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January 6 latest: The House select committee investigating the January 6 insurrection announced its first public hearing will take place on June 9. The committee promised “previously unseen material” will be presented during the primetime hearing. And on Friday, former Trump trade adviser Peter Navarro was indicted on two counts of contempt of Congress for refusing to comply with a subpoena from the committee. Sussmann acquitted: A jury in Washington, D.C., acquitted lawyer Michael Sussmann on a single charge of lying to the FBI, dealing a blow to the three-year investigation by special counsel John Durham into the Trump-Russia investigation. The jury forewoman, who did not give her name, told reporters outside the courthouse that "I think we could have spent our time more wisely." Michigan governor primary: Five Republican candidates for governor of Michigan have been blocked from the state's primary ballot after signatures the candidates submitted included alleged forgeries. The candidates have said they were unaware of any problems with their signatures, and most are pursuing legal avenues to get on the ballot. Progressives and school boards: There's been a swell of conservative activity around school policies and running for school boards in recent years. Now, progressives are hoping to have their own source of organization to counter that enthusiasm — and win races. Paying White House interns: The White House announced that for the first time in history, its interns will be paid. Participating interns will be paid $750 per week starting this fall. |
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The Shot: Investigating deaths at 1 federal prison |
Federal prisoners said to be the most dangerous are sent to the Special Management Unit at a penitentiary in Thomson, Ill. Bobby Everson went to Thomson in 2021. He was transferred there after having been written up for "threatening bodily harm" and "assault without serious injury," though prison records don't provide details, according to an investigation by NPR's Joseph Shapiro and The Marshall Project's Christie Thompson. In letters to his family after the transfer, Everson wrote about the conditions at Thomson. He wrote about near constant lockdown in a small cell with a cellmate and about hard restraints that caused scars on his wrists, ankles and abdomen. He also mentioned fighting with his new cellmate. Seventeen days later, Everson, 36, was found dead in his cell. It was a homicide caused by "blunt trauma" with an object, according to prison records. Federal prosecutors have yet to file charges against anyone in connection to his death, which is still under investigation. Officials claimed that opening Thomson would make federal prisons safer by relieving dangerous overcrowding. But the NPR and Marshall Project's investigation found that Thomson has become one of the deadliest, with five suspected homicides and two alleged suicides since 2019. Two days after the investigation published, three members of Congress called for an immediate federal investigation into violence and abuse at the prison. Read and listen to what happened to Everson and others incarcerated at the Thomson prison |
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