Sunday, October 30, 2016

Uh-Ma

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Hillary Clinton aide Huma Abedin has told people she doesn’t know how her emails ended up on her estranged husband’s computer, according to The Washington Post.
Abedin says she did not regularly use the computer, the newspaper reported, citing a person familiar with the investigation.

Her lawyers did not search the computer that belongs to former congressman Anthony Weiner when Abedin agreed to hand over emails to the State Department because she did not believe any of her emails would be on it, the person said.

Federal investigators are working to review more than 1,000 emails on a laptop shared by a top aide to Hillary and the aide’s disgraced husband that caused FBI Director James Comey to reopen the investigation into Clinton’s private email server, a person familiar with the matter told CBS News.

Clinton has called for the FBI to release all the new information it has on the investigation and soon they well. At this point, it will be a combo of the old and the New.

If something shows up, I am not shocked. They have done less safe communication by using a private server.   Just a thought.

Melt..ing

The cartoonist's homepage, greenvilleonline.com/opinion

Flame..

The cartoonist's homepage, indystar.com/opinion/varvel

Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Rainy...

Oct. 18, 2016

The Trio

Oct. 24, 2016

Exception...

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A 49-year-old registered nurse has been charged with eight counts of first-degree murder in the deaths of elderly nursing home residents in the Woodstock and London — over a seven-year period.  All of the victims were residents  in the Woodstock and London.
Police said Elizabeth Tracey Mae Wettlaufer allegedly used drugs to end the lives of the eight residents. Police would not say if nursing home records showed that drugs had gone missing.
The victims were administered a drug. We are not in a position to comment on the specifics it forms part of the evidence that is now before the courts," Ontario Provincial Police detective Dave Truax said.
Truax would only say that a number of drugs were stored and accessible in the nursing homes where the suspect worked.
Ontario Health Minister Eric Hoskins called the charges "horrific allegations" and said the safety and security of those in long-term care homes are his top priority.  "No resident of long-term housing needs to be concerned about their safety as a result of this investigation," Hoskins said.

May be we need an alternative....

Staging

The cartoonist's homepage, azcentral.com/opinions/benson
Steve Benson, The Arizona Republic.