq army retaliate, but he may also bring Iran into the conflict.

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The Presidential Race Is Still Not Close for Most Voters

Dammit, Jim, she might be right! ||| Reason“The presidential race has tightened,” runs yesterday’s headline over at Vox. “Clinton still leads. Democrats should still worry.” And it’s true—on a national level, Hillary Clinton’s recently comfortable lead over Donald Trump has jerked backward in recent days to just 2.2 percentage points in RealClearPolitics‘ poll average, down from 5.6 a week ago and 7.1 the week before that. This morning saw the highly rated ABC/Washington Post poll with a one-point Trump lead—the first time he has topped Clinton since mid-May.

But as much as we consume and process information about the presidential election on a national basis, it is on the state level where the thing is won and lost. And the fact is, this presidential election, like the one before it, is just not close in most states.

FiveThirtyEight publishes constantly updated odds for which candidate is most likely to win each state. As of yesterday afternoon and evening, the data-crunching site had estimated that the race was 99 percent or more locked in 13 states plus Washington, D.C., which combine for 162 electoral votes. They are: California, Massachusetts, Maryland, Alabama, Oklahoma, and D.C. (at 99.9% each); New York, Kentucky, and West Virginia (99.8%), Louisiana (99.6%), Arkansas and Idaho (99.4%), Hawaii (99.2%), and Wyoming (99.1%).

I live in New York and hail from California, and I cannot tell you how many people from either state have told me a variation on, “Well, I’d like to vote for Gary Johnson, but I’m just afraid the election will be too close.” No. It. Won’t. California went for Barack Obama by 23 percentage points in 2012, and is poised to choose Clinton by about the same margin this year. New York went +28 for Obama last time, and is around +21 for Clinton now.

More than half the country (26 states plus D.C.), representing a tick over half the Electoral College vote (271), is in 95 percent certainty zone, according to FiveThirtyEight. Bring the odds down to 90 percent, and we’re talking 33 states plus D.C., and 342 electoral votes.

Perhaps you don’t trust oddsmakers, or have a hard time wrapping your head around what, say, Texas‘s 91.9 percent odds actually means. OK, well, consider that 29 states plus D.C. currently feature polling leads of at least double digits for the second straight cycle. Here’s a list, compiled by combining the poll averages of FiveThirtyEight and RCP; parentheses will contain the 2012 major-party point spread:

74: District of Columbia (84)

36: Wyoming (41)

28: Maryland (26)

27: Massachusetts (23), West Virginia (41)

26: Hawaii (43), Vermont (36)

25: Oklahoma (34)

24: California (23)

22: Idaho (32)

21: New York (28), Alabama (22)

20: Arkansas (24), North Dakota (20), Nebraska (22)

19: Kentucky (23)

17: Louisiana (17)

15: Tennessee (20), South Dakota (18)

14: Illinois (17), New Jersey (18), Rhode Island (27)

13: Washington (15), Connecticut (17), Maine (15), Montana (14), Delaware (19)

12: Kansas (22)

11: Mississippi (12)

10: Oregon (12)

Keep in mind that in none of the above states is a third-party candidate polling in double digits.

As happens every presidential election, the non-Democrat/Republican presidential nominees are fading in the final days: Gary Johnson and Jill Stein are at a combined 6.7 percent in RealClearPolitics‘ current polling average, down from 8.2 percent a week ago and 10 percent less than a month ago. To the extent that that reflects a genuine preference for other candidates, or even a desire to decisively punish the hated opposition, that’s all well and good. But on-the-fence voters who are succumbing to gun-to-your-head logic (as in, “if you had a gun to your head, who would you vote for?”) are well advised to check state polling and recent history before letting the major parties off the hook.

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Did the $100 TRILLION Global Bond Bubble Just Burst?

Globally bonds are collapsing.

Germany’s 10-Year Bund has seen yields spike out of their downtrend.

As have Japan’s 10-Year Government Bonds.

Long-Term US Treasuries have taken out their trendline.

As have Junk Bonds.

Folks, the bond markets are flashing DANGER DANGER.

Globally the bond bubble is now well over $100 Trillion. And to top it off, ther's another $555 TRILLION in derivatives trading based on bond prices!

Another Crisis is brewing… the time to prepare is now.

Smart investors, however, are preparing for what’s to come.

On that note, we are already preparing our clients for this with a 21-page investment report titled the Stock Market Crash Survival Guide.

In it, we outline the coming crash will unfold…which investments will perform best… and how to take out “crash” insurance trades that will pay out huge returns during a market collapse.

We are giving away just 1,000 copies of this report for FREE to the public.

To pick up yours, swing by:

http://ift.tt/1HW1LSz

Best Regards

Graham Summers

Chief Market Strategist

Phoenix Capital Research

 

 

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Can This Key Level Stop The Bleeding In Health Care Stocks?

Via Dana Lyons' Tumblr,

The frightful performance of the health care sector could find imminent relief at a key chart juncture – if temporarily.

If there is one sector chart scary enough to merit a Halloween post, it would have to be health care. As we have been warning for some time, the performance of health care stocks in recent months has been a nightmare for investors. Whether it’s biotechs, pharmaceutical stocks, etc., the entire sector has been a bloody mess. However, at some point, things can become so bad that they can’t get any worse. And based upon a potentially key chart level, health care stocks may be reaching such a point, at least in the near-term.

While many important longer-term trendlines have already been broken across the health care space, there is one key line being tested right now that has yet to fail. Looking at a linear chart of the Dow Jones U.S. Health Care Index, its Up trendline since the 2011 lows has been especially prominent. With touches in October and November 2011, June, November and December 2012 and February of this year, the trendline has been more than validated. The fact that the index is presently testing the trendline, near 715, may give health care investors some hope that the bleeding might stop here.

image

 

Of course, we did mention that many other longer-term trendlines have already given way, including the post-2008 Up trendline in the NYSE Biotech Index (BTK) and the post-2009 Up trendline in the NYSE Pharmaceutical Index (DRG), both on log scales. Therefore, there has been enough technical damage done across the health care space that this one trendline may not be able to hold up the sector permanently. Not to mention, the DJ Health Care Index has put in a clear lower high on its chart.

However, health care stocks have been so badly beaten down that they are at least primed for a bounce. Therefore, this trendline may, at a minimum, serve as a tourniquet for the bleeding in the immediate-term. That said, the health care “patient” is so sick, technically, that any bounce may merely be a selling opportunity.

*  *  *

More from Dana Lyons, JLFMI and My401kPro.

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Bearish Crude Oil

This post is from October 11th and originally ran here – Bearish Crude Oil. The blog’s full archives are at Trader Scott’s Market Blog. This post’s charts are as of October 11th:

 

The global stock markets are very concerning to me and the current complacency will need to be wrung out – only a large sell off will accomplish it. But, to repeat, complacency is not a reason to get short – it’s just a warning flag. I chronicled my bearish views of crude oil over the few years before the major selling climax in crude on February 11th at $26ish. These posts here, here, and here, for example with my belief this past January that the final bottoming process had begun. And that $26 low was the major bottom, but there would be retests (but at higher lows). Currently I am quite concerned about crude and especially the shares. I usually initiate short positions when: I’m concerned about a market long term or shorter term (with energy shares it’s not long term bearishness); a market is under DISTRIBUTION/topping process/strong hands to weak hands; and that market is above the RESISTANCE area when a market is allegedly “breaking out to new highs”. So currently the general stock market, crude oil and energy stocks are quite concerning. I do not recommend for most people to attempt to sell short, so if you have questions you can e-mail me. The relevant charts are below:

FRAK  XLE XLE CRUDE CRUDE

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Syrian Refugees Admitted Into The U.S. Surge 675% So Far In 2016

Through October, the Obama administration has officially resettled 13,210 Syrian refugees into the United States since the beginning of 2016, an increase of 675% compared to the same 10-month period in 2015.  Of course, just last month Secretary of State Kerry revealed plans by the Obama administration to increase the number of refugees admitted into the U.S. even further to 110,000 in 2017, representing a 30% increase over the 2016 target and a 57% increase from 2015.  According to CNS News, 99.1% of incoming Syrian refugees so far in 2016 are Muslim while only 0.5% are Christian despite John Kerry declaring back in March that ISIS was actively committing genocide against Christians in the war-torn country.

Of those, 13,100 (99.1 percent) are Muslims – 12,966 Sunnis, 24 Shi’a, and 110 other Muslims – and 77 (0.5 percent) are Christians. Another 24 (0.18 percent) are Yazidis.

 

During the Jan.-Oct. period in 2015, 1,705 Syrian refugees were admitted, of whom 1,664 (97.5 percent) were Muslims and 29 (1.7 percent) were Christians.

 

Meanwhile the surge of Syrian refugee admissions initiated by the administration last February has continued into the new fiscal year, now one month-old: A total of 1,297 were resettled during October – a 593 percent increase over the 187 admitted in October 2015.

 

October’s arrivals were once again dominated by Sunni Muslims, accounting for 1,263 (97.3 percent) of the total. Another seven were Shi’a Muslims and 12 were other Muslims. The rest of the October intake comprised 15 (1.1 percent) Christians – eight Orthodox, four Catholics and three refugees self-described simply as Christians.

In light of the genocide acknowledgement by Kerry and given that Christians represent 10% of the Syrian population, it would seem to make sense that Christian refugees admitted into the United States would make up at least 10% of the migrant pool.  But, as CNS points out, since the genocide declaration by Kerry only 0.58% of Syrians granted asylum in the U.S. are Christian.

But jihadists among the rebels, and especially the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS/ISIL), have also targeted Christians, Yazidis and other minorities in particular. Last March 17, Secretary of State John Kerry announced, in line with a legislative requirement, that the treatment of Christians and other minorities in areas controlled by ISIS amounts to genocide.

 

Since that genocide determination, the Obama administration has resettled a total of 12,743 Syrian refugees in the U.S., but only 74 (0.58 percent) of them are Christians, and only 24 (0.18 percent) of them are Yazidis.
The vast majority – 12,637, or 99.16 percent – are Muslims, including 12,516 Sunnis.

 

When the civil war began in March 2011,
an estimated 74 percent of the Syrian population was Sunni Muslim and an estimated 10 percent was Christian.

 

Therefore if the U.S. admitted Christian Syrian refugees in proportion to the population, roughly 1,260 Christians would have been resettled in the United States in FY2016. Just 68 were.

 

Meanwhile, according to NBC, the top destination for Syrian refugees arriving in the U.S. is the state of Michigan. More than a 10th of the 10,000 Syrians admitted this fiscal year at the urging of the Obama administration are headed there, according to State Department figures.

Most of the new arrivals are likely to settle in and around Detroit, which has long been a magnet for Arab immigrants. This despite the fact that Michigan’s Republican Gov. Rick Snyder suspended efforts last November to bring more long-suffering Syrians to his state after the deadly terrorist attacks in Paris.

Snyder spokeswoman Anna Heaton told NBC News the governor “never suspended refugee resettlement” and is not opposed to more Syrian refugees settling in Michigan. “The governor suspended efforts to bring in additional refugees above and beyond the amount Michigan normally receives,” Heaton said in an email. “This increase in Syrian refugee resettlement is not surprising as our state continues to be a welcoming home for refugees who go on to contribute to our economic comeback and Michigan’s overall quality of life.”

Close on Michigan’s heels is California, which has taken in 1,030 Syrians between Oct. 1 of last year and Aug. 29, the federal figures show. Arizona and Texas, two red states led by Republican governors who have flat-out said they don’t want Syrian refugees because they supposedly pose a security risk, are next on the list having taken in 766 and 735 people, respectively, the figures show.

Those states were followed by Pennsylvania (600), Illinois (569), Florida (542) and New York (538), the figures show.

 

Just something else for the American public to consider in the 7 days remaining ahead of the presidential election.

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