‘검찰 범죄’ 특검을 해야할 50가지 이유⑥ 증거은닉

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‘검찰 범죄’ 특검을 해야할 50가지 이유⑥ 증거은닉

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Maryland Matters
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The increasing costs of fuel for cars and airplanes are adding extra strain to abortion funds that help people pay to travel for care in other states, leaders of several funds said this week. Abortion funds can help when someone must travel from their home state to a state where care is available. That often […]

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Maryland Matters
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The increasing costs of fuel for cars and airplanes are adding extra strain to abortion funds that help people pay to travel for care in other states, leaders of several funds said this week. Abortion funds can help when someone must travel from their home state to a state where care is available. That often […]

The legislation would make it easier for currently and formerly incarcerated people and child victims to sue the state over allegations of past abuse.

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New York Focus
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The legislation would make it easier for currently and formerly incarcerated people and child victims to sue the state over allegations of past abuse.

The merger of NextEra Nuclear and Dominion Nuclear creates one large utility company with control over all of New England's nuclear power.

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The merger of NextEra Nuclear and Dominion Nuclear creates one large utility company with control over all of New England's nuclear power.

Votebeat is a nonprofit news organization reporting on voting access and election administration across the U.S. Sign up for Votebeat Pennsylvania’s free newsletter here.If you’ve voted in person in Pennsylvania recently, you may have noticed that one of the poll workers checking you in was a high school student. And if you ask one of them why they wanted to be a poll worker, most will give a similar answer.“My school was offering it, and I thought it would be a good piece of money,” explained Aiden Martinez, a student from Franklin Towne Charter High School in Philadelphia.Aiden Martinez, a student from Franklin Towne Charter High School stands for a portrait at the state capitol after winning one of the Governor’s Civic Engagement Awards in Harrisburg, Pa. on May 27, 2026.But, once the allure of a paycheck and a day off school has faded away, they’ll tell you something else as well: They enjoy getting to see the voting process up close.“I kept going back afterward because it was interesting to see everyone in my community … and how seriously they took voting,” Martinez said. “It kind of inspired me to come back, and for my last year that I worked there, I voted too.”In Pennsylvania, 17-year-olds are eligible to be poll workers, and each year high school students staff voting sites across the state. And they’re not just stuck in corners or being sent to fetch coffee, either; they are meaningfully involved in running the polls. Advocates of the practice say it both helps counties fill a staffing gap and gives students valuable life experience.In Lebanon County, student poll workers have become an integral part of the county’s Election Day workforce. During the May 2026 primary, students made up 13% of all poll workers, and Jamie Shoemaker, the county’s poll worker coordinator, said she’s trying to increase that number.Shoemaker had hands-on experience with the program before taking it over full time. Shoemaker was a pollworker in her mother’s precinct before joining the county elections office, and one year her own high school aged daughter helped out as well. Her daughter, she said, ended up enjoying the experience.That was in 2019, when Lebanon County was mainly working with Lebanon High School to find students to work the polls. But after Shoemaker began working at the county elections department full time, she expanded the program to other high schools in the area. The county now averages about 50 to 55 student poll workers each election.The students do all types of jobs in the polling place, from checking voters in to keeping track of turnout and helping voters feed their ballots into tabulation machines. Many non-student poll workers in Lebanon — and nationally — skew older. And as elections become more technologically integrated with devices such as electronic pollbooks, older poll workers sometimes struggle to adapt.“Having the student there helps bridge that tech gap,” she said. “They can just look at it and know [what the issue is].”Keith Rolon is the cooperative education teacher at Lebanon High School and manages the school’s student poll worker program. His goal is to have two students at each of the city’s polling sites, including at least one who is bilingual to help translate for the city’s large Spanish-speaking population.“For me as a civics teacher, it was important for me to show them voting is important and elections are safe and here’s what goes into them,” he said.It’s also an opportunity for students to learn valuable life skills like self-advocacy that Rolon said can’t be learned in the classroom. During the primary, as he does every Election Day, he traveled around to all the polling places in the city to check on his students.At the Lebanon County Senior Center in the city’s 10th ward, he stopped in to see senior Ella Whalen and junior Emely Liriano. Whalen was recording which voters came in on a numbered list, and Liriano was seated next to her checking them in on the polling place’s e-pollbook.The judge of elections gave Rolon a positive review of their performance so far, and Rolon reminded them it was their responsibility to speak up for themselves when it was time for them to take a break or get lunch.Whalen and Liriano agreed the money they got from working the polls was nice, but the act of being civically engaged was appealing too. Their parents are politically active, and Whalen said it was good to help out.It was both Whalen’s and Liriano’s first time working an election, and although turnout was rather low (as usual for a primary), they said they still learned about the voting process.“It surprised me how quick it was,” Liriano said. “You just go in, you check off the boxes, you put [the ballot] in the thing, and then you leave. I didn’t even know there was a machine that you just put your ballots in.”Students from Franklin Towne Charter High School walk out before receiving the Governor’s Civic Engagement Awards at the state capitol in Harrisburg, Pa. on May 27, 2026.Diane Gordian, the civic engagement and language access engagement coordinator for the Pennsylvania Department of State, helps organize student poll worker programs across Pennsylvania. She said a benefit of the programs is that they help students, and importantly also their families, build habits of democratic engagement.“Those students come home and say, ‘Hey Mom and Dad, I want to do this,’ and that gets those parents motivated, not only to register to vote, but they sign up to be poll workers,” she said.Pennsylvania Secretary of the Commonwealth Al Schmidt hands one of the Governor’s Civic Engagement Awards, to a student from Franklin Towne Charter High School at the state capitol in Harrisburg, Pa. on May 27, 2026.The state is still tallying numbers from the primary, but Gordian said she expects this year to have the highest-ever rate of students serving as poll workers.Each year, the state honors certain students and their schools with the Governor’s Civic Engagement Award for registering eligible student voters and for working as poll workers.Martinez, from Franklin Towne Charter High School, was one of the 633 students who received that award this year, and he and eight of his peers recently spoke about their experiences at a press conference with Secretary of the Commonwealth Al Schmidt.Kayla Marshall, another student at Franklin Towne Charter, said the poll worker programs give students a chance to actually experience civic engagement rather than just hearing about it “in a PowerPoint at 8 in the morning while trying not to fall asleep.” Marshall worked the polls in three elections starting in November 2024.Kayla Marshall delivers remarks on the Governor’s Civic Engagement Awards, alongside fellow students from Franklin Towne Charter High School at the state capitol in Harrisburg, Pa. on May 27, 2026.“Working the polls taught me more than just how elections work,” she said. “It taught me responsibility, teamwork, patience, and the importance of giving back. It also showed me that young people don’t have to wait until ‘someday’ to make a difference.”Carter Walker is a reporter for Votebeat in partnership with Spotlight PA. Contact Carter at cwalker@votebeat.org.

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Votebeat is a nonprofit news organization reporting on voting access and election administration across the U.S. Sign up for Votebeat Pennsylvania’s free newsletter here.If you’ve voted in person in Pennsylvania recently, you may have noticed that one of the poll workers checking you in was a high school student. And if you ask one of them why they wanted to be a poll worker, most will give a similar answer.“My school was offering it, and I thought it would be a good piece of money,” explained Aiden Martinez, a student from Franklin Towne Charter High School in Philadelphia.Aiden Martinez, a student from Franklin Towne Charter High School stands for a portrait at the state capitol after winning one of the Governor’s Civic Engagement Awards in Harrisburg, Pa. on May 27, 2026.But, once the allure of a paycheck and a day off school has faded away, they’ll tell you something else as well: They enjoy getting to see the voting process up close.“I kept going back afterward because it was interesting to see everyone in my community … and how seriously they took voting,” Martinez said. “It kind of inspired me to come back, and for my last year that I worked there, I voted too.”In Pennsylvania, 17-year-olds are eligible to be poll workers, and each year high school students staff voting sites across the state. And they’re not just stuck in corners or being sent to fetch coffee, either; they are meaningfully involved in running the polls. Advocates of the practice say it both helps counties fill a staffing gap and gives students valuable life experience.In Lebanon County, student poll workers have become an integral part of the county’s Election Day workforce. During the May 2026 primary, students made up 13% of all poll workers, and Jamie Shoemaker, the county’s poll worker coordinator, said she’s trying to increase that number.Shoemaker had hands-on experience with the program before taking it over full time. Shoemaker was a pollworker in her mother’s precinct before joining the county elections office, and one year her own high school aged daughter helped out as well. Her daughter, she said, ended up enjoying the experience.That was in 2019, when Lebanon County was mainly working with Lebanon High School to find students to work the polls. But after Shoemaker began working at the county elections department full time, she expanded the program to other high schools in the area. The county now averages about 50 to 55 student poll workers each election.The students do all types of jobs in the polling place, from checking voters in to keeping track of turnout and helping voters feed their ballots into tabulation machines. Many non-student poll workers in Lebanon — and nationally — skew older. And as elections become more technologically integrated with devices such as electronic pollbooks, older poll workers sometimes struggle to adapt.“Having the student there helps bridge that tech gap,” she said. “They can just look at it and know [what the issue is].”Keith Rolon is the cooperative education teacher at Lebanon High School and manages the school’s student poll worker program. His goal is to have two students at each of the city’s polling sites, including at least one who is bilingual to help translate for the city’s large Spanish-speaking population.“For me as a civics teacher, it was important for me to show them voting is important and elections are safe and here’s what goes into them,” he said.It’s also an opportunity for students to learn valuable life skills like self-advocacy that Rolon said can’t be learned in the classroom. During the primary, as he does every Election Day, he traveled around to all the polling places in the city to check on his students.At the Lebanon County Senior Center in the city’s 10th ward, he stopped in to see senior Ella Whalen and junior Emely Liriano. Whalen was recording which voters came in on a numbered list, and Liriano was seated next to her checking them in on the polling place’s e-pollbook.The judge of elections gave Rolon a positive review of their performance so far, and Rolon reminded them it was their responsibility to speak up for themselves when it was time for them to take a break or get lunch.Whalen and Liriano agreed the money they got from working the polls was nice, but the act of being civically engaged was appealing too. Their parents are politically active, and Whalen said it was good to help out.It was both Whalen’s and Liriano’s first time working an election, and although turnout was rather low (as usual for a primary), they said they still learned about the voting process.“It surprised me how quick it was,” Liriano said. “You just go in, you check off the boxes, you put [the ballot] in the thing, and then you leave. I didn’t even know there was a machine that you just put your ballots in.”Students from Franklin Towne Charter High School walk out before receiving the Governor’s Civic Engagement Awards at the state capitol in Harrisburg, Pa. on May 27, 2026.Diane Gordian, the civic engagement and language access engagement coordinator for the Pennsylvania Department of State, helps organize student poll worker programs across Pennsylvania. She said a benefit of the programs is that they help students, and importantly also their families, build habits of democratic engagement.“Those students come home and say, ‘Hey Mom and Dad, I want to do this,’ and that gets those parents motivated, not only to register to vote, but they sign up to be poll workers,” she said.Pennsylvania Secretary of the Commonwealth Al Schmidt hands one of the Governor’s Civic Engagement Awards, to a student from Franklin Towne Charter High School at the state capitol in Harrisburg, Pa. on May 27, 2026.The state is still tallying numbers from the primary, but Gordian said she expects this year to have the highest-ever rate of students serving as poll workers.Each year, the state honors certain students and their schools with the Governor’s Civic Engagement Award for registering eligible student voters and for working as poll workers.Martinez, from Franklin Towne Charter High School, was one of the 633 students who received that award this year, and he and eight of his peers recently spoke about their experiences at a press conference with Secretary of the Commonwealth Al Schmidt.Kayla Marshall, another student at Franklin Towne Charter, said the poll worker programs give students a chance to actually experience civic engagement rather than just hearing about it “in a PowerPoint at 8 in the morning while trying not to fall asleep.” Marshall worked the polls in three elections starting in November 2024.Kayla Marshall delivers remarks on the Governor’s Civic Engagement Awards, alongside fellow students from Franklin Towne Charter High School at the state capitol in Harrisburg, Pa. on May 27, 2026.“Working the polls taught me more than just how elections work,” she said. “It taught me responsibility, teamwork, patience, and the importance of giving back. It also showed me that young people don’t have to wait until ‘someday’ to make a difference.”Carter Walker is a reporter for Votebeat in partnership with Spotlight PA. Contact Carter at cwalker@votebeat.org.

4 minutes

Mirror Indy
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Skateland, on Indy’s west side, will waive admission fees on these nights this summer. The post Mark your calendar for free family roller skating appeared first on Mirror Indy.

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Skateland, on Indy’s west side, will waive admission fees on these nights this summer. The post Mark your calendar for free family roller skating appeared first on Mirror Indy.

Punonjës të Klinikës së Fëmijëve kanë protestuar sot para Ministrisë së Financave, duke kërkuar pagesën e menjëhershme të pagave të papaguara, vazhdimin e kontratave të punës dhe zgjidhje të përhershme për statusin e tyre. Protestuesit shprehën shqetësimin dhe pakënaqësinë e tyre për faktin se që nga fillimi i vitit nuk kanë marrë paga, ndërsa në […]

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Portalb
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Punonjës të Klinikës së Fëmijëve kanë protestuar sot para Ministrisë së Financave, duke kërkuar pagesën e menjëhershme të pagave të papaguara, vazhdimin e kontratave të punës dhe zgjidhje të përhershme për statusin e tyre. Protestuesit shprehën shqetësimin dhe pakënaqësinë e tyre për faktin se që nga fillimi i vitit nuk kanë marrë paga, ndërsa në […]

Epaiketan gizonezkoaren integritate moralari egindako kaltea frogatzen saiatu ziren, baina, sei lagunek egindakoa indarkeria matxistaren biktima bati laguntza besterik ez zela izan azaleratu zen auzitegian

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Berria
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Epaiketan gizonezkoaren integritate moralari egindako kaltea frogatzen saiatu ziren, baina, sei lagunek egindakoa indarkeria matxistaren biktima bati laguntza besterik ez zela izan azaleratu zen auzitegian

„Pilru – Cântece ale rezistenței este o inițiativă comunitară dedicată documentării, protejării și recuperării instrumentului muzical făcut de mână transmis din generație în generație de comunitățile adivasi tharu și kumhar din Tarai.”

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„Pilru – Cântece ale rezistenței este o inițiativă comunitară dedicată documentării, protejării și recuperării instrumentului muzical făcut de mână transmis din generație în generație de comunitățile adivasi tharu și kumhar din Tarai.”

9 minutes

African Arguments
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“Democracy is not just a question of having a vote. It consists of strengthening each citizen’s possibility and capacity to participate in the deliberations involved in life in society.”  Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Political Scientist, and Former President of Brazil As Ethiopia’s June 1st national election looms, the country continues to preserve the formal structures of electoral democracy while steadily weakening the substantive conditions that give elections democratic meaning and legitimacy. At this hour, electoral institutions remain in place and preparations for voting continue, yet conflict, shrinking civic space, widespread human rights concerns and constrained political competition are reshaping the environment […] The post Redefining ‘Free and Fair’: Ethiopia’s Election and Electoral Legitimacy appeared first on African Arguments.

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“Democracy is not just a question of having a vote. It consists of strengthening each citizen’s possibility and capacity to participate in the deliberations involved in life in society.”  Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Political Scientist, and Former President of Brazil As Ethiopia’s June 1st national election looms, the country continues to preserve the formal structures of electoral democracy while steadily weakening the substantive conditions that give elections democratic meaning and legitimacy. At this hour, electoral institutions remain in place and preparations for voting continue, yet conflict, shrinking civic space, widespread human rights concerns and constrained political competition are reshaping the environment […] The post Redefining ‘Free and Fair’: Ethiopia’s Election and Electoral Legitimacy appeared first on African Arguments.

9 minutes

Настоящее Время
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У президента РФ спросили, не пора ли прекратить войну – ведь его рейтинги снижаются, экономика падает, а дроны бьют по Петербургу. Путин ответил, что армия наступает на всех фронтах. Украинский президент Владимир Зеленский опубликовал открытое письмо главе Кремля с призывом остановить войну

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Настоящее Время
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У президента РФ спросили, не пора ли прекратить войну – ведь его рейтинги снижаются, экономика падает, а дроны бьют по Петербургу. Путин ответил, что армия наступает на всех фронтах. Украинский президент Владимир Зеленский опубликовал открытое письмо главе Кремля с призывом остановить войну

The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), in partnership with the African Development Bank (AfDB), on The post UNDP, AfDB donate ICT equipment to bolster economic governance in South Sudan appeared first on Radio Tamazuj.

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The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), in partnership with the African Development Bank (AfDB), on The post UNDP, AfDB donate ICT equipment to bolster economic governance in South Sudan appeared first on Radio Tamazuj.

Писатель и общественный деятель Захар Прилепин займет пост проректора Горного университета в Санкт-Петербурге. Он будет курировать идеологическую и воспитательную работу в вузе, пишет «Фонтанка» со ссылкой на источники.

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Писатель и общественный деятель Захар Прилепин займет пост проректора Горного университета в Санкт-Петербурге. Он будет курировать идеологическую и воспитательную работу в вузе, пишет «Фонтанка» со ссылкой на источники.

From Ukraine to Tehran, asymmetric warfare is redefining the modern battlefield. Superiority is no longer measured solely by jets and naval fleets, but by inexpensive unmanned drones.

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From Ukraine to Tehran, asymmetric warfare is redefining the modern battlefield. Superiority is no longer measured solely by jets and naval fleets, but by inexpensive unmanned drones.

11 minutes

Berria
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Eraikuntzak eta batez ere zerbitzuek eusten diote EAEko ekonomiari. Urteko lehen hiruhilekoan %2,2 hazi da BPGa, baina urteak aurrera egin ahala indarra galtzea espero du Eusko Jaurlaritzak.

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Eraikuntzak eta batez ere zerbitzuek eusten diote EAEko ekonomiari. Urteko lehen hiruhilekoan %2,2 hazi da BPGa, baina urteak aurrera egin ahala indarra galtzea espero du Eusko Jaurlaritzak.

Aurrerantzean ere orain arteko ereduari eusteko asmoz direla esan du kolektiboak, baina onartu dute 2021az geroztik «gerrikoak estutu» egin behar izan dituztela, eta hausnarketarako denbora bat hartuko dutela iragarri dute.

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Aurrerantzean ere orain arteko ereduari eusteko asmoz direla esan du kolektiboak, baina onartu dute 2021az geroztik «gerrikoak estutu» egin behar izan dituztela, eta hausnarketarako denbora bat hartuko dutela iragarri dute.

A Szociális és Gyermekvédelmi Főigazgatóság szerint a csomagosztás most „projektvégrehajtási, és nem politikai tevékenység” lesz.

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A Szociális és Gyermekvédelmi Főigazgatóság szerint a csomagosztás most „projektvégrehajtási, és nem politikai tevékenység” lesz.

Granite Staters’ hopes are fading that artificial intelligence will have a positive impact on the economy, health care, politics, and more, according to the latest Granite State Poll from the University of New Hampshire Survey Center.  Nearly two-thirds of respondents said the technology would have a negative effect overall on the U.S. over the next […]

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Granite Staters’ hopes are fading that artificial intelligence will have a positive impact on the economy, health care, politics, and more, according to the latest Granite State Poll from the University of New Hampshire Survey Center.  Nearly two-thirds of respondents said the technology would have a negative effect overall on the U.S. over the next […]

Пентагон не будет размещать комплексы Tomahawk в Германии в том числе из опасений, что Россия может воспринять это как эскалацию. Об этом пишет Politico со ссылкой на источники.

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Пентагон не будет размещать комплексы Tomahawk в Германии в том числе из опасений, что Россия может воспринять это как эскалацию. Об этом пишет Politico со ссылкой на источники.

3.4 แสนคนลุ้น ครม.อนุทินทำต่อ แก้สัญชาติ-สถานะบุคคล ถอดวิธีคิด ‘นพ.พรหมินทร์’

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3.4 แสนคนลุ้น ครม.อนุทินทำต่อ แก้สัญชาติ-สถานะบุคคล ถอดวิธีคิด ‘นพ.พรหมินทร์’