Who’s at Fault? 18 Million Government Workers Exposed and No One to Blame

Fox News has learned that the number of victims of a pair of massive cyberattacks on U.S. government personnel files has soared to at least 18 million — but the head of the hacked Office of Personnel Management refuses to blame anyone in her agency.

“I don’t believe anyone is personally responsible,” OPM Director Katherine Archuleta said Tuesday.

The statement came during tense Capitol Hill testimony on a breach that seems to be growing wider by the day. Archuleta, who faced tough questioning at a House hearing last week, likewise faced angry senators on Tuesday before a Senate appropriations subcommittee.

Grilled on whether anyone takes responsibility, Archuleta said only the perpetrators should be blamed — she said current failures result from decades of meager investment in security systems, but said changes are being made and in fact helped detect the latest breaches.

Still, the assurances are unlikely to ease concerns on Capitol Hill and among those who may have been affected. The web has expanded to include not just current and former government workers, but also those who may have applied for a government job. (Read more from “Who’s at Fault? 18 Million Government Workers Exposed and No One to Blame” HERE)

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Report: Sweeping New Hostage Policy Due to ‘Idiot’ at State Dept, WILL Harm Americans

The federal government will stop threatening families with criminal prosecution for attempting to pay ransom for loved ones taken hostage by terrorist groups, President Barack Obama will announce Wednesday in an executive order clarifying and changing the way the government handles hostage situations. The sweeping new policy is due to “an idiot” at the Department of State, an official close to the review process told The Daily Caller News Foundation– and “it’s going to encourage more kidnappings of U.S. service members and U.S. diplomats stationed abroad, and it’s going to make Americans targets.”

The changes are the result of an extensive review of federal policy regarding hostages abroad. Obama ordered the review in December after frustrated family members of current and former hostages complained about the process, and in light of changing national security realities, such as the rise of ISIS, since the policy was written in 2000.

The official told TheDCNF that the Justice Department has not wanted to issue blanket immunity because there are times when a duress defense would not hold up in court, such as if the a family crowd-sourced for ransom money. That, the officials said, is because providing material support to terrorists is a blatant violation of U.S. law. Other agencies also opposed the change.

It’s long been an unofficial policy to turn the other way if a family tries to pay a ransom, but making that policy official could prove problematic if non-family members try to get financially involved or if family members try to solicit the public for the money they need to pay a ransom.

“This is really media-driven,” the official told TheDCNF. “The White House wants this issue to go away.” (Read more from “Report: Sweeping New Hostage Policy Due to ‘Idiot’ at State Dept, WILL Harm Americans” HERE)

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Time to Checkmate Federal Courts on Same-Sex Marriage and More

At the close of the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia in 1787, a woman allegedly approached Benjamin Franklin and asked, “Well, Doctor, what have we got – a republic or a monarchy?” The sage 81-year-old Franklin replied, “A republic, if you can keep it.”

Wordsmith, entrepreneur, inventor, diplomat, and polymath, Franklin understood that a piece of paper, however well conceived and drafted, would never be sufficient to secure ordered liberty. Over the long haul, the prize of a republic of free citizens would hinge on constant effort.

The new U.S. Constitution was a grand legal document, but its function would be to provide the tools for generations of human exertion. Without continuing the sacrifices made by Franklin and the founders into the future, the American experiment in liberty, which captured the imagination of the world, would not endure.

Can we today, utilizing the tools of the Constitution, keep alive the self-governing federal republic we have received? With the U.S. Supreme Court entertaining, as if a serious legal issue, whether ordinary state laws on marriage were outlawed 147 years ago when the post-Civil War Fourteenth Amendment was adopted, now would be a good time to reexamine and deploy such tools. An obvious starting point is the control of federal court jurisdiction which the Constitution entrusts to Congress. (For a discussion of several other constitutional means to check judicial usurpation, see Edwin Vieira, How to Dethrone the Imperial Judiciary (2004).)

No court can decide any case without jurisdiction, the authority to render a binding judgment in a disputed matter. Unlike most state courts which possess general jurisdiction, federal courts have only limited jurisdiction to hear cases as authorized by the U.S. Constitution and laws thereunder. They are courts of limited jurisdiction.

Article III of the Constitution provides in part:

Section 1. The judicial Power of the United States, shall be vested in one supreme Court, and in such inferior Courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain and establish. The Judges, both of the supreme and inferior Courts, shall hold their Offices during good Behaviour, and shall, at stated Times, receive for their Services, a Compensation, which shall not be diminished during their Continuance in Office.

Section 2. The judicial Power shall extend to all Cases, in Law and Equity, arising under this Constitution, the Laws of the United States, and Treaties made, or which shall be made, under their Authority;—to all Cases affecting Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls;—to all Cases of admiralty and maritime Jurisdiction;—to Controversies to which the United States shall be a Party;—to Controversies between two or more States;— . . . —between Citizens of different States,—between Citizens of the same State claiming Lands under Grants of different States, and between a State, or the Citizens thereof, and foreign States, Citizens or Subjects.

In all Cases affecting Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, and those in which a State shall be Party, the supreme Court shall have original Jurisdiction. In all the other Cases before mentioned, the supreme Court shall have appellate Jurisdiction, both as to Law and Fact, with such Exceptions, and under such Regulations as the Congress shall make. [Emphasis added.]

The above language was the result of multiple compromises by the Constitutional Convention. Chief among them was the so-called Madisonian Compromise. Some delegates opposed creation of a federal court system below the U.S. Supreme Court, leaving state courts to decide federal issues first, with possible appeal to the Supreme Court. James Madison and others thought creation of a lower federal court system was best, and persuaded the Convention to defer the issue to later congressional decision.

Thus Congress was given authority over the existence of lower federal courts including details of their jurisdiction. Congress has used this power to alter lower court jurisdiction in a variety of ways. One of the most prominent was the Norris-LaGuardia Act of 1932 which restricted injunctions in labor disputes – a statute later upheld by the Supreme Court. (See “Congressional Authority over the Federal Courts,” Congressional Research Service (May 16, 2005).)

As for the U.S. Supreme Court, the Constitution, not Congress, sets its original jurisdiction, the matters initially filed in and heard by it. These cases are rare and comprise a fraction of the high court’s workload. The bulk of its deliberations are appeals from lower courts, its appellate jurisdiction. As to this jurisdiction, Congress is given a large hand: “[T]he supreme Court shall have appellate Jurisdiction, both as to Law and Fact, with such Exceptions, and under such Regulations as the Congress shall make.” (See Ralph A. Rossum, “Congress, the Constitution, and the Appellate Jurisdiction of the Supreme Court,” 24 Wm. & Mary L. Rev. 385 (1983).)

After arguing for the general soundness of the Constitution’s allocation of judicial power for the new federal system, Alexander Hamilton, in Federalist No. 80 (1788), explains the checking power entrusted to Congress over court jurisdiction against any “mischief” that might arise:

From this review of the particular powers of the federal judiciary, as marked out in the Constitution, it appears that they are all conformable to the principles which ought to have governed the structure of that department, and which were necessary to the perfection of the system. If some partial inconveniences should appear to be connected with the incorporation of any of them into the plan, it ought to be recollected that the national legislature will have ample authority to make such EXCEPTIONS, and to prescribe such regulations as will be calculated to obviate or remove these inconveniences. The possibility of particular mischiefs can never be viewed, by a well-informed mind, as a solid objection to a general principle, which is calculated to avoid general mischiefs and to obtain general advantages. [Emphasis added.]

(In Federalist Nos. 79 and 81 Hamilton discussed the ultimate check provided Congress over the entire federal judiciary, the power to impeach and remove judges.)

In the modern era, various efforts have been made to use congressional control over court jurisdiction to check sweeping liberal decisions of the Supreme Court. The subjects addressed have included Court rulings which sanctioned large-scale busing as a remedy to public school segregation, banned traditional group prayer in public schools, and overturned longstanding state criminal laws restricting abortion. Other efforts to curb jurisdiction have involved religious liberty questions, recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance, display of the Ten Commandments, and state marriage laws reflecting the ancient understanding that the nature of marriage involves two parties of the opposite sex rather than a homosexual pair.

Recently some members of Congress have focused on the need to restrain federal judges from imposing their will over state marriage laws – to protect the ancient understanding that the nature of marriage involves two parties of the opposite sex rather than a homosexual pair. Congressman Steve King (R-IA) has led a handful of his colleagues in seeking such legislation in the current Congress. See Rep. King’s bill entitled “Restrain the Judges on Marriage Act of 2015,” H.R. 1968, 114th Congress, 1st Session (2015). Most Republican congressmen appear to be overly timid and have been unwilling to join this effort. Only 10 members have signed on as co-sponsors: Brian Babin (R-TX), Jeff Duncan (R-SC), Louie Gohmert (R-TX), Doug LaMalfa (R-CA), Thomas Massie (R-KY), Steven Palazzo (R-MS), Glenn Thompson (R-PA), Tim Walberg (R-MI), Ted Yoho (R-FL), and Walter Jones (R-NC). Are these the only Republican House members who have the courage of their convictions on marriage?

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) introduced a companion bill to Mr. King’s bill in the Senate, S.1080, “Protect Marriage from the Courts Act of 2015.” He has zero co-sponsors at this point. Are there no other Republican Senators who support traditional marriage?

In the 1970s and 1980s, Sen. Jesse Helms (R-NC) had some success in the Senate with court limitation amendments on school prayer. But he too faced opposition from some Republican colleagues.

In April 1979, with a 58-member Democratic majority, Helms won approval of court limitation twice (with votes of 47 to 37 and 51 to 40), only to see the legislation die after parliamentary maneuvers and inaction in the Democratic House. In August 1982, when Republicans held 53-member majority in the Senate, Helms offered a similar court limitation amendment, which by a 47-53 vote survived a motion to table (or kill). Lacking 60 votes for cloture, though, the legislation did not clear the Senate. Helms tried again in September 1985. By then not only did he face liberal Democratic opponents, but key Republicans, including Senators John Danforth (R-MO), Pete Domenici (R-NM), Barry Goldwater (R-AZ), Orrin Hatch (R-UT), and Richard Lugar (R-IN), joined them to table the amendment by vote of 62 to 36.

Congressman John Hostettler (R-IN) led a winning effort in the House in 2004, when Republicans held a slim majority. His Marriage Protection Act removed all jurisdiction from lower federal courts and appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court over the Defense of Marriage Act. DOMA, enacted in 1996 by veto-proof majorities of both houses of Congress, allowed states not to recognize same-sex marriages from other states (sec. 2) and defined marriage for federal purposes as only between a man and a woman (sec. 3). After the House Judiciary Committee, chaired by Congressman Jim Sensenbrenner (R-WI), cleared Hostettler’s bill, it passed the full House in July 2004, on a vote of 233 to 194. Despite Republican control, the Senate failed to take action. The bill had been referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee, chaired by Sen. Orrin Hatch, who had earlier opposed the Helms legislation limiting court jurisdiction over school prayer. If Hostettler’s legislation had been enacted in 2004, the case of United States v. Windsor, 133 Sup. Ct. 2675 (2013), striking down sec. 3 of DOMA as unconstitutional by 5-to-4 vote, would likely never have been decided.

In Federalist No. 78 (1788) Alexander Hamilton reckoned the judiciary the “least dangerous” and “weakest” branch of the federal government. Unlike the executive or legislative branches, the judiciary, he noted, lacked the sword and the purse. He thought that while “individual oppression” may proceed from courts, danger to the “general liberty of the people” exceeded the judicial power.

Brilliant though he was, Hamilton failed to see what might happen when most of the checks and balances applicable to the judiciary under the Constitution were allowed to lie dormant for half a century and more. He overlooked the dangers that an extra-constitutional ethos might grow up, encouraged by the Court’s own extravagant jurisprudence, holding that the constitutional text and the Court’s interpretations are functionally equivalent, and thus irreformable except by the Court itself.

Moreover, it is certain that the original and later constitutional framers never envisioned Supreme Court justices growing so arrogant as to engage in wholesale usurpations against customary state legislative powers. They surely never imagined that federal courts would turn the killing of an unborn son or daughter into a constitutionally protected right. But see Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973). The framers did not dream that such courts would transform what was “the crime against nature,” homosexual sodomy, into protected behavior. But see Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S. 558 (2003). And nothing the framers included in the Constitution contemplates a right for the oxymoronic concept of same-sex marriage, yet lower courts have forced this unnatural relationship upon the states and upended millennia of civilizing law.

Despite what they may not have foreseen, Ben Franklin and other constitutional drafters did leave us the tools of self-government, more than ample to stop judicial hubris and other legal chicanery. Thus we have the means to preserve our republic and its historic values. Do we have the will?

__________________________________

Thomas J. Ashcraft is a lawyer in Charlotte, North Carolina. He served on the legislative staff of U.S. Senator Jesse Helms in the 1980s and as U.S. Attorney for the Western District of North Carolina, 1987-93. Email him at [email protected].

This article is part of a series on “Building Resistance to Same-Sex Marriage.” Please support this important work with a contribution to the U.S. Justice Foundation. Permission is freely granted to publish, copy, reproduce, distribute, or excerpt from this article for any purpose.

10 Years After This City Seized a Woman’s Land: An Empty Lot

It’s been a decade since the city of New London, Conn. forcibly took the Fort Trumbull neighborhood for what became private-development, and now all that remains is an empty lot.

In 1998, the area surrounding the waterfront neighborhood saw an increased surge of economic development. This prompted city officials to decide the Fort Trumbull could be better used for other purposes.

According to the Institute for Justice, the plan was to take the land from the residents and give it to the New London Development Corporation (NLDC), a private body. Eminent domain allows the government to take land for the purposes of the public good so long as property owners are offered just compensation.

Residents, however, did not like the idea. In an effort to protect their homes, Susette Kelo and her neighbors took their city to court. After years of fighting, Kelo v. City of New London went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. To the dismay of the residents, however, the court ruled in 2005 in favor of New London.

“When I first started this battle, it was about me and this little pink house,” Kelo told The Daily Signal. “But it grew into something much bigger than that. It turned into a nationwide battle to save the Fort Trumbull neighborhood.” (Read more from “10 Years After This City Seized a Woman’s Land: An Empty Lot” HERE)

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Study: Electric Cars Worse for Environment Than Gas Powered Cars

A study published by the nonpartisan National Bureau of Economic Research found that on a per-mile basis electric cars were on average worse for the environment when compared to their gas-run counterparts.

The study concluded that on average per mile, electric cars were half a cent worse for the environment than gas-powered vehicles.

The environmental effects of the different vehicles depended largely on where they were driven. In urban areas, electric vehicles performed better, while the opposite occurred once the cars left the city. In Grand Forks, North Dakota, electric vehicles were 3 cents worse for the environment per mile, while in Los Angeles, they performed 3.3 cents better per mile.

The authors of the study believe that this is an important distinction, especially when taking into account the federal government pays a $7,500 subsidy for every electric car purchased.

“Because electric vehicles, on average, generate greater environmental externalities than gasoline vehicles, the current federal policy has greater deadweight loss than the no-subsidy policy,” wrote the authors in their study. (Read more from “Study: Electric Cars Worse for Environment Than Gas Powered Cars” HERE)

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Is Europe dead?

Has the post-war dream of a grand union of democratic states been shattered beyond repair? North American observers might be forgiven for thinking so, given the unprecedented tidal wave of public recriminations, personal insults, and dire predictions spewing forth from the European Union’s panicky and divided leaders.

The principal cause is the imminent climax to the crisis over Greece’s undeclared, de facto bankruptcy. The country is €323 billion ($352.7 billion) in debt — more than 175% of its GDP. It cannot pay what it owes to other European countries and the European Central Bank. Its next big loan repayment, of €1.6bn to the International Monetary Fund, falls due at the end of this month, and may be missed.

The left-wing Syriza government, led by Alexis Tsipras, has confirmed Greece will run out of money by June 30 unless creditors release an additional €7.2 billion in bail-out funds. Yannis Stournaras, Greece’s central bank governor, warned that failure to reach a deal would “mark the beginning of a painful course that would lead initially to a Greek default and ultimately to the country’s exit from the euro area and — most likely — from the European Union.”

If Greece is expelled or otherwise forced to drop out of the eurozone — the group of 19 countries which have adopted the euro as their common currency — the consequences could be catastrophic and far-reaching. For Greeks, it could trigger bank collapses, emergency controls on capital flight, non-payment of salaries, and broad social and economic chaos. For the EU, it could spell the end for the euro if market confidence fails and other severely indebted states decide they, too, can’t or won’t pay up. (Read more from “Is Europe Dead?” HERE)

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Obama: Americans Have Distorted Impression of Muslims

Speaking at the annual White House Iftar dinner on Monday night, President Barack Obama explained the unfair stereotypes that Muslim Americans have to deal with in the United States and called on others to support their community.

The Iftar dinner is to honor the Muslim holiday of Ramadan, which marks the time when Muslims believe that the Koran was shown to the prophet Muhammad for the first time. The holiday, which began last week, goes on for a month. During the time, Muslims fast during the day in remembrance of their leader.

In his remarks, the President spoke about the “distorted impression” many Americans have of Muslims.

“Here in America, many people personally don’t know someone who is Muslim,” he said. “They mostly hear about Muslims in the news – and that can obviously lead to a very distorted impression.”

He also said that the dinner “is also a reminder of the freedoms that bind us together as Americans, including the freedom of religion – that inviolable right to practice our faiths freely,” USA Today reported. (Read more from “Obama: Americans Have Distorted Impression of Muslims” HERE)

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Mike Huckabee on Charleston: God Already Solved Racism [+video]

In a discussion with Fox News’ Ed Henry, [Mike] Huckabee was criticized for flip-flopping on the Confederate flag issue.

“You say voters want a leader, somebody who will stand up,” Henry noted. “A few days ago, I saw you asked right here on Fox about the Confederate flag issue down in South Carolina and you basically punted, and said it’s a state issue.”

“Is that leadership?” asked Henry.

“I didn’t punt at all,” Huckabee said. “I think we’ve missed the real point in this. When I’m asked that question as a presidential candidate, what I’m being baited for is, is South Carolina a racist state?”

“And so what I said was, Ed, as a frequent visitor to South Carolina, I look at this objectively,” he continued. “You’ve got a female governor who is of Indian descent, you have the only elected African-American U.S. senator in the South from a state of 4.8 million people, elected largely by people who are mostly white. That’s not racism.” (Read more from “Mike Huckabee on Charleston: God Already Solved Racism” HERE)

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Google Accused of Abusive Conduct in Privacy App Case

An award-winning company founded by former Google engineers is taking legal action against the search engine giant over claims it has engaged in a “pattern of abusive behavior” and is violating privacy rights on a “massive scale.”

Disconnect, a U.S. firm that designs privacy-enhancing technology, has filed a complaint with European antitrust regulators after its Android app was banned from the Google Play Store. The app was designed to protect smartphone users from invisible tracking and malware distributed through online advertisements.

The complaint was submitted earlier this month, but the full allegations were not made public at the time. The Intercept has obtained a copy of the 104-page complaint, which attacks Google over its claimed commitment to privacy and accuses the tech titan of trying to stop people from using the Disconnect app because it poses an “existential threat” to its revenue sources.

Google’s business, the complaint claims, “consists almost entirely of gathering data about the preferences, locations, and behavior of ordinary people and monetizing that data through the sale of targeted advertisements on the Internet.” Because of this, it alleges, Google is “using the full weight of its market power to deny users control over tracking, particularly mobile tracking.”

When you visit a website, usually unbeknown to you, other websites and services try to connect to your device in the background to collect data about your browsing habits. The Disconnect app allows users to view and block these invisible network connections, which the company says “permit intrusions into the personal privacy of users by facilitating tracking and the collection of personal information” and “expose users to risks associated with malware and other forms of cybercrime.” However, some of these same invisible connections are used to generate advertising revenue, an issue that appears to be at the root of Google’s decision to crack down on Disconnect. (Read more from “Google Accused of Abusive Conduct in Privacy App Case” HERE)

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ISIS Crucifies, Publicly Displays Bodies of Two Boys Accused of Eating During Holy Month of Ramadan

The Islamic State group has crucified and killed two children in Syria for eating during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, during which Muslims are required to fast in obedience to Allah.

The boys, who were both younger than 18, were killed by the militants and later displayed with placards hung around their necks revealing their “crime” was committed “with no religious justification.” The horrific incident occured in the town of Mayadin, Deir Ezzor province, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights revealed on Monday . . .

Ramadan, which literally means “scorching” in Arabic, is a time when devout Muslims abstain from food, drink, and other physical needs during the daylight hours to focus on their spiritual health and seek forgiveness for past sins . . .

Under the brutal rule of ISIS, which regularly carries out public beheadings, stonings and crucifixions those accused of crimes, the punishments for disobeying religious laws are exceedingly harsh.

In February, militants living in Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city, severely disfigured the faces of fifteen Iraqi women by pouring acid on them as a form of punishment after the women were caught without their faces being fully covered by a niqab, a hijab which covers the entire face, except for slits for eyes. (Read more from “ISIS Crucifies, Publicly Displays Bodies of Two Boys Accused of Eating During Holy Month of Ramadan” HERE)

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