THREAD: According to a Washington Post-ABC News poll, a majority of Americans support the Black Lives Matter movement and a record 69 percent say black people and other minorities are not treated as equal to white people in the criminal justice system. 1/10
But the public generally opposes calls to shift some police funding to social services or remove statues of Confederate generals or presidents who enslaved people 2/10
Top Findings:
Americans’ confidence in police appears shaken after a wave of national protests following Floyd’s killing. Compared to 2014, fewer Americans say they are confident that police are adequately trained to avoid using excessive force 3/10
The share of Americans saying that black people and other minorities do not receive equal treatment in the criminal justice system has risen by 15 percentage points from 2014 — and this year marks the first time a majority of whites has held this view 4/10
Larger shares of virtually every demographic group now say that minorities do not receive equal treatment as white people in the criminal justice system 5/10
Today, that view is held by 62% of white people, up 18 points from 2014. Among black people, 97% now assert there is unequal treatment of minorities, up from 89 percent in 2014. Over two-thirds, 68 percent of Hispanic people, say the same, roughly similar to 2014 6/10
The partisan split in views of how police treat black people has expanded. Republicans are now 60 points more likely than Democrats to have confidence that police treat white and black people equally (80% vs. 20%), compared with a 43-point gap in 2014 (77%vs. 34%) 7/10
Almost 8 in 10 black Americans say black people experience racial discrimination in their communities, including half who say it happens “often” 8/10
There is far less support for some other high-profile proposals that have been in the forefront of public debate recently. Ex. On issue of police funding, for 55% of Americans oppose moving funds from police departments to srvs — and 43% say they oppose it “strongly” 9/10
The majority of Americans oppose removing public statues honoring Confederate generals. 52 percent of Americans oppose removing public statues honoring Confederate generals, while 43% support their removal. 10/10
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UPDATE: FBI-Phoenix tells ABC News that no items related to this matter were taken to the FBI lab at Quantico, as Kari Lake’s spokesperson claimed in a statement earlier today.
Asked by ABC News if anything from the alleged incident was sent to Quantico for testing, a spokesperson from FBI-Phoenix said “no.”
The FBI’s comment that nothing is being tested at a lab in Quantico directly refutes Lake camp's claim two envelopes sent to campaign office...
...w/suspicious white substance were allegedly "confiscated by law enforcement and sent to professionals at Quantico for examination, and we are awaiting details," as Lake campaign spokesperson Colton Duncan claimed in a stmt to ABC in on Sunday
FBI, HAZMAT & bomb squad called to Kari Lake HQ 'suspicious item' in mail
A campaign staffer for Kari Lake, the GOP candidate for governor in Arizona, allegedly opened an envelope holding a suspicious white substance delivered to Lake’s campaign headquarters in Phoenix, her campaign tells ABC News.
Sergeant Phil Krynsky of the Phoenix Police Department told ABC News on Sunday, "Officers responded to a found property call at an office building near 40th st & Camelback Road. When officers arrived, they learned there were suspicious items located inside the mail….”
#BREAKING: #AZ federal judge orders in-person hrg TOMORROW in new suit filed by advocacy groups @votolatino@AZRetiredAms seeking to challenge Clean Elections USA & founder Melody Jennings' alleged voter intimidation campaigns.
The suit accuses CEUSA, Jennings & 10 unnamed "supporters" from armed "organized vigilante groups" of conducting "coordinated vigilante intimidation campaign" at ballot drop box locations -- and seeks a temp restraining order to block them from access to ballot drop box sites.
Complaints argues that “organized vigilante groups have already turned away voters" and that their “presence has led to repeated complaints of voter intimidation."
Of 130 prospective jurors in the pool, 60 in prospective jury pool remain, 70 were dismissed.
All 18 prospective jurors who were ushered into the jury box for this first panel finished reading all their answers to jury questionnaire before the judge dismissed court for today.
A woman from prospective jury panel of 18 was excused bc 1 of her answers to jury questionnaire. she answered “yes” to question 29 on the questionnaire; Asked if 29 was yes by Judge Merchan, he then asked her to step forward to speak with counsel. she was then dismissed.
She told reporters outside court room question 29 had to do with biases against Trump that would not allow her to be an impartial juror in the case.
Trump Payroll attorney Michael Van Der Veen told me “there was a lot of bias” when I asked if dismissed jurors from the panel had connections or biases against Trump, Trump Org, Weisselbergs, etc.
He also told me among those prospective jurors dismissed were people who had connections to the organization, people with connections to the grammar school Columbia Prep three who knew prosecution.
Van Der Deen said they’d like jury selection to conclude on Friday but tbd on how realistic that is.
Latest in Trump Org criminal trial day 1: jury selection under way -
Out of a group of 130 prospective jurors, nearly 50 raised their hand to go back to speak with the judge, prosecution and defense outside the court room [no press access so we can’t hear]
to talk over any issues they have named by the judge that would exclude them from serving, and bringing the jury questionnaire we haven’t seen yet.
Reasons for jurors seeking to be excused could scheduling conflicts and the normal rung of issues that jurors seek to be excused from. Or Bias and connections to or opinions on a list of names that would impede them from serving as a juror - or judge of the facts.