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SOLEDAD: AN ESTIMATED $10 BILLION WILL BE ON THE TABLE BETTING ON MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL GAMES DURING MARCH MADNESS, AND MUCH OF IT ILLEGAL.

IT IS ESTIMATED THAT ILLEGAL SPORTS BETTING IS A $150 BILLION A YEAR INDUSTRY.

NEW JERSEY IS ONE OF MANY STATES HOPING TO TAP INTO THAT MONEY BY LEGALIZING SPORTS BETTING, BUT A FEDERAL LAW PASSED IN 1992 IS STOPPING THEM.

THE LAW IS CALLED THE PROFESSIONAL AND AMATEUR SPORTS PROTECTION ACT.

IT BANS MOST STATES FROM SPONSORING, OPERATING, AND PROMOTING ANY SPORTS WAGERING, AND NEW JERSEY IS CHALLENGING THAT LAW BEFORE THE U.S. SUPREME COURT, SAYING IT IS

UNCONSTITUTIONAL, VIOLATING THE 10TH AMENDMENT, WHICH SUPPORTS STATES RIGHTS.

NEARLY TWO DOZEN OTHER STATES HAVE SIDED WITH NEW JERSEY.

THE OPPOSITION IS THE NCAA, NBA, NFL, AND OTHER SPORTS ORGANIZATIONS.

FAMED ATTORNEY TED OLSEN ARGUED FOR NEW JERSEY IN THIS CASE AND IS WAITING ON THE RULING.

IT IS SO NICE TO HAVE YOU WITH US.

LOCK ME THROUGH WHAT IS AT ISSUE.

TED: PEOPLE ALL OVER THE UNITED STATES BET ON SPORTS, BUT IT IS ILLEGAL BECAUSE OF THIS FEDERAL STATUTE.

NEW JERSEY FELT THAT IN ORDER TO REINVIGORATE ITS CASINOS, ATLANTIC CITY AND SO FORTH, THIS WOULD BE HELPFUL FOR THEM TO BE ABLE TO DO WHAT NEVADA ALREADY DOES, WHICH IS ALLOW SPORTS

BETTING.

NEVADA IS THE ONLY STATE WHERE IT IS PERMISSIBLE UNDER FEDERAL LAW.

SOLEDAD: DOES THAT MAKE A DIFFERENCE IN YOUR CASE?

DOES THAT AS YOU HAVE PRESENTED NOW BEFORE THE SUPREME COURT, IS THE FACT THAT THERE IS THIS EXCEPTION FOR NEVADA, AND IN FACT, TECHNICALLY, THERE WAS POTENTIALLY AN EXCEPTION FOR NEW

JERSEY -- TED: THEY GAVE NEW JERSEY A CHANCE TO JOIN UP WITH NEVADA.

NEW JERSEY AT THE TIME DIDN'T WANT TO DO THAT.

THE FACT IS IT IS OPTICAL.

IT'S IMPORTANT FOR US TO UNDERSTAND THAT BETTING ON SPORTS IS A $200 BILLION OR $300 BILLION INDUSTRY IN THE UNITED STATES.

IT'S TAKING PLACE, AND WHAT NEW JERSEY IS SAYING IS, ALL WE WANT TO DO IS REGULATE THE PEOPLE WHO ARE INVOLVED IN THIS BUSINESS.

SOLEDAD: I KNOW IT IS FRAMED AS A STATE'S RIGHTS ISSUE, BUT REALLY, FOR LEGAL NEOPHYTES, IT'S A MONEY GRAB.

OVER $200 BILLION EXISTS -- TED: IT IS IMPORTANT IF THE ACTIVITY IS TAKING PLACE IN THE STATE IS GOING TO OVERSEE IT TO MAKE SURE THE BOOKS ARE OPEN, TO MAKE SURE THE RIGHT PEOPLE ARE

DOING IT, TO MAKE SURE CASINOS ARE OPERATED IN A CERTAIN WAY.

SOLEDAD: THEORETICALLY, THIS IS HUGE.

THIS IS NOT A NEW JERSEY VERSUS THE NCAA STORY.

THIS IS REALLY EVERY STATE THAT WOULD JUMP INTO THIS.

TED: OF COURSE.

THE STATES ARE KNOWING THIS IS TAKING PLACE.

IT'S UNDERGROUND.

IT'S ORGANIZED CRIME.

SOLEDAD: THERE'S LOTS OF MONEY.

I KNOW YOU STAY AWAY FROM THE MONEY ARGUMENT, BUT I THINK MUCH OF THIS IS DRIVEN BY, THERE'S A WHOLE BUNCH OF MONEY, AND OTHER PEOPLE ARE GETTING IT, AND THE STATE COULD HAVE IT.

TED: THAT IS CERTAINLY TRUE.

I'M NOT SAYING THAT IS NOT TRUE, BUT IT IS ALSO A GOOD GOVERNMENT ISSUED.

IF YOU HAVE SOMETHING THAT IS TAKING PLACE -- PROHIBITION.

DID THAT WORK?

NO, IT DIDN'T WORK BECAUSE PEOPLE WERE GOING TO DO IT ANYWAY, AND CRIMINALS RAN IT, AND CRIMINALS BROUGHT OTHER KINDS OF LEGAL PROBLEMS, SHOOTINGS, MOB VIOLENCE, TAX

EVASION.

THE SAME IS TRUE HERE TO A CERTAIN DEGREE.

TED: THE NCAA SAID AND OTHERS ON THAT SIDE SAID THEY WERE CONCERNED IF NEW JERSEY WINS, IT DAMAGES THE INTEGRITY OF THE GAME.

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THAT ARGUMENT?

TED: I THINK THEY ARE TOTALLY WRONG.

IF IT IS BEING RUN BY CRIMINALS, THAT IS THE RISK.

YOU CAN'T WATCH IT CAREFULLY OF CRIMINALS ARE DOING IT AND NOT OPENING THEIR BOOKS.

SOLEDAD: YOU ARGUED THIS CASE BACK IN THE SUMMER.

HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT IT YEAH YOU GENUINELY CONFIDENT YOU ARE GOING TO WIN IT?

TED: WE ALWAYS THINK WHEN WE ARGUE A CASE BEFORE THE SUPREME COURT WE ARE GOING TO WIN.

SOLEDAD: THAT'S WHY I'VE SAID "GENUINELY." REALLY, DO YOU THINK YOU ARE GOING TO WIN?

TED: YOU CONVINCE YOURSELF.

I DO THINK WE ARE RIGHT, AND I DO HOPE, AND I'M HOPEFULLY CONFIDENT THAT THE SUPREME COURT WILL RECOGNIZE THAT THE ISSUE IS IMPORTANT AND SHOULD BE DECIDED.

For more infomation >> States Stand to Gain More Revenue, Power from SCOTUS Case on Sports Betting - Duration: 4:29.

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Chronicle: U.S. senate candidates - Duration: 24:20.

For more infomation >> Chronicle: U.S. senate candidates - Duration: 24:20.

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USA in 5 Minutes - Learn more about the United States of America - Duration: 4:49.

With a population of over 325 million, United States of America is one of the most populated

countries in the world.

Welcome to All in 5 Minutes, and today I will tell you more about it.

The USA or the United States of America is a highly developed country, with the world's

largest economy by nominal gross domestic product (GDP).

USA consists of 50 states (like California, Texas and Florida), a federal district (Washington,

D.C.), five major self-governing territories (Puerto Rico, American Samoa, Guam, U.S. Virgin

Islands and Northern Mariana Islands), and various possessions.

USA is approx.

9.8 million km2 (3.8 million square miles) large.

The capital is Washington, D.C., and the largest city by population is New York City.

Other large cities are Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston, and Philadelphia.

The arrival of Christopher Columbus in 1492 started the European colonization of the Americas.

In 1607, Jamestown became the first permanent English settlement in America.

In 1775, began the American Revolutionary War which was a conflict between Great Britain

and its Thirteen Colonies who wanted to declare an independence.

On July 4, 1776, the US declared its independence from Great Britain by approving the Declaration

of Independence.

In 1783, Britain and the United States signed the Treaty of Paris officially ending the

Revolutionary War and recognizing the United States as a sovereign nation.

The Founding Fathers of the United States are people who led the American Revolution.

They are John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, Thomas Jefferson, James

Madison, and George Washington.

The American Civil War was a conflict from 1861 to 1865.

It was fought between the Union in the north of the US led by Abraham Lincoln, and the

Confederacy in the south led by Jefferson Davis.

The war started because the Confederacy wanted to leave the United States of America.

The Union won the war, and as a result, slavery was made illegal in the United States.

The Spanish–American War and World War I confirmed the country's status as a global

military power.

The USA was the first country to develop nuclear weapons, the only country to use them in warfare,

and a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council.

Nowadays the USA is a leading military, political, cultural, and scientific force internationally.

The supreme law of the United States is the Constitution.

It divides the government into three branches to ensure a central government where no individual

or group gains too much control.

The three branches are: Legislative (makes laws)

Executive (carries out the laws) Judicial (evaluates laws)

The legislative branch includes Congress which consists of the Senate and the House of Representatives.

Congress confirms or rejects the President's appointments and can remove the President

from office.

The executive branch enforces laws and it includes the President, Vice President, and

the Cabinet which has advisors to the President.

The President can veto or reject laws passed by Congress.

Donald Trump is the 45th and current President of the United States of America.

The Vice President is Mike Pence.

The judicial branch consists of the Supreme Court and other federal courts, and it applies

laws to individual cases and decides if they violate the Constitution.

And here are some interesting facts

Americans eat about 100 acres of pizza each day, with about 3 billion pizzas sold annually

in the USA Women got the right to vote in the United

States in 1920 Alaska has a longer coastline than all of

the other 49 states combined.

Global Positioning System (GPS) is controlled by the USA and can be switched off at any

time.

There is still a lot to learn about the USA and to find out more you can click on the

playlist on your screen, or you can follow the links in the description.

If you would like to learn about something else in 5 minutes, you can follow this video

YouTube suggests specifically for you.

Don't forget to leave a like and subscribe!

Thanks for watching, and see you in the next video!

For more infomation >> USA in 5 Minutes - Learn more about the United States of America - Duration: 4:49.

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U.S. rejected Japan's 'unrealistic' conditions for talks with N. Korea: Kyodo - Duration: 0:50.

The United States is also getting ready for a summit with North Korea.

And in the mean time, the U.S. has apparently rejected a quest from Japan that it put certain

preconditions on the talks.

Japan's Kyodo News cites several diplomatic sources who say that Tokyo's foreign minister,

Taro Kono, when he was in Washington, asked that the U.S. only meet with Pyongyang if

the regime is willing to abandon its medium-range missiles... and the resolve the issue of its

kidnappings of Japanese nationals in the 1970s and 80s.

Kyodo's sources said those preconditions were rejected as "unrealistic"... when Kono met

with incoming secretary of state Mike Pompeo, defense secretary James Mattis, and others.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, when he goes to Washington in mid-April to meet with

President Trump,... is expected to make a similar request.

For more infomation >> U.S. rejected Japan's 'unrealistic' conditions for talks with N. Korea: Kyodo - Duration: 0:50.

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U.S. departs Somalia after the Battle of Mogadishu - 3/25/1994 - Duration: 1:04.

- Today in military history, 1994.

The last U.S. troops depart Somalia after

an unsuccessful campaign in a divided country.

In 1992, the United Nations sent a peace keeping force

to the country to provide food and aid

after drought, famine, and civil war

threatened the population with starvation.

In December, President George H. W. Bush launched

Operation Restore Hope, providing 25,000 U.S. troops

to support the mission and help maintain security

from Somalia's warring factions.

In 1993, President Bill Clinton

reduced the U.S. presence to 4,200 troops

and the U.N. formally assumed responsibility

for the operations.

In June, however, Pakistani U.N. peacekeepers

were ambushed by Somali warlord, General Mohamed Aidid.

President Clinton dispatched elite special ops troops

on a mission to capture Aidid,

resulting in the first battle of Mogadishu,

which would result in the loss of two Blackhawks

and 18 soldiers, with another 84 wounded.

Clinton ordered a total U.S. withdrawal

by March 25, 1994.

(dramatic music)

For more infomation >> U.S. departs Somalia after the Battle of Mogadishu - 3/25/1994 - Duration: 1:04.

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After Enacting Tough Penalties Against China, Trump Deploys US Military to Deliver Brutal Message - Duration: 3:56.

After Enacting Tough Penalties Against China, Trump Deploys US Military to Deliver Brutal

Message On Thursday, the Trump administration hit

the Chinese with $60 billion in trade penalties for intellectual property theft.

Hours later, Trump sent Beijing a message of a different sort — sailing a destroyer

near one of artificial islands created by China in the South China Sea in an attempt

to expand its geographic purview.

According to Reuters, the destroyer USS Mustin sailed within 12 nautical miles — the internationally-recognized

territorial limit — of Mischief Reef in the Spratly Islands on Friday, according to

Reuters.The destroyer then conducted "maneuvering operations" off the manufactured islands.

The move was part of what are known as "freedom of navigation" operations, or FONOPS, which

essentially send a territorial message to nations engaged in maritime irredentism.We

conduct routine and regular freedom of navigation operations, as we have done in the past and

will continue to do in the future," said Lieutenant Commander Nicole Schwegman, spokeswoman

for U.S. Pacific Fleet, when asked about the actions.

According to the South China Morning Post, Chinese officials called it a "serious military

provocation" and claimed the destroyer had been "warned off" by two Chinese frigates.What

the U.S. is doing will damage the military-to-military relations and atmosphere," Chinese defense

ministry spokesman Ren Guoqiang said.

Also damaging the atmosphere: $60 billion in trade penalties levied against China for

intellectual property violations by the Trump administration just hours prior.We have a

tremendous intellectual property theft situation going on," President Trump said as he announced

the penalties, The Daily Caller reported.

Last summer, U.S Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer began an investigation into whether

China was violating Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 through policies "related to

technology transfer, intellectual property, and innovation are unreasonable or discriminatory

and burden or restrict U.S. commerce."On Wednesday, testifying before Congress about

trade policy, Lighthizer seemed to indicate the administration was leaning in the direction

of imposing tariffs upon China as part of the administration's penalties for this

property theft.

"Our view is we have a very serious problem of losing our intellectual property.

We are losing to China in ways not reflected in underlying economics," Lighthizer said.China

is generally considered to be the main offender when it comes to American intellectual property

theft, which can cost us to $600 billion a year, according to Commerce Secretary Wilbur

Ross.

White House Trade Adviser Peter Navarro added Thursday that talks had failed to produce

any sort of meaningful results.

In addition to tariffs, the administration is also looking into blocking certain investments

as part of the penalties.A statement from the Chinese Ministry of Commerce on Thursday

said that Beijing "has expressed its position on many occasions that we resolutely oppose

this type of unilateral and protectionist action by the U.S. China will not sit idly

by while legitimate rights and interests are hurt.

"We must take all necessary measures to firmly defend our rights and interests."

Whether or not that resonates with the Trump administration is anyone's guess, although

Friday's actions in the South China Sea might provide a pretty big hint.

For more infomation >> After Enacting Tough Penalties Against China, Trump Deploys US Military to Deliver Brutal Message - Duration: 3:56.

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BREAKING Trump Unleashes Brutal Surprise On United Nations "We Simply Cannot… - Duration: 33:12.

BREAKING: Trump Unleashes Brutal Surprise On United Nations: "We Simply Cannot…

Another win for the America First crowd!

Under Barack Obama, America was steadily becoming a slave to globalism.

Pacts like the Paris Climate Accord required the U.S. to submit to rules crafted by outsiders.

Every America would be forced to follow rules we had no say in.

The accord was not brought to the America people.

Congress wasn't allowed to vote.

It was tyranny, plain and simple.

But that was only one move by Obama to force globalism onto America.

He pushed the country to agree to ridiculous rules from the U.N.

Again, not rules decided by Congress or the American people.

Rules crafted by bureaucrats from other countries.

Of course, the rules dictated America's policy on immigration.

From CNN:

The United States notified the United Nations that it will no longer take part in the global

compact on migration, saying it undermines the nation's sovereignty.

The US has been a part of the New York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants since it was formed

last year.

The declaration aims to ensure the rights of migrants, help them resettle and provide

them with access to education and jobs.

It calls for the negotiation of a global compact on migration, which is expected to be adopted

next year.

"While we will continue to engage on a number of fronts at the United Nations," Secretary

of State Rex Tillerson said in a statement Sunday, "in this case, we simply cannot

in good faith support a process that could undermine the sovereign right of the United

States to enforce our immigration laws and secure our borders."

The US supports "international cooperation on migration issues," the statement added,

"but it is the primary responsibility of sovereign states to help ensure that migration

is safe, orderly, and legal."

In explaining its withdrawal Saturday, the US said the pact contains provisions that

are inconsistent with the nation's immigration policies.

While the US is proud of its leadership on migration and refugee issues, the global approach

is not compatible with the nation's sovereignty, according to Nikki Haley, the US ambassador

to the UN.

CNN and other liberal outlets make this seem like a drastic measure.

Keep in mind the "compact" was formed last year.

It was hardly a pillar of the United Nations.

This compact was a scheme to force the United States and other nations to accept refugees

and other migrants.

It would force us to face the crisis Europe is enduring.

Millions of strangers would flood our country, all because George Soros or some other globalist

says so.

Our migrant policy should be decided by our leaders, plain and simple.

Those leaders—members of Congress—answer to the American people.

If we don't like the laws they write, we can vote them out.

We can't do that with members of the U.N.

We might not even know who is writing these rules!

It was necessary to pull the U.S. from this compact.

Our policies must reflect our values and concerns.

We cannot allow rogue nations, corrupt bureaucrats, and foreign interests to control

our country.

For more infomation >> BREAKING Trump Unleashes Brutal Surprise On United Nations "We Simply Cannot… - Duration: 33:12.

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Who Will Stop the US-Russia Arms Race? - Duration: 14:14.

AARON MATE: It's the Real News.

I'm Aaron Mate.

President Trump is drawing heat for congratulating Russian President Vladimir Putin on his re-election

victory.

During a phone call with Putin this week Trump reportedly ignored a written directive from

his aides that instructed him, quote, do not congratulate.

Speaking to MSNBC, Democratic Sen. Mark Warner echoed the outraged response from Republican

Sen. John McCain.

MARK WARNER: I think John McCain put out a statement today, and his words were better

than mine.

He says, the leader of the free world doesn't call up and congratulate a dictator over a

sham election.

And clearly that's what happened today.

AARON MATE: News of the friendly phone call prompted former CIA Director John Brennan

to suggest that the Russians could have compromising information on Donald Trump.

REPORTER: Why won't the president confront Vladimir Putin, why won't he read the cards

and say the things that you say need to be said to Vladimir Putin?

Do you believe he is somehow in debt to the president of Russia?

JOHN BRENNAN: I think he's afraid of the president of Russia.

REPORTER: Why?

JOHN BRENNAN: Well, I think one can speculate as to why.

That the Russians may have something on him personally that they could always roll out

and make his life more difficult.

REPORTER: Do you believe Russia has something on him?

JOHN BRENNAN: I believe that the Russians would would not, they would opt for things

to do if they believed that it was in their interests.

And the Russians, I think, have had long experience with Mr. Trump and they have things that they

could expose.

REPORTER: Something personal, perhaps?

JOHN BRENNAN: Perhaps.

Perhaps.

AARON MATE: In his defense, Trump said on Twitter that President Obama had also congratulated

Putin during his last win in 2012.

And like Obama, Trump claimed he wants to cooperate with Russia on several issues, including

the arms race.

This comes weeks after Putin gave a speech unveiling a new nuclear arsenal and blaming

the U.S. for the arms race.

He later spoke to NBC News.

VLADIMIR PUTIN: If you were to speak about arms race, then an arms race began at exactly

the time and moment when the U.S. opted out of the Antiballistic Missile Treaty.

AARON MATE: Well, why does Russia blame the U.S. for the arms race?

And in this current political moment, can their differences possibly be resolved.

Well, to discuss this, I spoke recently to Professor Stephen F. Cohen, professor emeritus

of Russian studies at New York University and Princeton.

And I began by asking him what Putin is seeking in his relationship with the U.S.

STEPHEN COHEN: Well, let's begin by saying that there's hardly been a time when Putin

did not call for good relations with the United States, even in the worst of times.

And he continues to refer to American political leaders as 'my partners,' even in the worst

of times.

This, by the way, drives harder line, or harder line people in the Soviet security establishment

up the wall.

They say to him, why do you keep calling them your partner?

Putin is a guy who came to power with the hope and intention of a real, functional,

constructive economic political relationship with the United States.

And though he may have given up that hope, he still calls for it.

The speech he gave that you're referring to, the equivalent, I guess, of the state of the

Union speech on March 1, was exceedingly important.

The first two thirds of it was essentially his electoral program.

It dealt with domestic issues, what he hopes to do for the Russian people.

It was very similar to speeches made here during our elections.

He talked about education, he talked about infrastructure, he talked about pensions.

He talked about health care.

No American would be surprised.

[But the latter third.

Putin called it historic, and I think it is.

And we can explain this simply.

Ever since the America and the Soviet Union acquired the capacity to put nuclear warheads

on ballistic missiles, cross the seas and strike the other country, we have been in

a strategic agreement called mutual assured destruction.

And all that meant that if Washington launched at Moscow, within minutes Moscow would launch

at Washington, and both countries would be grievously affected, if not completely destroyed.

And this doctrine, called MAD, may seem frightful, but it kept the nuclear peace until the idea

came up that you could build an antiballistic missile weapon, missile defense.

It started with Reagan.

To prevent that, I think signed in 1972, was a treaty, the antiballistic missile treaty,

which meant that the sides were prohibited from deploying antiballistic missile systems

in order to preserve this mutual assured destruction so that neither side would be tempted to launch

a first strike.

Each side, America and the Soviet Union, was given one exemption exemption.

Moscow put a missile defense system over, Russia did over Moscow.

And I think we have our someplace in South Dakota for some reason, I'm not sure why.

In 2002 President Bush left this treaty, nullified it unilaterally.

Ever since then we've been pushing missile defense installations toward Russia.

I think there are 30 or 40.

They range from, as I understand it, California to Alaska.

But there's one operating in Romania, one to open in Poland.

But here's the thing.

we've figured out how to deploy them on ships.

And so these anti-missile defense systems are sailing on ships in the Black Sea and

the Baltic Sea, right on Russia's borders.

So what did Putin say?

And it's really, if if half of what he claimed for these weapons is true, and I'm sure more

than half is true, he said, we have developed several weapons that do not lie at the ballistic

level.

That is, high in the sky and descend.

They fly much lower, much faster, and they can allude any any missile system that you

Americans have spent trillions of dollars on.

So therefore, we have restored mutual assured destruction.

He's saying that you Americans, and it's true some Americans did this, tried to develop

missile defense so that you could threaten us wit,h or perhaps launch, a first nuclear

strike knowing that your missile defense would protect you from retaliation.

He said that was a fiction from the beginning.

But we now have these new weapons which make it absolutely impossible.

And so he ends by saying, therefore, having restored the balance of sanity, let us sit

down and have major nuclear weapons talks again.

But again, Aaron, I mean, if it's true, and I have no reason to think it's not true, though

the stages of development of these weapons is a little unclear, it's true what Putin

said about these four or five new weapons systems.

We are now in a completely new era, because since the end of the Soviet Union the United

States has tried to develop at least the capacity of a first strike capability at Russia using

these missile defenses.

That is over.

It's not possible any longer.

Trillions of dollars have been wasted.

By the way, I forget which administration, Bush or Obama, made missile defense a NATO

project.

It started out as an American project.

But it officially gave it to NATO.

Why?

Because where NATO goes, the missile defense installations go, and NATO has expanded right

to Russia's borders.

So this is an historic turning point, assuming what Putin said is largely true.

Though you wouldn't know it.

I guess you had on professor Theodore Postol of MIT.

And I mean, Ted is excellent on this stuff but you don't get any of this in the mainstream

media.

Putin's speech was read as an act of threatened aggression against the United States.

It was just the opposite.

AARON MATE: Right.

And you know, I think what we often forget, too, is that as this missile system , defensive

missile system, whatever it's called, was developed, especially under Bush number two,

George W. Bush, it was billed to Russia for so long as being targeted towards Iran.

Which seems like a pretty tough sell to accept when, when it's actually being positioned

so close to Russia.

STEPHEN COHEN: Look, it's bogus.

It's fiction.

It's B.S.

It's disinformation.

It's American propaganda.

The reality is this: Russia has been protesting about the, once we left, Washington left the

Antiballistic Missile Treaty, Russia has been protesting what we've been building.

We told Russia, why are you worried?

It has nothing to do with Russia.

This is all about Iran and, quote, rogue states, unidentified.

Russia said, OK, in that case let's build it together.

We actually have better radar facilities than you have.

We'll build it, we'll manage it together.

We refused that systematically.

Every attempt Russian made to join in the creation of a missile defense system was rejected

by Washington.

Everybody, unless, you know, you believe in the Easter Bunny, I guess, that this system

as it was expanded, increasingly, and it branched out, was directed at Russia.

I mean, maybe it would have worked against Iran, too, but that was going to be a bonus.

This was about Russia.

The Russians knew it.

You and I knew it.

Everybody knew it.

Do you know what is an indestructible weapon system?

AARON MATE: No I don't.

STEPHEN COHEN: One funded in all 50 states.

All right.

That's what this missile defense has been.

They farmed out manufacturing of it everywhere from Paducah Kentucky to Israel.

Everybody gets a piece of the action.

Therefore you get no protest in Congress because it's constituency politics.

And that's true of a lot of the weapons systems we make.

They're indestructible when all 50 states get a piece of the action, and that's what

you have with this missile defense stuff.

AARON MATE: OK, so, speaking of Congress.

If there is to be any push for Trump to engage with what Putin said seriously and try to

restart some sort of arms control talks, including the New START treaty, which Trump has indicated

little interest in advancing, you'd think that it would be Trump's opposition party

who would be pushing him towards that.

Now, recently there were some Democratic senators to call for a new round of strategic arms

talks with Russia.

But I want to read to you a quote from the Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer, where

he is greeting the news of Mike Pompeo now being the secretary of state.

And instead of pointing to Pompeo's open disdain for the Iran nuclear deal and his hawkishness

on things including Russia, this is what Chuck Schumer said.

He said: The instability of this administration and just about every area weakens America.

If he's confirmed we hope that Mr. Pompeo will turn up we'll turn over a new leaf and

will start toughening up our policies towards Russia and Putin, unquote.

So Professor Cohen, as we wrap, that is the top priority from the leader of the opposition

party Chuck Schumer, for the new nominee to be secretary of state to be tougher towards

Russia.

STEPHEN COHEN: Well, but it's not just Schumer.

And Schumer is not to make this distinction as statesmen.

He is a kind of local politician risen way above his pay grade when it comes to foreign

affairs.

It was outrageous what he said.

But a lot of the Democratic leaders are saying this sort of thing.

I mean, let me make the point you made before.

One reason this situation is so dangerous, Aaron, so dangerous, is that in the '70s and

'80s, and I participated at a junior or younger level, the debate over Cold War or detente

in the United States, that the pro-detente people, the anti-Cold War people had lots

of very senior allies many in Congress.

Even in the State Department.

Even among presidential aides.

It was always a fair fight.

There is no one today.

Only the Schumers and the Pelosis.

And they have become with this Russia gate stuff, claiming that Putin attacked America

and it was like Pearl Harbor or 9/11.

I mean I never call people names, but this is warmongering.

That's exactly what it is.

If you claim Russia attacked America, the assumption is we have to attack Russia.

And we're talking about nuclear war potentially.

So what kind of political leadership is, we have descended into a morass of degraded commentary

on Russia that has never even when the Soviet Union existed, even during the worst days

of the Cold War, we didn't have this kind of discourse.

AARON MATE: We have to leave it there.

Professor Stephen F. Cohen, professor emeritus of Russian studies at New York University

and Princeton University.

Thank you.

STEPHEN COHEN: Pray a lot, Aaron.

AARON MATE: Will do.

And thank you for joining us on the Real News.

For more infomation >> Who Will Stop the US-Russia Arms Race? - Duration: 14:14.

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JOHN KERRY OFFICIALLY UNDER INVESTIGATION AS DOSSIER PROBE TARGETS OBAMA STATE DEPARTMENT - Duration: 4:28.

JOHN KERRY OFFICIALLY UNDER INVESTIGATION AS DOSSIER PROBE TARGETS OBAMA STATE DEPARTMENT

Fox News contributor Sara Carter revealed that the House Intelligence Committee is now

investigating former Secretary of State John Kerry's "possible role," in the Steele

dossier that was paid for by the Democratic National Committee and Hillary Clinton Campaign.

The committee began looking into Kerry's connections after his former counsel and State

Department colleague Jonathan Winer published an op-ed in the Washington Post.

Sara Carter reported:

The House Select Committee on Intelligence is now investigating former Secretary of State

John F. Kerry's possible role into the unverified dossier paid for by the Democratic National

Committee and Hillary Clinton Campaign, this reporter has learned.

The dossier, assembled by a former British spy, laid the foundation for the FBI's investigation

into alleged collusion between President Trump and Russia and was the essential piece of

evidence used by the FBI to get a warrant to spy on a former volunteer for the Trump

campaign.

For more than a month, the committee has been in its second phase of investigations focused

on former Obama State Department officials and their role in either transmitting information

or using information provided by former British spy and investigator Christopher Steele.

Steele was hired by embattled research firm Fusion GPS, also under several congressional

and Senate investigations.

[…] Jonathan Winer, a long-time colleague of Kerry

and who served as the former envoy for Libya during his tenure at the Department, wrote

an opinion piece in the Washington Post on Feb. 8, defending his relationship with Steele

and his role in the infamous dossier.The Gateway Pundit reported:

Rep. Devin Nunes (R-CA) recently revealed to Fox News host Laura Ingraham that Kerry

had been briefed on a 'second dossier'.

"There were comments over the weekend from people from within the State Department that

said John Kerry had been briefed on the dossier–the new dossier whatever this new dossier is and

that they also provided it to the FBI," Nunes told Ingraham.Byron York of the Washington

Examiner previously reported that the Obama State Department was being probed as to whether

or not they had a hand in the dossier.

York notes Steele was viewed inside the Obama State Department as a valuable source for

intelligence on all things Russia.

Obama State officials made a habit of disseminating reports the former British spy authored for

private clients around the Department:

A book published in November by a correspondent at the Guardian, "Collusion: Secret meetings,

dirty money, and how Russia helped Donald Trump win," noted that Steele's 2010 work

on the World Cup soccer corruption investigation won him the trust not only of the FBI, but

the State Department as well.

From author Luke Harding: The [soccer] episode burnished Steele's

reputation inside the U.S. intelligence community and the FBI.

Here was a pro, a well-connected Brit, who understood Russian espionage and its subterranean

tricks.

Steele was regarded as credible.

Between 2014 and 2016, Steele authored more than a hundred reports on Russia and Ukraine.

These were written for a private client but shared widely within the State Department

and sent up to Secretary of State John Kerry and to Assistant Secretary of State Victoria

Nuland, who was in charge of the U.S. response to the Ukraine crisis.

Many of Steele's secret sources were the same sources who would supply information

on Trump.

One former State Department envoy during the Obama administration said he read dozens of

Steele's reports on Russia.

The envoy said that on Russia, Steele was "as good as the CIA or anyone."

Steele's professional reputation inside U.S. agencies would prove important the next

time he discovered alarming material, and lit the fuse again.

Hillary Clinton, who admitted her 2016 presidential campaign helped fund the dossier, was Obama's

Secretary of State between January 21, 2009 – February 1, 2013.

For more infomation >> JOHN KERRY OFFICIALLY UNDER INVESTIGATION AS DOSSIER PROBE TARGETS OBAMA STATE DEPARTMENT - Duration: 4:28.

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U.S. and Cuba enter negotiations for the first time since 1961 - 3/24/1977 - Duration: 0:57.

- Today in military history, 1977,

the United States and Cuba engage in direct negotiations

for the first time since 1961.

During the escalation of the Cold War in the 50s and 60s,

tension between Cuba and the US reached a breaking point.

In 1961, President John F. Kennedy severed

diplomatic relations with communist leader Fidel Castro.

When President Jimmy Carter took office in 1977,

he was prepared to reopen communication with Cuba.

On March 24, 1977, negotiators from both countries,

met to discuss fishing rights.

In the following months, the Cold War enemies

were able to reach common ground,

including the release of prisoners,

and the ease of travel restrictions.

But by 1980, animosity resurged,

and the relationship disintegrated.

It wasn't until 2015 when the formal relationship

was tenuously restored and the embassies

in both countries were reopened.

For more infomation >> U.S. and Cuba enter negotiations for the first time since 1961 - 3/24/1977 - Duration: 0:57.

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Hidden Enemy - The Psychiatric industry's Infiltration of the U.S. Military - Duration: 0:31.

Now we have soldiers coming back from the battlefield and

they're addicted to psychotropic medication.

So, do antidepressants cause suicide?

Of course they do!

I took my pistol and put in my mouth...

For more infomation >> Hidden Enemy - The Psychiatric industry's Infiltration of the U.S. Military - Duration: 0:31.

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5.56mm M4 CARBINE ⚔️ US Armed Forces - Duration: 5:25.

The M4 carbine is a shorter and lighter variant of the M16A2 assault rifle.

The M4 is a 5.56×45mm NATO, air-cooled, direct impingement gas-operated, magazine-fed carbine.

It has a 14.5 in barrel and a telescoping stock.

The M4 carbine is extensively used by the United States Armed Forces and is largely

replacing the M16 rifle in United States Army and United States Marine Corps combat units

as the primary infantry weapon.

Facts -The first model called XM4, which was renamed

to M4 in May 1991, had an Upper A1 Sight, and was given a shorter 11.5-barrel, but later

it was given a longer 14.5-inch barrel for the bayonet and the M203 Grenade Launcher.

-There have been some criticisms of the carbine, such as lower muzzle velocities and louder

report due to the shorter barrel, additional stress on parts because of the shorter gas

system, and a tendency to overheat faster than the M16A2.

Design The M4 is handy and more convenient to carry

than a full-length rifle.

While the M4's maneuverability makes it a candidate for non-infantry troops, it also

makes it ideal for close quarters battle.

The M4 have mostly replaced the M16A2 in the Army and Marines.

The U.S. Air Force, for example, has transitioned completely to the M4 for Security Forces squadrons,

while other armed personnel retain the M16A2.

The US Navy uses M4A1s for Special Operations and vehicle crews.

Some features of the M4 compared to a full-length M16-series rifle include:

- Compact size - Shortened barrel 14.5 in, which includes

the shorter carbine gas system.

- Telescoping buttstock

Functionality The M4 is capable of mounting the M203 and

M320 grenade launchers.

The distinctive step in its barrel is for mounting the M203 with the standard hardware.

The M4 is capable of firing in semi-automatic and three-round burst modes, while the M4A1

is capable of firing in semi-auto and fully automatic modes.

Reliability

The reliability of the M4 has increased as the design was upgraded.

In 1990, the M4 was required to fire 600 mean rounds between stoppages using M855 ammunition.

In 2013, the current M4A1 version can fire 1,691 mean rounds between stoppages using

M855A1 ammunition.

Accessories

The M4 can be fitted with many accessories, such as night vision devices, suppressors,

laser pointers, telescopic sights, bipods, either the M203 or M320 grenade launchers,

the M26 MASS shotgun, forward hand grips, and anything else compatible with a MIL-STD-1913

Picatinny rail.

Other common accessories include the AN/PEQ-2 and AN/PEQ-15 multi-mode laser and light modules,

Advanced Combat Optical Gunsight, and M68 CCO.

EOTech holographic weapon sights are part of the SOPMOD II package.

Visible and infrared lights of various manufacturers are also commonly attached using various mounting

methods.

As with all versions of the M16, the M4 accepts a blank-firing attachment for training purposes.

In January 2017, a USMC unit deployed with suppressors mounted to every infantry M4 service

weapon.

Exercises showed that having all weapons suppressed improved squad communication and surprise

during engagements; disadvantages included additional heat and weight, increased maintenance,

and the greater cost of equipping so many troops with the attachment.

Specifications Weight

Empty: 6.5 lb 7.49 lb with 30 rounds

Length 33 in when the stock is extended

29.75 in when the stock is retracted

Action Gas-operated, rotating bolt

Rate of fire: 700–950 round/min cyclic Muzzle velocity: 2,970 ft/s

Effective firing range: 500 m Feed system: 30-round box magazine or other

STANAG magazines.

Magazines with different capacities also available.

Sights: Iron sights or various optics

For more infomation >> 5.56mm M4 CARBINE ⚔️ US Armed Forces - Duration: 5:25.

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Kasich: US should engage, not fight with world - Duration: 6:47.

For more infomation >> Kasich: US should engage, not fight with world - Duration: 6:47.

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How Did Yoga Come To The United States? - Duration: 10:08.

*Breathes out*

I actually am pretty terrible at yoga.

But I grew up watching my not-blood uncle Ranjit practicing yoga in his home every day.

And let me tell you, it didn't look like this.

"The goats love this more than the people do.

The goats are having a lot more fun, between you and I."

Yoga today is a massive industry in the United States– and it's a major part of leading a

healthy lifestyle for millions of Americans. And a fashion style for lots of others.

And while we may all know that "Om" and "Namaste" and maybe even "Chakra" are words somehow related

to yoga, the actual history of how yoga came to the United States, spread across the world

and gave birth to millions wearing Lululemon isn't as well known.

Hey guys, I'm Sana. And today I'm gonna explore the history of yoga in the United States and ask your favorite question:

Are our yoga classes cultural appropriation, appreciation...

or just late-stage capitalism?

Yoga is a massive industry in the United States.

One study found that Americans spend $16 billion a year on clothing, equipment, classes and accessories.

It's also reported that over 36 million, or 15%, of Americans had done their downward dog

at some point in the last six months. Over the course of their lives, that number increases to 28% of Americans.

And it's also everywhere in pop culture.

"Unless you're planning to move those hands down, get them off me."

"Baby bend over, baby bend over - lemme see you do that yoga."

"I'm so good at yogaaaa"

So how did a South Asian spiritual practice dating back thousands of years even get to America?

Well, say hello to Swami Vivekananda—the man credited for introducing yoga to Americans.

Vivekananda came to Chicago in 1893 to speak at the first-ever Parliament of Religions conference,

a meeting of faith leaders from around the world that was part of the Chicago World's Fair.

He's credited for having introduced Hindu spirituality to Americans through a series of speeches he gave at the conference.

Dr. Andrea Jain, who focuses on the popularization of yoga around the world, says that

while Vivekananda made yoga better known in the United States, there were others who were already dabbling in it before him.

Many Americans appropriated yoga and practiced it as a part of their spiritual traditions long before that.

They appropriated, of course, modern versions of yoga, yoga that they thought were non-dogmatic

and oftentimes removed from religious institutions.

And Vivekananda wasn't even the guy who popularized the kind of yoga we do today in classes.

B.K.S. Iyengar, K. Pattabhi Jois and T.K.V. Desikachar are credited for being the founding fathers of modern yoga.

All three were students of perhaps the most influential yoga teacher, Sri Tirumalai Krishnamacharya.

Among Krishnamacharya's most influential students was Indra Devi.

Indra Devi was key in really teaching yoga in a way that distanced it from those stereotypes of Hinduism that many Americans deemed threatening,

especially specific Hindu beliefs that might be perceived as a threat to the American religious identities.

Indra Devi – whose real name was Eugenie Peterson – was a Russian actress who

brought yoga with her to Los Angeles in 1947, where it attracted the attention of actors interested in fitness and breathing techniques.

I want to mention here that from the 1880s into the early 1900s, in response to fear of incoming immigrants,

the U.S. government enacted a series of immigration laws that barred or limited immigration from Asia.

And yoga, in particular, was treated as a "strange cult" that was "stealing" young white women.

And it's following this period that we see Indra Devi, a white woman, teach yoga.

Now, while there were many Westerners traveling to India for access to knowledge of yoga and Hindu spirituality,

it's only after the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 that we see yoga become a part of the American counterculture of the 1960s.

Hindu spirituality, or "spirituality from the East," was big.

And there were many swamis who were able to immigrate to the United States and open up centers and develop the practice.

And many young Americans in search of spiritual fulfillment continued to travel to India.

Jain notes, in our conversation, that Hindu spirituality was seen as an outright rejection of the rigidity of the church.

Most of them were Protestant Christians, and they were rejecting the Church and instead turning to what they considered to be radically alternative.

In the '70s and '80s, the growth of yoga slowed down a bit–

and that lack of growth coincided with a national conservative movement and its backlash against counterculture.

But then the '90s came and there was also a boom in corporatized everything.

Including yoga.

The 90s is when you start to see yoga represented in the mainstream as just another consumer product

that one could buy. Just like an aerobics class, one could choose to go attend a yoga class.

And part of that mainstreaming was yoga's popularity among celebrities

like Sting, Raquel Welch, Madonna, Gwyneth Paltrow and actress slash fitness "guru" Jane Fonda.

Be conscious of how relaxed you feel.

Carry this feeling with you.

One of the most popular yoga books of the early 2000s, by the way, was by supermodel Christy Turlington,

who was also featured on Time magazine's cover for a story on the "Science of Yoga."

Soon, the instructors to the stars, like Baron Baptiste and Rodney Yee, became more mainstream celebrities themselves.

So, back to that pesky question:

Is practicing yoga, if you're not a part of Hindu or even South Asian culture, actually a form of cultural appropriation? Or is it appreciation?

I actually got to sit down with badass Bay Area artist Chiraag Bhakta, who in 2014 put

together an exhibit at the San Francisco Asian Art Museum called #WhitePeopleDoingYoga.

Bhakta's exhibit looked at who got the face time in marketing and teaching yoga in the United States and

—spoiler—it wasn't Indians.

My practice revolves around, focuses on, identity politics. I started coming across grassroots-level meditation and yoga ephemera from like books,

records, advertisements from the 50s to the 80s, and I was kind of curious on how yoga was being branded and marketed to the Western audience.

I don't have the answers, and I think that's why I created the piece, to like really just explore that

and to see what conversations come out of it.

Jain is also quick to point out that the appropriation conversation shouldn't be so simplified—

that yoga's own history in South Asia isn't linear.

We don't want to perpetuate some kind of very simple narrative that suggests that

there is this authentic, original tradition

called 'Yoga' that existed in South Asia that was then appropriated.

Yoga is really culturally South Asian. It doesn't belong to this religion or that.

A lot of the problem also, for Jain, comes down to how yoga is sold.

There are many countless cases in which entrepreneurs and corporations sell yoga products and services and do so in a way that is driven towards making a profit without

benefiting the conduits of yoga in South Asia.

That said, to just reduce the yoga industry to mere commercialization or commodification is just too

simple, because among many yoga practitioners, you have an interest in learning about that history.

But despite how some practitioners may have the knowledge about yoga's history and the power dynamics at play,

the commercialization has nevertheless whitewashed the practice.

In a two-year archival study of Yoga Journal magazine, there was never a South Asian person

on the cover and less than 1% of content contributors were South Asian.

And it's not really surprising when yoga, for the most part of its history, has been marketed to white, wealthy Americans.

I think it's an extension of colonialism in a lot of ways;

of mining the lands and the cultures and then using those materials for your own financial benefit.

Chiraag also pointed out how the founder of Lululemon, the leading name in Yoga apparel, actually made a comment in 2004,

in an interview, about how he chose the name for the company because it was "funny" to hear the Japanese try to pronounce it.

White male, like, making fun of one Asian culture, mining the sh*t out of another culture,

and just sitting on billions of money. And you start seeing this pattern of like, oh yeah, that sounds familiar.

And Jain notes that while many yoga consumers may actually be searching for something spiritual,

the yoga industry functions on, well, a sort of exoticization of that spirituality.

Even though we oftentimes think of commercial yoga as non-spiritual or non-religious or simply

fitness or simply commodities, it's a lot more complicated, because many of the reasons behind why consumers choose yoga

are tied to Orientalist stereotypes.

So when entrepreneurs then sell these products, they are capitalizing off of those stereotypes.

This whole conversation on appropriation and authenticity takes an uncomfortable turn when we look at how yoga has

been weaponized in India under the leadership of Narendra Modi and the Hindu nationalist BJP party.

They've been trying to reclaim yoga as a Hindu tradition as a way to assert Hindu identity

in a multi-religious country, where Muslims have come under violent threat.

So, how should we approach our yoga classes?

Is it time to drop the sun salutations and incredibly comfortable pants? Well, I'll leave that to Bhakta.

I guess what I want people to take away is to just really stop and think about

what they're stepping on, and, you know, what they're participating in,

when going to a yoga class or buying those yoga pants.

For more infomation >> How Did Yoga Come To The United States? - Duration: 10:08.

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Marches Held Across The U.S. And On Six Of The Planet's Seven Continents - Duration: 3:09.

For more infomation >> Marches Held Across The U.S. And On Six Of The Planet's Seven Continents - Duration: 3:09.

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Students From Around U.S. Converge On Washington To March, Help Make A Change - Duration: 5:26.

For more infomation >> Students From Around U.S. Converge On Washington To March, Help Make A Change - Duration: 5:26.

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Students March Across The US Demanding Change In Gun Laws - Duration: 5:57.

For more infomation >> Students March Across The US Demanding Change In Gun Laws - Duration: 5:57.

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Melania Trump recognises 10 Women with global Courage awards at State Department - Duration: 19:16.

For more infomation >> Melania Trump recognises 10 Women with global Courage awards at State Department - Duration: 19:16.

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Ekweremadu Sells Two US Properties Below Market Value To Stop Nigerian Gov From Seizing Them - Duration: 7:48.

Deputy Senate President, Mr Ike Ekweremadu, has sold two of his three properties in Kissimmee, Florida, United States of America.

The properties, which were recently exclusively reported by SaharaReporters as owned by him, are townhouses at 2747 Club Cortile Circle and 2763 Club Cortile Circle, Kissimmee, Florida.

The properties which were bought in 2008 for $200,000 each were put on the market in January and sold for $150,000 to the same buyer on February 20 2018.

SaharaReporters' investigations revealed that both properties were sold below prevailing market value in Mr Ekweremadu's apparent bid to avoid forfeiting them to the Federal Government.

He has also put the third one, situated at 4507 Stella Street, Bellavida Estate Kissime, Florida, up for sale, but he is yet to find a buyer.  The owner of the property said to be worth $500,000, is still listed as the Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu with his Enugu address clearly stated on the property did.

The two houses already sold were bought in January by a company, Y-Kat Enterprises Inc. , with an address at 10143 Foxhurst Ct Orlando, Florida.

When SaharaReporters contacted the person listed as the owner, Mr Russel Daya, he declined to speak with our reporters, claiming it was too late in the night.

When asked if he knew Nigerias deputy Mr Ekweremadu, he answered in the negative and hung up immediately.

The fire sale of the properties has, however, not concealed that they were previously owned by Mr Ekweremadu. Ekweremadus 4507 Stella Street, Bellavida Estate, Kissimmee, Florida Sahara Reporters Media.

Documents exclusively obtained by SaharaReporters from Osceola County Tax Collector show  Mr Ekweremadu as the taxpayer on the property at 4507 Stella Street, Bellavida Estate Kissime, Florida, till the end of 2017.

A notice of Ad Valorem and non-Ad Valorem taxes from the tax collector, bearing Mr Ekweremadu's address of 4 Iyienu Street, Independence Layout, Enugu, showed that the Deputy Senate President paid a total of $6, 728.

37 as tax on the house as at December 2017.

On the property at 2747 Club Cortile Circle, Kissimmee, Florida, the tax collector's documents showed that the Deputy Senate President paid a total of $1,665.91 as at December 2017. The document similarly bears Mr Ekweremadu's Enugu address.

Likewise, the Deputy Senate President paid taxes on the one at 2763 Club Cortile Circle, Kissimmee, Florida. Ekweremadu-2763-Club-Cortile-Cir.pdf Ekweremadus 2763 Club Cortile Cir. Mr Ekweremadu owns 22 properties across the world, worth millions of dollars.

Though registered in his name, many of the properties were missing from the Deputy Senate President's asset declaration form he submitted to the Code of Conduct Bureau in 2015, an indication that he hid them to avoid questions on how he acquired them.

Saharareporters had recently detailed Mr Ekweremadus properties in Nigeria, UAE, UK and the US.

The report showed that in addition to the three properties in the US, the Deputy Senate President did not declare his ownership of 11, Evans Enwerem Street, Apo Legislative Quarters, Abuja; Plot 2633 Kyami, Abuja; Housing Estate (Plot 1106 CRD, Cadastral Zone 07-07, Lugbe, Abuja; and Plot 2782 Asokoro Extension, Abuja.

Similarly, he neglected to declare houses at Citi Park Estate, Gwagwalada; Plot 1474 Cadastral Zone BD6, Mabushi; Congress Court; Flat 1, Block D25, Athletics Street, (24th Street) Games Village; and Plot 66, 64 Crescent, Gwarimpa Estate, all in Abuja.

Two London properties, Flat 4 Varsity Court, Harmer Street, WIH 4NW, London; and 52 Ayleston Avenue, NW6 7AB, London; were equally omitted from his assets declaration form dated 5 June 2015.

In addition to these are his properties in the United Arab Emirates. These include Room 1903, The Address Hotel, Downtown Dubai; The Address Boulevard, 3901, Dubai; two Flats of Burij Side Boulevard (the signature), Dubai; Emirate Gardens Apartment No.

EGG1/1/114, Dubai; Emirate Gardens Apartment No. EGG1/115, Dubai; and Apartment No. DFB/12/B 1204, Park Towers, Dubai. Others are Flat 3604, MAG214, Dubai; and Villa No 148, Maeen 1, The Lakes Emirates Hills, Dubai.

On Thursday, the Federal Government asked the Federal High Court in Abuja to freeze undeclared assets traced to the Deputy Senate President.

The Federal Government, via an ex-parte motion (FHC/ABJ/CS/284/2018), applied for an interim court order for the temporary forfeiture of the undeclared properties pending the conclusion of further inquiry/investigation by the Special Presidential Investigation Panel for the Recovery of Public Property and possible arraignment of Mr Ekweremadu.

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