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Trump told Russia has dirt on him Document includes allegations that Moscow obtained salacious info on presidentelect
David Jackson and Kevin Johnson USA TODAY
During a special briefing Friday, leaders of the intelligence community gave Donald Trump a synopsis of unsubstantiated and salacious allegations that Russian operatives obtained potentially compromising personal and financial information about the president-elect, a U.S. official confirmed Tuesday. The official, who is not authorized to comment publicly, said the document was provided along with the intelligence community’s assessment that Russia had
meddled in the U.S. election. The separate document represented a summary of a 35-page compilation of documents prepared by a former foreign intelligence officer. The officer, the official said, is known to U.S. intelligence, but the contents of the document have not been verified. Trump responded Tuesday evening by Twitter, calling the report “FAKE NEWS - A TOTAL POLITICAL WITCH HUNT!” The decision to present the information to Trump, first reported by CNN, was made after it was determined that the document — in many forms — had been circulated widely to political opposition researchers, U.S. lawmakers,
journalists and others. CNN said it reviewed the compilation of the memos, which originated as research commissioned by antiTrump Republicans and later by Democrats. Buzzfeed posted the intelligence documents. The summary document includes allegations that information was exchanged over a long period of time between the Russian government and Trump representatives. The news came on a day when the Senate Intelligence Committee conducted hearings into the alleged Russian hacking of the Democratic National Committee and emails provided to the website WikiLeaks. Chairman Rich-
“I think the American people have a right to know this.” Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore.
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President Barack Obama speaks during his farewell address Tuesday at McCormick Place in Chicago.
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election night 2016, his message has been aimed at rallying downcast supporters and defending a legacy that his successor has vowed to dismantle. In his speech, he recited a litany of his proudest achievements, among them the economic recovery from the Great Recession, the diplomatic outreach to Cuba, the nuclear accord with Iran, the death of Osama bin Laden, extension of health care coverage to another 20 million people and more. “That’s what we did,” he said to cheers. “That’s what you did. You were the change. Because of you, by almost every mea-
Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions, President-elect Donald Trump’s attorney general nominee, rejected on Tuesday the “false caricature” of his views on racial tolerance. Facing a barrage of challenges to his record on civil rights enforcement, he asserted that the Justice Department under his direction would “never falter USA TODAY in its obligaSen. Jeff tion to proSessions tect the rights of every American, particularly those who are most vulnerable.’’ The 70-year-old former federal prosecutor and state attorney general arrived to a marble-encrusted hearing room packed with protesters. Before he could take his seat at the witness table, protesters wearing Ku Klux Klan costumes erupted with shouts of “white power” before they were ushered out, the first clash of
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WASHINGTON PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS, AP
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Moving in Last year, South Dakota had the USA’s highest percentage of people moving into a state. Relocation percentages:
68% in 32% out TOMORROW Moving out SOURCE 2016 United Van Lines National Movers Study of 48 contiguous U.S. states MICHAEL B. SMITH AND JANET LOEHRKE, USA TODAY
ard Burr, R-N.C., said the panel will conduct an independent review of the intelligence community’s report about Russian interference to help Trump. FBI Director James Comey declined to answer questions from Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., about whether the FBI is investigating possible contacts between the Trump campaign and the Russian government. “I think the American people have a right to know this,” Wyden said. “And if there is a delay in declassifying this information and releasing it to the American people, and it doesn’t happen before Jan. 20 (Inauguration Day), I’m not sure it’s going to happen.”
OBAMA LOOKS BACK: ‘THAT’S WHAT WE DID’ Proud president says grateful goodbye to nation Susan Page @susanpage USA TODAY
It was little more than eight years ago and 3 miles away that Barack Obama embraced the promise of his presidency, addressing a jubilant crowd in Chicago’s Grant Park at a victory celebration on election night 2008. A political lifetime later, before a sea of supporters at McCormick Place on Tuesday, Obama delivered what is likely to be his final formal address to the nation. His hair was grayer, his tone more somber. Since
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People attend President Obama’s farewell address in Chicago on Tuesday. Obama tried to encourage supporters.
Federal jury sentences Dylann Roof to death White supremacist seeks new defense team as he prepares to request a new trial Tonya Maxwell and Tim Smith USA TODAY Network CHARLESTON, S . C. A federal district court jury decided Tuesday to sentence Dylann Roof to death for his June 2015 attack on a black church’s Bible study group after the panel found that life in prison offered no possibility of
redemption for the 22-year-old. Jurors took about three hours to make their decision after listening to closing arguments from prosecutors and Roof, who told the panel in a brief, disjointed statement that he continues to stand by his slaying of nine people at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church here. Roof looked down and shuffled papers as U.S. District Judge Richard
Gergel read his death vens, who continue to sentence. serve as his standby Following the decicounselors. Following the sion, Roof asked Gergel sentencing, the team sent to appoint a new defense out a brief statement. team in preparation for a “We want to express motion in which he will our sympathy to all of the ask for a new trial. The families who were so judge said he would take grievously hurt by DyAP that matter up after a lann Roof’s actions,” the formal sentencing hear- Dylann Roof statement read. “We are ing, scheduled for sorry that despite our Wednesday morning. best efforts the legal proceedings Roof, who served as his own at- have shed so little light on the torney, had been represented by reasons for this tragedy.” Roof told the the jury of 10 David Bruck and Kimberly Ste-
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women and two men that only one of them needed to vote for life for that sentence to be imposed. Gergel later instructed the panel that a hung jury would result in a sentence of life in prison rather than a mistrial. If the U.S. District Court jury had not decided on the death penalty, Roof would have faced a death-penalty trial in South Carolina’s 9th Judicial Circuit Court. Judge J.C. Nicholson on Thursday ordered that trial to be put on hold indefinitely. It was to have begun Jan. 17.
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