This Grandmother Didn’t Submit the Proper Banking Form. Now the IRS Wants $2.1 Million From Her.


Monica Toth

The IRS wants to seize more than $2 million from an elderly woman, whose family fled from Nazi Germany, for failing to report her father’s endowment to her. Now, she’s petitioning the Supreme Court to consider whether this is an unconstitutionally excessive fine.

The Institute for Justice, representing Monica Toth, an 82-year-old grandmother living in the Boston area, filed a petition with the Supreme Court on Friday asking them to determine whether federal “civil penalties” imposed by the federal government for violating regulations count as “fines.” While a reasonable person might assume “penalties” and “fines” are the same thing, the federal government’s position is that they are not, and, therefore, the IRS can demand millions in such penalties from people without triggering the Excessive Fines Clause of the Eighth Amendment.

Monica Toth’s family fled Germany in the 1930s to escape rising fascism and antisemitism. Her family landed in Argentina, where she was born in 1940. Toth immigrated to the U.S. when she was 22 and established a family. She became a U.S. citizen in the 1980s.

Her father, who had in the meantime become a successful businessman, gifted Toth several million dollars in a Swiss bank account shortly before dying in 1999. The federal Bank Secrecy Act, passed in 1970, requires citizens to report various banking records and information to the government. It also requires any citizen with more than $10,000 in foreign bank accounts to fill out a Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR) annually.

Toth had not been filing these FBARs until 2010, which is when she says she discovered the requirement. According to the Institute for Justice, she had previously been filing her taxes by hand using forms from the local library. Once she knew of the requirement, she disclosed the existence of the account to the IRS and told them she hoped her filings would put her back into compliance with the law.

Things didn’t go well for her. According to the Institute for Justice’s filing, the IRS launched an audit in 2011. The agency determined that she underpaid her taxes in some years and overpaid in others. She paid $40,000 in penalties for her tax mistakes. Everything was settled. Her taxes were up to date.

But then the IRS came for her again because of her failure to file her FBARs. Under federal law, the maximum penalty for failing to file this record is either $100,000 or half the balance of the reported account, whichever is greater. The IRS declared that her failure to file the FBAR documentation was “reckless” and filed for half the money of the account, a civil penalty of more than $2.1 million. It doesn’t matter whether Toth’s failure to file the form deprived the IRS of taxes it was owed or whether she was actively trying to deceive the government. All that mattered was that she didn’t file a proper record of the bank account that the IRS contends she should have known she needed to file.

The fight here is not over whether the federal government and the IRS have the power to penalize people for trying to conceal bank accounts from tax collectors. Rather, it’s about whether taking $2.1 million from a citizen for simply not annually completing a one-page form can be considered an excessive fine that violates the Eighth Amendment of the Constitution’s Bill of Rights.

The United States argues that it cannot because it does not believe that taking Toth’s money should count as a “fine” at all. It is, instead, a “civil penalty” that is immune to scrutiny under the Eighth Amendment. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit has agreed with the federal government and refused to even consider whether taking $2.1 million from Toth was “excessive.” The Institute for Justice counters that this is clearly a type of fine.

“The Eighth Amendment’s Excessive Fines Clause is a key check on the government’s power to punish,” said Institute for Justice Attorney Sam Gedge in a prepared statement. “That is why the Excessive Fines Clause is part of the Bill of Rights, and that is why the federal courts need to take it seriously.”

The Institute for Justice has previously and successfully turned to the Supreme Court to set limits on the government’s ability to seize people’s assets and property. In Timbs v. Indiana (2019), the Court ruled unanimously that the Eighth Amendment applied to state-level asset forfeitures in a case where the state of Indiana seized an SUV from a man arrested for selling heroin and attempted to keep it. In that ruling, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg noted that one of the purposes of the Eighth Amendment is to prevent the government from using fines not as a punishment but “as a source of revenue.”

Toth has already made amends and paid fines for her mistakes with her IRS filings. In absence of evidence of deliberate fraud, it’s hard not to see this grasping as anything other than an attempt by the IRS and the Department of Treasury to bring in some money. The Institute for Justice notes that Toth is far from alone here. There’s been a recent escalation in the use of civil penalties by the federal government over FBAR filings: “Over the past decade, the government has expanded its FBAR enforcement relentlessly. Between 2012 and 2020, it assessed nearly $1.5 billion in FBAR penalties. This Term, it is asking the Court to ratify a still more aggressive regime.”

Whenever you read about how the IRS needs more and better enforcers and will only target wealthy people who are deliberately trying to conceal their money, think about Toth’s case. The IRS is looking for reasons to take huge sums of money from people without showing that these citizens have been engaging in actual misconduct. Worse still, this agency is also attempting to argue that seizing people’s money and assets doesn’t count as a fine and, therefore, the Eighth Amendment doesn’t protect citizens against it.

The post This Grandmother Didn't Submit the Proper Banking Form. Now the IRS Wants $2.1 Million From Her. appeared first on Reason.com.

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$2,000 ‘Inflation’-Stimulus Payments Should Be Sent Out: Pennsylvania Governor

$2,000 ‘Inflation’-Stimulus Payments Should Be Sent Out: Pennsylvania Governor

Authored by Jack Phillips via The Epoch Times,

The governor of Pennsylvania on Monday called on the state legislature to provide $2,000 in stimulus payments for some families to “survive inflation,” although such programs have been flagged by critics as contributing to price pressures.

“I want to give Pennsylvanians the step up they need to survive inflation and higher prices. So, $2,000 to any family, to families making $80,000 dollars or less. We estimated that about 250,000 families will apply for this,” Democrat Gov. Tom Wolf said.

That’s the second time Wolf has attempted to get a bill passed that would hand out payments, he added.

The commonwealth can afford to do so because it has an $800 billion economy, Wolf asserted.

“So that’s a 500-million-dollar operation expense and it’s going to provide needed buffers against high prices,” Wolf added, according to Fox News.

“And we hope prices are up temporarily, but it’s going to give families some room to get back on their feet.”

Pennsylvania has “the ability to do this” due to Pennsylvania’s finances, he said at an event in Sharpsburg, local media reported. “We can actually help families get lifesaving medicine, out-of-state funds. We can help families stay in their homes,” Wolf continued. “We can help families afford to eat. Why on earth wouldn’t we do it? Especially now again when we have the money sitting in the bank?”

The move is likely a political tactic ahead of the 2022 midterms. Wolf and other Democrats will likely use the prospect of passing a bill that authorizes $2,000 stimulus checks for lower-income individuals in a bid to increase voter turnout.

According to Christina Herrin from the nonprofit Citizens Against Government Waste (CAGW), stimulus checks by states are a “fruitless attempt to combat inflation.”

In a July 22 blog post, Herrin said that there is “no evidence” for the claim that artificially pumping money into the economy will halt inflation. The Biden administration’s $1.9 trillion America Rescue Act, which included the third round of stimulus checks, was a “significant factor” in pushing up inflation to four-decade highs, she stated.

“A one-time payment for ‘inflation relief’ is far different than tax rebates that many states are providing to all taxpayers based on income. They are feel-good band-aids that will make everything more expensive and keep inflation going longer than it would otherwise,” Herrin said.

Read more here…

Tyler Durden
Tue, 08/30/2022 – 13:00

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Struggling, ‘Lazy’ Washington Post May Cut 100 Newsroom Positions

Struggling, ‘Lazy’ Washington Post May Cut 100 Newsroom Positions

The New York Times would like you to know that its competitor, the Washington Post, is struggling.

Not only is the Post on track to lose money in 2022 after years of profitability, it’s been unable to boost the number of paying subscribers back to the 3 million it had in 2020 as its business has “stalled.”

The organization is on track to lose money in 2022, after years of profitability, according to two people with knowledge of the company’s finances. The Post now has fewer than the three million paying digital subscribers that it had hailed internally near the end of 2020, according to several people at the organization. Digital ad revenue generated by The Post fell to roughly $70 million during the first half of the year, about 15 percent lower than in the first half of 2021, according to a recent internal financial document reviewed by The New York Times. -NYT

As such, CEO Fred Ryan has floated the possibility with newsroom leaders that the paper may cut 100 positions – around 10% of its newsroom.

The Post denied that they’re looking to reduce head count, and instead said they were “exploring positions that should be repurposed to serve a larger, national and global audience,” whatever that means.

Over 20 people with knowledge of the Post‘s business operations spoke to the NYT – most of whom “would do so only on the condition of anonymity, to protect their relationships inside the organization.”

The NYT notes that – with the exception of themselves and the Wall Street Journal, many news outlets have have suffered declining readership since President Trump left office. You can add ZeroHedge to the list of winners as well, as traffic has grown since Trump left office, while our premium subscriber count has grown steadily since we launched the service.

Rooting out laziness

According to the report, Fred Ryan’s “focus on productivity and office attendance in the newsroom has also been a source of tension.”

He has expressed his belief to members of his leadership team that there were numerous low performers in the newsroom who needed to be managed out. He has monitored how many staff members come into the office, and has weighed new measures to compel people to return to work, including threats of firings, according to several people at The Post.

Many of the publication’s top leaders, including its top editor, Sally Buzbee, are urging patience. They say that the company’s efforts to broaden coverage will eventually attract new readers and lead to financial success. -NYT

Of note, Ryan came to the Post in 2014 from Politico. Before that, the 67-year-old was a former official in the Reagan administration.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 08/30/2022 – 12:39

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Watch: Reporter Asks White House “How Come Migrants Are Allowed In Unvaxx’d, But World-Class Tennis Players Aren’t?”

Watch: Reporter Asks White House “How Come Migrants Are Allowed In Unvaxx’d, But World-Class Tennis Players Aren’t?”

Authored by Steve Watson via Summit News,

Fox News reporter Peter Doocy made another salient point Monday when he asked White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre to explain why unvaccinated migrants are walking into the country every day, but tennis star Novak Djokovic has been denied energy to compete in the U.S. Open.

Doocy asked Jean-Pierre “How come migrants are allowed to come into this country unvaccinated, but world-class tennis players are not?”

Of course Jean-Pierre had no answer as usual, stating that “The U.S. government cannot discuss the details of individual visa cases.”

She added that “Due to privacy reasons, the U.S. also does not comment on medical information of individual travelers as it relates to this tennis player.”

She then claimed that only the CDC can answer the question and “This is something that they decide.”

Jean-Pierre also stated that migrants coming into the U.S. and visitors to the country are “two different things”.

Doocy followed up, asking “Somebody unvaccinated comes over on a plane, you say that’s not okay. Somebody walks into Texas or Arizona unvaccinated, they’re allowed to stay?”

“That’s not how it works. It’s not like someone walks over,” Jean-Pierre replied.

“That’s exactly what is happening!” Doocy shot back, urging that “Thousands of people are walking in a day. Some of them turn themselves over. Some of them are caught. Tens of thousands a week are not. That is what is happening.”

Watch:

Last month, organizers of the U.S. Open confirmed that Wimbledon champion Djokovic wouldn’t be allowed to compete at the tournament due to the Biden administration’s ban on unvaccinated foreign nationals entering the country.

Ironically, the event’s official website states that “at this time, ticket holders will not be required to show proof of COVID vaccination for admission into the US Open.”

The Serbian, who has won the tournament three times before, opted not to risk traveling and experiencing a repeat of his atrocious treatment by authorities in Australia, which ended up in him being deported.

Commenting recently on the situation, American tennis legend John McEnroe described it as a “joke” that Djokovic is still not allowed to compete in the US Open due to his vaccination status.

“At this point, in the pandemic, we’re two-and-a-half years in, I think people in all parts of the world know more about it, and the idea that he can’t travel here to play, to me is a joke,” said McEnroe.

Meanwhile, The Border Patrol are literally unlocking gates for illegal immigrants to walk into the country and get bussed to cities like New York.

According to data from Customs and Border Protection, more than two million people have attempted to cross the border in the 2022 fiscal year so far.

That figure equates to a 22 year high.

[ZH: As Joe Concha concludes in an excellent op-ed, Tennis fans will be robbed this week. Djokovic, who had been ranked No. 1 for 373 consecutive weeks (a record), will sit and watch someone else win a title he’s captured three times.

We will someday look back on the COVID-19 era with such shame — shame for what our leaders did in preventing our children from going to school and requiring that they wear masks for years.

The same illogic applies to those who believe keeping Djokovic out of the country and out of the Open is a good idea. ]

*  *  *

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Tyler Durden
Tue, 08/30/2022 – 12:20

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Democratic Gubernatorial Candidate Who Defended COVID Lockdowns in Court Now Says They Were a Mistake


Josh Shapiro Pennsylvania attorney general COVID-19 coronavirus Governor Tom Wolf lockdowns business closures lawsuits COVID

In May 2020, when roughly one-third of all Pennsylvania businesses were closed due to the state’s heavy-handed COVID restrictions, the state’s attorney general encouraged residents to rat out their neighbors for breaking the rules.

“See a #COVID19 health and safety violation? Report it!” Josh Shapiro tweeted, along with instructions for how narcs could report such violations to local law enforcement, the state Department of Health, and the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). “Following safety guidelines is how we’ll get through this together,” he added.

As the invocation of law enforcement suggests, those weren’t really guidelines at all. Lots of states took aggressive action to limit social interactions in the early days of the pandemic, but few states went further than Pennsylvania. On March 19, 2020, Gov. Tom Wolf and his top public health officials drew up an arbitrary list of “non-life-sustaining” businesses that would be forced to close until further notice—many were not allowed to reopen for months, and then had to endure (or ignore) further state-mandated shutdowns during the holiday season. Federal labor data would later show that only Michigan and Puerto Rico saw a greater number of business closures due to government mandates during those first few months of the pandemic.

Publicly, Shapiro encouraged Pennsylvanians to report their neighbors for violating those lockdowns. Professionally, he went to state and federal courts (as was his duty as attorney general) to assert Wolf’s authority to issue those shutdown orders.

Now that he’s running for governor, however, Shapiro says that he was privately against it all.

“This is an area where I think folks got it wrong,” Shapiro said of school and business shutdowns in an interview with the Associated Press. On mask and vaccine mandates, Shapiro told the A.P.’s Marc Levy that he believed the state needed to “educate” and “empower” individuals to make the best decisions for themselves.

“To me, that’s the approach we need to take more broadly as a public, which is to educate, empower and respect people’s personal decisions and respect their personal freedom to make those choices,” Shapiro told the A.P.

There are two ways to view Shapiro’s comments.

Perhaps he’s admitting to having learned an important lesson about governing from having an up-close view of the Wolf administration’s heavy-handed and unpopular COVID policies—so unpopular that state lawmakers and the public teamed up to pass a pair of constitutional amendments to limit future governors from taking similar actions.

On the other hand, this sure smells like some really convenient campaign trail retconning of the past two-plus years.

Even though we should be willing to cut Shapiro some slack for having to go to court to defend Wolf’s policies—one of his recent predecessors as Pennsylvania attorney general, Kathleen Kane, tried refusing to defend state laws she didn’t like and that didn’t end well for her—the rest of this doesn’t hold up to scrutiny. As the state’s top legal officer, Shapiro surely had a place at the table as the emergency orders and mandatory business closures were being hashed out.

So when Shapiro says “folks got it wrong,” he’s obviously trying to distance himself from his own culpability.

Even if he initially believed those extreme measures were necessary but later had a change of heart, he could have registered his objections with reporters at any time. And if he truly objected to defending those policies, he could have resigned his post, as at least one other member of Wolf’s administration did in response to lockdowns.

What’s really happening here is that Shapiro is being forced to respond to a line of attack from his gubernatorial opponent, Republican state Sen. Doug Mastriano (R–Fayetteville). Trailing in the polls, Mastriano is hoping to make up ground by reminding Pennsylvanians just how much they disliked the state’s COVID policies and by tying Shapiro to those decisions. He’s likely trying to follow the same playbook as Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, the Republican who scored an unexpected victory last year after pledging to end mask mandates and school closures.

Shapiro distancing himself from the policies of the Wolf administration makes a cynical kind of political sense. It is another signal of just how untenable lockdown policies always were in a democratic system. His awareness of the importance of personal freedom is even perhaps an encouraging sign. But he ought to own up to being wrong.

It wasn’t “folks” who screwed up Pennsylvania’s response to COVID, forced businesses to close, and encouraged neighbors to snitch on one another for the crime of simply trying to earn a living. It was, at least in part, Josh Shapiro.

The post Democratic Gubernatorial Candidate Who Defended COVID Lockdowns in Court Now Says They Were a Mistake appeared first on Reason.com.

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Democratic Gubernatorial Candidate Who Defended COVID Lockdowns in Court Now Says They Were a Mistake


Josh Shapiro Pennsylvania attorney general COVID-19 coronavirus Governor Tom Wolf lockdowns business closures lawsuits COVID

In May 2020, when roughly one-third of all Pennsylvania businesses were closed due to the state’s heavy-handed COVID restrictions, the state’s attorney general encouraged residents to rat out their neighbors for breaking the rules.

“See a #COVID19 health and safety violation? Report it!” Josh Shapiro tweeted, along with instructions for how narcs could report such violations to local law enforcement, the state Department of Health, and the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). “Following safety guidelines is how we’ll get through this together,” he added.

As the invocation of law enforcement suggests, those weren’t really guidelines at all. Lots of states took aggressive action to limit social interactions in the early days of the pandemic, but few states went further than Pennsylvania. On March 19, 2020, Gov. Tom Wolf and his top public health officials drew up an arbitrary list of “non-life-sustaining” businesses that would be forced to close until further notice—many were not allowed to reopen for months, and then had to endure (or ignore) further state-mandated shutdowns during the holiday season. Federal labor data would later show that only Michigan and Puerto Rico saw a greater number of business closures due to government mandates during those first few months of the pandemic.

Publicly, Shapiro encouraged Pennsylvanians to report their neighbors for violating those lockdowns. Professionally, he went to state and federal courts (as was his duty as attorney general) to assert Wolf’s authority to issue those shutdown orders.

Now that he’s running for governor, however, Shapiro says that he was privately against it all.

“This is an area where I think folks got it wrong,” Shapiro said of school and business shutdowns in an interview with the Associated Press. On mask and vaccine mandates, Shapiro told the A.P.’s Marc Levy that he believed the state needed to “educate” and “empower” individuals to make the best decisions for themselves.

“To me, that’s the approach we need to take more broadly as a public, which is to educate, empower and respect people’s personal decisions and respect their personal freedom to make those choices,” Shapiro told the A.P.

There are two ways to view Shapiro’s comments.

Perhaps he’s admitting to having learned an important lesson about governing from having an up-close view of the Wolf administration’s heavy-handed and unpopular COVID policies—so unpopular that state lawmakers and the public teamed up to pass a pair of constitutional amendments to limit future governors from taking similar actions.

On the other hand, this sure smells like some really convenient campaign trail retconning of the past two-plus years.

Even though we should be willing to cut Shapiro some slack for having to go to court to defend Wolf’s policies—one of his recent predecessors as Pennsylvania attorney general, Kathleen Kane, tried refusing to defend state laws she didn’t like and that didn’t end well for her—the rest of this doesn’t hold up to scrutiny. As the state’s top legal officer, Shapiro surely had a place at the table as the emergency orders and mandatory business closures were being hashed out.

So when Shapiro says “folks got it wrong,” he’s obviously trying to distance himself from his own culpability.

Even if he initially believed those extreme measures were necessary but later had a change of heart, he could have registered his objections with reporters at any time. And if he truly objected to defending those policies, he could have resigned his post, as at least one other member of Wolf’s administration did in response to lockdowns.

What’s really happening here is that Shapiro is being forced to respond to a line of attack from his gubernatorial opponent, Republican state Sen. Doug Mastriano (R–Fayetteville). Trailing in the polls, Mastriano is hoping to make up ground by reminding Pennsylvanians just how much they disliked the state’s COVID policies and by tying Shapiro to those decisions. He’s likely trying to follow the same playbook as Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, the Republican who scored an unexpected victory last year after pledging to end mask mandates and school closures.

Shapiro distancing himself from the policies of the Wolf administration makes a cynical kind of political sense. It is another signal of just how untenable lockdown policies always were in a democratic system. His awareness of the importance of personal freedom is even perhaps an encouraging sign. But he ought to own up to being wrong.

It wasn’t “folks” who screwed up Pennsylvania’s response to COVID, forced businesses to close, and encouraged neighbors to snitch on one another for the crime of simply trying to earn a living. It was, at least in part, Josh Shapiro.

The post Democratic Gubernatorial Candidate Who Defended COVID Lockdowns in Court Now Says They Were a Mistake appeared first on Reason.com.

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Google Barring Truth Social From Play Store Due To ‘Insufficient Content Moderation’

Google Barring Truth Social From Play Store Due To ‘Insufficient Content Moderation’

Last week, Truth Social CEO Devin Nunes claimed that it was “up to Google” to approve the App for download on the Play Store platform, claiming in a statement to Just the News‘ John Solomon: “we’re waiting on them to approve us, and I don’t know what’s taking so long.”

They could approve it tomorrow and it would be live for all the people who have now pre-ordered,” Nunes continued, adding: “We have built this from the ground up, brick-by-brick, so that we can’t be canceled. But the two companies that we have to work with specifically for the apps, which is the Google Play Store and Apple to be in their app store – everyone is beholden to them.”

Not so fast, says Google – who told Axios that the app hasn’t been approved for distribution due to “insufficient content moderation.”

“On Aug. 19, we notified Truth Social of several violations of standard policies in their current app submission and reiterated that having effective systems for moderating user-generated content is a condition of our terms of service for any app to go live on Google Play,” a spokesperson said, adding “Last week Truth Social wrote back acknowledging our feedback and saying that they are working on addressing these issues.”

More via Axios:

Details: A source says that Google’s concerns relate to content such as physical threats and incitements to violence.

  • Truth Social does have “sensitive content” banners that appear before some posts that read “This content may not be suitable for all audiences,” but content that threatens violence remains on the platform.
  • For example, in response to a post from former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn, an account called “TheVictim24” posted last week, “It’s be nice if you people weren’t just okay with the military and police stage a rebellion and framing civilians. Zero people trust the police and if the military comes in, we’ll kill them. Someone admit this nation needs to be nuked because it’s satanic.”
  • That post wasn’t labeled.

Workaround: Truth Social could offer Android users a version of its app via its website or other channels — an option not available to developers on Apple’s iOS mobile operating system — but the company has not done so.

The big picture: Truth Social’s technological challenges come amid broader financial and legal disputes.

  • The company owes one of its tech vendors over $1.6 million, Axios has confirmed, and the blank-check company looking to merge with it and take it public is under investigation by federal securities regulators.

*  *  *

As Axios concludes, since Truth Social isn’t available on Android OS, around 44% of US smartphone users can’t download it.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 08/30/2022 – 12:05

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Alabama Cops Arrested Man Watering His Neighbor’s Plants Because He Wouldn’t Give Them His Full Name


Screenshots from body camera footage showing police arresting Michael Jennings

On May 22, Michael Jennings was watering his neighbor’s flowers. Minutes later, he had been arrested on obstruction charges, all because he refused to provide his full name to police officers. According to Al.com, Jennings, a pastor at a church in Sylacauga, Alabama, had agreed to water his neighbor’s plants while they were out of town. Sometime during the afternoon of May 22, one of Jennings’s neighbors called the police, citing concerns about a suspicious person and vehicle at a nearby house.

According to recently released body camera footage, Childersburg police approached the house and asked Jennings to identify himself. While Jennings told the officers his name was “Pastor Jennings,” he told them that he did not have to disclose his full name, saying “I’m not gonna give you no I.D., I ain’t did nothing wrong . . . I used to be a police officer.”

“Come on man, don’t do this to me. There’s a suspicious person in the yard, and if you’re not gonna identify yourself—” said an unnamed police officer, before being interrupted by Jennings, who said, “I don’t have to identify myself.”

As shown in the video, Jennings became frustrated with the officers. “Lock me up and see what happens, I want you to,” he told the officers, before walking away from them.

Jennings was then handcuffed by the officers. Shortly after he was handcuffed, one of Jennings’ neighbors approached the officers and identified herself as the woman who placed the original call to the police. The woman told officers that she had misidentified Jennings, and reported him as a suspicious person. “They are friends, and they went out of town today, so he may be watering their flowers, it’d be completely normal,” she said. “This is probably my fault.”

“The way y’all handled this situation was totally wrong,” said Jennings, still in handcuffs. “You racially profiled . . . I told ya’ll I was here watering the flowers . . . I had the water hose in my hand.”

According to CBS42, Jennings was booked into the Talladega County Jail, though he was later released and the charges dropped. However, Jennings and his lawyers are still not satisfied. Childersburg police officers “may think all they have to do is drop the charges and this all goes away,” Bethaney Embry Jones, one of Jennings’ attorneys told Al.com. “This was a crime, not a mistake. I would hope that the Childersburg Police Department would understand the difference.”

So would Jennings’ arrest hold up in court? “Every step of the way, there’s room for both sides to argue that this very close case cuts their way. It’s going to be a very close call in my estimation,” Clark Neily, senior vice president for Legal Studies at the Cato Institute, tells Reason. Neily notes that while Alabama statute requires individuals to provide their name, address, and an explanation of their actions to officers when there is a reasonable suspicion of wrongdoing, Jennings arguably provided officers with all three. Further, this state law only applies to public property, which a private home is not.

“Once you were told by the neighbor that she had messed up, the only possible reason you now have to continue holding him under arrest is that he violated that law requiring people to identify themselves, right? But you have two problems,” says Neily. “Problem one, this was not in public, this was on private property, so arguably the statute doesn’t apply and you actually didn’t have the authority. And second, he did identify himself.”

While it is unclear whether the officers who arrested Jennings broke the law, there is good reason to believe that they acted outside the bounds of a state statute allowing officers to demand individuals identify themselves under some circumstances. Whether a judge would agree remains to be seen.

“Last I checked, watering roses ain’t no crime,” Jennings told CBS42

The post Alabama Cops Arrested Man Watering His Neighbor's Plants Because He Wouldn't Give Them His Full Name appeared first on Reason.com.

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Powell And Negative Gamma Leave Market Exposed

Powell And Negative Gamma Leave Market Exposed

By Simon White, Bloomberg markets live commentator and reporter

Higher short-term real rates and falling gamma leave stocks exposed in the short term.

The jury was definitively in and Powell did what was broadly expected, renewing the Fed’s hawkish vows. This leaves equities exposed in the next few weeks as they continue to be heavily tied to short-term rates. Specifically, the real peak Fed Funds has a very tight relationship with the S&P. Real peak Fed Funds has risen lately, including 21 bps on Friday with Powell’s speech –- but the S&P has lagged the move so far, suggesting more equity downside is in the cards.

However, positioning in equities overall remains very short, increasing the risk of a squeeze. Sentiment has been improving, while internals such as the advance-decline line, the net number of stocks making new 52-week highs and the number of stocks trading above their 200-day moving average are constructive.

Nevertheless, we remain in a bear market, meaning there is a wide range of potential outcomes. Adding to the instability, net gamma is now negative, meaning a greater potential of more short-term follow-through on the downside.

As the market falls, short expiry, close-to-the-money calls see their delta rapidly fall to zero, while puts struck further out of the money that dealers are short of see their delta rise. This means dealers switch to having to sell after the market has moved lower, increasing the risk that downward moves are reinforced.

Volatility should thus remain supported. The VIX stood out as an attractive Jackson Hole hedge, and it has since risen, outperforming the move expected based on the fall in the S&P.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 08/30/2022 – 11:40

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Taiwan Fired “Defensive Shots” At China Drones For First Time

Taiwan Fired “Defensive Shots” At China Drones For First Time

Taiwan’s defense ministry has issued new details of the live fire incident with a Chinese drone which happened near Taiwan-controlled islands reportedly in the Dadan, Erdan and Shiyu areas.

Crucially, Taipei is confirming live ammunition was used, and not merely warning flares as in a prior July confrontation: “As Taiwan’s military had warned on Sunday (Aug. 28), troops fired live ammunition on a Chinese drone that failed to heed warnings as it flew over an outer island on Tuesday,” local reports cite defense officials as saying.

Dadan Island, just off the Chinese mainland

Taiwan regional media described the drone cluster as including “three batches of three civilian drones” – and that according to protocol warning flares were first fired. Taiwanese media has detailed the encounter as follows:

However, because the drone continued to circle over the island, soldiers fired “defensive shots” at the drone to drive it away. The UAV then flew away in the direction of Xiamen at 6 p.m. and the KDC will “continue to maintain vigilance and closely monitor the situation,” the statement read.

This action is consistent with a warning issued by the KDC on Sunday that it would shoot down intruding Chinese drones that fail to heed warnings.

On Monday (Aug. 29), the KDC stated that it would carry out a four-step process in dealing with the drones that would include “firing signal flares, reporting the intrusion, driving the drone out, and shooting it down.”

Meanwhile Chinese state pundits are busy issuing their own stark warnings…

The headline sparked anxiety across markets as fears remain of a broader ‘reunification’ war in the wake of Nancy Pelosi’s ultra provocative Taipei visit on Aug.2.

US equity markets erased all their overnight gains. Bond yields initially tumbled on a safe-haven bid, but bounced back after the US macro data.

Meanwhile, China has been sending warships through the Taiwan Strait, also in breach of the median line on a daily basis through August.

Also on Tuesday, the Biden administration is said to be preparing an unprecedented $1.1 billion arms package for Taiwan, which Congress is expected to approve – but which is likely to take months or at least weeks to go through.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 08/30/2022 – 11:25

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/PmT7Yo8 Tyler Durden