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Wednesday, December 6, 2023

UNLV shooting live updates: Las Vegas police respond to active shooter situation; suspect dies

 

What to know about the UNLV shooting

  • The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department is responding to reports of an active shooter on the campus of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
  • The shooting occurred near Beam Hall.
  • There appears to be multiple victims, police said in a post on X.
  • Police urged everyone to avoid the area.
3m ago / 3:42 PM EST

Las Vegas police say the suspect has died

The suspect involved in UNLV campus shooting has been located and is dead, Las Vegas police said in a post on X.

6m ago / 3:38 PM EST

Suspect contained in UNLV shooting, police say

The suspect in the active shooting on UNLV's campus has been contained, Las Vegas police said on X.

Police said to avoid the area and that the investigation is ongoing.

13m ago / 3:31 PM EST

More shots fired at UNLV Student Union

University police are responding to additional shots fired at the UNLV Student Union, the school said on X.

19m ago / 3:26 PM EST

There appears to be multiple victims, Las Vegas police say

The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department said the active shooter was near Beam Hall and that there appears to be multiple victims at this time.

24m ago / 3:21 PM EST

Las Vegas police responding to active shooter

University police are responding to an active shooter on the campus of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

The school posted on X that there is a confirmed active shooter on campus. Police were responding after getting reports of shots fired.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/live-blog/unlv-shooting-las-vegas-live-updates-rcna128402

Washington State’s Mental-Health Experiment

 Western State Hospital, a mammoth, 714-bed public mental institution, is one of Washington State’s two public hospitals for the mentally ill. Built in 1871 in rural Pierce County, Western State has long been controversial, with disability-rights groups claiming that its role in the state’s mental-health system is too large and local law enforcement claiming that it isn’t large enough. Today, as the state struggles to manage a backlog of mentally ill defendants in its county jails, the historic facility finds itself under fire again, with hospital staff and law enforcement accusing administrators of inappropriately discharging dangerous patients.

The latest controversy began in August, when 22 counties sued Washington for failing to evaluate mentally ill defendants in county jails. According to the counties, this failure crowded local jails with incompetent defendants, waiting for admission to Western State. Responding to disability-rights groups, the counties contended, the state had unfortunately “removed beds from and closed wards at Western State Hospital, long before replacement bed space was available, resulting in a decrease in capacity to perform its statutory obligations, including its obligation to . . . evaluate civil conversion patients.”

Then, in September, former Western State Hospital psychiatrist Laetitia Geoffroy-Dallery resigned, accusing the hospital of making discharge decisions that “endanger[ed] our patients, their families, and the community at large.” Mary Robnett, the Pierce County prosecutor whose county hosts Western State, seconded this assessment in a statement to local media. Robnett also claimed that Western’s administrators had failed to give her and other law-enforcement officers the statutorily required 30 days’ notice before discharging formerly incompetent defendants. In other words, maintained Robnett, some mentally ill defendants who were admitted to Western and restored to competence, and who were thus eligible for prosecution, were discharged without notice, potentially evading prosecution altogether.

The hospital’s inability to manage its admissions and discharge policies stems from Governor Jay Inslee’s mental-health reforms. Inslee proposed phasing down the state’s civil services—inpatient beds for people with serious mental illness who are not involved in the criminal-justice system—at its two public mental hospitals and focusing both campuses’ resources on criminal forensic patients.

Under the plan, approved by the state legislature in 2019, Western and Eastern State Hospital, the public hospital in Medical Lake, would serve almost exclusively patients involved in the criminal-justice system. The hospitals would restore incompetent defendants, house on a long-term basis those adjudicated not guilty by reason of insanity, and, according to the state department of social and health services (DSHS), treat only those adult civil patients with “the most challenging high-risk behaviors.” The other adult civil patients currently housed at Western and Eastern State would either be discharged into the community or placed in one of six new “community-based” hospitals—16- to 48-bed residential-treatment facilities located throughout Washington.

The new law represented a middle path between two competing visions of mental-health reform: that of disability-rights groups, committed to deinstitutionalization and the eventual closure of Western State; and that of local law enforcement, which wants psychiatric patients out of its jails and placed at the state hospitals. By increasing forensic beds and potentially reducing civil beds, Inslee sought to satisfy both camps.

Disability-rights advocates had pressured Washington for decades to wind down its civil footprint at the hospitals. Kimberly Mosolf, an attorney with Disability Rights Washington, whose organization sued the state over its large inpatient population in 2014, claimed that Washington was “violating people’s constitutional rights” by not discharging them from the hospital “in a timely fashion.” The potential decline in civil-bed space at large “institutional” facilities is consistent with disability-rights groups’ vision, which, as the New York–based civil libertarian Bruce Ennis once described it, is “nothing less than the abolition of involuntary hospitalization.”

Inslee’s desire to expand forensic services, on the other hand, may have been motivated by law enforcement’s complaints about the state’s forensic mental-health system. Western State’s administrators announced the construction of a drab, 350-bed forensic unit on the hospital grounds, built in a brutalist style that contrasts with the facility’s regal brick exteriors. The state claims that the new unit “will augment, not replace, the majority of the existing WSH structures,” and likely will expand the forensic services offered on grounds.

In practice, the rebalancing of civil and forensic beds has made it almost impossible to manage the state’s caseload, especially those “civil conversion” patients who committed crimes but are eligible for long-term civil commitment. The problems may multiply in the future, as the plan to treat most of the state’s civil patients in smaller settings, away from the rural campuses at Eastern and Western State Hospitals, takes effect. As other states have discovered, moving noncriminal patients out of state hospitals can, over time, result in a portion of those discharged patients deteriorating to the point of criminal behavior.

Washington has thus far acquired only two of Inslee’s six proposed civil units. But even if the state builds all of these “community-based” units, it may wind up with fewer total civil beds, meaning that some patients at Eastern and Western State today may not have beds in the future. DSHS told City Journal that Eastern and Western State house 192 and 287 civil patients, respectively. Most of the proposed “community-based” units will house 48 patients or fewer.

More fundamentally, even the most lavishly funded community-based mental-health programs have historically failed to treat people with serious and persistent mental illness. The economies of scale and physical plants available at large state hospitals like Eastern and Western State make long-term treatment possible for people whose conditions cannot be managed in a less restrictive environment; a small building downtown is not an ideal place to house a treatment-resistant schizophrenic for 180 days. The past 60 years of American mental-health care has proved conclusively that smaller, community-based settings, focused on prompt discharge at the expense of long-term stabilization, are inadequate for some people with serious, persistent mental illness. Sometimes, taking an unstable person out of his community for treatment is precisely what he and his community need.

Other states have already taken Washington’s intended path. New York cut more than 300 beds at its state hospitals between 2016 and 2021. In the past few years, the state has seen several high-profile incidents involving people with untreated psychosis variously injuring and killing strangers. Some of the perpetrators had been in and out of mental hospitals for decades. New York has learned that discharging civil patients to community-based hospitals, or out of institutions entirely, can lead some to decompensate—a few, like accused New York subway murderer Martial Simon, to the point of violence. Left untreated, civil patients can become forensic patients.

By downsizing the civil footprint and expanding forensic services at its state hospitals, Washington is running a similar experiment. Whether the results prove as tragic as New York’s remains to be seen. For some patients, better outcomes will likely follow. But others will almost certainly find themselves back on Steliacoom Boulevard, bound again for the century-old doors of Western State Hospital—this time, in orange jumpsuits.

Now Defending the Homeland: Wokespeak Grants to Arts Groups

 Founded in 2020 in the aftermath of the George Floyd protests, the Black Legacy Project describes itself as “a musical celebration of black history to advance racial solidarity, equity and belonging.” It brings together artists of all backgrounds “to record present day interpretations of songs central to the Black American experience and compose originals relevant to the pressing calls for change of our time.”

A similar arts group, Nu Art Education Inc., an offshoot of the NorCal School for the Arts, says it is “following the theory of change that utilizing theater arts” can be “a tool to teach and practice conflict resolution in the classroom.”

DHS
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas at a TVTP "grantee symposium" in November 2022.

While both outfits share a mission of using the arts to inspire social change, they have something else in common: counterterrorism. Or rather, both have received taxpayer grants through the Department of Homeland Security’s “Targeted Violence and Terrorism Prevention” (TVTP) program. Together, the two groups have received more than $1.4 million since the Biden administration doubled the program’s annual budget, to some $20 million per year.

Grants to arts cooperatives and educational initiatives strike some as odd for a department charged with protecting the United States -- including its southern border, now viewed by many as virtually open to illegal migrants. Against that backdrop, FBI Director Christopher Wray recently warned Congress of the heightened threat of terror in the U.S. at a time of wars raging on two continents with America involved on the sidelines.

On Tuesday, Wray told the Senate Judiciary Committee the "threat matrix" is "blinking red lights everywhere."

"The threat level has gone to a whole other level since Oct. 7," he said.

Fox News/YouTube
Andrew Arthur, Center for Immigration Studies: “It’s kind of hard to see how all that is going to help stop terrorism."

Given such concerns, Andrew Arthur of the Center for Immigration Studies, a critic of Biden policies, said the DHS grants are misplaced. "It’s kind of hard to see how all that is going to help stop terrorism,” he told RealClearInvestigations.

DHS declined to discuss the TVTP program, or answer questions about how competitive the grant process is or who makes final decisions on where the money will go.

The program has its roots in the Obama administration under the concept of “countering violent extremism” and has drawn criticism ever since from both left and right – albeit for different reasons. During the Trump administration, the leftist Brennan Center for Justice faulted the “anti-Muslim and xenophobic rhetoric and policies” in such programs, which “also target refugees, asylum seekers, and Black Lives Matter activists.”

The Brennan Center said “the reality is that these programs, which are based on junk science, have proven to be ineffective, discriminatory and divisive.”

That was then. Now, having doubled the program’s budget, the Biden administration is using the money to advance parts of its agenda not directly related to terrorism. Increasingly the DHS grants, like much larger ones at other departments, are part of the administration’s “whole of government” effort to promote “diversity, equity and inclusion” and quash what it considers misinformation.

Black Legacy Project

While proclaiming that that the grants are designed for “local communities across the country to develop targeted violence and terrorism prevention programming in their communities,” the Department of Homeland Security also stresses its focus on DEI.

“Ensuring equity is a key priority of the TVTP Grant Program and 41 percent of this year’s grant recipients are devoted to underserved populations, compared to 25 percent last year,” the DHS website says, noting grants have gone to historically black colleges and universities, seven “Minority Serving Institutions (MSI),” a Native American group and another serving the LGBTQIA+ community.

The program uses keywords to note favored characteristics of approved grants. Ones used often include “raising societal awareness,” “bystander training,” and what advocates call “media literacy.”

“Media literacy involves the critical evaluation of media messages, as well as their authors and audiences, and it includes the ability to differentiate between original, evidence-based reporting and commentary or propaganda,” said Seth Ashley, a communications professor at Boise State University, which has received nearly $400,000.

But such anodyne-sounding definitions come at a time when censorship by government in tandem with news outlets and social media has stirred controversy and court challenges. Experts have sprouted in the fields of “misinformation” or “disinformation,” and their power to control what is published and shared on various tech platforms has grown.

Boise State University
Seth Ashley: “Doing your own research is fine, but it’s no substitute for the meticulous work of experts."

One of the recipients of DHS funding for media literacy is the University of Rhode Island, which received $700,000 in TVTP grants in 2022. The money has helped pay for “Courageous Rhode Island” initiatives that involve online seminars and work with K-12 schools.

In one of Courageous R.I.’s starter seminars, URI professors Renee Hobbs and Pam Steager discuss warning signs for media consumers. The flags include sources that “attract audience attention by finding and promoting unexplained phenomena or coincidence that seems at odds with official narratives.”

In another, the professors warn of “contrarian ‘experts’ [that] increase visibility and status by exploiting journalistic norms of balance and neutrality to present a controversy that counters widely-accepted beliefs.”

The COVID-19 pandemic is often used as a case study in media literacy. Ashley co-authored an op-ed in the Idaho Capital Sun in 2021 warning of COVID “disinformation.” But the co-authors offered no concrete examples of what would earn that classification, and many of the doubts health officials and Big Tech worked diligently to erase then – on masks, lockdowns, the origin of the virus – have been vindicated by subsequent reporting and revelations.

“Doing your own research is fine, but it’s no substitute for the meticulous work of experts who are doing their best to learn everything they can about Covid-19 and are updating us when their knowledge grows and as situations change,” Ashley wrote.

Asked by RealClearInvestigations about the sort of collaboration between government actors and Big Tech companies exposed in the “Twitter Files” and other revelations, Ashley replied, “I don’t think recent events have changed the need to be vigilant about where or how we get information, but I do think the digital age has made that more difficult than ever.”

Some conservative critics see in the nebulous language of media literacy a clear agenda against outlets that could counter the message of Washington Democrats. They see the government using taxpayer money to get around First Amendment protections by paying third party groups to censor views it doesn’t approve.

Goldwater Institute/YouTube
Nicole Solas, "media literacy" critic: “They are promoting their own propaganda by saying someone or something else is propaganda."

“They are very careful in the words they use, and you rarely see them offer concrete examples of ‘misinformation,’” said Dan Schneider, vice president of the conservative Media Research Center. “But what the project is trying to do is get into the schools and divert people from conservative outlets and direct them to liberal outlets.”

Schneider has looked closely at the work being done in Rhode Island, as well as by other media watchdogs such as NewsGuard.

One of Courageous R.I.’s goals is combating “fear and hate that leads to violence,” but one participant in the group’s online workshops said that is a tenuous thesis. Nicole Solas, a Rhode Island parent who became a prominent critic of what she regarded as a leftward drift in public education there, took some Courageous R.I. courses online and clashed with Hobbs. Like critics at the Brennan Center, Solas said she saw no proof that “words in media cause people to commit violent acts,” and she said it was clear Courageous R.I. had conservative news in its crosshairs.

“They themselves are media – they write blogs,” Solas said. “They are promoting their own propaganda by saying someone or something else is propaganda so it’s not a real ‘conversation.’”

Hobbs disputed that characterization, insisting “listening” is a key component of the “Courageous Conversations” that Courageous R.I. seeks.

The “media literacy” advanced by TVTP grants also warns against outlets that do not perform “public interest journalism.” Ashley defines that as “journalism that aims to serve citizens by addressing issues of social importance and holding powerful actors accountable. It can be produced by anyone but usually comes from organizations with the resources and expertise necessary to gather and synthesize large amounts of information.”

Using preferred groups to set such parameters has been a hallmark of government grants like TVTP since the Obama administration, according to several people familiar with the process. The grants are not confined to DHS – the State Department, FEMA, the EPA, and other branches have similar programs – and critics agree the overall goal of such policies is to corral speech into preferred spaces and proscribe it from countering preferred narratives.

“They are using targeted funding to promote a buy-in to toeing the government line,” said Brian Cavanaugh, a former White House national security staffer in the Trump and Biden administrations who is now a senior vice president of American Global Strategies. “And here these have nothing to do with DHS’s core mission.”

Some of the grants appear to go to traditional organizations engaged in fighting terrorist threats. But most of the $70 million in grants issued since 2020 – $60 million of which flowed since Biden took office – reflect the administration’s approach to DEI initiatives more than any clear attempt to tackle potential threats, according to Mike Howell, director of the Oversight Program at the conservative Heritage Foundation. Howell said he has tracked federal “countering violent extremism” measures for almost a decade.

“This goes back to Obama where we saw the government shower these credentialed liberal outfits with a crap-ton of money,” he said. “Trump redirected it a bit, but not enough to kill it in its roots, so now it has cropped back up and gone full-woke under Biden.”

These include $878,000 to Michigan State University social workers who are running a project with the Drama Club on Rikers Island; nearly $1 million on esports (electronic sports or gaming); more than $500,000 to the Sexual Minority Youth Assistance League; and three grants to Columbia University Teachers’ College totaling more than $2.3 million, including classwork “to slow the manifestation of domestic radicalization and extremism that contributed to the Jan. 6 insurrection on the grounds of the U.S. Capitol.”

“The project will involve researching, developing and presenting stories,” one Teachers’ College grant says. “It also will include curating and co-creating educator stories of adapting to challenging situations, supporting the storytelling of educators who bring unifying narratives from their local communities, and leading the sharing of these stories.”

Teachers’ College officials did not respond to RCI’s request for comment.

In earlier iterations, much of the grant money would fund pet congressional projects, budget log-rolling that helped keep it popular on a bipartisan basis. But under Biden, Howell said, the grants have been folded into the “whole of society” philosophy that animates the administration’s efforts.

“These grants fund the left but it’s not harmless – they use these grants to predicate their own initiatives,” he said. “What they are doing is outsourcing research to groups they like, who reach the conclusions they want, and then the administration claims it is ‘acting on the belief of experts.’ This growth and maturation of outsourcing is one of the less noticed trends that got us into the mess we’re in now.”

By James Varney, RealClearInvestigations

https://www.realclearinvestigations.com/articles/2023/12/06/now_defending_the_homeland_wokespeak_grants_to_arts_groups_996025.html

Disgraceful Testimony From Harvard, Penn, MIT Presidents

The presidents of , , and were all asked the following question under oath at today’s congressional hearing on antisemitism: Does calling for the genocide of Jews violate [your university’s] code of conduct or rules regarding bullying or harassment? The answers they gave reflect the profound moral bankruptcy of Presidents Gay, Magill and Kornbluth. Representative was so shocked with the answers that she asked each of them the same question over and over again, and they gave the same answers over and over again. In short, they said: It ‘depends on the context’ and ‘whether the speech turns into conduct,’ that is, actually killing Jews. This could be the most extraordinary testimony ever elicited in the Congress, certainly on the topic of genocide, which to remind us all is: “the deliberate killing of a large number of people from a particular nation or ethnic group with the aim of destroying that nation or group” The presidents’ answers reflect the profound educational, moral and ethical failures that pervade certain of our elite educational institutions due in large part to their failed leadership. Don’t take my word for it. You must watch the following three minutes. By the end, you will be where I am. They must all resign in disgrace. If a CEO of one of our companies gave a similar answer, he or she would be toast within the hour. Why has antisemitism exploded on campus and around the world? Because of leaders like Presidents Gay, Magill and Kornbluth who believe genocide depends on the context. To think that these are the leaders of Ivy League institutions that are charged with the responsibility to educate our best and brightest. On the bright side, our congressional leaders deserve accolades for showing tremendous leadership and moral clarity in their statements, by the questions they asked, and the respectfulness with which they conducted the hearing. It was a masterclass of how our government and democracy should operate. If you have time, please watch the entire hearing. Throughout the hearing, the three behaved like hostile witnesses, exhibiting a profound disdain for the Congress with their smiles and smirks, and their outright refusal to answer basic questions with a yes or no answer.
3:21

Bill Ackman,
CEO Pershing Square, Co-trustee

2seventy bio Reiterates Commitment to Maximizing Shareholder Value

 2seventy bio, Inc. (NASDAQ: TSVT), (“2seventy” or “the Company”), a leading immuno-oncology cell therapy company, today issued the following statement reiterating its commitment to maximizing shareholder value:

As we indicated last month, the Board has commenced a process to consider all options to maximize value. This process is well underway and our team is committed to working as thoughtfully and quickly as possible to ensure our important therapies become available to patients in need, we drive value for our shareholders and best support our employees.

https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20231206910473/en/