Michigan House committee to look into AG's handling of Flint Water Crisis prosecutions
Republican lawmakers in Michigan are asking for documentation on how much the state Attorney General's Office spent on the seven years of prosecutions related to the Flint Water Crisis that ultimately came up with no convictions.
Due to a switch of the City of Flint's water supply in 2014 without proper care to ensure prevention of lead contamination, despite citizen concerns about the water they were drinking and cleaning with, many of the city's residents were effectively poisoned.
The prosecution in regards to the crisis began in April 2016 when Republican then-state Attorney General Bill Schuette charged an employee of the City of Flint and two Michigan Department of Environmental Quality employees for their roles in the crisis.
Current state Attorney General Dana Nessel, a Democrat, took over the office in 2018 and in 2021 her office announced charges for Republican former Governor Rick Snyder, his aides and officials in Flint for their response to citizens' concerns about the water.
Oversight Chair of the new Weaponization of State Government Subcommittee Rep. Angela Rigas (R-Alto) sent a letter to the Michigan Attorney General's Office Wednesday requesting itemized lists of costs and state funds spent on the Flint prosecutions.
'This request falls within the Subcommittee's mandate to ensure transparency, accountability, and the responsible use of state resources in governmental operations,' Rigas wrote.
The subcommittee has three Republican members, Rigas and Reps. Josh Schriver (R-Oxford) and Jason Woolford (R-Howell) while two Democrats also serve on the committee, Reps Laurie Pohutsky (D-Livonia) and Dylan Wegela (D-Garden City) .
All Republican members of the subcommittee signed the letter.
The Michigan Attorney General's Office has received the request and it is being reviewed, Danny Wimmer, a spokesperson for the office said Wednesday afternoon.
Wednesday also marked the committee's first meeting with Rigas setting a mandate for the committee to address what she called a 'growing threat of political prosecution' by state departments and agencies.
She said the issue of politically motivated prosecution escalated during the COVID-19 pandemic where many Michiganders railed against Gov. Gretchen Whitmer's lockdown orders to slow the spread of the virus. As the state suffered economic hardship amid the pandemic, some restaurant and other business owners defied COVID safety protocols and kept their doors open in spite of Whitmer's executive orders, which were later deemed unconstitutional by the Michigan Supreme Court.
Rigas herself was charged for her actions during a May 2020 protest on the State Capitol lawn called 'Operation Haircut' where she and other hairstylists and barbers gathered with hundreds of participants to rail against the orders. The charges were eventually dropped.
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
US considering removing tax on capital gains on home sales, Trump says
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump said on Tuesday his administration is considering removing taxes on capital gains on home sales. "If the Fed would lower the rates, we wouldn't even have to do that," Trump told reporters in the Oval Office. "But we are thinking about no tax on capital gains on houses." Profits from the sale of homes, like other assets, are now subject to capital gains taxes, although there are large deductions for sales of primary residences. Republican Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene interpreted Trump's comments as a show of support for a bill she's proposed called the No Tax on Home Sales Act, which would eliminate the federal capital gains tax on the sale of primary residences. "Thank you, President Trump, for supporting my No Tax on Home Sales Act!" Greene said in a post on X. "You worked for it. You should keep it. Let's get this bill passed!" Greene said. Congress recently passed legislation that made permanent broad tax cuts passed in 2017 during Trump's first presidency. The bill also fulfilled Trump's campaign promises to include new tax breaks for tips, overtime pay, seniors and auto loans. Trump's political opponents say the measures will mainly help the rich and add trillions of dollars to U.S. national debt, only partially offset by deep cuts to healthcare and other benefits for the poor. Sign in to access your portfolio


San Francisco Chronicle
18 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
‘We're not leaving': In-N-Out responds to rumors about California exit
In-N-Out Burger is staying put in California, despite CEO Lynsi Snyder's personal decision to relocate her family to Tennessee, the company said Tuesday. The popular fast food chain reaffirmed that its corporate headquarters will remain in the state, following a wave of speculation sparked by CEO Lynsi Snyder's announcement that she and her family are relocating to Tennessee. 'We're not moving In-N-Out Burger's corporate headquarters,' read a joint statement from Snyder and the company. 'We're not leaving California, or leaving our roots behind. Each one of our locations is here to stay.' The move to Tennessee, the company said, is part of a previously announced expansion that includes opening an 'Eastern Territory' office in Franklin, Tenn., by 2026. Snyder will reside there with her family, but the majority of the company's operations will remain in California. In-N-Out is consolidating its West Coast offices in Baldwin Park — home to the original 1948 location — and phasing out its Irvine office by 2030, a year later than initially planned. California Gov. Gavin Newsom's office also pushed back against the rumors. 'For those interested in the facts, rather than fiction, In-N-Out is expanding East — creating a second HQ in Tennessee,' the office posted on X. 'In-N-Out continues to expand in California — adding more locations in the Golden State this year than any other state.' Speculation about the company's future in California intensified after Snyder appeared on conservative pundit Allie Beth Stuckey's 'Relatable' podcast last week, where she aired personal frustrations about life and business in the state. 'There's a lot of great things about California, but raising a family is not easy here,' Snyder said. 'Doing business is not easy here.' She also referenced a COVID-era clash with San Francisco officials, when one location was temporarily shut down for refusing to enforce vaccine mandates. 'We're not policing our customers,' Synder said. 'I'm very proud of where In-N-Out started,' she wrote. 'Anyone who knows me knows how often I talk about our beginnings and how our Customers here in California helped bring us to where we are today.'


The Hill
18 minutes ago
- The Hill
Republican-led states urge NCAA to remove transgender athletes' records
Republican attorneys general in more than two dozen states urged the NCAA on Tuesday to strip records, titles and awards from transgender women who competed in women's college sports. The attorneys general, led by Mississippi's Lynn Fitch, sent a letter to NCAA President Charlie Baker calling for the college sports organization to 'restore to female athletes the records, titles, awards, and recognitions they earned but were denied because of policies that allowed biological males to compete in female categories.' 'Female collegiate athletes trained, competed, and triumphed- only to see their recognitions stripped away and devalued by unfair policies that ignored biology,' Fitch said in a statement. The letter applauds a policy the NCAA adopted in February, shortly after President Trump signed an executive order opposing transgender athletes in girls' and women's sports, to limit competition in women's events to student-athletes 'assigned female at birth only.' 'We encourage you to extend this policy to practice as well. Athletics is not only about what happens during competition,' the attorneys general wrote, adding that the new NCAA policy 'stops short of full fairness for women athletes.' The NCAA previously allowed transgender women to participate in female sports after completing one year of testosterone suppression treatment. In 2022, the organization said national and international governing bodies should determine eligibility rules for transgender athletes in specific sports. Under those prior rules, Lia Thomas, then a swimmer at the University of Pennsylvania, became the first transgender woman to win a national Division I championship title in 2022, the year she graduated. Following a February investigation by the Education Department that found Penn had violated Title IX, the federal law prohibiting sex discrimination, when it allowed Thomas to join the women's swim team for the 2021-22 season, the Ivy League University agreed to remove Thomas's records from its leaderboard. Thomas broke three of the six Penn women's swimming and diving individual freestyle records in the year she competed. An addendum to the university's women's swimming all-time school records now reads, 'Competing under eligibility rules in effect at the time, Lia Thomas set program records in the 100, 200 and 500 freestyle during the 2021-22 season.' 'All colleges and universities should follow suit,' the attorneys general wrote on Tuesday, 'as should the NCAA.' In February, the Education Department similarly called for the NCAA and the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) to revoke transgender female athletes' records and awards. Doing so, the department wrote in letters to Baker and NFHS President Bob Lombardi, would recognize the harms done by 'misguided policies.' In Tuesday's letter, the Republican attorneys general said Trump, who made transgender student-athletes central to his reelection campaign's closing argument, 'has made restoring fairness to women athletes a priority.' They touted executive orders signed by the president to ban trans women and girls from competition and recognize only two unchangeable sexes, male and female. 'With more than 500,000 college athletes and approximately 1,100 member schools in all 50 states, the NCAA has the opportunity and privilege to impact the lives of so many student athletes in a positive or negative way,' the attorneys general wrote in their letter to Baker. 'There is no doubt that the women forced to compete against biological males in female events were impacted negatively and unfairly disadvantaged.' In December, Baker, a former Republican governor of Massachusetts, testified before a Senate panel that fewer than 10 NCAA athletes are transgender. A spokesperson for the organization did not immediately return a request for comment. Tuesday's letter comes as the Supreme Court is set to decide during its next term whether states may ban transgender athletes from competing on girls' and women's school sports teams. The justices agreed earlier this month to hear appeals from West Virginia Attorney General JB McCuskey (R) and Idaho Attorney General Raúl Labrador (R) — both of whom signed the letter to Baker — defending their state bans, with a decision expected by next summer.