Jenny Cudd is accused of two misdemeanors: entering a restricted building or grounds, and violent entry or disorderly conduct. She told the court she had already paid for the work-related trip.
Jenny Cudd is accused of two misdemeanors: entering a restricted building or grounds, and violent entry or disorderly conduct. She told the court she had already paid for the work-related trip.
COVID-19 by the numbers Over the weekend, New Mexico health officials reported 1,282 new COVID-19 cases: 752 on Saturday and 530 on Sunday. There have now been 174,064 total cases, 102,961 of which the health department has designated as recovered. Santa Fe County had 69 new cases 32 on Saturday and 37 on Sunday. The state also announced 35 additional deaths, 17 on Saturday and 18 on Sunday, three from Santa Fe County: on Saturday, a woman in her 80s who was a resident of the BeeHive Homes Santa Fe facility; and on Sunday, a woman in her 60s who was hospitalized and had underlying conditions, as well as a woman in her 70s who was hospitalized. There have now been a total of 3,283 deaths statewide. As of yesterday, 479 people were hospitalized with COVID-19.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s laptop remains missing after reports surfaced that a Harrisburg woman stole the device during the storming of the Capitol earlier this month.
Riley Williams, 22, allegedly sought to sell the computer to Russian security services, but for unknown reasons, that plan fell through, agents said in court documents. And since surrendering to authorities last week, the location of the laptop remains a mystery.
Investigators searched Williams’ car and apartment and still there has been no sign of the computer, her defense lawyer said during a hearing in Washington on Tuesday.
Whether Pelosi’s laptop was ever in Williams’ possession remains under investigation. She has only been charged with aiding and abetting the theft. Prosecutors based their allegations on social media posts where Williams bragged about stealing the device.
Judge halts release of Lisa Eisenhart, who carried zip ties through Capitol with her son Jordan Fischer
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More than a dozen people charged in the Capitol riot appeared in federal courts in Tennessee, Texas and the District of Columbia on Monday – just a fraction of the 100+ defendants already charged in the case.
In Texas, Garret Miller – the alleged Capitol rioter who tweeted “Assassinate AOC” and threatened a Capitol Police officer – apologized to the New York congresswoman and said in a written statement released by his attorney that he had been “following the instructions of former President Trump” whose after November 6 “had been believed the election was stolen from him.”