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Well, Good Morning!
Let's take a look at what the day has in store for us.
So, let's dig in, shall we?
Here's What You Need To Know... Why did this gunmaker recently subpoena the records of school children? Remington, the gunmaker being sued by nine families of Sandy Hook shooting victims, has subpoenaed school records belonging to five children and four educators who were killed, the Connecticut Post reports. Remington requested attendance records, report cards and other documents for the deceased children and educators, according to court documents.
Lawyers representing the nine families in court on Thursday sought to seal the records requested by the now-bankrupt Remington company. "The records cannot possibly excuse Remington's egregious marketing conduct, or be of any assistance in estimating the catastrophic damages in this case," the families' lead attorney, Josh Koskoff, said.
The subpoena comes as a high-profile case between the nine families and Remington gears up for a jury trial slated for later this year or early 2022. The families are suing the gunmaker for their marketing practices. Remington argues that it manufactured a legal firearm and that the gunman, not the manufacturer, is responsible for the shooting.
9/11 victims' families seek probe of missing evidence Relatives of the victims of the Sept. 11 attacks called Thursday for the Justice Department's inspector general to investigate the FBI's handling of evidence from its investigation into the hijackers and their associates, saying certain records are apparently missing or lost.
The victims' relatives regard that missing or withheld evidence as potentially crucial in proving their premise that the Saudi kingdom was effectively complicit in the attacks. That thesis forms the basis of a pending federal lawsuit in New York, though U.S. investigations have not conclusively established such a link.
President Joe Biden on Friday directed the declassification of certain documents related to the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. The order directs the Justice Department and other executive branch agencies to begin a declassification review, and requires that declassified documents be released over the next six months.
Pentagon restarts 16 advisory boards after 7-month pause. Why does it matter? Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin has agreed to restart 16 defense advisory boards, after halting activity by all the panels in February and essentially purging a number of members who were appointed in the final days of the Trump administration. Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said a sweeping review of all the board is complete, and Austin has begun taking action on some of the recommendations from the study.
The review was designed to assess whether each board provides value and make sure its focus aligns with U.S. strategic priorities and the National Defense Strategy. All together there were more than 600 members on the 42 boards, but defense officials weren't able to say exactly how many had to resign. They said it was "hundreds."
On the other hand, Austin is currently drawing nearly unprecedented amounts of ire along with General Milley, Secretary Blinken, and President Biden for the Afghanistan debacle, with many calling for their resignations or impeachment.
The House Armed Services Committee adopted an amendment Friday requiring Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin to detail various elements of the Pentagon's activities in Afghanistan, including how military officials plan to facilitate the evacuation of American citizens who were left behind.
Recommended Link: In honor of Labor Day and celebration of YOUR hard work, Josh Martinez is hosting an EPIC one-time Profit Accelerator event…
A Look Back On Your Favorite Headlines In Focus: Culture, Sports & Entertainment A former top producer for Good Morning America faces new sexual assault lawsuit The lawsuit claims that "ABC looked the other way" and "elevated [that producer] through the ranks...and facilitated the hostile workplace."
Why is this former NFL player running for a US Senate seat in Georgia? The football legend has even received the support of the former president in his bid for the Senate seat.
This former star of Buffy the Vampire Slayer is arrested because of drugs He was arrested for fraudulently obtaining prescription pills.
In Focus: Science, Tech & Health "The Accident" has been careening through the Milky Way for 10 billion years It's not quite a star, and it's not quite a planet — but it's soaring through the Milky Way, much closer than we thought.
Planet 9 may be closer and easier to find than thought — if it exists A new study's "treasure map" suggests that a planet several times more massive than Earth could be hiding in our solar system…
Cannibal toads eat so many of their young, they're speeding up evolution The kids are not alright.
In Focus: Business, Markets & The Economy These are the four stocks that can transform $10,000 into $100,000 Some of the names on this list will most definitely surprise you.
These are the five rocketing tech stocks you want to buy right now Quit overthinking and grab a hold of these soaring names.
This is how much your Social Security benefit could increase next year Just how much is the biggest cost-of-living-adjustment in decades going to impact you and your lifestyle?
In Focus: Politics & World Affairs What did Biden say in his address after the Kabul bombings? 13 U.S. service members were killed. Biden faced criticism from both sides of the aisle.
Why the Supreme Court halted reinstating Trump's "Remain in Mexico" policy Justice Samuel Alito issued the temporary stay late Friday night. It will remain in effect until tonight so the high court can consider filings in the case.
DOJ brands Chinese-owned U.S. newspaper a foreign agent The Justice Department has forced a major Chinese-owned newspaper's U.S. subsidiary to register as a foreign agent, records show.
Adult film star Ron Jeremy indicted on 33 counts of rape, sexual assault
First Asian giant hornet nest of the season destroyed in Washington state
10 things we know about the secret X-37B space plane
Google Maps heads in a new direction with these exciting new features
How could this five-minute habit change your life?
Could you be one thought away from your greatest idea ever?
Why did this California hiker die in Death Valley over the weekend?
The greatest fraud to come out of Silicon Valley makes headlines again ahead of trial
It's Time For Your Clickbait Break!
One For The History Books Traditional end of the Western Roman Empire, 476; General Lee invades the North in 1862; the Third French Republic proclaimed as French overthrow Emperor Napoleon III in 1870; Thomas Edison's light bulb is used to light NY's Pearl Street Station in its first large-scale test in 1882.
"The mark of the immature man is that he wants to die nobly for a cause, while the mark of the mature man is that he wants to live humbly for one." — J.D. Salinger, Catcher in the Rye
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Saturday, September 4, 2021
September 04: 9/11 victims’ families seek probe of missing evidence
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