Man Arrested After Allegedly Hunting Women In Washington State

On the evening of April 14, 2022, tragedy struck when James-David Joseph Algarin allegedly opened fire on two homeless women in Kent, Washington.

The Washington State Prosecutors have charged the suspect on Friday, April 21 with two counts of attempted murder in the first-degree and have stated they are asking that he be held on a bond of $1.5 million.

The shootings have been linked to one another, and police records show that at 11:01 P.M., they responded to an emergency call saying that someone had heard gunshots and saw a red vehicle drive away from the area. When arriving at the scene, officials discovered the victim, struck multiple times in the chest and back.

The woman reportedly remembered being picked up by someone near a 7-Eleven in the region who had a holstered handgun by his side. It is believed that her refusal of his advances spurred the attack, and surveillance footage shows Algarin aiming his weapon at her as she attempted to flee.

The second attack occurred at 11:37 P.M. when police received another 911 call about a woman lying on the side of the road. It was reported that Algerian first followed the victim for a while. Footage shows that the victim had eventually approached Algarin’s car, she put her head inside, but quickly walked away before he opened fire with an AR-15, hitting her in the leg and head. Officers were later able to identify the suspect’s unique red Subaru WRX with custom lettering on the sidewalls, which tied both murders together.

Post arrest, detectives uncovered survey data from Algarin’s phone which included searches of “Kent shootings in the U.S.,” “King County cold cases,” and “Unsolved murders in Washington state.”

Court documents state that it was premeditated. They read, “Although the defendant has no significant criminal history, his premeditated search and hunt for homeless women in Kent resulting in shooting of both women.”

The document also shares that the suspect had a firearm and then rearmed himself for the second shooting. “The defendant used a pistol at the first shooting and then re-armed himself with an Ar-15 rifle to shoot his second victim. The fact the defendant lured both women into darkened areas of Kent at night equipped with two different types of firearms and without provocation shoot both women is very concerning.”

Algarin is now in custody, and his charges provide an unfortunate reminder of the dangers homeless women face daily.

Thankfully, both women survived their ordeals, though the woman who was shot in the head received life-changing injuries that could affect her for the rest of her life.

The GOP Wants to Cut Social Programs in Favor of Military Spending. Biden Is Enabling Them.

The House GOP’s new budget would — surprise, surprise — further balloon militarized spending and take the axe to social programs. And Joe Biden’s love for military spending isn’t helping things.

US army soldiers stand near an armored military vehicle in Syria on March 27, 2023. (Delil Souleiman / AFP via Getty Images)

Last week, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy unveiled the Limit, Save, Grow Act, the House GOP’s budget plan. The bill would cap fiscal year 2024 federal spending at FY2022 levels, or about $260 billion less than the $1.73 trillion budget Joe Biden proposed last month. Here’s how the FY2022 budget divvied up that $1.47 trillion:

The FY2024 budget won’t end up looking like FY2022’s, however. Even though McCarthy’s bill doesn’t specify which parts of the federal budget would be slashed, social programs are clearly the GOP’s primary target.

Oklahoma representative Tom Cole — vice chair of the Appropriations Committee and chair of the Appropriations Subcommittee on Transportation, Housing, and Urban Development — said that of the twelve spending measures that make up the annual federal budget, only Pentagon, Department of Homeland Security (DHS), and Military Construction-Veterans Affairs (Milcon-VA) appropriations will be spared from cuts. The chairpersons of those subcommittees, Cole said, will be “popping champagne corks,” while “the rest of us will be crying into our beer.” (Cole also sits on the Congressional Bourbon Caucus.)

The prized three — Pentagon, DHS, Milicon-VA — consumed most of the discretionary budget in FY2022, but even the amount Biden is proposing for the Pentagon and Milcon-VA in FY2024 is way higher than in 2022 (DHS is “only” a few billion dollars higher). As a result, the other nine appropriation categories would have about $140 billion less to work with next year than they did last year.

The projected GOP budget below reflects that. I estimated the funding for the remaining nine appropriations bills based on their share of last year’s $1.47 trillion discretionary budget — minus FY2022-level Pentagon, DHS, and Milcon-VA funding — and applied that percentage to a prospective $1.47 trillion budget for FY2024, minus what Biden just proposed for the Pentagon, DHS, and Milcon-VA. This would leave at most 28% of the federal budget available for everything else.

What we see is Exhibit A in how the establishment uses bloated militarized spending to crowd out social spending. By setting a budget ceiling, Republicans force a choice between funding for social programs and the national security state — knowing full well which one the president will select. Biden refers to military spending as America’s only “sacred obligation” and spent the last year dismantling the United States’ pandemic-era expansion of the welfare state. Biden is unlikely to insist on paring back DHS, either, especially after investing so heavily in border patrol agents, surveillance, and operations in his FY2023 budget.

The current budget battle is being framed as an inter-party struggle, but it’s much more a class conflict than a partisan one. Joe Biden knew this would be the Republican strategy, and he released the largest-ever (nominal) Pentagon budget anyways. And after McCarthy put out his bill, the White House effectively ruled out any conversion from military to nonmilitary spending. As Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez told David Sirota in a recent interview, Biden is lurching to the right.

Twitter Files: Twitter Loves Dr Fauci and Big Pharma “Marketing Strategy”

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The Tower for Twitter? UK Minister Calls for Jailing Social Media Bosses Who Do Not Censor Speech

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The Geopolitics of “Soft Power”

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Lula Just Discredited Brazil’s Foreign Policy by Placing Conditions on His Visit to Russia

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New petition highlights support for judicial reform among immigrants to Israel

Initiative follows similar immigrant petition against the judicial overhaul: “Immigrants are not monolithic in their views.”

By World Israel News Staff

A new petition circulating on social media is calling on olim (immigrants to Israel) to voice their support for the government’s judicial reform, pushing back against the massive protest movement which has challenge the judicial overhaul for the past three months.

The petition, written in English, French, and Russian, is not affiliated with any political movement or organization but is the solo initiative of pro-Israel activist and American-born Israeli Rachel Moore.

A veteran immigrant who moved to Israel in her 20s, Moore has worked with a number of Jewish and pro-Israel groups and is a member of the Judea and Samaria Speakers Bureau.

The letter, directed at Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Justice Minister Yariv Levin, MK Simcha Rothman, President Isaac Herzog, Jewish Agency Chairman Doron Almog and Diaspora Affairs Minister Amichai Chikli, emphasizes the diversity of opinions among immigrants, while arguing that a majority support the general principles behind the government’s judicial reform plan.

“We are a diverse group of olim, representing a variety of backgrounds. We range the spectrum from religious to secular, recent and veteran, and from all around the country,” the petition reads. “We are deeply committed to the Zionist vision and have left behind our countries of birth to join in the modern miracle of Jewish statehood and sovereignty.

“We are writing to you to express our support for the government’s judicial reform proposals. We would also like to dispel any notions that olim or Diaspora Jewry speak in any monolithic voice regarding the current government’s proposal.

“While we may disagree on various details of the plan, we wholeheartedly agree with the principles animating the reform: an unshakeable commitment to democratic governance, the restoration of balance between the branches of government and the strengthening of public accountability and the rule of law. We have seen the ever-diminishing value of our votes, when judges pursue their own policy interests at the expense of our elected officials, unanchored by enacted law.”

Speaking with World Israel News, Moore said she wrote the petition last week in response to another petition, circulated last month, which sought to highlight opposition among immigrants to judicial reform.

“It seemed to take the tone that… this is how olim [immigrants] feel,” Moore said. “It bothered me so much that they would present it as if this is the opinion of all olim.”

“The vast majority support some measure of judicial reform, and that monolithic statement that ‘this is how the olim feel’ was so offensive to me and made me want to take action,” she said.

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Midtown Athletic Club’s Chicago Location Fired All of Its Housekeepers, Twice

The luxury Midtown Athletic Club in Chicago told its housekeepers they would be laid off on May 1. The workers saw the move as retaliation for their organizing efforts — and when they went public, the club fired them again, effective immediately.

Midtown Athletic Club housekeepers demonstrating in Chicago, April 1, 2023. (Arise Chicago via Twitter)

On March 23, nonunionized housekeepers at the Midtown Athletic Club in Chicago received a message from management with the subject title: “Change in the Housekeeping Structure.” The letter said that effective May 1, the luxury gym, which includes a tennis club designed by Venus Williams, would begin using an outside contractor for its cleaning needs. The thirty-eight housekeepers would be laid off. While the workers were told they were welcome to apply for positions with the third party, “whether they hire you is up to them.”

The letter noted that a few other Midtown clubs across the country use an outside contractor for housekeeping services, but the Chicago workers saw the move as retaliation: they had been raising concerns about the club’s lack of protective equipment and cleaning supplies for months, and internally pushing for better staffing for more than a year. They say the club, which currently charges $259 a month for an individual membership (plus a $350 joining fee) and paid its housekeepers $16 to $17 an hour, did not rectify the issues. So, in the fall of 2022, they went to Arise Chicago, a workers’ center, with their concerns.

“There was a lack of both towels and the personnel to keep them clean,” says Monica Vargas, who has worked at Midtown Athletic Club for a year and a half. She says the club lacked biohazard bins for bloody towels, and that she and her fellow workers were always short on protective equipment in general and garbage bags and high-quality gloves in particular. “They didn’t have dedicated bins for disposal of sharps — some members of the clubs would use injectable medications, so they’d dispose of them in the garbage and the staff would on occasion stab themselves with them.”

Shortly after reaching out to Arise Chicago, the Midtown housekeepers filed complaints with the Chicago Office of Labor Standards (OLS), National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), and Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). According to Arise, one worker was fired in retaliation for those efforts, though they reached a settlement through the NLRB. According to a press release from Arise, OSHA investigated Midtown and provided a list of needed improvements and a required posting to workers, but one housekeeper reported that Midtown displayed the poster for less than a week before taking it down, and that the club has not fully completed any of OSHA’s listed improvements.

In response to the March 23 layoff notice, Midtown’s housekeepers held a work stoppage on April 1, passing out flyers encouraging the gym’s members to contact Midtown’s management and urge them to rescind the decision to fire the cleaners. They also filed an NLRB unfair labor practice complaint on March 28, including petitioning for an injunction on company firings due to their organizing campaign. The housekeepers then formed a formal workplace committee, electing four leaders to deliver a letter requesting to meet with management on April 10.

Three days later, the workers received another notice: effective immediately, they were all fired. The notice stated that the housekeepers were eligible for a severance agreement that would compensate them for the work they would have completed through May 1, but workers say that to receive the money, they were told they would have to sign a document attesting they had resigned rather than been fired.

“Midtown asked us all to sign a document resigning in order to receive offered pay through May 1 and our last paycheck for work already performed,” says Nadia Don, who has worked at Midtown for three years. Worse, Cristina Perez, another Midtown housekeeper, claims that when she texted the club’s housekeeping director after receiving the layoff notice about getting her personal belongings from a locker at Midtown, she was told that she could only do so if she signed the document stating that she had voluntarily resigned.

“I told her I had medication that I needed, including for diabetes, in my locker,” says Perez, who has worked at Midtown for two years. “She said no, that I was only allowed to collect my belongings or even enter the building if I signed the paper voluntarily resigning. What would happen if I ran out of medication? What was I supposed to do? It made me feel like I was asking for a big favor or a gift for something so basic as accessing my own medicine. It was so disrespectful and made me feel trapped.”

“We are being treated like criminals,” says Claudia Gonzalez, who has worked at Midtown for around two and a half years. “If we set foot on the property, we’re told we’ll be considered trespassing. It’s tremendously unfair that the company has tied the condition of signing this document to get their pay and belongings — those things should not be connected. I am saddened by the entire situation.”

Gonzalez claims that while Midtown told her and her coworkers that they could apply for positions with the outside contractor, the club had “expressly told the new vendor that only in very limited circumstances should they consider any of the old employees. They want to turn over this workforce and to whatever extent possible, the new workers hired by the vendors should be entirely new to the club.”

In comments to Block Club Chicago, Midtown denied the workers’ claims. Jon Brady, Midtown’s president, says the club is fully compliant with all health and safety protocols and that “Midtown Athletic is not taking retaliatory action.” He also contested the workers’ claims that they had been denied access to their lockers.

The workers are urging Midtown’s members to contact the club’s leadership over the alleged retaliation. Some members have already done so: Katherine Bissell Córdova, who has been a Midtown member for around a year, says that when she first reached out to management following the April 1 work stoppage, the club told her they had received a “high volume of complaints about cleanliness,” a claim she finds hard to believe.

“I was always amazed by how clean it was given how high volume a club it is,” says Córdova. “It was obvious that they work hard, for long hours, to keep it really clean.” Córdova says that she is “dismayed” by the situation and thinks that Midtown management had assumed that members like herself wouldn’t notice or care about the firings.

“But everyone I have told has been so mad and so surprised to hear this and asking what they can do,” says Córdova. “Of course, some of us are reconsidering our membership — a lot of members are at the club several days a week, and we have real relationships with these workers.”

“Midtown needs to hire these people back immediately,” says Córdova when asked what she would like to tell the club’s management. “These are human beings with families. We spend a premium on this club, and it’s not fair that our dollars go to bringing in another workforce rather than to these people. We don’t want them treated as if they are disposable.”

“We want people to know the kind of conditions that we endured at the club, and we want to be sure that independent of the outcome for us, that this is not something that continues to happen to workers at Midtown going forward,” says Gonzalez. “We don’t want this to be repeated in the future, whether the workers are direct to Midtown or employed by a third party.”

“We want not just the public but especially the members of the club to know that it was always our duty to create a top-tier experience for our members, independent of the challenges we faced, whether being short-staffed or lacking the supplies we needed,” adds Vargas. She continues:

We were ready to drop dead at the end of our shifts but if members take anything away from this, we hope it’s that we were doing our very best and we would never have allowed anything to be subpar due to a lack of effort. We always gave 100 percent for the members, and we are asking them to support us now in our fight. We want them to know the other side of patronizing Midtown Athletic Club. They come in and they get to enjoy a wonderful experience, and we believe that is in no small part due to the work we do, but we also want them to reach out to the club and say that the way they are treating the housekeeping staff is wrong.