Reading view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.

Trump’s FBI pick has plans to reshape the bureau. This is what Kash Patel has said he wants to do

By ERIC TUCKER, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Kash Patel has been well-known for years within Donald Trump’s orbit as a loyal supporter who shares the president-elect’s skepticism of the FBI and intelligence community. But he’s receiving fresh attention, from the public and from Congress, now that Trump has picked him to lead the FBI.

As he braces for a bruising and likely protracted Senate confirmation fight, Patel can expect scrutiny not only over his professed fealty to Trump but also for his belief — revealed over the last year in interviews and his own book — that the century-old FBI should be radically overhauled.

Here’s a look at some of what he’s proposed for the nation’s premier federal law enforcement agency. How much of it he’d actually follow through on is a separate question.

He’s mused about shutting down the FBI’s Washington headquarters

The first FBI employees moved into the current Pennsylvania Avenue headquarters 50 years ago. The building since then has housed the supervisors and leaders who make decisions affecting offices around the country and overseas.

But if Patel has his way, the J. Edgar Hoover Building could be shut down, with its employees dispersed.

“I’d shut down the FBI Hoover Building on day one and reopen it the next day as a museum of the ‘deep state,’” Patel said in a September interview on the “Shawn Kelly Show.” “Then, I’d take the 7,000 employees that work in that building and send them across America to chase down criminals. Go be cops. You’re cops — go be cops.”

Such a plan would undoubtedly require legal, logistical and bureaucratic hurdles and it may reflect more of a rhetorical flourish than a practical ambition.

In a book last year titled, “Government Gangsters: The Deep State, the Truth and the Battle for Our Democracy,” he proposed a more modest reform of having the headquarters moved out of Washington “to prevent institutional capture and curb FBI leadership from engaging in political gamesmanship.”

As it happens, the long-term fate of the building is in flux regardless of the leadership transition. The General Services Administration last year selected Greenbelt, Maryland, as the site for a new headquarters, but current FBI Director Christopher Wray has raised concerns about a potential conflict of interest in the site selection process.

He’s talked about finding ‘conspirators’ in the government and media

In an interview last year with conservative strategist Steve Bannon, Patel repeated falsehoods about President Joe Biden and a stolen election.

“We’re going to come after the people in the media who lied about American citizens, who helped Joe Biden rig presidential elections,” Patel said. The same applies for supposed “conspirators” inside the federal government, he said.

Kash Patel
FILE — Kash Patel, former chief of staff to Acting Secretary of Defense Christopher Miller, speaks at a rally in Minden, Nev., Oct. 8, 2022. (AP Photo/José Luis Villegas, File)

It’s not entirely clear what he envisions, but to the extent Patel wants to make it easier for the government to crack down on officials who disclose sensitive information and the reporters who receive it, it sounds like he’d back a reversal of current Justice Department policy that generally prohibits prosecutors from seizing the records of journalists in leak investigations.

That policy was implemented in 2021 by Attorney General Merrick Garland following an uproar over the revelation that the Justice Department during the Trump administration had obtained phone records of reporters as part of investigations into who had disclosed government secrets.

Patel himself has said that it’s yet to be determined whether such a crackdown would be done civilly or criminally. His book includes several pages of former officials from the FBI, Justice Department and other federal agencies he’s identified as being part of the “Executive Branch Deep State.”

Under the FBI’s own guidelines, criminal investigations can’t be rooted in arbitrary or groundless speculation but instead must have an authorized purpose to detect or interrupt criminal activity.

And while the FBI conducts investigations, the responsibility of filing federal charges, or bringing a lawsuit on behalf of the federal government, falls to the Justice Department. Trump intends to nominate former Florida attorney general Pam Bondi as attorney general.

He wants ‘major, major’ surveillance reform

Patel has been a fierce critic of the FBI’s use of its surveillance authorities under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, and in his “Shawn Kelly Show” interview, called for “major, major reform. Tons.”

That position aligns him with both left-leaning civil libertarians who have long been skeptical of government power and Trump supporters outraged by well-documented surveillance missteps during the FBI’s investigation into potential ties between Russia and Trump’s 2016 campaign.

But it sets him far apart from FBI leadership, which has stressed the need for the bureau to retain its ability to spy on suspected spies and terrorists even while also implementing corrective steps meant to correct past abuses.

If confirmed, Patel would take over the FBI amid continued debate over a particularly contentious provision of FISA known as Section 702, which permits the U.S. to collect without a warrant the communications of non-Americans located outside the country for the purpose of gathering foreign intelligence.

Biden in April signed a two-year extension of the authority following a fierce congressional dispute centered on whether the FBI should be restricted from using the program to search for Americans’ data. Though the FBI boasts a high compliance rate, analysts have been blamed for a series of abuses and mistakes, including improperly querying the intelligence repository for information about Americans or others in the U.S., including a member of Congress and participants in the racial justice protests of 2020 and the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol.

Patel has made clear his disdain for the reauthorization vote.

“Because the budget of FISA was up this cycle, we demanded Congress fix it. And do you know what the majority in the House, where the Republicans did? They bent the knee. They (reauthorized) it,” Patel said.

In his book, Patel said a federal defender should be present to argue for the rights of the accused at all FISA court proceedings, a departure from the status quo.

He has called for reducing the size of the intelligence community

Patel has advocated cutting the federal government’s intelligence community, including the CIA and National Security Agency.

When it comes to the FBI, he said last year that he would support breaking off the bureau’s “intel shops” from the rest of its crime-fighting activities.

It’s not clear exactly how he would intend to do that given that the FBI’s intelligence-gathering operations form a core part of the bureau’s mandate and budget. Wray, who’s been in the job for seven years, has also recently warned of a heightened threat environment related to international and domestic terrorism.

After the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, then-FBI Director Robert Mueller faced down calls from some in Congress who thought the FBI should be split up, with a new domestic intelligence agency created in its wake.

The idea died, and Mueller committed new resources into transforming what for decades had been primarily a domestic law enforcement agency into an intelligence-gathering institution equally focused on combating terrorism, spies and foreign threats.

Frank Montoya Jr., a retired senior FBI official who served as the U.S. government’s national counterintelligence executive, said he disagreed with the idea of breaking out the FBI’s “intel shops” and viewed it as a way to defang the bureau.

Doing so, he said, “makes the bureau less effective at what it does, and quite frankly, it will make the intelligence community less effective at what it does.”

FILE – Kash Patel speaks before Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump at a campaign rally at the Findlay Toyota Arena Oct. 13, 2024, in Prescott Valley, Ariz. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)

WDET kicks off Holiday Fundraiser on Giving Tuesday with exciting new thank you gifts

For several years, WDET has participated in Giving Tuesday as a one-day fundraiser.

This year, Giving Tuesday will mark the first day of WDET’s Holiday Fundraiser – a five-day fundraising event that will come to a close on Saturday, Dec. 7, with Midtown Detroit’s 50th annual Noel Night celebration, of which WDET will be participating!

WDET is celebrating its 75th anniversary this year, and we couldn’t have gotten to where we are today without support from members and listeners like you. In this eventful year, WDET made significant program changes and as a result, our audience has grown. At 75, WDET is not slowing down, and we continue to strive every day to bring Detroiters the high-quality news, music and conversation they have come to rely upon over the years.

If you would like to be part of WDET’s future, consider making a gift today. Those who make a donation during fundraiser can select from a variety of thank you gifts at wdet.org/thanks and choose the amount that’s right for you.

Three new gifts will be available during WDET’s Holiday Fundraiser, including:

  • An Evening with David Sedaris: When you donate $100/month, you’ll receive four tickets to “An Evening with David Sedaris” on April 8 at Detroit’s Fisher Theatre, as well as a copy of Sedaris’ hilarious books “Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim” and “Happy Go Lucky.”
  • Essential Music Tour with Ann Delisi + Rob Reinhart: For a gift of $75/month, you and a guest will be treated to brunch, an exclusive behind-the-scenes tour of WDET Studios with Ann Delisi and Rob Reinhart, and a live studio performance by Syrian American guitarist, pianist and composer Kareem Kanouh on Jan. 18, 2024. You and your guest will also receive an Ann Delisi T-Shirt!
  • NEW MEMBERS ONLY – WDET Stadium Scarf: New members who make a gift of any amount during the Holiday Fundraiser will get a limited edition WDET stadium scarf.

Help keep WDET sustainable for the next 75 years, and make your gift today!

Support Detroit Public Radio.

WDET is celebrating 75 years of people powered radio during our 2024 Holiday Fundraiser, now through Dec. 7. Become a member and invest in WDET’s next chapter of news, music and conversation.

Donate today »

The post WDET kicks off Holiday Fundraiser on Giving Tuesday with exciting new thank you gifts appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

Today in History: December 3, toxic gas leak kills thousands in Bhopal

Today is Tuesday, Dec. 3, the 338th day of 2024. There are 28 days left in the year.

Today in history:

On Dec. 3, 1984, a cloud of methyl isocyanate gas escaped from a pesticide plant operated by a Union Carbide subsidiary in Bhopal, India, causing an estimated 15,000 to 20,000 deaths and more than 500,000 injuries.

Also on this date:

In 1947, the Tennessee Williams play “A Streetcar Named Desire” opened on Broadway.

In 1967, a surgical team in Cape Town, South Africa, led by Dr. Christiaan Barnard (BAHR’-nard) performed the first human heart transplant on Louis Washkansky, who lived 18 days with the donated organ from Denise Darvall, a 25-year-old bank clerk who had died in a traffic accident.

In 1979, 11 people were killed in a crush of fans at Cincinnati’s Riverfront Coliseum, where the British rock group The Who was performing.

In 1989, U.S. President George H.W. Bush and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev concluded two days of positive bilateral discussions in Malta in a symbolic end to the Cold War.

In 2015, Defense Secretary Ash Carter ordered the armed services to open all military jobs to women, removing the final barriers that had kept women from serving in combat.

Today’s Birthdays:

  • Singer Jaye P. Morgan is 93.
  • Rock singer Ozzy Osbourne is 76.
  • Rock singer Mickey Thomas is 75.
  • Actor Daryl Hannah is 64.
  • Actor Julianne Moore is 64.
  • Olympic figure skating gold medalist Katarina Witt is 59.
  • Actor Brendan Fraser is 56.
  • Singer Montell Jordan is 56.
  • Actor Holly Marie Combs is 51.
  • Actor/comedian Tiffany Haddish is 45.
  • Actor Anna Chlumsky (KLUHM’-skee) is 44.
  • Actor Amanda Seyfried is 39.
  • Rapper Lil Baby is 30.
  • Actor Jake T. Austin is 30.

Victims who lost sight after the Bhopal tragedy are seen on December 04, 1984 in Bhopal where a poison gas leak from the Union Carbide factory killed 20000 persons and injured around 300000. The tragedy occurred when a storage tank at a pesticide plant run by Union Carbide exploded and poured cyanide gas into the air, immediately killing more than 3,500 slum dwellers. On background is the site of the factory. (Photo by AFP FILES / AFP) (Photo by STR/AFP FILES/AFP via Getty Images)

Detroit Evening Report: Hundreds trained in Mental Health First Aid through WSU Nursing program

The Wayne State College of Nursing has trained about 600 individuals in Mental Health First Aid protocols through a $1.5 million grant.

Subscribe to the Detroit Evening Report on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, NPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

The trainees took classes from 2022-2024. College of Nursing Professor Dr. Cynthera McNeill says the courses were part of a larger effort to break the stigma around mental health, including in communities where there’s a shortage of mental health professionals.

“Rather than just show up and collect research data, we were given the opportunity to provide education and skills that enable community members to take action and serve as a bridge between those dealing with mental health troubles and the services they need,” McNeill said.

The trainees work with community-based organizations to educate others. In August, the college won another $600,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Minority Health to focus on reducing barriers to colorectal cancer screening and opioid drug overdose prevention — which McNeil says will also include mental health first aid courses.  

The trainings are being held in collaboration with African American and Middle Eastern North African (MENA) community organizations to provide culturally competent care. 

Other headlines for Monday, Dec. 2, 2024:

  • A bill introduced in the Michigan House of Representatives would require commercial health insurance plans to cover long-term treatment for brain injuries from diseases, strokes, and falls.
  • Several community health centers in Detroit will be open from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. this week to assist with Medicare enrollment before the enrollment period ends Dec. 7.
  • The city of Detroit’s District 4 will host a charter-mandated community meeting on from 7-8:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Dec. 3, to share updates and resources from city departments. The meeting will take place both on Zoom and in person at the Detroit Burns Seventh-Day Adventist Church, 10125 E Warren Ave., Detroit.
  • It’s National Influenza Vaccination Week, and the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) is urging people to get the flu vaccine before the holiday season.
  • It’s also Older Driver Safety Awareness week. The Michigan Department of State provides resources to keep drivers educated and safe, regardless of their age.

Do you have a community story we should tell? Let us know in an email at detroiteveningreport@wdet.org.

Trusted, accurate, up-to-date.

WDET strives to make our journalism accessible to everyone. As a public media institution, we maintain our journalistic integrity through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

Donate today »

The post Detroit Evening Report: Hundreds trained in Mental Health First Aid through WSU Nursing program appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

The Metro: WDET joining Midtown Detroit’s 50th annual Noel Night celebrations

The city of Detroit is already donned in holiday drip following the tree lighting last month. This Saturday, holiday cheer will cascade throughout Midtown as the city’s cultural district celebrates its 50th annual Noel Night. 

Produced by the nonprofit Midtown Detroit, Inc., more than 100 participating businesses and vendors will offer Noel Night activities and entertainment including live music performances, holiday shopping with special deals, arts and crafts, Christmas carols and more.

WDET — celebrating its 75th anniversary this year — is a media partner for Noel Night and will be offering tours of the station, opportunities to meet hosts, sweet refreshments and more from 3 to 10 p.m. Several Wayne State University schools, colleges and divisions will be hosting Noel Night activities across campus as well. 

Subscribe to The Metro on Apple PodcastsSpotifyNPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

Maureen Stapleton, interim director of Midtown Detroit Inc., joined The Metro on Monday along with Source Booksellers owner Janet Jones to talk about what participating businesses and organizations have in store for the event’s 50th year.

Stapleton noted that Midtown Detroit is the perfect place to showcase the city’s diverse holiday traditions and culture.

“What makes me most proud is the cultural diversity of the activities of the day,” she said. “We have cultural institutions that are some of the finest in the country that are on display.”

Stapleton also pointed out that, despite being called Noel Night, many activities will begin at 11 a.m. Saturday morning. For a full schedule of events and activities, visit midtowndetroitinc.org/schedule.

Use the media player above to hear the full conversation.

More from The Metro on Dec. 2, 2024:

  • With Thanksgiving now in the rearview, the holiday season is in full force. Over the weekend at Eastern Market, crowds of shoppers were loading their bags with gifts and filling their pickup trucks with Christmas trees. But Christmas is far from the only religious and spiritual holiday celebrated in the month of December. Aaron Gale, an associate professor and scholar of religious studies at West Virginia University, joined the show to discuss the vastly different ways people of different faiths celebrate the season. 
  • For many, food is more than something to excite your taste buds; it’s a container for culinary traditions, helping continue the heritage of the people who created it. In the new documentary, “Detroit: The City of Chefs,” chef, producer and award-winning director Keith Famie highlights what makes Detroit’s food scene so rich and what food can do to continue old rituals and inspire new stories. Famie joined The Metro to discuss the film.
  • The holidays are a time where we hear a lot about gratitude, joy and spending time with family. But it can also be a stressful or sad time for many people, emphasizing lost loved ones or estranged relationships. To discuss the importance of mental health awareness during the holiday season, clinical psychologist Dr. Cindy Morgan joined the show. Natasha T Miller, a Michigan poet and former co-host of the Science of Grief podcast from WDET and the MSU Museum, also joined the show.

    Listen to The Metro weekdays from 10 a.m. to noon ET on 101.9 FM and streaming on-demand.

    Trusted, accurate, up-to-date.

    WDET strives to make our journalism accessible to everyone. As a public media institution, we maintain our journalistic integrity through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today. Donate today »

    The post The Metro: WDET joining Midtown Detroit’s 50th annual Noel Night celebrations appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

    Trudeau told Trump Americans would also suffer if tariffs are imposed, a Canadian minister says

    By ROB GILLIES, Associated Press

    TORONTO (AP) — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told Donald Trump that Americans would also suffer if the president-elect follows through on a plan to impose sweeping tariffs on Canadian products, a Canadian minister who attended their recent dinner said Monday.

    Trump threatened to impose tariffs on products from Canada and Mexico if they don’t stop what he called the flow of drugs and migrants across their borders with the United States. He said on social media last week that he would impose a 25% tax on all products entering the U.S. from Canada and Mexico as one of his first executive orders.

    Canadian Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc, whose responsibilities include border security, attended a dinner with Trump and Trudeau at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club on Friday.

    Trudeau requested the meeting in a bid to avoid the tariffs by convincing Trump that the northern border is nothing like the U.S. southern border with Mexico.

    “The prime minister of course spoke about the importance of protecting the Canadian economy and Canadian workers from tariffs, but we also discussed with our American friends the negative impact that those tariffs could have on their economy, on affordability in the United States as well,” LeBlanc said in Parliament.

    If Trump makes good on his threat to slap 25% tariffs on everything imported from Mexico and Canada, the price increases that could follow will collide with his campaign promise to give American families a break from inflation.

    Economists say companies would have little choice but to pass along the added costs, dramatically raising prices for food, clothing, automobiles, alcohol and other goods.

    The Produce Distributors Association, a Washington trade group, said last week that tariffs will raise prices for fresh fruit and vegetables and hurt U.S. farmers when the countries retaliate.

    Canada is already examining possible retaliatory tariffs on certain items from the U.S. should Trump follow through on the threat.

    After his dinner with Trump, Trudeau returned home without assurances the president-elect will back away from threatened tariffs on all products from the major American trading partner. Trump called the talks “productive” but signaled no retreat from a pledge that Canada says unfairly lumps it in with Mexico over the flow of drugs and migrants into the United States.

    “The idea that we came back empty handed is completely false,” LeBlanc said. “We had a very productive discussion with Mr. Trump and his future Cabinet secretaries. … The commitment from Mr. Trump to continue to work with us was far from empty handed.”

    Joining Trump and Trudeau at dinner were Howard Lutnick, Trump’s nominee for commerce secretary, North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, Trump’s pick to lead the Interior Department, and Mike Waltz, Trump’s choice to be his national security adviser.

    Canada’s ambassador to the U.S., Kirsten Hillman, told The Associated Press on Sunday that “the message that our border is so vastly different than the Mexican border was really understood.” Hillman, who sat at an adjacent table to Trudeau and Trump, said Canada is not the problem when it comes to drugs and migrants.

    On Monday, Mexico’s president rejected those comments.

    “Mexico must be respected, especially by its trading partners,” President Claudia Sheinbaum said. She said Canada had its own problems with fentanyl consumption and “could only wish they had the cultural riches Mexico has.”

    Flows of migrants and seizures of drugs at the two countries’ border are vastly different. U.S. customs agents seized 43 pounds of fentanyl at the Canadian border during the last fiscal year, compared with 21,100 pounds at the Mexican border.

    Most of the fentanyl reaching the U.S. — where it causes about 70,000 overdose deaths annually — is made by Mexican drug cartels using precursor chemicals smuggled from Asia.

    On immigration, the U.S. Border Patrol reported 1.53 million encounters with migrants at the southwest border with Mexico between October 2023 and September 2024. That compares to 23,721 encounters at the Canadian border during that time.

    Canada is the top export destination for 36 U.S. states. Nearly $3.6 billion Canadian (US$2.7 billion) worth of goods and services cross the border each day. About 60% of U.S. crude oil imports are from Canada, and 85% of U.S. electricity imports as well.

    Canada is also the largest foreign supplier of steel, aluminum and uranium to the U.S. and has 34 critical minerals and metals that the Pentagon is eager for and investing for national security.

    Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau walks through the lobby of the Delta Hotel by Marriott, Friday, Nov. 29, 2024, in West Palm Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

    Salvation Army donations doubled on Giving Tuesday thanks to donor

    Those who plan to make the Salvation Army of Metro Detroit part of their donations during this holiday season may want to offer their support Tuesday.

    As part of the Giving Tuesday campaign, all donations up to $25,000 will be doubled, thanks to the generosity of an anonymous donor.

    Donations will be matched dollar for dollar and donations may be made by the following methods:

    • Texting GIFT to 24365

    • Donating money via online kettle, Paypal, Venmo or through Tap to Give.

    • Visiting SAmetrodetroit.org.

    • Call 877-SAL-MICH

    Proceeds will provide critical social services and programs to those in need, including feeding and sheltering, outdoor and educational opportunities for at-risk youth, anti-human trafficking initiatives, a free legal aid clinic, emergency disaster services, drug and alcohol rehabilitation programs and more.

    — MediaNews Group staff 

    (SUBMITTED LOGO)

    West Bloomfield supervisor resigns just weeks after winning re-election

    Three weeks after being re-elected as West Bloomfield Township supervisor, Steve Kaplan announced his resignation from the post.

    He will join the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office as assistant prosecuting attorney. He served both the Wayne and Macomb county prosecutors before he became supervisor.

    Kaplan’s resignation from the township’s top post will be effective in early December. The Board of Trustees will have 45 days to appoint a successor, according to “The Splash Live,” a program on the township’s community access cable channel.

    He could not be reached for comment on his resignation.

    Kaplan, a Democrat, was elected to the township board in 2000. He was elected supervisor in 2016 and re-elected in 2020 and also in the Nov. 5 election.

    Kaplan’s last Board of Trustees’ meeting will be at 6 p.m. Monday, Dec. 2. The board meets at Township Hall, 4550 Walnut Lake Road. You can watch the meeting live at https://civiccentertv.com/.

    He ran unopposed in the Nov. 5 election. He garnered 26,765 votes, more than any other elected official in the township, even though the clerk and treasurer were also unopposed.

    The supervisor is a full-time post, overseeing all township departments, according to West Bloomfield’s website.

    In addition to his previous work in both the Wayne and Macomb county prosecutors’ offices, Kaplan worked as a Warren-based criminal attorney. He represented several well-known defendants, including Timothy Fradeneck. The Eastpointe man pleaded guilty but mentally ill in 2016 in the strangulation deaths of his wife and two children.

    Kaplan, an attorney since 1981, was a Macomb County assistant prosecutor for 24 years and Wayne County assistant prosecutor for two years.

    During his time in the Macomb Prosecutor’s Office, ending in 2010, Kaplan prosecuted some of the biggest murder cases in the county, including convictions in 24 of 25 cold cases.

    He said in a 2016 interview with the Macomb Daily that he is most satisfied with the murder convictions of Robert Pann, Arthur Ream and Michael George, although the George conviction was reversed and he was convicted again in a second trial by another assistant prosecutor.

    Pann was convicted in 2001 of killing his girlfriend, Bernice Gray, 23, of St. Clair Shores, despite no body, no eyewitness and no confession.

    Ream died in August while serving a life sentence for the murder of Cindy Zarzycki, a 13-year-old Eastpointe girl. He was a suspect in the disappearance of at least four other girls, but police didn’t have enough evidence to charge him in the additional cases.

    Kaplan ran for Oakland County prosecutor and Oakland County Circuit Court judge in the late 1990s. He narrowly lost both races — the prosecutor post by 0.6% in a recount won by Republican David Gorcyca.

    Kaplan said in the Macomb Daily interview, given when he became supervisor in 2016, that he would miss being in the courtroom.

    “Whether it’s a retail fraud trial or a murder trial, there’s drama, action, passion and choreography in every trial,” he said.

    He said he would transfer some of his lawyering abilities to his new job, as he would run the township Board of Trustees meetings and would be keyed into legal matters as the township’s top administrator.

    Attorney Steve Kaplan argues to a jury in Macomb County Circuit Court during the trial of Angela Alexie earlier this year. Macomb Daily file photo

    No word on possible charges for illegal immigrant who reportedly struck pedestrian; victim died 5 days later

    There’s no word yet on what charges — if any — will be filed against a driver who struck a pedestrian in Rochester Hills last month. The pedestrian died five days after being hit, the Oakland County Sheriff’s Office said Monday.

    Soon after the Nov. 3 crash, the sheriff’s office described the driver as a 28-year-old Colombian who is in the United States illegally.

    The victim, Stephen Singleton, was hospitalized in “grave condition” after being hit, and died Nov. 8, the sheriff’s office said. He was 72.

    Singleton was wearing a reflective vest and walking westbound on Avon Road when he was struck while crossing Rochester Road. It’s believed he was hit while in a marked crosswalk, the sheriff’s office said.

    The driver was in a 2013 Ford Focus when he reportedly hit the pedestrian at around 6:45 a.m. The sheriff’s office said alcohol, drugs and/or excessive speed don’t appear to have been factors in the crash.

    The case is under review by the Oakland County Prosecutor’s Office.

    The driver is expected to have a hearing in federal court regarding his illegal immigration status, as determined by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the sheriff’s office added.

    Sheriff: Pedestrian still in ‘grave condition’ after being struck by car driven by illegal migrant

    Accused golf course rapist makes plea deal with prosecutors

    Overdosing on cannabis — when a good time goes bad 

    Mistrial declared in Wayne County murder case; victim was Farmington Hills man

     

    file photo (Aileen Wingblad/MediaNewsGroup)

    Drug, now in testing, has promise for epileptic seizures

    By Paul Sisson, The San Diego Union-Tribune

    SAN DIEGO — More than 100 locations nationwide participating in new clinical trials for a drug that shows promise for treating epileptic seizures among patients for whom other medications do not work.

    The drug, BHV-7000, activates potassium receptors in the brain in a way that appears to modulate seizures, explained Dr. Taha Gholipour, a neurologist at the University of California, San Diego, a participant in the trial and the study’s local investigator. Other commonly prescribed anti-seizure medications act on sodium and calcium channels in neurons, routes that are effective for some but not all patients.

    About 40% of the estimated 1.5 million people with epilepsy are resistant to drugs that engage the calcium and sodium routes, meaning that having a third avenue, through potassium, would be a major expansion of the options for treating seizures.

    “The potassium channel is not completely new or unknown in our neuroscience community — there have been many attempts in the past to study this route — but we have had no success in getting a drug that has minimal side effects and also effective seizure control,” Gholipour said. “But years of preclinical work in labs, in cell models, in animal models, and then in early clinical trials in humans, have shown that it looks like this drug is well tolerated and potent in controlling seizures, which is exciting news.”

    A phase 1 trial tested the drug in 58 patients, mostly white men with a median age of 40, finding that the main side effects, observed in just a handful of participants, were headaches and abdominal discomfort, which resolved when they stoped taking the drug.

    Biohaven Ltd. a Connecticut-based biopharmaceutical company, is working to enroll 390 participants for the second and third phases of a clinical trial designed to determine whether the drug can decrease the average seizure frequency in patients diagnosed with focal onset epilepsy, which causes seizures in a specific part of the brain.

    Participants must be aged 18 to 75 and are randomly assigned to receive one of two different dose strengths or a placebo, a non-active dose that is vital for comparison purposes. A diagnosis of focal onset epilepsy must have been made at least one year prior and participants must experience four or more seizures in a 28-day period, have been unsuccessfully treated with at least two anti-seizure medications, and must be “on a stable dose of at least one and up to three anti-seizure treatments.”

    UC San Diego Jacobs Medical Center in La Jolla on Thursday, July 11, 2024, in San Diego. (Nelvin C. Cepeda/The San Diego Union-Tribune/TNS)

    Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares steps down as carmaker continues struggle with slumping sales

    NEW YORK (AP) — Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares is stepping down after nearly four years in the top spot of the automaker, which owns car brands like Jeep, Citroën and Ram, amid an ongoing struggle with slumping sales.

    The world’s fourth-largest carmaker announced that its board accepted Tavares’ resignation Sunday, effective immediately.

    Stellantis noted Sunday that the process of finding a new, permanent CEO is “well under way.” In the meantime, the company says a new interim executive committee, led by chairman John Elkann, will be established.

    As head of PSA Peugeot, Tavares took control of the Netherlands-based company in January 2021 — when it merged with Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, creating an automotive giant that is the parent to several well-known brands today. Beyond Jeep, Citroën and Ram, the company portfolio includes Dodge, Chrysler, Fiat, Peugeot, Maserati and Opel.

    Stellantis’ North American operations had been the company’s main source of profits for some time, but struggles piled up this year, with the company citing rising competition and larger market changes. As a result of lofty sticker prices and fewer affordable options, many high-priced vehicles have been left unsold on dealers’ lots.

    For its third quarter, Stellantis posted 27% plunge in net revenues, as gaps in launching new products and action to reduce inventories also slashed global shipments of new vehicles by 20%.

    The carmaker reported net revenues of 33 billion euros (nearly $36 billion ) in the three-month period ending Sept. 30, down from 45 billion euros in the same period last year. All regions except South America reported double-digit dips in revenues — led by North America, which plunged 42% to 12.4 billion euros ($13.1 billion).

    In recent months, Tavares had come under fire from U.S. dealers and the United Auto Workers union after the release of dismal financial performance reports. He also oversaw cost-cutting efforts that included delaying factory openings and laying off union workers — further straining the company’s relations with the UAW, which filed several grievances against Stellantis and threatened to strike in recent months.

    The UAW welcomed Tavares’ resignation with president Shawn Fain calling the move “a major step in the right direction for a company that has been mismanaged and a workforce that has been mistreated for too long.” He noted that thousands of UAW members had been calling for Tavares’ firing for weeks for what Fain called the CEO’s “reckless mismanagement of the company.”

    “Tavares is leaving behind a mess of painful layoffs and overpriced vehicles sitting on dealership lots,” Fain said in a statement. He added that the union looks forward to sitting down with Stellantis’ new chief executive and “will keep using all means available” to hold the company accountable.

    Beyond the U.S., Stellantis has faced pressure in Italy — where lawmakers questioned the former chief executive over the company’s production plans in October, with the far-right government accusing the company of relocating assembly plants to low-cost countries. Tens of thousands of autoworkers in the country also held a one-day walkout, calling for more employment certainty and protections.

    In efforts to revive sales, Stellantis previously made a number of leadership changes in October, which included naming new heads of operations in North America and Europe. At the time, the company expected Tavares to step down in early 2026, closer to the end of his five-year contract.

    The company confirmed in September that it was searching for a CEO to eventually succeed Tavares, but it maintained those efforts were part of standard leadership transition plans.

    In a statement Sunday, Stellantis’ senior independent director Henri de Castries said that Stellantis’ success is “rooted in a perfect alignment” between shareholders, the company’s board and the CEO — but noted “different views” had emerged in recent weeks, resulting in the decision to approve Tavares’ resignation.

    Elkann, the chairperson of Stellantis’ board, thanked Tavares for “his years of dedicated service and the role he has played in the creation of Stellantis” in an additional statement. He added that he looks forward to appointing a new CEO.

    Stellantis did not comment further beyond Sunday’s release. The announcement arrived shortly after Bloomberg reported Tavares’ plans to step down, citing unnamed sources familiar with the matter.

    The post Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares steps down as carmaker continues struggle with slumping sales appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

    ‘EV roadmap’ makes recommendations on supporting electric adoption in Michigan

    Michigan aims to set up a public network of 100,000 electric vehicle charges by 2030 to support an anticipated two million EVs on local roads. Millions of dollars’ worth of investments have entered the state in recent years to support that vision.

    A report put together by some of Michigan’s trade organizations offers guidance on making it a reality. The so-called “Transportation Electrification Roadmap” includes policy and spending recommendations.

    Listen: Policy experts discuss Michigan’s EV roadmap

    Chase Attanasio, a policy analyst at Clean Fuels Michigan, says one suggestion is to establish a clean fuel market in the state.

    “We’ve seen in California, a clean fuel standard has created a market for clean fuels that surpasses $2.8 billion in the first three years of the program,” Attanasio said.

    Michigan Energy Innovation Business Council Policy Principle Sophia Schuster says building out an electric vehicles network represents a chance to improve state power infrastructure as a whole.

    “We have the chance to look at electric vehicles and the charging infrastructure that support them as a solution to supporting a healthier grid,” she said.

    Schuster added that Michigan’s power grid currently ranks among the worst in the country when it comes to reliability.

    Trusted, accurate, up-to-date.

    WDET strives to make our journalism accessible to everyone. As a public media institution, we maintain our journalistic integrity through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

    Donate today »

    The post ‘EV roadmap’ makes recommendations on supporting electric adoption in Michigan appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

    Great Lakes, Plains and Midwest forecast to be hit with snow and dangerous cold into next week

    BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — The first big snow of the season threatened to bury towns in New York along lakes Erie and Ontario during a hectic holiday travel and shopping weekend, while winter storm conditions could persist into next week and cause hazards in the Great Lakes, Plains and Midwest regions.

    An Arctic outbreak of cold air will expand south and east and bring “dangerously cold wind chills” into the Northern Plains and Upper Midwest, the National Weather Service said Saturday, while heavy lake-effect snow could make travel “very difficult to impossible” into next week.

    “Temperatures will be 15 to 20 degrees below average over parts of the Northern Plains and temperatures will be about 10 degrees below average over parts of the eastern third of the country,” the weather service reported.

    Cold weather advisories were issued for parts of North Dakota on Saturday and high pressure from central Canada will move south into the Northern Plains by Monday. A freeze warning will be issued over the Central Gulf Coast states to the Southeast, the weather service said.

    Light to moderate snow was expected from the middle Mississippi Valley to the central Appalachians on Saturday, with similar snow conditions over parts of the Northern Plains and upper Mississippi Valley and central Appalachians on Sunday, the weather service said.

    In Michigan, heavy lake-effect snow in northern parts of the state was expected to continue into the weekend, according to the National Weather Service in Gaylord. Some areas of the Upper Peninsula could see up to 3 feet (0.9 meters) of snow Sunday night through to Monday, National Weather Service meteorologist Lily Chapman said.

    As flakes began flying Friday, New York state forecasters warned 4 to 6 feet (1.2 to 1.8 meters) of blowing and drifting snow could fall in Watertown and other areas east of Lake Ontario through Monday.

    After an unusually mild fall, as much as 2 to 3 feet (0.6 to 0.9 meters) of snow were possible along Lake Erie and south of Buffalo from lake-effect bands notorious for pummeling the region with snowfall rates of 2 to 4 inches (5 to 10 centimeters) per hour. Lake-effect snow happens when warm moist air rising from a body of water mixes with cold dry air overhead.

    “The lake is 50 degrees (10 degrees Celsius). We’re about six degrees above where we should be this time of year, that’s why we’re seeing these heavy lake-effect events,” Erie County Public Works Commissioner William Geary said. “The outlook for the next two weeks into December, we’ll probably see some more.”

    New York Gov. Kathy Hochul declared a disaster emergency for the targeted counties, allowing state agencies to mobilize resources. Rapidly deteriorating conditions Friday caused closures along Interstate 90, and tandem and commercial vehicles were banned from Interstate 86 in western New York and much of U.S. Route 219 beginning Friday afternoon.

    “There’s a considerable number of vehicles going off the road on the 219 currently,” Gregory Butcher, Erie County deputy director for preparedness and homeland security, said at an afternoon briefing.

    ATVs and snowmobiles were being placed around the county to help first responders if necessary, Butcher said.

    The Buffalo Bills called for volunteers to potentially shovel snow at Highmark Stadium, where over 2 feet (0.6 meters) of snow was possible before Sunday night’s game against the San Francisco 49ers. Last year, a major lake-effect storm forced the NFL to push back the Bills wild-card playoff home game against Pittsburgh from Sunday to Monday.

    “It’s going to be slow going, there’s no doubt about that,” Erie County Executive Mark Poloncarz said, adding the heaviest snow is expected to be over by kickoff.

    The team, meanwhile, was preparing to play in any conditions.

    “We’re trying to stay on top of it,” coach Sean McDermott said Friday.

    The Bills are 9-2, their best start since 1992, and with a win Sunday they would clinch their fifth straight AFC East title.

    Lake-effect snow also covered parts of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula in a system that is expected to last through the weekend. The area was blanketed in snow by Friday afternoon, with some places already measuring more than a foot (0.3 meters) of snow.

    “We’ve got this westerly, northwesterly flow regime and this chilly air mass over the U.P.,” said Chapman of the National Weather Service. “So it’s a pretty good setup for this long duration lake-effect snowfall event.”

    Gusty winds, especially near the Great Lakes, has impacted visibility in Michigan and Chapman urged caution on the roads.

    Joe DeLizio, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Gaylord, said visibility on roads was low but he hadn’t been made aware of any major accidents so far.

    “Haven’t heard too much as far as problems, but obviously travel is pretty difficult,” DeLizio said.

    Reporting by Carolyn Thompson, Associated Press. AP Sports Writers John Wawrow, Isabella Volmert and Joey Cappelletti also contributed.

    The post Great Lakes, Plains and Midwest forecast to be hit with snow and dangerous cold into next week appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

    MichMash: What should legislative bodies be doing to ensure government oversight?

    On this Thanksgiving episode of MichMash, we take a look at how the Michigan Legislature falls short in their oversight of government. Gongwer News Service’s Zach Gorchow sat down with Jim Townsend, the director of the Levin Center for Oversight and Democracy, to find out why. 

    Subscribe to MichMash on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, NPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

    In this episode:

    • Does Michigan have the resources for thorough oversight?
    • How legislators can ensure oversight even when a member of their own party is governor
    • Does the Michigan Legislature need to be restructured?

    Gorchow says for the past 25 years of covering state government in Michigan, the Legislature hasn’t been robust in their oversight. Townsend added that isn’t because of a lack of resources. 

    “Michigan stands out among many states as having more resources than any other legislature…the legislature is for all intents and purposes a full-time legislature,” said Townsend. “Unfortunately, Michigan does not take the opportunity to do in-depth oversight.” 

    He went on to say it’s just not a priority for the government and that it isn’t a priority because attention is diverted to other things. Townsend also emphasized the imporance of reaching across the aisle to ensure government oversight is conducted in a fair and partisan way.

    “The best oversight investigations are bipartisan oversight investigations,” he said. “The credibility will be higher when both parties are involved.” 

    More from WDET:

    Support the podcasts you love.

    One-of-a-kind podcasts from WDET bring you engaging conversations, news you need to know and stories you love to hear.

    Keep the conversations coming. Please make a gift today.

    Give now »

    The post MichMash: What should legislative bodies be doing to ensure government oversight? appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

    What’s the best Michigan tree for your home?

    Consumers still have an array of choices as supplies tighten for some Christmas tree species.

    Michigan farms and tree lots offer an array of great Christmas tree choices. While it’s true that supplies of some species, particularly Fraser fir, will be tighter than in past years, consumers who want a real tree will be able to find one. Whether you look for a pre-cut tree at a local tree lot or bundle up the family for the choose-and-cut experience, you will find a wide variety of tree types that offer something for everyone.

    How do I find a real tree?

    As with most things, shopping early will ensure the best selection. If your holiday tradition is to put the tree up closer to Christmas Day, you can store your tree with its cut end in water in your garage or other protected, unheated space until you are ready to move it into the house.

    Consumers will also have an easier time finding a real tree if they are willing to expand the menu of trees they choose from. Michigan Christmas tree growers produce a diverse range of Christmas tree types, and this might be the year to consider something different for your holiday tradition.

    To help you pick the perfect tree, Michigan State University Extension has developed a description of the main types of trees grown in Michigan: Fraser fir, Scots pine, Douglas fir, Blue spruce, Black hills spruce, White pine, Balsam fir, Concolor fir, Korean fir and Canaan fir.

    Michigan Christmas tree farms create traditions, holiday memories for generations

    The 'tried and true' Christmas trees

    Fraser fir

    Fraser fir continues to increase in consumer popularity and for good reason. Fraser fir has blue-green needles with silvery undersides. The branches are strong and stiff and hold up well to ornaments. The trees have a pleasant scent and needle retention is excellent.

    Fraser fir. (Photo by Bert Cregg and Jill O'Donnell, MSU)
    Fraser fir. (Photo by Bert Cregg and Jill O’Donnell, MSU)

    Scots pine

    Scots pine is the tree species that has long defined the Michigan Christmas tree industry and is still a favorite for traditionalists. Scots pines are dense trees with dark-green needles. Stiff branches hold up well to ornaments and needle retention is excellent. Scots pine is also a more economical choice.

    Scots pine. (Photo by Bert Cregg and Jill O'Donnell, MSU)
    Scots pine. (Photo by Bert Cregg and Jill O’Donnell, MSU)

    Douglas fir

    Douglas fir is a dense tree with soft, light green needles. You’ll need to stick with lighter-weight ornaments since the branches are not as stiff as some other species. This is another good choice for budget-conscious consumers.

    Douglas fir. (Photo by Jill O'Donnell, MSU)
    Douglas fir. (Photo by Jill O’Donnell, MSU)

    Blue spruce

    Blue spruce remains a popular Christmas tree because of its bright blue color. Branches are stiff and hold ornaments well. Blue spruce needles are quite sharp, so be sure to wear gloves and long-sleeves when handling. While the needles may make the tree hard to handle, some people choose blue spruce to keep pets away from the tree.

    Blue spruce. (Photo by Bert Cregg and Jill O'Donnell, MSU)
    Blue spruce. (Photo by Bert Cregg and Jill O’Donnell, MSU)

    Black hills spruce

    Black hills spruce have needles that are shorter and softer than Colorado blue spruce. Black hills spruce have excellent color and have a very traditional Christmas tree appearance. Branches are stiff and hold up well to ornaments.

    Black hills spruce. (Photo by Bert Cregg and Jill O'Donnell, MSU)
    Black hills spruce. (Photo by Bert Cregg and Jill O’Donnell, MSU)

    White pine

    White pine is one of two Michigan native conifers commonly used for Christmas trees, along with balsam fir. This is a dense tree with soft, green needles. This tree will require lightweight ornaments as the branches are not particularly strong. For consumers that have a high ceiling and want a larger tree, white pine can be an economical choice.

    White pine. (Photo by Bert Cregg and Jill O'Donnell, MSU)
    White pine. (Photo by Bert Cregg and Jill O’Donnell, MSU)

    Balsam fir

    Balsam fir has long been a preferred species for many consumers because of its strong Christmas tree scent. It has dark green needles and excellent form.

    Balsam fir. (Photo by Bert Cregg and Jill O'Donnell, MSU)
    Balsam fir. (Photo by Bert Cregg and Jill O’Donnell, MSU)

    Concolor fir

    Concolor fir have longer needles than many other fir trees and they may be as blue as a blue spruce. The big draw for this species, however, is the strong, citrus-like scent.

    Concolor fir. (Photo by Jill O'Donnell, MSU)
    Concolor fir. (Photo by Jill O'Donnell, MSU)

    Korean fir

    Korean fir is native to Asia, as noted by the name, but grows well in our climate and soil. It has dark green needles with striking silvery undersides. The form and unique texture add to this species’ appeal.

    Korean fir. (Photo by Jill O'Donnell, MSU)
    Korean fir. (Photo by Jill O'Donnell, MSU)

    Canaan fir

    Canaan fir combines many of the characteristics of balsam fir and Fraser fir. It is sometimes described as a hybrid between the two, but is actually a specific seed source of balsam fir from the Canaan Valley of West Virginia.

    Canaan fir. (Photo by Bert Cregg and Jill O'Donnell, MSU)
    Canaan fir. (Photo by Bert Cregg and Jill O’Donnell, MSU)

    Want to find a Christmas tree farm near you? Visit the Michigan Christmas Tree Association website, mcta.org, to see choose and cut farms, retail lots and wholesale farms in your area.

    For more information, visit Michigan Christmas Trees.

    Content resourced from a publication of Michigan State University Extension and used with the permission of Michigan State University.

    © 2023 Michigan State University, All rights reserved.

    Some people prefer artificial Christmas trees that can be stored and taken out each year. Others make a yearly expedition to a tree lot or a Christmas tree farm to find the perfect fir or spruce. (Photo courtesy of Metro Creative Connection)

    Trudeau says Trump would raise prices on Americans if he follows through on Canada tariff threat

    By ROB GILLIES, Associated Press

    TORONTO (AP) — Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Friday that if President-elect Donald Trump follows through on this threat to impose sweeping tariffs on Canadian products, he would be raising prices for Americans and hurting American business.

    Trump has threatened to impose tariffs on products from Canada and Mexico if the countries don’t stop what he called the flow of drugs and migrants across southern and northern borders. He said he would impose a 25% tax on all products entering the U.S. from Canada and Mexico as one of his first executive orders.

    “It is important to understand that Donald Trump, when he makes statements like that, he plans on carrying them out. There’s no question about it,” Trudeau said to reporters in Prince Edward Island in Atlantic Canada.

    “Our responsibility is to point out that he would not just be harming Canadians, who work so well with the United States, but he would actually be raising prices for Americans citizens as well and hurting American industry and business.”

    Trudeau said Trump got elected because he promised to bring down the cost of groceries but now he’s talking about adding 25% to the cost of all kinds of products including potatoes from Prince Edward Island.

    Those tariffs could essentially blow up the North American trade pact that Trump’s team negotiated during his initial term. Trudeau noted they were able to successfully re-negotiate the deal, which he calls a “win win” for both countries.

    “We can work together as we did previously,” Trudeau said.

    Trump made the tariff threat Monday while railing against an influx of illegal migrants, even though the numbers at the Canadian border pale in comparison to the southern border.

    The U.S. Border Patrol made 56,530 arrests at the Mexican border in October alone — and 23,721 arrests at the Canadian one between October 2023 and September 2024.

    Trump also railed about fentanyl from Mexico and Canada, even though seizures from the Canadian border are few in comparison to the Mexican border. U.S. customs agents seized 43 pounds of fentanyl at the Canadian border last fiscal year, compared with 21,100 pounds at the Mexican border.

    Canadian officials say lumping Canada in with Mexico is unfair but say they are ready to make new investments in border security.

    “We’re going to work together to meet some of the concerns,” Trudeau said. “But ultimately it is through lots of real constructive conversations with President Trump that I am going to have, that will keep us moving forward on the right track for all Canadians.”

    Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said Thursday she is confident that a tariff war with the United States will be averted. Trump posted on social media that he had spoken with her and she had agreed to stop unauthorized migration across the border into the United States.

    When Trump imposed higher tariffs during his first term in office, other countries responded with retaliatory tariffs of their own. Canada, for instance, announced billions of new duties in 2018 against the U.S. in a tit-for-tat response to new taxes on Canadian steel and aluminum.

    Canada is already examining possible retaliatory tariffs on certain items from the U.S. should Trump follow through on his threat to impose sweeping tariffs on Canadian products, a senior official told The Associated Press this week.

    A government official said Canada is preparing for every eventuality and has started thinking about what items to target with tariffs in retaliation. The official stressed no decision has been made. The person spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to speak publicly.

    In the U.S., business groups were quick to warn about rapidly escalating inflation. House Democrats put together legislation to strip a president’s ability to unilaterally apply tariffs this drastic, warning that they would likely lead to higher prices for autos, shoes, housing and groceries.

    Canada is the top export destination for 36 U.S. states. Nearly $3.6 billion Canadian (US$2.7 billion) worth of goods and services cross the border each day.

    About 60% of U.S. crude oil imports are from Canada, and 85% of U.S. electricity imports are from Canada.

    Canada is also the largest foreign supplier of steel, aluminum and uranium to the U.S. and has 34 critical minerals and metals that the Pentagon is eager for and investing in for national security.

    Canada is one of the most trade-dependent countries in the world, and 77% of Canada’s exports go to the U.S.

    “Canada has reason to fear because Trump is impulsive, often influenced by the last thing he sees on Fox News,” said Nelson Wiseman, professor emeritus at the University of Toronto. “He can leverage that by catering to what he thinks will sound and look good to the public rather than to what happens or will happen.”

    FILE – U.S. President Donald Trump, left, and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau talk prior to a NATO round table meeting at The Grove hotel and resort in Watford, Hertfordshire, England, Dec. 4, 2019. (AP Photo/Frank Augstein, File)

    Man dies from injuries 2 weeks after Clarkston Road crash

    An Independence Township man died Friday at his home from injuries he suffered in a traffic crash two weeks ago, officials said.

    Gerald Allen Gorsline, 51, was driving a 2006 Chevrolet Silverado on Clarkston Road at around 5 a.m. on Nov. 15 when he crossed the centerline near Clintonville Road, left the roadway and crashed into a tree, according to the Oakland County Sheriff’s Office.

    While the crash is still under investigation, it’s been determined that excessive speed was a factor, the sheriff’s office said. It hasn’t yet been determined why the vehicle left the roadway, the sheriff’s office said.

    Gorsline was extricated from the vehicle by a rescue crew from Independence Township Fire Department and transported to a hospital.

    There were no signs of alcohol intoxication, the sheriff’s office said, though results of toxicology reports are pending. Gorsline was not wearing a seatbelt, the sheriff’s office said.

    file photo (Oakland County Sheriff's Office)

    A ‘yoga pill’ to end anxiety? Neuroscientists discover a brain circuit that instantly deflates stress

    By Deborah Vankin, Los Angeles Times

    Your heart is racing, your arms are tingling and your breathing is shallow. You’re having an anxiety attack. And you’re in a public place, to boot. A crowded restaurant, say, or at the office. Not a space where you can comfortably lay on the ground and do some deep breathing exercises to calm yourself.

    What if there were a pill that would instead induce that kind of calm breathing for you? That scenario might be possible after a new scientific breakthrough.

    Neuroscientists at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla have identified a brain pathway that instantly deflates anxiety. The new study, which published earlier this week in the scientific journal Nature Neuroscience, lays out how the aforementioned brain circuit regulates voluntary breathing — meaning conscious breathing as opposed to automatic breathing that happens without your having to think about it — allowing us to slow our breath and calm our mind.

    The discovery opens up the potential for the creation of new drugs that would mimic the relaxed state common during breath work, meditation or yoga. Sung Han, senior author of the study, says he’d like to one day see a “yoga pill,” as he calls it, on the market to ease anxiety. It would likely be useful for the more than 40 million adults in the U.S, who, according to the National Alliance on Mental Illness, suffer from an anxiety disorder.

    Han says the new discovery is a real scientific breakthrough.

    “As a scientist, finding something never known before is always exciting,” he told the Los Angeles Times. “This top-down breathing circuit has been a longstanding question in the neuroscience field. It’s exciting to find the neural mechanism to explain how the slowing down of breathing can control negative emotions, like anxiety and fear.”

    We’ve long known that we can control our breathing patterns to alter our state of mind — when we get stressed, we might take a deep, slow breath to feel calmer. But scientists didn’t understand how that worked — which parts of the brain were actually slowing our breath and why that activity makes us calmer. Now they know that there is a group of cells in the cortex, the higher part of the brain responsible for more conscious, complex thought, that send messages to the brain stem, which in turn sends information to the lungs. That’s the aforementioned “circuit.”

    The discovery validates soothing behavioral practices such as yogamindfulness and even “box breathing” — the latter a technique that involves repeatedly breathing in, then holding your breath, for four-second counts in order to relieve stress — because it grounds these behavioral practices in science.

    But the practical applications is what makes the Salk discovery so important, Han says.

    “It can, potentially, create a whole new class of drugs that can more specifically target anxiety disorder,” he says.

    These would differ from common anti-anxiety medications by more specifically targeting areas of the brain. Common anti-anxiety drugs like Xanax and Lexapro target multiple areas of the brain that control multiple brain processes and behaviors. It’s why these drugs don’t work for everyone in the same way and may create unwanted side effects. More precisely targeting an individual brain circuit makes a medication more effective and reduces potential side effects. And, in extreme cases, such a pill might be more efficient for targeting anxiety than doing breathing exercises.

    “If you’re in panic, breathing techniques alone may not be sufficient to suppress anxiety,” Han says.

    Han’s team is now trying to find the opposite circuit — a fast breathing circuit — that increases anxiety.

    “To target the slow breathing circuit, we need to understand the opposite circuit, so we can avoid targeting it,” Han says. “To relieve the anxiety.”

    While Han hopes his findings will lead to a “yoga pill,” that’s likely a long ways off. The research, and ensuing clinical trials, could take as much as 10 years, he says. And nothing is for certain.

    “I cannot say that this discovery is directly connected to the discovery of the new medication,” Han says. “But I can say it’s a stepping stone. We now know the pathway. That’s exciting. That is the first step.”


    ©2024 Los Angeles Times. Visit at latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    A new study lays out how the aforementioned brain circuit regulates voluntary breathing — meaning conscious breathing as opposed to automatic breathing that happens without your having to think about it — allowing us to slow our breath and calm our mind. (Jim Cooke/Los Angeles Times/TNS)

    Regulators cracked down on sweet vapes after use by kids spiked. Now the Supreme Court is wading in.

    By LINDSAY WHITEHURST, Associated Press

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Vaping is coming before the Supreme Court next week as federal regulators ask the high court to uphold its block on sweet, flavored products following a spike in youth e-cigarette use.

    The Food and Drug Administration has denied more than a million marketing applications for candy- or fruit-flavored products that appeal to kids, part of a wider crackdown that advocates say helped drive down teen vaping after an “epidemic level” surge in 2019.

    Vaping companies, though, said the agency unfairly disregarded arguments that their sweet e-liquid products would help adults quit smoking traditional cigarettes without putting kids at greater risk.

    Republican Donald Trump’s administration could take a different approach after he vowed in a September social-media post to “save” vaping.

    The Supreme Court on Monday is hearing arguments in the FDA’s appeal of a decision from the conservative 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. While other courts upheld FDA refusals, the appeals court sided with the Dallas-based company Triton Distribution.

    It tossed out a decision blocking the marketing of nicotine-laced liquids like “Jimmy The Juice Man in Peachy Strawberry” that are heated by an e-cigarette to create an inhalable aerosol.

    Triton said the FDA had unfairly changed its requirements without enough warning.

    “It sort of pulls the chair out from the applicants,” said Marc Scheineson, a former FDA associate commissioner and attorney who now represents other small electronic tobacco companies.

    The FDA was slow to regulate the now multibillion-dollar vaping market, and even years into the crackdown flavored vapes that are technically illegal nevertheless remain widely available. The agency has approved some tobacco-flavored vapes, and recently allowed its first menthol-flavored electronic cigarettes for adult smokers.

    The marketing refusals combined with age-limit enforcement on the federal and state levels have helped drive down youth nicotine use to its lowest level in a decade, said Dennis Henigan, vice president for legal and regulatory affairs at the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids.

    He says the FDA was clear in its requirements and fears a court decision that leads to wider availability for flavored vape products, which are the dominant choice among the 1.6 million high school students who still vape. “We think that would be a real harm to public health,” Henigan said.

    FILE – The Supreme Court is seen in Washington, Nov. 2, 2024. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)
    ❌