FOR A TRAVEL BAN SIGNALS SUPPORT - … · Trump s efforts to impose a ban on travel to the United...

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VOL. CLXVII . . . No. 57,944 © 2018 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2018 U(D54G1D)y+=!/![!#!: Chinese opera, one of the world’s oldest dramatic art forms, is revered in Thai- land. Bangkok Journal. PAGE A6 INTERNATIONAL A4-11 Holding On to Chinese Opera The ubiquity of Waffle House, a chain of more than 1,800 eateries, invites every kind of story, some chronicled on Insta- gram, others in mug shots. PAGE A19 NATIONAL A12-19 Waffle House Diaries Meghan Markle may not be a duchess quite yet, but even before her wedding to Prince Harry, she is already royalty in the world of fashion. PAGE D1 THURSDAY STYLES D1-6 A Duchess of Style The police in New York routinely use and share sealed arrest records of people cleared of crimes without getting court approval, a lawsuit says. PAGE A23 Sealed Files’ Use Is Challenged Nicholas Kristof PAGE A27 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A26-27 WASHINGTON — A 15-month legal battle over President Trump’s efforts to impose a ban on travel to the United States from several predominantly Muslim countries reached a final stage on Wednesday at the Supreme Court, with its five-member conserva- tive majority signaling it was ready to approve a revised ver- sion of the president’s plan. The justices appeared ready to discount Mr. Trump’s campaign promises to impose what he re- peatedly described as a “Muslim ban,” while giving him the benefit of the doubt traditionally afforded to presidents. Some expressed worry about second-guessing ex- ecutive branch determinations about who should be allowed to enter the United States. Immigrant rights groups had hoped that Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. or Justice Anthony M. Kennedy would join the court’s four-member liberal wing to op- pose the ban as unconstitutionally discriminatory against Muslims. But their questioning was almost uniformly hostile to the ban’s op- ponents. At one point in the oral argu- ments, Chief Justice Roberts asked whether Mr. Trump will for- ever be unable to address immi- gration in light of his campaign statements. “Is there a statute of limitations on that?” the chief jus- tice asked. Solicitor General Noel J. Fran- cisco, representing the adminis- tration, said the latest travel ban, issued in September as a presi- dential proclamation, was not di- rected at Muslims. “This is not a so-called Muslim ban,” he said. “If it were, it would be the most ineffective Muslim ban that one could possibly imag- ine.” It excluded, he said, “the vast majority of the Muslim world.” Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. add- ed his own statistics. “I think there are 50 predomi- nantly Muslim countries in the world,” he said. “Five predomi- nantly Muslim countries are on this list. The population of the pre- dominantly Muslim countries on this list make up about 8 percent of the world’s Muslim population. If you looked at the 10 countries with the most Muslims, exactly one, Iran, would be on that list of the top 10.” Neal K. Katyal, a lawyer for the challengers, rejected that analy- sis. “If I’m an employer and I have 10 African-Americans working for me and I only fire two of them” but retain the other eight, he said, “I SUPREME COURT SIGNALS SUPPORT FOR A TRAVEL BAN SKEPTICAL OF CHALLENGE Deferring to President on Judgment of National Security Threats By ADAM LIPTAK and MICHAEL D. SHEAR Continued on Page A17 N.F.L. owners, players and league executives, about 30 in all, convened urgently at the league’s headquarters on Park Avenue in October, nearly a month after President Trump began deriding the league and its players over protests during the national an- them. It was an extraordinary summit meeting; rarely do owners and players gather in this manner. But the president’s remarks about players who were kneeling during the anthem had catalyzed a level of public hostility that the N.F.L. had never experienced. In the spirit of partnership at the meet- ing, the owners decided that they and the players should sit in alter- nating seats around the large ta- ble, which featured an N.F.L. logo in the middle. “Let’s make sure that we keep this confidential,” Commissioner Roger Goodell said to begin the session. The New York Times has ob- tained an audio recording of the roughly three-hour meeting, and several people in the room corrob- orated details of the gathering. The unvarnished conversation re- veals how the leaders of the most dominant sports league in the country and several of its most outspoken players confronted an unprecedented moment — mostly by talking past one another. The players sounded ag- grieved. After discussing a pro- posal to finance nonprofit groups to address player concerns, they wanted to talk about why Colin Kaepernick, the quarterback who started the anthem protests to highlight social injustice and po- lice brutality against African- Americans, was, they believed, being blackballed by the owners. The owners sounded panicked about their business under attack, and wanted to focus on damage control. Candid Audio As N.F.L. Met Over Protests Fed-Up Players Faced Panicked Owners By KEN BELSON and MARK LEIBOVICH AUDRA MELTON FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES A memorial that gives voice to the targets of American white supremacy is set to open on Thursday in Montgomery, Ala. Page A12. Lynching Victims, Name by Name KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Fadi al-Batsh, a well-liked electri- cal engineering lecturer and de- vout family man, always had a smile for his friends and students in the seven years since he moved to Malaysia from his native Gaza. On Saturday, as he walked out- side his apartment building in suburban Kuala Lumpur, he was gunned down in a hail of at least 14 bullets by two men on a motor- cycle. It was the Palestinian man’s un- dercover job — as what intelli- gence officials described as a technology expert for the military wing of the Gaza-based Hamas movement — that had put him in the cross hairs. Malaysian officials said the at- tackers were “most likely born in the Middle East or in the West” but would not directly say who they thought was behind the killing. Mr. Batsh’s family blamed Mossad, the Israeli spy agency. That claim has been confirmed by Middle Eastern intelligence of- ficials, who said the killing was part of a broader operation or- dered by the Mossad chief, Yossi Cohen, to dismantle a Hamas project that sends Gaza’s most promising scientists and engi- neers overseas to gather know- how and weaponry to fight Israel. Malaysia may seem like an odd Behind an Assassination in Malaysia, Israeli-Palestinian Intrigue By HANNAH BEECH and RONEN BERGMAN Continued on Page A6 KEYSER, W.Va. Don Blankenship is running for the United States Senate as a proud West Virginian with Appalachian roots, but his primary residence is a $2.4 million villa with palm trees and an infinity pool near Las Ve- gas. Mr. Blankenship, a Republican loyalist of President Trump, is running an America First-style campaign and calls himself an “American competitionist,” but he admires China’s state-controlled economy and has expressed inter- est in gaining Chinese citizenship. The former coal mining execu- tive is widely known for spending a year in prison for his role in a mining explosion that claimed 29 lives. Yet ahead of the May 8 pri- mary election, he is running as a champion of miners and has bought TV ads that challenge set- tled facts about his role in the dis- aster. And even as Mr. Blankenship seeks to join the Republican ma- jority in Washington, a “super PAC” linked to the party establish- ment is attacking him as a “con- victed criminal” and a hypocrite. No Republican candidate in the 2018 midterms embodies so many contradictions as pointedly as Mr. Blankenship, who was found guilty of conspiracy to violate mine safety standards in federal court and yet has plenty of sup- porters in coal country. He is one of three leading Re- publican contenders heading into the primary, even though he is lug- ging around enough political bag- gage to disqualify a candidate most anywhere else. That Mr. Blankenship retains a political hope is a consequence of West Virginia’s sharp shift to the right, driven by seething hostility to the Obama presidency, both its social changes and its perceived “war” on coal. The emergence of a former coal boss with a criminal record as a potential Senate nomi- nee seems partly an expression of many West Virginia voters’ desire to poke a thumb in the eye of the Washington establishment, Re- publicans very much included. Mr. Blankenship offers no apol- ogy for his many contradictions and personal and business deci- sions, some of them previously undisclosed. Though he lives a ba- ronial lifestyle thanks to a fortune Coal Country Run for the Senate. No Apologies. By TRIP GABRIEL and STEPHANIE SAUL Don Blankenship, a former coal boss, says the size and origins of his wealth are no one’s business. AL DRAGO FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Candidate Bears Hefty Political Baggage in West Virginia Continued on Page A14 WASHINGTON — Dr. Ronny L. Jackson, the White House physi- cian nominated to lead the Veter- ans Affairs Department, provided such “a large supply” of Percocet, a prescription opioid, to a White House Military Office staff mem- ber that he threw his own medical staff “into a panic” when it could not account for the missing drugs, according to a summary of ques- tionable deeds compiled by the Democratic staff of the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee. A nurse on his staff said Dr. Jackson had written himself pre- scriptions, and when caught, he simply asked a physician assist- ant to provide him with the medi- cation. And at a Secret Service going away party, the doctor got intoxi- cated and “wrecked a government vehicle,” according to the summa- ry. The two-page document, dis- tributed by committee Demo- crats, fleshes out three categories of accusations — prescription drug misuse, hostile work envi- ronment and drunkenness — that threaten to derail President Trump’s nominee. Committee Claims Mount Against Pick To Lead V.A. By NICHOLAS FANDOS Continued on Page A16 SACRAMENTO — It was a rash of sadistic rapes and murders that spread terror throughout Califor- nia, long before the term was com- monly used. The scores of attacks in the 1970s and 1980s went un- solved for more than three dec- ades. But on Wednesday, law en- forcement officials said they had finally arrested the notorious Golden State Killer in a tidy sub- urb of Sacramento. Joseph James DeAngelo, 72, who was taken into custody out- side his home on Tuesday and charged with six counts of murder, had been living undisturbed a half-hour drive from where the 12- year rampage began. He was de- scribed as a former police officer, and his time in uniform partly overlapped with many of the crimes he is accused of commit- ting. The case was cracked in the past week, Sheriff Scott Jones of Sacramento County said on Wednesday, when investigators identified Mr. DeAngelo and were able to match his DNA with the murders of Lyman and Charlene Smith in Ventura County in 1980. “We found the needle in the haystack and it was right here in Sacramento,” said Anne Marie Schubert, the Sacramento district attorney, who helped organize a Search for ‘Golden State Killer’ Leads to Former Police Officer By THOMAS FULLER and CHRISTINE HAUSER Continued on Page A19 E.P.A. STRATEGY Scott Pruitt may spread blame for his actions when he talks to Congress. PAGE A15 TRIPLING RENT The White House wants to raise rents in federally subsidized housing. PAGE A15 Colin Kaepernick, who started the protests, does not have a job. TED S. WARREN/ASSOCIATED PRESS Continued on Page A16 The comedian Michelle Wolf is honing her material for the White House Corre- spondents’ dinner. She doesn’t mind that the president won’t attend. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-8 Lots of Jokes, No Trump Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo suggested political consequences if State Senator Simcha Felder, a Democrat, continued to caucus with Republicans. PAGE A20 NEW YORK A20-23 Pushing a Stray Into the Fold The Manhattan district attorney has tapped Joan Illuzzi, who helped convict Etan Patz’s killer, to lead the Harvey Weinstein investigation. PAGE A23 New Face of Weinstein Inquiry Facebook vowed to clean up its net- work. So why are swindlers still imper- sonating its chief executive? PAGE B1 BUSINESS DAY B1-11 Is That Really Mark Messaging? The cable giant’s $30.7 billion bid for the British broadcaster Sky sets up a take- over war with 21st Century Fox. PAGE B6 Comcast Vies for a ‘Jewel’ Before Congress, the French leader challenged the American stance on trade and the environment. PAGE A10 Macron Critiques U.S. Policies Female athletes with high levels of the hormone may face elimination under new rules in the sport. Above, Caster Semenya of South Africa. PAGE B12 SPORTSTHURSDAY B12-17 Track’s Testosterone Ceiling Late Edition Today, clouds giving way to some sunshine, milder, high 68. Tonight, increasing clouds, low 52. Tomor- row, some rain from late morning on, high 60. Weather map, Page B16. $3.00

Transcript of FOR A TRAVEL BAN SIGNALS SUPPORT - … · Trump s efforts to impose a ban on travel to the United...

Page 1: FOR A TRAVEL BAN SIGNALS SUPPORT - … · Trump s efforts to impose a ban on travel to the United States from ... I think there are 50 predomi-nantly Muslim countries in the world,

VOL. CLXVII . . . No. 57,944 © 2018 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 2018

C M Y K Nxxx,2018-04-26,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

U(D54G1D)y+=!/![!#!:

Chinese opera, one of the world’s oldestdramatic art forms, is revered in Thai-land. Bangkok Journal. PAGE A6

INTERNATIONAL A4-11

Holding On to Chinese Opera

The ubiquity of Waffle House, a chain ofmore than 1,800 eateries, invites everykind of story, some chronicled on Insta-gram, others in mug shots. PAGE A19

NATIONAL A12-19

Waffle House Diaries

Meghan Markle may not be a duchessquite yet, but even before her weddingto Prince Harry, she is already royaltyin the world of fashion. PAGE D1

THURSDAY STYLES D1-6

A Duchess of Style

The police in New York routinely useand share sealed arrest records ofpeople cleared of crimes without gettingcourt approval, a lawsuit says. PAGE A23

Sealed Files’ Use Is Challenged

Nicholas Kristof PAGE A27

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A26-27

WASHINGTON — A 15-monthlegal battle over PresidentTrump’s efforts to impose a ban ontravel to the United States fromseveral predominantly Muslimcountries reached a final stage onWednesday at the Supreme Court,with its five-member conserva-tive majority signaling it wasready to approve a revised ver-sion of the president’s plan.

The justices appeared ready todiscount Mr. Trump’s campaignpromises to impose what he re-peatedly described as a “Muslimban,” while giving him the benefitof the doubt traditionally affordedto presidents. Some expressedworry about second-guessing ex-ecutive branch determinationsabout who should be allowed toenter the United States.

Immigrant rights groups hadhoped that Chief Justice John G.Roberts Jr. or Justice Anthony M.Kennedy would join the court’sfour-member liberal wing to op-pose the ban as unconstitutionallydiscriminatory against Muslims.But their questioning was almostuniformly hostile to the ban’s op-ponents.

At one point in the oral argu-ments, Chief Justice Robertsasked whether Mr. Trump will for-ever be unable to address immi-gration in light of his campaignstatements. “Is there a statute oflimitations on that?” the chief jus-tice asked.

Solicitor General Noel J. Fran-cisco, representing the adminis-tration, said the latest travel ban,issued in September as a presi-dential proclamation, was not di-rected at Muslims.

“This is not a so-called Muslimban,” he said. “If it were, it wouldbe the most ineffective Muslimban that one could possibly imag-ine.” It excluded, he said, “the vastmajority of the Muslim world.”

Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. add-ed his own statistics.

“I think there are 50 predomi-nantly Muslim countries in theworld,” he said. “Five predomi-nantly Muslim countries are onthis list. The population of the pre-dominantly Muslim countries onthis list make up about 8 percentof the world’s Muslim population.If you looked at the 10 countrieswith the most Muslims, exactlyone, Iran, would be on that list ofthe top 10.”

Neal K. Katyal, a lawyer for thechallengers, rejected that analy-sis. “If I’m an employer and I have10 African-Americans working forme and I only fire two of them” butretain the other eight, he said, “I

SUPREME COURTSIGNALS SUPPORTFOR A TRAVEL BAN

SKEPTICAL OF CHALLENGE

Deferring to President onJudgment of National

Security Threats

By ADAM LIPTAKand MICHAEL D. SHEAR

Continued on Page A17

N.F.L. owners, players andleague executives, about 30 in all,convened urgently at the league’sheadquarters on Park Avenue inOctober, nearly a month afterPresident Trump began deridingthe league and its players overprotests during the national an-them.

It was an extraordinary summitmeeting; rarely do owners andplayers gather in this manner. Butthe president’s remarks aboutplayers who were kneeling duringthe anthem had catalyzed a levelof public hostility that the N.F.L.had never experienced. In thespirit of partnership at the meet-ing, the owners decided that theyand the players should sit in alter-nating seats around the large ta-ble, which featured an N.F.L. logoin the middle.

“Let’s make sure that we keepthis confidential,” CommissionerRoger Goodell said to begin thesession.

The New York Times has ob-tained an audio recording of theroughly three-hour meeting, andseveral people in the room corrob-orated details of the gathering.The unvarnished conversation re-veals how the leaders of the mostdominant sports league in the

country and several of its mostoutspoken players confronted anunprecedented moment — mostlyby talking past one another.

The players sounded ag-grieved. After discussing a pro-posal to finance nonprofit groupsto address player concerns, theywanted to talk about why ColinKaepernick, the quarterback whostarted the anthem protests tohighlight social injustice and po-lice brutality against African-Americans, was, they believed,being blackballed by the owners.The owners sounded panickedabout their business under attack,and wanted to focus on damagecontrol.

Candid AudioAs N.F.L. Met

Over Protests

Fed-Up Players FacedPanicked Owners

By KEN BELSONand MARK LEIBOVICH

AUDRA MELTON FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

A memorial that gives voice to the targets of American white supremacy is set to open on Thursday in Montgomery, Ala. Page A12.Lynching Victims, Name by Name

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia —Fadi al-Batsh, a well-liked electri-cal engineering lecturer and de-vout family man, always had asmile for his friends and studentsin the seven years since he movedto Malaysia from his native Gaza.

On Saturday, as he walked out-side his apartment building insuburban Kuala Lumpur, he wasgunned down in a hail of at least 14bullets by two men on a motor-cycle.

It was the Palestinian man’s un-dercover job — as what intelli-gence officials described as atechnology expert for the militarywing of the Gaza-based Hamas

movement — that had put him inthe cross hairs.

Malaysian officials said the at-tackers were “most likely born inthe Middle East or in the West”but would not directly say whothey thought was behind thekilling. Mr. Batsh’s family blamedMossad, the Israeli spy agency.

That claim has been confirmedby Middle Eastern intelligence of-

ficials, who said the killing waspart of a broader operation or-dered by the Mossad chief, YossiCohen, to dismantle a Hamasproject that sends Gaza’s mostpromising scientists and engi-neers overseas to gather know-how and weaponry to fight Israel.

Malaysia may seem like an odd

Behind an Assassination in Malaysia, Israeli-Palestinian IntrigueBy HANNAH BEECH

and RONEN BERGMAN

Continued on Page A6

KEYSER, W.Va. — DonBlankenship is running for theUnited States Senate as a proudWest Virginian with Appalachianroots, but his primary residence isa $2.4 million villa with palm treesand an infinity pool near Las Ve-gas.

Mr. Blankenship, a Republicanloyalist of President Trump, isrunning an America First-stylecampaign and calls himself an“American competitionist,” but headmires China’s state-controlledeconomy and has expressed inter-est in gaining Chinese citizenship.

The former coal mining execu-tive is widely known for spendinga year in prison for his role in amining explosion that claimed 29lives. Yet ahead of the May 8 pri-mary election, he is running as achampion of miners and has

bought TV ads that challenge set-tled facts about his role in the dis-aster.

And even as Mr. Blankenshipseeks to join the Republican ma-jority in Washington, a “superPAC” linked to the party establish-ment is attacking him as a “con-victed criminal” and a hypocrite.

No Republican candidate in the2018 midterms embodies so manycontradictions as pointedly as Mr.Blankenship, who was foundguilty of conspiracy to violatemine safety standards in federalcourt and yet has plenty of sup-porters in coal country.

He is one of three leading Re-

publican contenders heading intothe primary, even though he is lug-ging around enough political bag-gage to disqualify a candidatemost anywhere else.

That Mr. Blankenship retains apolitical hope is a consequence ofWest Virginia’s sharp shift to theright, driven by seething hostilityto the Obama presidency, both itssocial changes and its perceived“war” on coal. The emergence of aformer coal boss with a criminalrecord as a potential Senate nomi-nee seems partly an expression ofmany West Virginia voters’ desireto poke a thumb in the eye of theWashington establishment, Re-publicans very much included.

Mr. Blankenship offers no apol-ogy for his many contradictionsand personal and business deci-sions, some of them previouslyundisclosed. Though he lives a ba-ronial lifestyle thanks to a fortune

Coal Country Run for the Senate. No Apologies.By TRIP GABRIEL

and STEPHANIE SAUL

Don Blankenship, a former coal boss, says the size and origins of his wealth are no one’s business.AL DRAGO FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Candidate Bears HeftyPolitical Baggage in

West Virginia

Continued on Page A14

WASHINGTON — Dr. Ronny L.Jackson, the White House physi-cian nominated to lead the Veter-ans Affairs Department, providedsuch “a large supply” of Percocet,a prescription opioid, to a WhiteHouse Military Office staff mem-ber that he threw his own medicalstaff “into a panic” when it couldnot account for the missing drugs,according to a summary of ques-tionable deeds compiled by theDemocratic staff of the SenateVeterans’ Affairs Committee.

A nurse on his staff said Dr.Jackson had written himself pre-scriptions, and when caught, hesimply asked a physician assist-ant to provide him with the medi-cation.

And at a Secret Service goingaway party, the doctor got intoxi-cated and “wrecked a governmentvehicle,” according to the summa-ry.

The two-page document, dis-tributed by committee Demo-crats, fleshes out three categoriesof accusations — prescriptiondrug misuse, hostile work envi-ronment and drunkenness — thatthreaten to derail PresidentTrump’s nominee. Committee

Claims MountAgainst Pick

To Lead V.A.

By NICHOLAS FANDOS

Continued on Page A16

SACRAMENTO — It was a rashof sadistic rapes and murders thatspread terror throughout Califor-nia, long before the term was com-monly used. The scores of attacksin the 1970s and 1980s went un-solved for more than three dec-ades. But on Wednesday, law en-forcement officials said they hadfinally arrested the notoriousGolden State Killer in a tidy sub-urb of Sacramento.

Joseph James DeAngelo, 72,who was taken into custody out-side his home on Tuesday andcharged with six counts of murder,had been living undisturbed ahalf-hour drive from where the 12-year rampage began. He was de-

scribed as a former police officer,and his time in uniform partlyoverlapped with many of thecrimes he is accused of commit-ting.

The case was cracked in thepast week, Sheriff Scott Jones ofSacramento County said onWednesday, when investigatorsidentified Mr. DeAngelo and wereable to match his DNA with themurders of Lyman and CharleneSmith in Ventura County in 1980.

“We found the needle in thehaystack and it was right here inSacramento,” said Anne MarieSchubert, the Sacramento districtattorney, who helped organize a

Search for ‘Golden State Killer’Leads to Former Police Officer

By THOMAS FULLER and CHRISTINE HAUSER

Continued on Page A19

E.P.A. STRATEGY Scott Pruitt mayspread blame for his actions whenhe talks to Congress. PAGE A15

TRIPLING RENT The White Housewants to raise rents in federallysubsidized housing. PAGE A15

Colin Kaepernick, who startedthe protests, does not have a job.

TED S. WARREN/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Continued on Page A16

The comedian Michelle Wolf is honingher material for the White House Corre-spondents’ dinner. She doesn’t mindthat the president won’t attend. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-8

Lots of Jokes, No TrumpGov. Andrew M. Cuomo suggestedpolitical consequences if State SenatorSimcha Felder, a Democrat, continuedto caucus with Republicans. PAGE A20

NEW YORK A20-23

Pushing a Stray Into the Fold

The Manhattan district attorney hastapped Joan Illuzzi, who helped convictEtan Patz’s killer, to lead the HarveyWeinstein investigation. PAGE A23

New Face of Weinstein Inquiry

Facebook vowed to clean up its net-work. So why are swindlers still imper-sonating its chief executive? PAGE B1

BUSINESS DAY B1-11

Is That Really Mark Messaging?

The cable giant’s $30.7 billion bid for theBritish broadcaster Sky sets up a take-over war with 21st Century Fox. PAGE B6

Comcast Vies for a ‘Jewel’Before Congress, the French leaderchallenged the American stance ontrade and the environment. PAGE A10

Macron Critiques U.S. Policies

Female athletes with high levels of thehormone may face elimination undernew rules in the sport. Above, CasterSemenya of South Africa. PAGE B12

SPORTSTHURSDAY B12-17

Track’s Testosterone Ceiling

Late EditionToday, clouds giving way to somesunshine, milder, high 68. Tonight,increasing clouds, low 52. Tomor-row, some rain from late morningon, high 60. Weather map, Page B16.

$3.00