
Luzerne County Government Study Commission reaches agreement on ethics recommendation
The seven-citizen study commission is drafting a revised county home rule charter for voters to consider in November.
It had been split on a prior suggestion allowing council to determine if a commission is needed and, if so, how it would be structured.
If the proposed charter is adopted by voters in November, the wording approved Thursday would require council to vote within nine months to ratify or amend the existing ethics code.
Council would also be required to maintain or establish an ethics commission to receive and investigate ethics complaints.
The existing commission structure would remain in effect if council does not approve a new composition. The commission is currently composed of the county district attorney, manager, controller and two council-appointed citizens (one Democrat and one Republican).
Council also would be required to revisit the ethics code and commission structure every two years.
Study Commission Chairman Ted Ritsick and Vice Chairman Vito Malacari said this option ensures an ethics code and commission are in place but gives council legislative authority to determine how they are structured.
While the recommendation was unanimously approved, Study Commission Treasurer Cindy Malkemes said she is concerned council will not act to make improvements.
Many have complained the code is problematic and ineffective, but council has not exercised its current authority to revamp it.
Malacari told Malkemes citizens are free to "put pressure" on council members to make the code workable.
Study Commission member Mark Shaffer said he believes the membership composition of the ethics commission should be spelled out in advance so it is kept "out of council's hands," but he supported the proposal in a spirit of compromise.
Shaffer had predicted voters would reject the proposed new charter if council had discretion to eliminate an ethics commission.
Boards
The study commission also approved recommendations Thursday related to several boards:
—Assessment Appeals Board
This three-citizen panel appointed by council rules on requests for real estate assessment reductions.
The commission is adding wording to ensure the members complete training that was mandated by state law enacted after the current charter took effect. It also is allowing council to appoint alternate members to fill in as needed if permanent members are absent or have a conflict hearing any appeals.
—Retirement Board
The five-member board oversees the employee pension fund and currently consists of the county manager, budget/finance division head, council chair, a council member and member of the retirement system.
The new recommendation would replace the budget/finance division head with an additional council member and allow the manager the option to select a designee to serve in his/her place.
—Joint Airport Board
The county has three members — the council chair, a council member and county manager or his/her designee — on the joint board with Lackawanna County that oversees the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton International Airport.
Thursday's recommendation replaced the county manager with a third council member based on the argument that this board serves more of a legislative purpose.
Reach Jennifer Learn-Andes at 570-991-6388 or on Twitter @TLJenLearnAndes.
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Miami Herald
34 minutes ago
- Miami Herald
Trump Gets ‘Ratioed' on Truth Social for First Time Amid Epstein Backlash
President Donald Trump's weekend post defending Attorney General Pam Bondi's handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files has triggered an unprecedented backlash, marking the first time the Republican has been "ratioed" on his own social media platform, Truth Social. The term "ratioed" refers to when a social media post receives more replies than likes or shares, often signaling more disagreement or criticism than support. In his Saturday evening post, Trump lashed out at those criticizing Bondi, calling her performance "FANTASTIC" and dismissing the ongoing interest in Epstein as a waste of time. "We're on one Team, MAGA, and I don't like what's happening," the president wrote. "Let's not waste Time and Energy on Jeffrey Epstein, somebody that nobody cares about." The post—lengthy, defensive, and directed at his own base—appears to have backfired. According to public engagement data archived from Truth Social, the post has garnered more than 36,000 replies, compared with nearly 11,000 re-truths (the platform's term for shares) and 32,000 likes as of 10:45 a.m. ET Sunday. The backlash on Truth Social reflects growing internal division among MAGA supporters, many of whom have spent months anticipating revelations from the so-called "Epstein Files." Unlike mainstream social media platforms, Truth Social was designed as a haven for Trump and his supporters, where engagement overwhelmingly leans positive. The internal rift appears to stem from growing frustration over unfulfilled promises related to the Epstein case. Trump and several of his allies had long suggested that secret documents, including a so-called "client list," would be released under his administration. Bondi had previously claimed to possess such a list. But last week, the Justice Department announced that no list exists and reaffirmed that Epstein acted alone, dying by suicide in jail in 2019. The anticlimactic conclusion and the administration's refusal to release further files sparked fury from parts of Trump's base, especially activists and influencers who had built expectations around broader revelations. At the Turning Point USA Student Action Summit in Tampa this weekend, chants calling for Bondi's resignation could be heard. Trump's post defending her appeared to be a direct response to that dissent, but it only fueled it further. A user called Mother Rosie wrote: "This statement breaks my heart, Mr. President. I have four daughters, and live in Texas, where families lost little children. I can't even begin to comprehend the flipped narrative that 'it was so long ago' 'why are we still talking about this' and 'nobody should care.' These victims were some ones daughters, sisters, nieces, granddaughter. Someone's child. Please reconsider, sir. I voted for everything you are doing! Accountability was not something negotiable." Another woman, Crissy, who can be seen wearing a Trump-supporting beanie in her profile picture, said: "We want the ELITE PEDOS exposed! You promised us that. Pam promised us that. Kash promised us that. Now it's OUR fault bc we want that promise fulfilled and call Pam out every time she lies? What else has she lied to us about?" A third user, Dewayne Sykes, said: "This is going to cost you so many supporters. I being one of them." There will still some people speaking out in support of Trump in the comments, including from Navy veteran known as Robby F, who said: "We all want to know. But President Trump only has the evidence that these criminals left for him to find. If he gets his hands on anything that's useful, we will know." The data comes from an open-source GitHub repository which scrapes and stores all of Trump's Truth Social posts along with public metrics including reply count, like count, and re-truths. Using this dataset—which includes over 1,000 posts since 2022—Newsweek applied a filter to identify any posts where the number of replies exceeded both likes and shares. Only one post met that condition: the July 12, 2025 post defending Pam Bondi. Other posts in the archive occasionally drew large reply volumes, but in every case until now, likes or re-truths outnumbered them. This post represents the first—and so far only—time Trump was publicly rebuked by more of his own followers than supported him. FBI Director Kash Patel wrote on X on Saturday afternoon: "The conspiracy theories just aren't true, never have been. It's an honor to serve the President of the United States @realDonaldTrump—and I'll continue to do so for as long as he calls on me." Far-right political activist Laura Loomer on Saturday wrote on X: "President Trump says he thinks Blondi [sic] is 'doing a Fantastic job' as AG in a post he posted on Truth Social today...." Charlie Kirk, conservative founder and president of Turning Point USA, wrote on X: "President Trump on the Epstein Files, says he supports Pam Bondi at AG, the files are untrustworthy and created by Comey and Brennan. He wants his Justice Department focused on the voter fraud, the rigged election, ActBlue, and arresting thugs and criminals." While Trump used his Truth Social post to try shift focus away from the Epstein controversy, his followers seem unconvinced. The administration now faces the challenge of reuniting a fractured base ahead of the 2026 midterms elections. 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Miami Herald
37 minutes ago
- Miami Herald
Pa. Rep. Mike Kelly ‘still has questions' year after Trump assassination attempt in Butler
WASHINGTON - U.S. Rep. Mike Kelly says lawmakers and federal agencies still don't have a complete picture of what allowed a gunman to nearly assassinate Donald Trump at a rally in the congressman's hometown of Butler last year. "Like many in the Butler community, I still have questions about everything that led up to, and unfolded on, July 13," Kelly told the Post-Gazette in a statement Thursday. "May we continue to pursue the truth to get the American people the answers they deserve." The Republican congressman, who co-chaired a bipartisan task force investigating the attempted assassination, said Congress had taken significant steps to dig in to the attack. He said he and his colleagues continue to work with Secret Service Director Sean Curran and the agency to implement nearly 40 task force recommendations to bolster security and modernize protection efforts. The task force's investigation officially wrapped up in December. But lawmakers and multiple agencies are still probing the issue to help prevent future attacks. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security's Office of Inspector General still lists as ongoing its inquiry into the Secret Service's preparedness and processes for protecting Trump. The FBI has led the ongoing attempted assassination and domestic terrorism investigation into the 20-year-old Bethel Park gunman, Thomas Matthew Crooks, working with the Justice Department, Secret Service and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. The FBI's Pittsburgh field office told the Post-Gazette this past week it had nothing to add to previous statements on its investigation. Reps. Cory Mills, R-Fla., and Eli Crane, R-Ariz., who were not tapped for the task force, held a forum last year along with other GOP lawmakers and interviewed security experts to dig into the shooting as well as the government's preparations and response. Crane said on X Wednesday that, "There are still a lot of unanswered questions." An independent review panel, ordered by then-President Joe Biden and working with DHS, completed an inquiry between August and October. The panel conducted almost five dozen interviews with federal, state and local personnel, traveled to Butler to conduct detailed site surveys, and collected more than 7,000 documents. Like the task force, the panel found severe failures in planning, training, communication and more, suggesting "deep flaws in the Secret Service," according to its final report in October. U.S. Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, released on Saturday a Government Accountability Office report finding "the Secret Service had no process to share classified threat information with partners when the information was not considered an imminent threat." GAO's investigation, which Grassley requested last summer, also exposed "a litany of (Secret Service) procedural and planning errors, including misallocation of resources, lack of training and pervasive communication failures, all of which contributed to an unsecure environment" at the Butler rally, according to the senator's office. Rep. Jason Crow, D-Colo., who co-chaired the task force alongside Kelly, told the Post-Gazette on Thursday that protecting the country's leaders "goes beyond partisan politics." "Right now, we are witnessing a tragic rise in political violence across the country," he said. "Last year, President Trump was targeted; this year, a Minnesota lawmaker and her husband were assassinated. I'll continue conducting oversight to ensure this administration implements the task force's recommendations so that our leaders are protected." Secret Service changes The Secret Service has introduced a new fleet of military-grade drones and mobile command posts that allow agents to communicate via radio directly with local police, Matt Quinn, the agency's deputy director, told CBS News on Wednesday. That type of system didn't exist at the Butler rally, and communication failures and coordination among federal, state and local agencies were a major target of the task force and other investigators. Quinn told CBS that his agency was "totally accountable" for what happened at the Butler Farm Show grounds that day, and he provided details of previously announced disciplinary action against agents involved with the rally. Six U.S. Secret Service members were suspended without pay or benefits in the aftermath. The penalties ranged from 10 to 42 days of leave, and when the suspended employees returned to work, they were given restricted roles with less operational responsibility, Quinn said. "We aren't going to fire our way out of this," he told CBS. "We're going to focus on the root cause and fix the deficiencies that put us in that situation." Secret Service spokesman Anthony Guglielmi told the Post-Gazette Thursday that, "We have been working with all the oversight entities including U.S. Senate, Government Accountability Office, Inspector General ... on all of the reports." Before the task force released its final report in December, the Secret Service said it had provided more than 1,500 pages of documents and made personnel available for interviews in response to requests from Congress. "Our desire to learn from this failure and ensure it never happens again is unwavering," Guglielmi said in September. Thousands of interviews The task force wound up reviewing more than 20,000 pages of records linked to the Butler shooting and another foiled assassination attempt at a Trump golf course in Florida in September. While the task force's report said the agency provided significant cooperation, lawmakers said Department of Homeland Security policies "restricted certain important documents to in-camera review, and the overclassification of documents hindered the task force's investigation." While Kelly didn't fully detail what remaining questions he has, he and Crow previously said the Department of Justice withheld information related to ongoing investigations, specifically regarding the actions and motives of Crooks and Ryan Routh, the would-be assassin in Florida. The FBI countered that assertion. The agency told the Post-Gazette in December that it shared "documentation of more than 80 interviews with members of the (Secret Service) and other law enforcement agencies who responded on July 13; 17 detailed and technical laboratory reports analyzing the bullets, IEDs, Crooks' drone, DNA and other evidence; classified intelligence documents; records of communications with the (Secret Service) prior to the rally; photos of evidence; verified timeline based on evidence; dispatch log of 911 call from Crooks' parents; autopsy evidence documents; and other documents." Kevin Rojek, the special agent in charge of FBI Pittsburgh, told reporters last summer that the agency had conducted "nearly 1,000 interviews, served numerous search warrants, issued dozens of subpoenas, and analyzed hundreds of hours of video footage." Crooks in the month leading up to the attack searched former President Joe Biden and Trump online more than 60 times, and on July 5 looked up the dates of the Democratic and Republican national conventions. A day later, he registered to attend the Butler rally and searched for "how far was Oswald from Kennedy," and for details and photos of the grounds. One bullet struck and injured Trump, while former firefighter Corey Comperatore was killed and two attendees were also shot but survived. Trump's closest advisers, including eventual White House chief of staff Susie Wiles, didn't know the president's condition when he was rushed out of the rally, according to excerpts from "2024: How Trump Retook the White House and the Democrats Lost America," obtained by the Post-Gazette this past week. Only when Trump, then the presumptive GOP presidential nominee, later began cracking jokes in his hospital bed did his aides realize he was OK, according to authors Josh Dawsey of the Wall Street Journal, Tyler Pager of the New York Times and Isaac Arnsdorf of the Washington Post. "They thought I had four or five bullets in me because there was so much blood," said Trump. He had also refused to take a stretcher into the hospital because "he didn't want the visual," the authors wrote. Drones and tightened security The book highlights increased threats of political violence and additional security measures that the Trump campaign had to grapple with in the wake of the assassination attempts - including ongoing threats from Iran. Trump, for one, complained that his Secret Service detail made it harder for him to cheat at golf, the authors wrote. Meanwhile, the campaign and Secret Service grew increasingly concerned about drones, including in Pennsylvania and California. In September, en route to a farmers' event that required taking country roads southeast of Pittsburgh, Wiles received a call from the Secret Service notifying her there was "an unknown drone overhead, and they couldn't shake it," according to the book. "They might have to split Trump from the rest of the motorcade," the authors wrote. "Wiles thought to herself, 'This is it.' The drone followed them for almost the entire drive but never did anything." Kelly and several lawmakers, and the task force, have suggested the undermanned Secret Service should consider separating from DHS either as an independent agency or move back under the U.S. Treasury Department, where it was formed. The task force noted the Secret Service may be overburdened. The U.N. General Assembly relies on the agency to protect foreign dignitaries - a job that could potentially "be transferred or abrogated in order to focus on the (agency's) primary duty: to protect the president and other critical U.S. leaders." Reps. Ritchie Torres, a Democrat, and Mike Lawler, a Republican, both of New York, introduced legislation in August that would shift the Secret Service's financial crimes investigations to Treasury, and force the agency to stick solely to protecting the president and other officials. Kelly called on Americans reflecting "on the tragic events that unfolded in Butler" to pray for the Comperatore family, the injured rallygoers David Dutch and James Copenhaver, and for Trump. "In the wake of tragedy, the Butler community remains united and stronger than ever," he said. _____ Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Trump's team promised transparency on Epstein. Here's what they actually delivered.
A timeline shows what President Donald Trump's inner circle said about there being more to the Jeffrey Epstein story and their calls for Trump, as president, to reveal it all. WASHINGTON – For years, members of President Donald Trump's inner circle have called on federal officials to release their files on Jeffrey Epstein, a disgraced financier and convicted sex offender who died in a Manhattan jail cell in 2019 while awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking charges. Since Trump took office, Trump administration officials have propelled that campaign forward, suggesting new names from Epstein's purported client list and new accountability were in store. "Absolutely," Alina Habba said when asked by British journalist Piers Morgan in February if "we are likely to see criminal actions being taken" in relation to Epstein. Habba was serving as counselor to the president and is now the acting U.S. attorney for New Jersey. "To hide lists, to protect political friends, all of that, we don't have time for that." "It's a new day, it's a new administration, and everything's going to come out to the public," Attorney General Pam Bondi told Fox News host Sean Hannity in a March interview. Many who were eagerly awaiting the administration's next steps are now stewing in disappointment at what the Trump administration has delivered. In a July memo, the Justice Department and FBI said their "systematic review" of documents related to Epstein "revealed no incriminating 'client list.'" "(W)hile we have labored to provide the public with maximum information regarding Epstein ... no further disclosure would be appropriate or warranted," the offices said. After his team made such concrete promises, the report this week was tough for many Trump loyalists to swallow. Some of the president's most ardent supporters were in uproar. "I'm going to go throw up actually," said right-wing radio show host Alex Jones in a July 7 video post on X, as tears welled up in his eyes. "Shut down the FBI," former Trump spokeswoman Liz Harrington posted on X July 8. "No one believes there is not a client list," Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene said in a July 8 post on X. The outrage comes after years of claims from Trump's inner circle that the government has been hiding information on Epstein's possible associates and the circumstances of his death. While conspiracy theories have mounted online that a political elite had Epstein killed so he couldn't reveal the identities of others involved in his alleged sex-trafficking crimes, New York's chief medical examiner ruled in 2019 that Epstein died by suicide. The Justice Department memo this week echoes that finding. That hasn't stopped some right-wing commentators from speculating that the administration is perpetuating a cover-up. "Why is Pam Bondi's Justice Department covering up Jeffrey Epstein's crimes and murder?" right-wing political commentator Tucker Carlson posted on X July 8. USA TODAY combed through years of public statements that may shed light on why so many Trump supporters are angry. Trump allies and top-ranking members of his administration have long promoted theories that there was more to the Epstein story and that Trump, if re-elected, would reveal the full picture. Here's a timeline of what they've said: 2021: JD Vance posts about Epstein's mysterious jail death 2023: Bongino: People not telling the truth; Patel: Biden FBI has Epstein's 'black book'; RFK Jr.: Wants 'real answers' 2024: Trump: 'Weird situation' with jail camera at time of Epstein's death'; Vance: List should be released Feb. 2025: Bondi, others cite names, flight logs; promise action, accountability on Epstein files March 2025: Bondi says 'truckload' of files delivered by FBI July 2025: Bondi releases memo denouncing 'unfounded theories'; Trump deflects question about Epstein documents (This story has been updated to correct a spelling error.)