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Saturday, January 18, 2025

Vallejo, California residents beg Newsom for help with surging crime as LA burns

 As south California burns, northern Californians are grappling with a surging crime that has residents in one small city fearing for the “safety of their community.”

The once-quiet city of Vallejo, about 30 miles outside of San Francisco, landed a spot on the FBI’s nationwide watchlist for small cities thanks to its expanding crime rate.

Fed-up residents have reignited a petition initially started nearly a year ago, which demands Gov. Gavin Newsom deploy state and county officers “to assist Vallejo with its spiraling crime problem.”

The small city of Vallejo suffered at least 25 murders in 2024, according to the most recent crime data and local reporting.MediaNews Group via Getty Images
The petition has garnered nearly 4,000 signatures.Change.org
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“As a resident of Vallejo, CA, I am deeply concerned about the safety of my community,” wrote Paula Conley, the petition starter.

“Our city has been grappling with escalating crime rates due to severe understaffing in our local police department. We deserve a clean and safe city where we can live without fear.”

Nearly 4,000 others agreed, with resident Sharon grieving what she said was once a city she “was proud to live in.”

“I’m always tensed, afraid and always worried and my safety and those that come visit. I have been here 39 years and the [deterioration] of this once beautiful City is so disheartening. WE NEED HELP, WE NEED LEADERSHIP, WE WANT OUR CITY BACK!” she wrote.

Residents are demanding the Gov. Gavin Newsom deploy state and county officers “to assist Vallejo with its spiraling crime problem.”AP

Vallejo has grappled with a sordid police history in the last decade — including two high-profile fatal police shootings — but crime data shows that violent crime there exploded in 2024.

The city of just 120,000 suffered a shocking 23 murders between January and November 2024, according to police data — with residents saying the numbers surged yet again in the last two months.

Among the most grisly crimes, city public workers discovered a human limb sticking out from bags of construction debris on Christmas Eve, Open Vallejo reported. A week later on New Year’s Eve, a shooting left another person dead.

There was also 44 rapes in the last year — marking a whopping 26% increase from the same time frame in 2023.

There was also a dramatic 26% surge in rapes throughout the city in 2024.Vallejo Police Department/Facebook

The city also grappled with 12 fatal traffic incidents, 86 sexual assaults, 503 aggravated assaults, 1,101 auto burglary/theft cases, 200 shootings and 352 domestic violence cases in 2024.

Residents theorized that an understaffed city police department was to blame, despite the agency adding several new members to its ranks in the last year.

The city appointed its interim police chief as the permanent department head at the start of the month after what officials called a “robust national search.”

Jason Ta inherited a department under state oversight since 2020 — shortly after a city cop fatally shot 20-year-old Willie McCoy in the drive-thru of a Taco Bell, a murder that was ruled the result of officer misconduct.

Whether Newson and the state of California can meet Vallejo’s demands for beefed-up security is unknown.

Over 7,500 firefighters, National Guard and emergency responders from across the state have been sent to Los Angeles to fight the wildfires that have been burning for more than a week.

The deadly fires killed 27 people and destroyed more than 11,000 structures after the raging infernos burned through over 40,000 acres since Jan. 7.

https://nypost.com/2025/01/18/us-news/vallejo-california-residents-beg-newsom-for-help-with-surging-crime-as-la-burns/

Biden insisted he didn’t sign executive order just weeks after doing so, Speaker Johnson reveals

 Outgoing President Biden insisted in a meeting with Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson he never issued an executive order to freeze new liquid natural gas export permits — despite doing less than a month prior, the Louisiana pol revealed. 

Johnson told the Free Press’ Bari Weiss that he didn’t believe Biden was lying — the then 81-year-old leader was simply so addled that he “genuinely didn’t know what he had signed.”

The troubling encounter happened in the Oval Office in early 2024, when the two met to discuss the latest aid package for Ukraine.

Johnson said that he did not believe that Biden was lying, rather that he did not remember what he signed.Getty Images

Afterwards, Johnson asked Biden why he had inked an executive order pausing new permits for American liquid natural gas export to European allies — a crucial issue for his constituents in the Bayou State, which in 2023, handled 61% of the nation’s LNG exports, according to the US Energy Information Administration.

“Why would you do that? Cause you understand we just talked about Ukraine, you understand you are fueling Vladimir Putin’s war machine, because they gotta get their gas from him,” Johnson said he told Biden.

Biden was stunned, Johnson said.

“I didn’t do that,” the president said, according to Johnson.

“Sir, you paused it, I know. I have the export terminals in my state. I talked to those people in my state, I’ve talked to those people this morning, this is doing massive damage to our economy, national security,” Johnson said he told the commander-in-chief.

Biden insisted to Johnson that he never issued an executive order to freeze new liquid natural gas export permits.REUTERS

Biden continued to deny that he froze the exports — and then remembered he signed the executive order, which he said was simply to study the effects of the fuel. 

“I walked out of that meeting with fear and loathing because I thought, ‘We are in serious trouble—who is running the country?’” Johnson said.

“Like, I don’t know who put the paper in front of him, but he didn’t know,” he said.

The Wall Street Journal previously reported on Biden’s meeting with Johnson in late February, citing anonymous sources at the time. 

The encounter between Johnson and Biden happened in early 2024.Getty Images

bombshell December report revealed White House aides had been covering up the 82-year-old president’s mental decline since the very beginning of his term. 

In January 2021, staffers had already put into place plans to his in-person interactions. They also rearranged his daily schedules whenever Biden seemed tired or had made gaffes in public.  

Biden himself admitted in a USA Today interview he wasn’t sure if he would’ve had the “vigor” for another term had he won re-election, although he didn’t clarify what this meant about his current mental capacities.   

A December report revealed that White House aides had been covering up Biden’s mental decline.Pool/ABACA/Shutterstock

The lame duck president dropped out of the 2024 race following a disastrous debate performance against now-President-elect Donald Trump, where he gave garbled answers to questions, repeatedly froze, and even lost his train of thought. 

He dropped soon after and endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris, who was trounced by Trump in November’s presidential race. 

The White House didn’t respond to a request for comment. 

https://nypost.com/2025/01/18/us-news/president-biden-insisted-he-didnt-sign-executive-order-just-weeks-after-doing-so-speaker-mike-johnson/

3 states get green light to sue FDA over mifepristone access

 Idaho, Missouri and Kansas have been granted permission to file a lawsuit aimed at restricting access to the abortion medication mifepristone, The Hill reported Jan. 16. 

The decision comes months after the Supreme Court dismissed a similar challenge to the drug's accessibility. The lawsuit, initially brought by a group of anti-abortion activists and doctors, was dismissed in 2024. 

The court ruled that the plaintiffs lacked standing to challenge the FDA's regulatory actions on mifepristone, as they failed to demonstrate personal harm from its distribution. However, U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk on Jan. 16 ruled that Idaho, Missouri and Kansas can intervene and file the complaint.

The three states argue that the FDA's approval of mifepristone for use up to 10 weeks of pregnancy, along with its availability via telemedicine and mail, has contributed to what they view as a public health risk. 

The Justice Department previously sought to have the case dismissed, contending that the states lack legal standing to file the case in Texas. However, Mr. Kacsmaryk, who previously ruled in 2023 against the FDA and called for mifepristone's removal from the market, disagreed with the Justice Department's argument. 

https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/pharmacy/3-states-get-green-light-to-sue-fda-over-mifepristone-access.html