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Sunday, August 11, 2024

Combatting "False Narratives": DC Circuit Won't Block Speech Curb on Jan. 6 Defendant

 by Jonathan Turley,

We have previously discussed controversial sentences handed down in cases involving rioters on January 6th, including sentencing orders that, in my view, violate First Amendment rights. That included the case of Daniel Goodwyn, who pleaded guilty to a single misdemeanor count of entering and remaining in a restricted building. That crime would ordinarily not involve any jail time for a first offender.

However, Judge Reggie B. Walton  of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia decided that he would use the case to regulate what Goodwyn was reading and communicating with a chilling probation order. After the case was sent back by the D.C. Circuit, Walton doubled down on his extraordinary order. Now the D.C. Circuit has refused to hear an emergency appeal.

Judge Walton has attracted controversy and criticism over his public comments about former President Donald Trump and the other issues. He caused a stir in Washington after doing an interview with CNN in which he rebuked former President Donald Trump for his criticism of judges and their family members. Walton previously called Trump a “charlatan,”  and said that “I don’t think he cares about democracy, only power.”

Critics charged that Walton’s public statements ran afoul of Canon 3A(6) of the Code of Conduct for United States Judges, which states:

“A judge should not make public comment on the merits of a matter pending or impending in any court.”

Walton then triggered criticism over his handling of the Goodwin case.

The case involved Daniel Goodwyn, 35, of Corinth, Texas, who pleaded guilty on Jan. 31, 2023, to one misdemeanor count of entering and remaining in a restricted building or grounds without lawful authority. That is a relatively minor offense, but Walton imposed a 60-day jail sentence in June 2023 with these ongoing conditions on his online reading and speech.

Walton reportedly noted that Goodwyn spread “disinformation” during a broadcast of “Tucker Carlson Tonight” on March 14, 2023 and ordered that Mr. Goodwyn’s computer be subject to “monitoring and inspection” by a probation agent to check if he spread Jan. 6 disinformation during the term of his supervised release.

After accepting the plea to a single misdemeanor, Walton expressed scorn for Goodwyn appearing “gleeful” on Jan. 6 and his “egging on” other rioters.

He asked his defense counsel “why I should feel that he doesn’t pose a risk to our democracy?”

As a condition for supervised release, DOJ pushed the monitoring conditions and found a judge who seemed eager to impose it.

The order reflects the utter impunity shown by the Justice Department in its pursuit of January 6th defendants.  Justice Department official Michael Sherwin  proudly declared in a television interview that “our office wanted to ensure that there was shock and awe … it worked because we saw through media posts that people were afraid to come back to D.C. because they’re, like, ‘If we go there, we’re gonna get charged.’ … We wanted to take out those individuals that essentially were thumbing their noses at the public for what they did.”

Sherwin was celebrated for his pledge to use such draconian means to send a message to others in the country. (Sherwin has left the Justice Department and is now a partner at Kobre & Kim).

Walton was rebuked by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia for a surveillance order of Goodwin to detect any spreading of “disinformation” or “misinformation.”

In my new book, “The Indispensable Right: Free Speech in an Age of Rage,” I discussed concerns over the cases like Goodwyn’s and their implications for free speech. I participated in the coverage on January 6th and criticized President Trump’s speech while he was giving it. I disagreed with the legal claims made to oppose certification. However, the “shock and awe” campaign of the Justice Department, in my view, has trampled on free speech rights in cases that range from Goodwyn to the prosecutions of Trump himself.

Many of us were relieved when appellate judges (Gregory Katsas, Neomi Rao, and Bradley Garcia) rebuked Walton and held that “[t]he district court plainly erred in imposing the computer-monitoring condition without considering whether it was ‘reasonably related’ to the relevant sentencing factors and involved ‘no greater deprivation of liberty than is reasonably necessary’ to achieve the purposes behind the sentencing.”

They sent the case back but, to the surprise of few, Judge Walton proceeded to double down on the monitoring while implausibly declaring “I don’t want to chill anyone’s First Amendment rights.”

For some reason, Walton believes that barring an individual from reviewing and engaging in political speech does not “chill” his First Amendment rights.

Most of us were appalled by the riot and the underlying views of figures like Goodwyn, who is a self-proclaimed member of the Proud Boys. He was rightfully arrested and should be punished for his conduct. The question is not the legitimacy of punishment, but the scope of that punishment.

Prosecutor Brian Brady detailed how the Justice Department has in place a new system using artificial intelligence to monitor the reading and statements of citizens like Goodwyn. The Justice Department brushed aside the free speech concerns since Goodwyn remains under court supervision, even though he pleaded guilty to only a single misdemeanor.

Brady described a virtual AI driven thought program. The justification was that Goodwyn refused to abandon his extreme political views:

“Throughout the pendency of Goodwyn’s case, he has made untruthful statements regarding his conduct and the events of the day, he has used websites and social media to place targets on police officers who defended the Capitol, and he has used these platforms to publish and view extremist media. Imposing the requested [monitoring] conditions would protect the public from further dissemination of misinformation… [and] provide specific deterrence from him committing similar crimes.”

So now federal courts can use a single misdemeanor for unlawful entry in a federal building for less than 40 seconds to “protect the public from … dissemination of misinformation” on the government.

That was all Walton needed to hear. Relying on a record supplied by the Justice Department, Walton said in the hearing that Goodwyn is still engaging “in the same type of rhetoric” that fomented the Jan. 6 violence. He added that he was concerned about Goodwyn spreading “false narratives” when we are “on the heels of another election.”

Walton merely added the DOJ record to his renewed sentencing conditions.

Defense counsel then returned to the D.C. Circuit to seek an emergency stay but Judges Florence Pan and Bradley Garcia denied the motion, holding that “Appellant has not satisfied the stringent requirements for a stay pending appeal” to prevent further “false narratives.”

That drew a pointed dissent from Judge Gregory Katsas who stated:

Daniel Goodwyn pleaded guilty to one count of knowingly entering or remaining in a restricted building or grounds, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1752(a)(1). Goodwyn entered the Capitol and remained inside for a total of 36 seconds. He did not use force to enter, did not assault police officers, and neither took nor damaged any government property. When police instructed Goodwyn to leave the building, he did so.

...

On appeal, this Court vacated the condition … We further instructed the district court, if it wished to impose a new computer- monitoring condition on remand, to “explain its reasoning,” to “develop the record in support of its decision,” and to ensure that the condition complies with section 3583(d) and with the Constitution.

The district court reimposed the same condition on remand. In an oral hearing, the court said that Goodwyn had made statements on social media that “can be, it seems to me, construed as” urging a repeat of January 6, particularly “on the heels of another election.”  In its written order, the court elaborated on what it called Goodwyn’s “concerning online activity.”  This included posting exhortations to “#StopTheSteal!” and “#FightForTrump,” soliciting donations to fund his travel to Washington, posing for a livestream while inside the Capitol, confirming his presence there by text, and tweeting opinions such as: “They WANT a revolution. They’re proving our point. They don’t represent us. They hate us.” Id. at 3–4. In addressing what the court described as Goodwyn pushing “false narratives” about January 6 after-the-fact, the court, quoting from the government’s brief, led with the fact Goodwyn “sat for an interview with Tucker Carlson on Fox News Channel.” Id. at 4. Finally, in concluding that computer monitoring was reasonably related to Goodwyn’s offense, the court reasoned that monitoring would prevent Goodwyn from raising funds to support potential future crimes and would separate him “from extremist media, rehabilitating him.”

Judge Katsas stated that Goodwyn was likely to prevail on the merits and that his colleagues allowed the denial of First Amendment rights to continue in the interim.

The Walton order reflects the erosion of support for the First Amendment, even on our courts. It is reminiscent of our previous discussion of how courts have criminalized “toxic ideologies” as part of the crackdown on free speech in the United Kingdom.

Here is the D.C. Circuit order: United States v. Goodwyn

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/combatting-false-narratives-dc-circuit-refuses-block-judge-limiting-speech-jan-6th

Calling Your Tongue Your Own

 By Clarice Feldman

Very scary things are happening in the United Kingdom. Sir Mark Rowley, Met Police Commissioner, has threatened to jail U.S. citizens over online posts he deems hateful or disinformation. At the same time, the UK is openly enforcing a two-tier system of justice where antisemitic rioters, pro-jihadi and pro-open borders thugs are given free rein to terrorize citizens, and those who object are beaten and jailed. One jurist has, in fact, just sentenced someone for being a just a looker-on and even retweets of anything the UK overlords object to subjects one to arrest.

I’m not worried about Rowley’s threat because, unlike the UK, the Founders recognized that without free speech citizens have no agency in their own governance. Recognizing its importance, they made the right to free speech the very First Amendment to the Constitution. If conduct in the U.S. is not illegal, no extradition request could be honored. But it is clear that many Democrats, like their autocratic Labour counterparts in the UK, would love to muzzle us and they have put forth untenable definitions of the parameters of this right. 

In an exceptionally brilliant essay, Professor Jonathan Turley sets out why the Harris-Walz team presents the greatest threat to free speech in two centuries.  

The Biden-Harris administration has sustained an unrelenting attack on the freedom of speech, from supporting a massive censorship system (described by a federal court as an “Orwellian Ministry of Truth“) to funding blacklisting operations targeting groups and individuals with opposing views.  

President Biden made censorship a central part of his legacy, even accusing social media companies of “killing people” for failing to increase levels of censorship. Democrats in Congress pushed that agenda by demanding censorship on subjects ranging from climate change to gender identity -- even to banking policy -- in the name of combatting “disinformation.”

The administration also created offices like the Disinformation Governance Board before it was shut down after public outcry. But it quickly shifted this censorship work to other offices and groups.

As vice president, Harris has long supported these anti-free speech policies. The addition of Walz completes a perfect nightmare for free speech advocates. Walz has shown not only a shocking disregard for free speech values but an equally shocking lack of understanding of the First Amendment.

Walz went on MSNBC to support censoring disinformation and declared, “There’s no guarantee to free speech on misinformation or hate speech, and especially around our democracy.”

Ironically, this false claim, repeated by many Democrats, constitutes one of the most dangerous forms of disinformation. It is being used to convince a free people to give up some of their freedom with a “nothing to see here” pitch. 

Turley notes that other Democratic politicians like Ben Cardin and Stacey Plaskett have echoed this view, and even some dictionaries have espoused this, but as he reminds us, the Supreme Court has consistently rejected this  bizarre reading of the First Amendment,

The Supreme Court has consistently rejected the claim of Gov. Walz. For example, in the 2016 Matal v. Tam decision, the court stressed that this precise position “strikes at the heart of the First Amendment. Speech that demeans on the basis of race, ethnicity, gender, religion, age, disability, or any other similar ground is hateful; but the proudest boast of our free speech jurisprudence is that we protect the freedom to express ‘the thought that we hate.'”

Harris specifically threatened that she will hold social media platforms accountable for the hate infiltrating their platforms, because they have a responsibility to "help fight against this threat to democracy" and made a similar claim to Facebook’s owner, Mark Zuckerberg.

His is a fine exposition of how dangerous the Harris-Walz threat is to free speech, noting that in addition to censoring hate speech and misinformation that they also commit to ban “malinformation,” information ‘based on fact, but used out of context to mislead, harm and manipulate’.” As opposed to the tyrannical views of the Democrats’ present leaders, there’s the great Benjamin Franklin, 

"In those wretched countries where a man cannot call his tongue his own, he can scarce call anything his own. Whoever would overthrow the liberty of a nation must begin by subduing the freeness of speech. Without freedom of thought there can be no such thing as wisdom, and no such thing as liberty without freedom of speech which is the right of every man."

If you doubt that the Harris-Walz stated views are likely to be carried out or the extent to which they would go to muzzle those who oppose them, bear in mind the context in which they are made. Just to take one example of the Biden-Harris demonstrable overreach against those who oppose them, there’s the case of Tulsi Gabbard.

While the Biden administration placed  a military officer, former Congresswoman and presidential candidate, former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard [who, not coincidentally, demolished Harris in their presidential debate], on a watchlist, the FBI released into the U.S. on a special parole the Pakistani man who sought to plan an assassination of Donald Trump and other politicians.

According to several whistleblowers, Gabbard -- a military officer and former Hawaii congresswoman and presidential candidate -- was placed on a watchlist under Quiet Skies, a TSA surveillance program designed to focus law enforcement resources on travelers that present an elevated risk to aviation security.

Yet, while the government surveilled Gabbard, the FBI allowed Asif Raza Merchant to enter the U.S. in April with special permission known as “significant public benefit parole” even though he was flagged on a terrorism watchlist and recently traveled to Iran, according to government documents reviewed and reported on by Just the News.

House Oversight Committee member Glenn Grothman, a Wisconsin Republican, said that FBI’s tactic to let Merchant enter the country to gather evidence on him created a “dangerous situation.”

The performance of the U.S. Secret Service, which in Butler melted away like bodyguards in a crime novel so that the assassin had an easy shot at the person they were hired to protect, grows more suspicious by the day. Stephen Bryen argues there is evidence supporting the hypothesis that there was a second shooter at Butler, that the Service’s account of events is unpersuasive, and independent forensic experts must be called in to handle the investigation.  

The Secret Service cannot conduct an objective investigation.  That is abundantly clear from the testimony of the former Secret Service director, Kimberly A. Cheatle, and her "Acting" replacement, Ronald L. Rowe, Jr.  Both were willing to admit that mistakes were made, but both also try to convince the public that they got the shooter and we can all rest easy.

Adding the FBI into the mix also won't work because the FBI is extremely anti-Trump and spends their time at the behest of their Justice Department overseers trying to incarcerate Trump for phantom crimes.  The raid on Mar-a-Lago, is a great example of how FBI thuggery was used against the former President.  

The FBI lives in fear Trump will win the presidential election and clean house in the agency.  

The Justice Department also has set up a team of investigators, but anything from the DOJ is not credible and should be dismissed out of hand.

There is a growing sense that Trump was set up at Butler. It is hard to believe that the Secret Service simply made "mistakes."  There are whistleblower reports, still to be run down and confirmed, that Secret Service agents were told to stand down and not take action against a threat that was known hours before the shooting happened.

The audio evidence and the location of victims also raises serious issues.

The audio records nine shots, eight that seems to originate in the same location and one shot that is the Secret Service sniper that killed the shooter, Thomas Crooks.

The first eight shots consist of three shots coming fairly slow and then a slight pause and the remaining five shots more rapidly.

Based on the audio and video evidence it is clear that it was the first shot that nearly killed Mr. Trump.  It may be that the next two shots were part of the series aimed at Trump.  We are missing information on where those shots ended up, but maybe they hit low down as Trump got down after his ear was hit.  The remaining burst of five shots could have been the ones that killed Corey Comperatore and wounded David Dutch, 57, of New Kensington, Pennsylvania, and James Copenhaver, 74, of Moon Township, Pennsylvania, They were seated in the stands to Mr. Trump's right. [snip] There has been a lot of speculation about the possibility of a second shooter.  There also is confusion on the presence of 8 shell casings on the roof near the deceased shooter Thomas Crooks.  We don't have reliable information to back up the Secret Service claim that they found 8 shell casings.  A video of the agents on the roof shows that officers initially found five shell casings on the roof near the dead shooter.  

We now have a fragmentary video that appears to show gun flashes coming from a window in the same building as the shooter, who was on the rooftop.  The source of the video is not stated, but it seems genuine.  This obviously needs follow up and should be taken very seriously.

Well, Stephen is a pleasant guy and if Police Commissioner Rowley succeeds in extraditing and imprisoning the two of us in the UK, he’d be a nice companion with whom to exchange tapped messages through the water pipes.

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2024/08/calling_your_tongue_your_own.html 

'Harris, Walz face pressure from left over Israel-Hamas war'

 Just days after forming their ticket, Vice President Harris and her running mate Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz are already grappling with pressure from members of the pro-Palestinian movement, whose disaffected voters pose a potential threat to the duo in key states that make up the “blue wall.” 

Harris was confronted by protesters twice this past week during rallies in Michigan and Arizona over the country’s handling of the war in Gaza. And though several leaders of the Uncommitted National Movement expressed a hopeful tone about the new ticket after briefly engaging with Harris in Detroit, other groups, like the Abandon Biden Campaign, see little daylight between her and President Biden on the issue. 

The mixed signals from the party’s left flank raise questions over whether Harris will be able to bring those voters back into the fold. 

“It opens the door and creates a possibility,” said James Zogby, a Democratic National Committee (DNC) member and the co-founder of the Arab American Institute, regarding whether the new ticket could draw protest voters back into the fold. 

“We’ll see in the coming weeks,” he added.

That optimistic note was echoed by others, including some who belonged to the movement attempting to pressure Biden by rallying voters to back an “uncommitted” option in this year’s primaries.

“There was quite a shift when Biden dropped out,” Laura Keating, an uncommitted delegate to the DNC from New Jersey, told The Hill. “My phone started beeping off the hook from the Signal app when that came out. There was hope.” 

The Democratic Party rapidly formed a new ticket just weeks after Biden withdrew from the race, with Harris choosing Walz as her running mate this week. Democrats largely cheered the running mate selection, as some members on the left had raised concerns about Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro (D), who is Jewish, and his views on the Israel-Hamas war. 

Harris has called the situation in Gaza “devastating” and has noted that “Israel has a right to defend itself, but how it does so matters.” At the same time, her national security adviser Phil Gordon wrote on the social platform X that the vice president does not support an arms embargo, and it remains too early to tell how Harris’s policy will shift, if at all, on the conflict compared to Biden’s. 

“Since October 7, the Vice President has prioritized engaging with Arab, Muslim, and Palestinian community members and others regarding the war in Gaza. The Vice President has reaffirmed that her campaign will continue to engage with those communities,” a Harris campaign spokesperson told The Hill in a statement.  

“The Vice President has been clear: she will always work to ensure Israel is able to defend itself against Iran and Iran-backed terrorist groups,” the spokesperson continued.  

“The Vice President is focused on securing the ceasefire and hostage deal currently on the table. As she has said, it is time for this war to end in a way where: Israel is secure, hostages are released, the suffering of Palestinian civilians ends, and the Palestinian people can realize their right to dignity, freedom, and self-determination.” 

Walz told MPR News after more than 45,000 primary voters cast protest votes against Biden that those voters were “civically engaged” and acknowledged that “these folks are asking for a change in course.” Walz has also said Israel has a right to defend itself, and some pro-Israel groups have backed the Democratic running mate. 

Some members of the pro-Palestinian movement have signaled they see a possible opening to make inroads with the new Democratic ticket on the issue of the war, which was triggered when Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7, killing about 1,200 people and taking more than 250 hostages.  

The subsequent war between Israel and Hamas has led to the death of tens of thousands of Palestinians, wide-scale destruction in the Gaza Strip and a humanitarian crisis.  

And Biden has faced growing calls to raise pressure on Israel over its role in the death and destruction and hold back supplies of U.S. weapons.

“There is a window for Harris to adopt a stance that turns a page away from Biden’s current policy,” Layla Elabed, one of the leaders of the Uncommitted National Movement, told The Hill. 

Elabed and Abbas Alawieh, founders of the Uncommitted National Movement, briefly engaged with Harris at a photo line while the vice president was in Detroit. They expressed hope about a potential meeting to talk about an arms embargo.  

“We know she doesn’t support an arms embargo because it is not administration policy,” Elabed told The Hill. “That is why it is important for us to meet with her and for her to hear our voices.”

Dearborn, Mich., Mayor Abdullah Hammoud (D), another prominent voice on the matter, similarly suggested that “the door is cracked open, that there’s now opportunity to have dialogue” in a recent interview with PBS News Hour. He said he hoped to see “tough policy” from her in addition to her rhetoric. 

Organizers are also seeing a shift in support from young voters.  

According to Neha Dewan, co-director of South Asians for Harris, her organization’s youth team was having a “difficult time” getting young voters engaged because of apathy tied to the war in Gaza, calling the change “remarkable.”  

That’s changed since Harris took over as nominee.  

“There’s definitely been a shift because the biggest concern brought to us from youth organizers was that they didn’t like [the] Biden administration’s policy on the war in Gaza,” said Bejay Chakrabarty, a youth organizer with South Asians for Harris. “More people are coming in now.”  

“She’s not a wimp, she’s not a fool. She needs and she has the young people of America. She’s got to keep them, and next time they bomb a hospital, she may lose them if she doesn’t say something,” Keating told The Hill. 

Harris rankled some Democrats when she responded to protesters who interrupted her speech in Detroit by saying, “You know what, if you want Donald Trump to win, then say that. Otherwise, I’m speaking.” 

But members of the party credited her for the way she approached them in Phoenix, when she said, “We’re here to fight for our democracy, which includes respecting the voices that I think we are hearing from” and noted “the president and I are working around the clock every day to get that cease-fire deal done and bring the hostages home. 

“I appreciate the VP learning the lesson of Wednesday in Michigan and giving the *right* response in Arizona tonight, to pro-Palestine protesters. (Now she just has to make it happen and stop selling arms!),” wrote former MSNBC host Mehdi Hasan on X.

But other members of the pro-Palestinian movement believe little has changed between the two campaigns.  

“We consider her part and parcel of the administration,” said Hatem Abudayyeh, a spokesperson for the Coalition to March on the DNC and the national chair of the U.S. Palestinian Community Network. “We consider the policies of unequivocal diplomatic and political and military and financial support for Israel to be the policies of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris.”

Abudayyeh said there wasn’t going to be a “change” in how they were going to proceed ahead of the Democratic National Committee.  

“We’re going to mobilize those tens of thousands for the protest on the DNC,” he said. 

When Walz was chosen as Harris’s running mate, the Abandon Biden Campaign also cautioned “against falling for bare minimum platitudes.” The group, too, criticized Harris for the way she handled the protesters in Detroit. 

“I think the chances of compromise with a Biden-Harris ticket are the same as they are with a Harris-Walz ticket,” said Hudhayfah Ahmad, a spokesperson and head of media for the Abandon Biden Campaign, who noted the campaign who would be using “Abandon Harris” phrasing. “People are just under the assumption it’ll be easier under Harris-Walz with no evidence whatsoever.”

With less than 100 days until the November election and just weeks until the convention in Chicago, where multiple groups are expected to protest, the Harris-Walz ticket has a short runway to turn things around with disaffected Democrats.  

That’s particularly true in states like Michigan, home to large Arab and Muslim American communities, who cast a not-insignificant portion of votes against Biden. The mood at Democrats’ convention could offer some of the first clues on whether protest voters might warm up to the new ticket. 

“Everybody says there’s just three months. That’s a hell of a long time,” said Zogby.

“We’ll see what they do. But there is the possibility here of making real signs of change.”

Georgia state Rep. Ruwa Romman (D), who is Palestinian and has met with Harris about the war in Gaza, suggested that “there was a lot of cautious optimism” when Harris became the nominee but that “a lot of that optimism was eroded” when she confronted protesters at the Detroit rally. After Harris’s approach to protesters in Arizona, she said she “was glad to see the immediate adjustment.” 

“In that moment, I think there was an opportunity to show empathy and talk instead of saying you want Trump to win,” Romman said about the Detroit rally. 

“We have a historic candidate who is clearly listening,” she said of Harris in Arizona. “This immediate adjustment shows she is receptive to feedback. But the reality is we cannot fully bask in this historic moment.” 

https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/4821284-kamala-harris-tim-walz-israel-gaza-palestinians/

Hawaiian Electric raises going concern risk over Maui wildfire settlement financing

 Hawaiian Electric raised a going concern risk in its quarterly earnings report on Friday after it disclosed that it doesn't currently have a financing plan in place yet for the $1.99 billion Maui wildfire settlement it reached earlier this month.

The utility company and its parent, Hawaiian Electric Industries, said they're working closely with financial advisers to develop a financing plan for their share of a broader $4 billion settlement reached with victims of the deadly Maui wildfires that killed more than 100 people a year ago on Aug. 8.

"HEI and Hawaiian Electric do not yet have a financing plan in place to address the future payment of the $1.71 billion Maui windstorm and wildfire settlement accrued in the second quarter of 2024," the company wrote in a release.

"Until a definitive financing plan is developed and is probable of being implemented, HEI and Hawaiian Electric will disclose a 'going concern' risk in their financial statements. This risk is the result of estimated payments under the settlement agreement," the utility explained.


Maui wildfire Lahaina

The 2023 Maui wildfires devastated the historic town of Lahaina, killing 102 people. (Mario Tama / Getty Images)

The company said it intends to develop a financing plan that funds settlement payments through a mix of debt, common equity, equity-linked securities or other potential options. 

However, it notes "there can be no assurance at this time as to the availability or terms of any such financing."

TickerSecurityLastChangeChange %
HEHAWAIIAN ELECTRIC INDUSTRIES INC.15.53-0.45-2.82%

During the company's earnings call on Friday, the company told investors that the "settlement was just agreed to a week ago, and we don't expect payments to begin until mid-2025, at the earliest. So we believe that gives us sufficient time to develop and finalize that plan."

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HEI announced that the utility dividend to the parent company has been suspended in connection with its going concern statement and the company believes there is "sufficient liquidity runway as parties work toward finalizing the agreement in principle to settle tort claims related to the Maui wildfires."


Maui wildfire memorial

People gather at a public hillside memorial to Lahaina wildfire victims on Aug. 7, 2024, in Lahaina, Hawaii. (Mario Tama / Getty Images)

Hawaiian Electric's total contribution to the settlement amounts to $1.99 billion pre-tax and includes the $75 million the company previously contributed to the One Ohana Initiative. The settlement is to be paid in four installments.

Scott Seu, president and CEO of HEI, said in the company's latest earnings release that the settlement "would allow all parties to come together on a path forward." 

Seu added that he and the board "are confident that this settlement represents the best outcome for HEI, as it provides a clear line of sight toward resolution of the wildfire-related tort litigation and increased certainty for our company's path ahead."

Maui Wildfire Disaster

An aerial view of a Lahaina, Maui, neighborhood that was devastated by the August 2023 wildfires. (Justin Sullivan / Getty Images)


Settlement payments are expected to begin in mid-2025 following judicial review and approval, the utility company said previously. Hawaiian Electric and other defendants in the settlement didn't admit to any legal liability under the terms of the agreement.

Hawaiian Electric did not immediately respond to a request for comment made outside of usual business hours.

https://www.foxbusiness.com/economy/hawaiian-electric-raises-going-concern-risk-over-maui-wildfire-settlement-financing

"Didn't Sound Like Joe Biden": Pelosi Questions Dropout Letter As Biden Fingers Her In Ouster

In his first interview since he was very clearly ousted from the 2024 race, President Biden specifically mentioned former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) - telling CBS News Sunday Morning that Democrats in the House and Senate thought he would drag down the entire party's chances of reelection.

"A number of my Democratic colleagues in the House and Senate thought that I was going to hurt them in the races. And I was concerned if I stayed in the race, that would be the topic — you’d be interviewing me about why did Nancy Pelosi say [something] … and I thought it’d be a real distraction," said Biden.

"When I ran the first time, I thought of myself as being a transition president. I can’t even say how old I am — it’s hard for me to get out of my mouth," he continued, adding that it was a combination of those factors, along with the priority of "maintaining this democracy," that steered 'his' decision, the NY Post reports.

Pelosi, meanwhile, is acting very strange about the whole thing - suggesting that Biden's letter announcing his withdrawal from the race wasn't written by him. (duh)

As modernity.news reported last week, it was widely reported that Pelosi told Biden that he could either step down "the easy way" or be removed "the hard way." Biden is apparently furious with her, as mentioned by interviewer Lesley Stahl in this clip.

She didn’t need to call anyone.

It's fairly obvious what happened - and now Pelosi is overcompensating with absurd suggestions, like adding Biden to Mount Rushmore

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/it-didnt-sound-joe-biden-pelosi-questions-dropout-letter-biden-fingers-her-ouster