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Tag: Columbia

  • Trump opens 2024 run, says he’s ‘more committed’ than ever

    Trump opens 2024 run, says he’s ‘more committed’ than ever

    COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — Former President Donald Trump kicked off his 2024 White House bid with stops Saturday in New Hampshire and South Carolina, events in early-voting states marking the first campaign appearances since announcing his latest run more than two months ago.

    “Together we will complete the unfinished business of making America great again,” Trump said at an evening event in Columbia to introduce his South Carolina leadership team.

    Trump and his allies hope the events in states with enormous power in selecting the nominee will offer a show of force behind the former president after a sluggish start to his campaign that left many questioning his commitment to running again.

    “They said, ‘He’s not doing rallies, he’s not campaigning. Maybe he’s lost that step,’” Trump said at the New Hampshire GOP’s annual meeting in Salem, his first event.

    But, he told the audience of party leaders, “I’m more angry now and I’m more committed now than I ever was.” In South Carolina, he further dismissed the speculation by saying that ”we have huge rallies planned, bigger than ever before.”

    While Trump has spent the months since he announced largely ensconced in his Florida club and at his nearby golf course, his aides insist they have been busy behind the scenes. His campaign opened a headquarters in Palm Beach, Florida, and has been hiring staff. And in recent weeks, backers have been reaching out to political operatives and elected officials to secure support for Trump at a critical point when other Republicans are preparing their own expected challenges.

    In New Hampshire, Trump promoted his campaign agenda, including immigration and crime, and said his policies would be the opposite of President Joe Biden’s. He cited the Democrats’ move to change the election calendar, costing New Hampshire its leadoff primary spot, and accused Biden, a fifth-place finisher in New Hampshire in 2020, of “disgracefully trashing this beloved political tradition.”

    “I hope you’re going to remember that during the general election,” Trump told party members. Trump himself twice won the primary, but lost the state each time to Democrats.

    Later in South Carolina, Trump said he planned to keep the state’s presidential primary as the “first in the South” and called it “a very important state.”

    In his speech, he hurtled from criticism of Biden and Democrats to disparaging comments about transgender people, mockery of people promoting the use of electric stoves and electric cars, and reminiscing about efforts while serving as president to increase oil production, strike trade deals and crack down on migration at the U.S-Mexico border.

    While Trump remains the only declared 2024 presidential candidate, potential challengers, including Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, former Vice President Mike Pence and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, who was Trump’s ambassador to the United Nations, are expected to get their campaigns underway in the coming months.

    After his South Carolina speech, Trump told The Associated Press in an interview that it would be “a great act of disloyalty” if DeSantis opposed him in the primary and took credit for the governor’s initial election.

    “If he runs, that’s fine. I’m way up in the polls,” Trump said. “He’s going to have to do what he wants to do, but he may run. I do think it would be a great act of disloyalty because, you know, I got him in. He had no chance. His political life was over.”

    He said he hasn’t spoken to DeSantis in a long time.

    Gov. Henry McMaster, U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham and several members of the state’s congressional delegation attended Trump’s event at the Statehouse.

    Trump’s team has struggled to line up support from South Carolina lawmakers, even some who eagerly backed him before. Some have said that more than a year out from primary balloting is too early to make endorsements or that they are waiting to see who else enters the race. Others have said it is time for the party to move past Trump to a new generation of leadership.

    South Carolina House Speaker Murrell Smith was among the legislative leaders awaiting Trump’s arrival, although he said he was there not to make a formal endorsement but to welcome the former president to the state in his role as speaker.

    Otherwise, dozens of supporters crammed into the ceremonial lobby between the state House and Senate, competing with reporters and camera crews for space among marble-topped tables and a life-sized bronze statue of former Vice President John C. Calhoun.

    Dave Wilson, president of conservative Christian nonprofit Palmetto Family, said some conservative voters may have concerns about Trump’s recent comments that Republicans who opposed abortion without exceptions had cost the party in the November elections.

    “It gives pause to some folks within the conservative ranks of the Republican Party as to whether or not we need the process to work itself out,” said Wilson, whose group hosted Pence for a speech in 2021.

    But Gerri McDaniel, who worked on Trump’s 2016 campaign, rejected the idea that voters were ready to move on from the former president. “Some of the media keep saying he’s losing his support. No, he’s not,” she said. “It’s only going to be greater than it was before because there are so many people who are angry about what’s happening in Washington.”

    The South Carolina event was in some ways off-brand for a onetime reality television star who typically favors big rallies and has tried to cultivate an outsider image. Rallies are expensive, and Trump added new financial challenges when he decided to begin his campaign in November — far earlier than many had urged. That leaves him subject to strict fundraising regulations and bars him from using his well-funded leadership political action committee to pay for such events, which can cost several million dollars.

    Trump’s campaign, in its early stages, has already drawn controversy, most particularly when he had dinner with Holocaust-denying white nationalist Nick Fuentes and the rapper formerly known as Kanye West, who had made a series of antisemitic comments. Trump also was widely mocked for selling a series of digital trading cards that pictured him as a superhero, a cowboy and an astronaut, among others.

    He is the subject of a series of criminal investigations, including one into the discovery of hundreds of documents with classified markings at his Florida club and whether he obstructed justice by refusing to return them, as well as state and federal examinations of his efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election, which he lost to Biden.

    Still, early polling shows he’s a favorite to win his party’s nomination.

    “The gun is fired, and the campaign season has started,” said Stephen Stepanek, outgoing chair of the New Hampshire Republican Party. Trump announced that Stepanek will serve as senior adviser for his campaign in the state.

    ___

    Kinnard reported from Columbia, South Carolina, and Colvin from New York. Associated Press writer Michelle L. Price in New York contributed to this report.

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  • SC official says Alex Murdaugh will not face death penalty

    SC official says Alex Murdaugh will not face death penalty

    COLUMBIA, S.C. — State prosecutors will not seek the death penalty for Alex Murdaugh when the disbarred attorney appears in court next month for a double murder trial that has drawn international attention.

    “After carefully reviewing this case and all the surrounding facts, we have decided to seek life without parole for Alex Murdaugh,” South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson said in a statement Tuesday.

    Murdaugh faces murder charges in the June 2021 shooting deaths of his wife and son. The scion of a prominent legal family has pleaded not guilty and repeatedly denied any involvement in the slayings.

    Murdaugh’s legal team welcomed the move, noting in a statement that the decision removes the impediments to beginning the trial on the scheduled start date of Jan. 23 that a death penalty case would have likely brought.

    A grand jury recently indicted Murdaugh on nine counts of tax evasion, adding to the dozens of charges handed down since his family’s deaths.

    Prosecutors earlier this month revealed Murdaugh’s alleged motive in a bid to get evidence of Murdaugh’s alleged financial crimes admitted into the trial. Prosecutors said Murdaugh killed his wife and son last year to gain sympathy and distract others from years of alleged financial misdeeds. The impending revelation of those crimes — which allegedly lined Murdaugh’s pockets with nearly $9 million stolen from poor clients to maintain his painkiller addiction — were about to sink his reputation, according to the prosecutors.

    The defense has asked the judge not to allow evidence related to the alleged motive. They argue such evidence only serves to convince the jury that Murdaugh was a bad person who would commit a crime as awful as killing family members.

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  • 24 Non-Boring Puffers to Get You Through Winter With a Smile

    24 Non-Boring Puffers to Get You Through Winter With a Smile

    We’re mere weeks away from the first day of winter, so, if you haven’t already, it’s time to start looking for proper gear to brave the chill. Thankfully, fashion’s embrace of the puffer jacket has turned practical outerwear into a style statement. 

    Sure, you can stick to a plain black puffer, but why not add something bright and colorful to your cold-weather rotation? There are so many elegant and fun options to choose from, like the print-forward styles from The Very Warm to the just-announced collaboration between Reformation and Canada Goose.

    Angela Wei

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  • Tennessee Mom Goes Viral For Furiously Denouncing Homophobic Hate

    Tennessee Mom Goes Viral For Furiously Denouncing Homophobic Hate

    A Tennessee woman has gone viral for her impassioned speech defending the LGBTQ community at a county board of trustees meeting last week.

    Jessee Graham, a mom of four from Columbia, gave the fiery address to the Maury County Board of Trustees in response to the resignation of the county’s public library director, Zachary Fox, at last Wednesday’s meeting.

    Fox resigned after months of backlash from certain community members over the library’s Pride Month LGBTQ book display. He also upset some people by hosting a family-friendly drag brunch last year at a brewery he runs.

    Fox, who ran the library for three years, was targeted by a right-wing bullying campaign as a result, The Daily Beast reported.

    “I’ve never been sexually assaulted at a drag show, but I have been in church, twice,” Graham told the board. “The men in that church told me it was my fault.”

    She denounced the “vile and disgusting” homophobic rhetoric taking root in the county. “I’m sick of it!” she said.

    “They haven’t done anything to anyone,” Graham continued, referring to the LGBTQ community. “I am so sick of listening to this weird, fake pious crap about Christianity being the reason behind, ‘We have to protect the kids.’”

    “Jesus didn’t go anywhere and condemn people!” she said. “He did not ever walk into any place and spew hatred and lies and completely annihilate a group of human beings who just want to exist.”

    “It is child abuse to immediately tell your child that he is wrong for feeling like he doesn’t belong,” she added.

    Critics of the Pride Month display were reportedly unhappy that the LGBTQ books were in the same vicinity as the part of the library where children’s books were kept, as well as an area where a children’s free lunch program was taking place.

    In social media posts, opponents suggested the display was a threat to children and attacked Fox for supposedly pushing a “Gay Pride Month agenda” to minors.

    The library board accepted Fox’s resignation, though it unanimously supported him staying on as director.

    Throughout Graham’s speech, attendees at the meeting were heard applauding and cheering her on. Various videos of her remarks on social media have each been viewed over a million times.

    The incident is just the latest example of tensions in local communities as conservatives wage culture wars over education on history and identity issues relating to racial minorities and LGBTQ people. Republicans and right-wing activists have worked to ban books and teachings about those groups and the history of their oppression in the United States, and to portray the existence of LGBTQ people and drag performers as somehow explicitly sexual and inherently threatening to children.

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  • Kohl’s New Concept Store Is Small

    Kohl’s New Concept Store Is Small

    A new 35,000 square foot Kohl’s store will open in Tacoma, Wash. It is humming with new ideas as the company is unveiling its first mini store. The company had promised in May that they plan to open one hundred of these units in the next five years. This first store will open November 4th and participate in the critical holiday quarter. It is located in the Tacoma Mall, a Simon property.

    One thought – this new store is away from the thundering critics and gives management the unique chance to highlight the successes and correct any flaws without constant scrutiny by outsiders. Frankly, from reports I have heard, it has few flaws since it stresses openness and has modern fixtures. The floors are polished concrete, and there is a racetrack layout making all departments accessible. Lighting in the relatively small store is flexible, making it easy to enlarge or shrink departments depending on the season.

    The assortment had to be edited and best sellers had been chosen for the planned opening. Michelle Gass, CEO of Kohl’s, mentioned to David Moin of WWD that Kohl’s used data to create a very localized experience and an assortment characterized by more focus on outdoor brand greats such as Columbia and Eddie Bauer. There are more mannequins, including models with a variety of skin tones, in all sizes in order to emphasize family brands.

    One of the major changes in the store’s layout is that the checkout is no longer in front of the store near the entrance. The check-out is now on the side, giving customers more of a merchandise feeling when they enter the store. ”It will not take long for customers to see the check-out area.” said Gass.

    Of course, there is a Sephora boutique that will attract young customers. As a matter of fact, the whole store has a young feeling that should appeal to the Gen X age group. More Mini-Kohl’s are already under construction in (1) San Angelo, Texas, (2) Morgantown, West Virginia, and (3) Lenox, Mass. These units certainly will give management a chance to evaluate the success of smaller stores. A traditional Kohl’s store is about 80,000 square feet in size. The new stores will be a prototype for the additional units planned in coming years; a total of 86 small stores are planned to be opened in the next four fiscal years and several more will fall into year 5.

    Editing the assortment to deliver a true local focus will be tough since demographics, weather, and ethnicity have to e considered. Kohl’s management has indicated that they will use data to make decisions for each location.

    POSTSCRIPT: About 600 stores have been torn up in the past two tears to make room for Sephora boutiques. It was a great coup for Kohl’s to partner with Sephora since it should bring down the average age of shoppers. 250 stores will get Sephora boutiques this coming year. I hope that the holiday season will show some strength in the revamped stores since the second quarter saw an -8.5 percent drop in sales. New store formats, adding Sephora and rolling out small concepts, will hopefully give Kohl’s momentum for the future.

    Walter Loeb, Senior Contributor

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  • Small Missouri town ‘devastated’ by destructive wildfire

    Small Missouri town ‘devastated’ by destructive wildfire

    WOOLDRIDGE, Mo. — Roughly half of a small Missouri town burned Saturday after a wildfire spread quickly from a farm field and destroyed or heavily damaged 23 buildings, officials said.

    No one died and only one person was taken to a hospital for an injury that was not life-threatening, but the entire town of Wooldridge had to be evacuated Saturday because of the fire. The blaze was sparked in a field by a combine that was harvesting crops. A nearby stretch of Interstate 70 had to be closed for nearly two hours Saturday evening because of heavy smoke.

    Cooper County Fire District spokesman Jim Gann said Sunday that between 4.6 and 5.4 square miles burned before the fire was brought under control. Firefighters were working Sunday to keep hot spots under control with strong winds forecast in the afternoon.

    Wooldridge is a town of less than 100 people about 20 miles (32 kilometers) west of Columbia along the Missouri River. Stephen Derendinger, an engineer with the Jamestown Rural Fire Protection District, said half the town is burnt.

    “It’s devastated,” Derendinger said.

    Firefighters saved the Wooldridge Baptist Church, Wooldridge Community Club and post office as they pumped water from swimming pools to help battle the blaze.

    Elsewhere in Missouri Sunday, some Kansas City area residents were being urged to evacuate because of a grass fire near Interstate 470 and Raytown Road between Raytown and Lee’s Summit.

    Kansas City Police spokeswoman Officer Donna Drake said police were called to the area around 11 a.m. Sunday and started knocking on doors to let residents know about the fire. Drake said the blaze started as a mulch fire at a business before spreading quickly toward a neighborhood.

    The Missouri State Highway Patrol shut down Interstate 470 in the area Sunday afternoon for a couple hours because visibility was poor and fire had spread to both sides of the highway.

    High winds and dry conditions helped the fire spread quickly. Kansas City Fire Chief Donna Lake said the fire began on the south side of I-470 before the wind carried embers from the initial fire over the highway and started a second fire in a wooded area north of the highway.

    Lake said fire crews had to battle fires in two locations.

    Drought conditions are common across Missouri and the National Weather Service warned about high winds in the northwest corner of the state Sunday, creating conditions ideal for wildfires to spread.

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  • Innovative Learner-Driven Private School Opening in Columbia, Maryland

    Innovative Learner-Driven Private School Opening in Columbia, Maryland

    Every child has a gift that can change the world; Spartek Academy: An Acton Academy develops those gifts in 1st-8th grade students.

    Press Release



    updated: Aug 10, 2021

    Spartek Academy: An Acton Academy [Spartek] is opening its doors in Columbia, Maryland. Spartek is a learner-driven private school where 75% of our curriculum is hands-on and students are in charge of their learning. There are no teachers, only guides, no homework, and no tests. How do our students learn? With a mastery-based approach. It’s simple: every student works at their own pace and shows mastery in that area before advancing. 

    Spartek Academy is an affiliate school of Acton Academy, based in Austin, Texas. Acton Academy has 300+ Affiliate schools worldwide and has been endorsed by Sal Khan, Founder of Khan Academy; Seth Godin, Author; and Sugata Mitra, Founder of School in the Clouds.

    Acton’s disruptive educational model focuses on three things: learning to learn, learning to be, and learning to do. Students participate in Socratic discussions and self-paced challenges, which equips them to be independent lifelong learners. In addition, Hands-on Quests for Science, Entrepreneurship, and the Arts prepare children for apprenticeships and real-world challenges.

    About the Founder:
    Janear Garrus, the Founder of Spartek Academy, is an entrepreneur and educator. She has founded several other organizations and programs serving the Baltimore-Washington area: Chesapeake Educational Alliance, Launch Business Camp, Greater Purpose Christian Homeschoolers, and the Baltimore Children’s Business Fair (which is hosting its fifth annual event this fall). In addition, she and her husband have homeschooled their children for their entire education. Garrus found that Acton Academy aligned with her desires for her children’s education and felt compelled to start one in Howard County. “I chose to start an Acton Academy in Howard County because I truly believe in the model. It takes the best elements of homeschooling and combines them with innovation and collaboration amongst students. Spartek is an environment where there are no limits to students’ learning and discovery. What students are good at, they can focus on now, and that’s powerful.”

    Spartek is enrolling in grades 1-8 for the 2021-2022 school year. The school will add a grade-level each following school year. For more information about Spartek Academy: An Acton Academy, contact Janear Garrus at 410-343-9780 or hello@spartekacton.org.

    Source: Spartek Academy

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  • Stars and Strikes Brings Their Unique Version of Family Entertainment to Irmo, South Carolina

    Stars and Strikes Brings Their Unique Version of Family Entertainment to Irmo, South Carolina

    Press Release



    updated: Feb 11, 2019

    Georgia-based Stars and Strikes recently announced plans to open a new family entertainment center in Irmo, South Carolina in the 4th Quarter of 2019, their second location in South Carolina.

    The 50,000 square foot facility located at 800 Lake Murray Boulevard will house 24 bowling lanes, 8 of which are VIP lanes. In addition to bowling, Stars and Strikes features other attractions, including a 7,500 sq. foot arcade and prize store, multi-story laser tag, bumper cars, the 7/10 Grille and a large full-service bar.

    The new Irmo facility also includes private party rooms for events, including an upscale corporate event room that will seat over 100 guests. Stars and Strikes excels at providing chef-crafted cuisine in a fun-filled atmosphere. 

    “We are aware of the demand for our unique brand of entertainment from the families and residents of Irmo, Lexington County and the greater Columbia area,” said Jack Canouse, managing partner and co-founder of Stars and Strikes. “With these families in mind, we are excited to bring a quality brand of family-focused entertainment to the Irmo area that guests of any age can enjoy.”

    The location will offer affordable birthday packages designed to accommodate budgets of any size. Stars and Strikes delivers a fantastically fun birthday party experience for kids that is easy and affordable for parents. The Company’s birthday parties are consistently voted the #1 Birthday Parties by multiple news outlets.

    The Irmo location will offer fresh, chef-crafted cuisine including a variety of appetizers, salads, sandwiches, specialty pizzas and other house-made items. 

    With thirteen existing locations throughout Georgia, Alabama, South Carolina and Tennessee, and a new Stars and Strikes coming soon to Raleigh, NC (opening in the 4th Quarter of 2019), Stars and Strikes Irmo will be a kid-friendly, safe, clean, smoke-free entertainment center.

    Stars and Strikes is excited to be an active member of the Irmo community. The company will invest over $7 million in the new facility, creating over 150 jobs, most of which will be filled locally. 

     ABOUT STARS AND STRIKES

    Locally owned and operated, Stars and Strikes Family Entertainment Centers provide a fun and friendly atmosphere for the whole family to enjoy. Stars and Strikes currently employs over 1300 people throughout the Southeast. 

    Press contact:

    Scott Harris, Director of Marketing
    678-780-9227
    ​Sharris@StarsandStrikes.org

    # # #

    Source: Stars and Strikes

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  • Randall’s Island Launches the Park-as-Lab (PAL) Initiative – a Growing Part of the Randall’s Island Park Alliance’s Waterfront Stewardship Program

    Randall’s Island Launches the Park-as-Lab (PAL) Initiative – a Growing Part of the Randall’s Island Park Alliance’s Waterfront Stewardship Program

    Professors from Baruch College, Columbia University, and Queens College praise PAL as providing unmatched opportunities for students

    Press Release



    updated: Oct 17, 2017

    ​The Randall’s Island Park Alliance (RIPA) today announced the official launch of its Park-as-Lab (“PAL”) initiative, an integral part of its growing Waterfront Stewardship Program.

    The PAL program is geared toward connecting local graduate, undergraduate and high school students, researchers and citizen scientists with Randall’s Island Park, as an ideal site for the study of urban ecology. As part of its longstanding Waterfront Stewardship Program, RIPA offers free hands-on environmental education to over 4500 local K-12 students annually, maintains the Island’s waterfront, and monitors the Island’s water quality and biodiversity, including avian species, vegetation, and marine life. The PAL initiative, an exciting expansion, will help further foster on-site research, toward protecting our local urban ecology, improving community understanding, and promoting sustainability and climate resilience in New York City and beyond. A key element of the PAL mission is to facilitate supervised student scientific research at Randall’s Island Park.

    The PAL program is geared toward connecting local graduate, undergraduate and high school students, researchers and citizen scientists with Randall’s Island Park, as an ideal site for the study of urban ecology.

    The PAL program is receiving tremendous feedback from participating professors and students:

    “As a STEM professor for a diverse public university, I am excited and encouraged by the unparalleled opportunities for urban studies that the PAL program can provide to our students. RIPA’s support for project development and implementation are indispensable resources for conducting local research in the city.” – José D. Anadón, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Department of Biology, Queens College, CUNY

    “Having worked with RIPA’s team collecting data on Randall’s Island for several years now, we’ve found their support to be invaluable in ensuring regular collection of samples, coordinating research, and providing access to the unique restored habitats found at the Park.” – Chester B. Zarnoch, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Department of Natural Science, Baruch College, CUNY

    “RIPA’s PAL initiative has been an asset to my students. They have provided materials, access, and guidance for a range of research projects, from oyster health to avian research. Their local insight and facilitation have enabled students to explore new possibilities in urban ecology.” – David C. Lahti, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Department of Biology, Queens College, CUNY

    “Over many summers, my Urban Ecology students have gained from visiting Randall’s Island Park and learning from the excellent RIPA staff about their research and education programs, and their long-term planning process. The Island is ideally situated to serve as a site for research and education for New York City students and researchers. RIPA’s new PAL initiative will build upon their years of successful environmental education programs to facilitate increased opportunities and partnerships for the study of urban ecology.” – Matthew I. Palmer, Ph.D., Senior Lecturer, Department of Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Biology, Columbia University

    RIPA is committed to fostering a better understanding of the ecology of Randall’s Island Park, of New York City, and of our world as a whole.  For nearly 25 years, RIPA has worked to restore, maintain, and develop programming along the Randall’s Island waterfront. The Park’s 20 acres of restored natural areas, ten acres of wetlands and nearly five miles of scenic waterfront offer a unique opportunity for environmental education. RIPA’s Waterfront Stewardship Program was created to take advantage of this resource and offers free hands-on STEM education to children of various grade levels. The PAL initiative is an exciting expansion, geared toward connecting local students, researchers and citizen scientists with Randall’s Island Park – an ideal site for the study of urban ecology.  For more information, or to participate in PAL, please visit, https://randallsisland.org/things-to-see-do/park-as-lab/.

    About the Randall’s Island Park Alliance

    The Randall’s Island Park Alliance (RIPA), founded in 1992, is a public-private partnership with the NYC Department of Parks & Recreation.  Celebrating 25 years as the dedicated steward of Randall’s Island Park, the Alliance works with the City and local communities to sustain, maintain, develop and program the Island to sup­port the wellbeing of all New Yorkers. The Park offers miles of waterfront pathways, 20 acres of natural areas and wetlands, an urban farm, a track and field stadium, a golf center, a 20-court tennis center and dozens of new playing fields, as well as the Harlem River Event Site.
     

    Media Contacts for RIPA:

    Jennifer Wainwright
    Randall’s Island Park Alliance
    212-830-7722
    Jennifer.wainwright@randallsisland.org

    Melissa Sheer
    Kent Place Communications
    917-690-2199
    melissa@kentplacellc.com

    Source: Randall’s Island Park Alliance

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  • Kirk Stange Teaching CLE for Missouri Association of Trial Attorneys’ 59th Annual Convention

    Kirk Stange Teaching CLE for Missouri Association of Trial Attorneys’ 59th Annual Convention

    Press Release



    updated: May 18, 2017

    On Saturday, June 24th, Kirk Stange, St. Louis, Missouri Divorce Lawyer and Founding Partner of Stange Law Firm, PC, will be speaking at the Lodge of Four Seasons (Lake of the Ozarks) for the Missouri Association of Trial Attorneys’ 59th Annual Convention. This three-day event will cover various CLE topics, including:

    • Pursuing Claims without Introducing Medical Bills
    • Recognizing Bad Faith
    • Using Technology in Depositions and Client Interviews
    • Update on the Law
    • Preparing for Critical Depositions That Will Win Your Case
    • The Importance of Dredd Scott Ethics
    • Investigating Claims in a Digital Age
    • Update on Worker’s Compensation Law
    • Keep the Process Moving – Service Issues & Motion Practice
    • Administrative Law Judge Panel
    • Judicial Roundtable
    • Preparing Your Client for the Case
    • What Would You Do? Ethics
    • When Good Clients Go Bad

    Kirk Stange will be teaching on the topic of Investigating Claims in a Digital Age. This topic will point out the newer ways to obtain information digitally in litigation. In litigation, there are conventional ways to obtain material, which are Interrogatories, Requests for Production, and Depositions. Kirk will be teaching about the broader arrays to find discovery, which are home and work computers; cell phones and tablets; flash drives and external hard drives; cloud storage/vendor’s servers; social media; and much more.

    “It is an honor to present for the Missouri Association of Trial Attorneys on a topic as important as investigating claims in the digital age.”

    Kirk C. Stange, Esq., Founding Partner

    MATA was founded in 1951 as the Missouri Association of Claimants Attorneys (MACA) by a small group of attorneys from across the state who recognized the value of banding together to gain more equitable rights for their clients. Injured people in the state of Missouri have no better advocate in the legislative process than MATA. MATA’s legislative committee, leadership, staff and lobbying team review more than 1,500 pieces of legislation each year and lobby Missouri legislators in the Capitol in Jefferson City to protect consumers’ rights.

    Stange Law Firm, PC is based out of Clayton, Missouri, with offices across Missouri, Illinois and Kansas. Kirk and Paola Stange founded Stange Law Firm, PC in 2007, and from there it has become one of the fastest-growing family law firms in the country. If you are in need of legal assistance for matters such as a Divorce in Missouri, Illinois and Kansas, child custody disputes, child support litigation, adoption, or any other family law matter, please contact our attorneys.

    Note: The choice of a lawyer is an important decision and should not be based solely upon advertisements. Kirk C. Stange is responsible for this content. Principal place of business 120 South Central Avenue, Suite 450, St. Louis (Clayton), MO 63105.

    Source: Stange Law Firm, PC

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