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Tag: Georgia

  • Solar companies join forces to make panels in the U.S.

    Solar companies join forces to make panels in the U.S.

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    A pair of North American solar companies are joining forces to take advantage of a new federal clean energy subsidy.

    On Wednesday, the Georgia-based silicon solar cell maker Suniva announced it is partnering with Canada-based photovoltaic solar module provider Heliene to sell American-made solar panels starting later this year. The panels will be made at Heliene’s factory in Mountain Iron, Minn.


    What You Need To Know

    • A pair of North American solar companies are joining forces to take advantage of an Inflation Reduction Act subsidy
    • Suniva, based in Georgia, and Heliene, based in Canada, will make solar panels in the United States
    • China currently makes about 80% of the solar panels made globally
    • The U.S. makes about 2% of solar panels

    The 2022 Inflation Reduction Act qualifies the companies for a10% domestic content bonus investment tax credit as part of its goal to bring green technology manufacturing back to the United States. China currently makes about 80% of the solar panels used globally, while the U.S. makes about 2%.

    Suniva is the country’s largest and oldest U.S. maker of monocrystalline silicon solar cells, which are smaller, more energy efficient and longer lasting than other types of cells but also more expensive to manufacture.

    “This contract is a testament to the effectiveness of the Inflation Reduction Act,” Suniva CEO Cristiano Amoruso said in a statement. “We are proud to fulfill our longstanding promise to bring back cell manufacturing to the United States.”

    The partnership announcement comes as Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen is scheduled to visit Suniva’s facility in Norcross, Ga., on Wednesday. The U.S. lost about 20% of its solar manufacturing jobs from 2016-2020, according to the Treasury Department.

    Despite the loss in U.S. solar manufacturing, the country added more solar energy to the grid than ever before in 2023, according to a report from the Solar Energy Industries Assn. released earlier this month. The amount of new electricity-generating capacity from solar increased 51% compared with 2022 and marked the first time that a renewable electricity source made up more than 50% of capacity additions in a single year.

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  • 3/13: CBS Evening News

    3/13: CBS Evening News

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    3/13: CBS Evening News – CBS News


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    House passes bill that could lead to U.S. TikTok ban; Texas teacher donates kidney to save life of toddler she did not know

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  • 3/13: Prime Time with John Dickerson

    3/13: Prime Time with John Dickerson

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    3/13: Prime Time with John Dickerson – CBS News


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    John Dickerson reports on efforts in Congress to ban TikTok, a judge throwing out some charges in Trump’s Georgia case, and dangerous weather across the country including a major snowstorm in Colorado.

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  • New rules aim to prevent

    New rules aim to prevent

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    New rules aim to prevent “judge shopping” in major court cases – CBS News


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    The Judicial Conference of the United States, the federal agency that sets guidelines for America’s judiciary, has taken a major step to stop plaintiffs from seeking the most favorable judge for their case, a practice known as “judge shopping.” CBS News legal contributor Jessica Levinson explains.

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  • What happens to the Trump Georgia 2020 election case if Fani Willis is disqualified by court?

    What happens to the Trump Georgia 2020 election case if Fani Willis is disqualified by court?

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    The judge overseeing the sprawling case against former President Donald Trump and his co-defendants in Georgia’s election interference probe is expected to decide by Friday whether he’ll disqualify Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis and her office from prosecuting the case. If he does, what would happen next?

    In mid-February, Fulton County Judge Scott McAfee heard hours of fiery testimony about the romantic relationship between Willis and the special prosecutor she hired for the case, Nathan Wade. There were arguments from both sides about the timeline of the relationship as well as whether the relationship was “improper” and amounts to a conflict of interest.

    Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis in court
    Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis testifies during a hearing on Feb. 15, 2024 in Atlanta. Judge Scott McAfee is hearing testimony on whether Willis and Special Prosecutor Nathan Wade should be disqualified from the case for allegedly lying about a personal relationship.

    ALYSSA POINTER / Getty Images


    Willis and Wade have admitted to the relationship, which they say ended last summer, but both argued there is no conflict of interest. 

    Willis’ disqualification would also extend to her office. The case would then be referred to the Prosecuting Attorneys’ Council of Georgia Executive Director Pete Skandalakis. In a statement to CBS News, council spokesperson Tracy Walston said Skandalakis would have a few options. 

    “The executive director can appoint a district attorney, a solicitor-general, a retired prosecuting attorney, an attorney employed by the Department of Law, designate an attorney from the Prosecuting Attorneys’ Council, or appoint a competent attorney to act as district attorney pro tempore in place of the district attorney,” she said. 

    Walston says the council has been faced with the disqualification of district attorneys in the past and  the process for replacing them is the same as the one for recusals.

    Possible scenarios

    Naming a district attorney in another county would be one possibility. Georgia has 159 counties, 129 of which voted Republican in 2020. The remaining 30 counties, all in more urban parts of the state, voted Democratic in that election. But even if the case were to be referred to another office, the new prosecutor would have oversight on whether to add, drop or amend the charges Trump and several others face. Those kinds of changes could require reopening the investigation, which would delay the trial for months, likely beyond the presidential election.

    Judge McAfee could also decide to not remove Willis but still refer the matter to an oversight agency. 

    “He could just refer this whole matter to the Bar Association, or to another ethics board, and say that it should not stop this trial,” CBS News legal analyst Rikki Klieman said.

    Controversial Fani Willis speech

    Aside from the financial misconduct allegations, Trump attorney Steve Sadow asked McAfee to remove Willis’ office for forensic misconduct after her fiery speech at the historically black Big Bethel AME Church in Atlanta in January. In the speech, Willis suggested questions were raised about why Wade was hired because they both are Black. 

    “These assertions by the DA engender a great likelihood of substantial prejudice towards the defendants in the eyes of the public in general, and prospective jurors in Fulton County in particular,” Sadow’s motion said. 

    “It’s very persuasive. The problem is that it’s probably too far away from trial,” Klieman said. “You know, if she had made the church speech on the eve of jury selection, that would be a really strong argument.” 

    “Judge McAfee is in a difficult place,” Klieman said, adding that it would be “a courageous move for any judge to disqualify a district attorney’s office.” 

    She believes if Willis is removed from the case it would significantly delay prosecution. 

    “I do not believe the case will be dismissed,” she said, “but I do believe that at this moment in time, disqualification is an open question.” 

    The former president and remaining 14 co-defendants deny wrongdoing and have pleaded not guilty to the charges against them. Four original co-defendants have taken plea deals. 

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  • Biden, Trump trade barbs at dueling Georgia rallies

    Biden, Trump trade barbs at dueling Georgia rallies

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    Biden, Trump trade barbs at dueling Georgia rallies – CBS News


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    Both President Biden and former President Donald Trump held rallies in Georgia over the weekend ahead of Tuesday’s pivotal state primary. The dueling events offered a glimpse of the November rematch, as the candidates threw jabs at each other. CBS News senior White House correspondent Weijia Jiang has more.

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  • Biden says he regrets using term

    Biden says he regrets using term

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    President Biden said Saturday that he regrets using the term “illegal” during his State of the Union address to describe the suspected killer of Georgia nursing student Laken Riley.

    Facing frustration from some in his party for the use of the term to describe people who arrived or are living in the U.S. illegally, Biden expressed remorse, saying he didn’t want to demean any group, and sought to differentiate himself from former President Donald Trump.

    In an interview with MSNBC’s Jonathan Capehart on Saturday, Biden said, “I shouldn’t have used illegal, it’s undocumented.” The term was once common but is far less so today, particularly among Democrats who more fully embraced immigrant rights’ issues during Trump’s presidency.

    The moment occurred Thursday night during an exchange in which Biden pressed Republicans in his address to pass a bipartisan border security deal that fell apart after Trump opposed it. U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a stalwart Trump ally, then shouted at the president to say the name of Laken Riley, the Georgia woman killed last month, adding she was killed “by an illegal.”

    “By an illegal, that’s right,” Biden responded immediately, before appearing to ask how many people are being killed by “legals.”

    The death of Riley, a nursing student, has become a rallying cry for Republicans, a tragedy that they say encompasses the Biden administration’s handling of the U.S-Mexico border amid a record surge of immigrants entering the country. An immigrant from Venezuela who entered the U.S. illegally has been arrested and charged with her murder.

    Speaking to Capehart, Biden said, “Look, when I spoke about the difference between Trump and me, one of the things I talked about in the border was his, the way he talks about vermin, the way he talks about these people polluting the blood. I talked about what I’m not going to do. What I won’t do. I’m not going to treat any, any, any of these people with disrespect.”

    It appeared to be a shift from a day earlier, when Biden had hesitated when asked by reporters if he regretted using the term, saying, “well I probably,” before pausing and saying “I don’t” and appearing to start saying the word “regret.”

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  • Building Community Through Literacy: ThickerPlots Book Club Hosts First In-Person Event 

    Building Community Through Literacy: ThickerPlots Book Club Hosts First In-Person Event 

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    Photo by Mya Grant/The Atlanta Voice

    What started as a social media page to express her love for books has turned into a literacy hub for people of diverse backgrounds to share theirs. ThickerPlots book club organized their very first event, a book exchange highlighting literacy awareness, community and the love of a good book. 

    Nahtyka Jolly, originally from Columbus, Georgia, was raised around books. Some of her earliest memories of Christmas and birthday gifts were always books. Along with her mother, Nina Jolly, and older sister Kurstyn Jolly, they spent many weekends and time after school in the library. Reading was such a big pillar in their household that they’d organize family book clubs to talk about the books they liked and didn’t like. 

    Jolly’s mother stressed the importance of literacy in their family and instilled in her daughters at a young age that knowledge and education can carry you far in life. 

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    Mya Grant

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  • Andrew Young Fast Facts | CNN

    Andrew Young Fast Facts | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Here is a look at the life of civil rights activist and former ambassador Andrew Young.

    Birth date: March 12, 1932

    Birth place: New Orleans, Louisiana

    Birth name: Andrew Jackson Young Jr.

    Father: Andrew Jackson Young, a dentist

    Mother: Daisy (Fuller) Young, a teacher

    Marriages: Carolyn (McClain) Young (April 15, 1996-present); Jean (Childs) Young (June 7, 1954-September 16, 1994, her death)

    Children: with Jean (Childs) Young: Andrea, Lisa, Paula, Andrew III

    Education: Attended Dillard University, 1947-1948; Howard University, B.S., Biology, 1951; Hartford Theological Seminary, B.D., 1955

    Began working with the National Council of Churches on voter registration and voter education projects. Young also started working with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. at this time.

    Helped draft both the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

    Made a speech in the House of Representatives supporting President Richard Nixon’s choice of Gerald Ford as vice president. Is the only African American who voted for Ford’s confirmation.

    Quote regarding his role as UN ambassador, “There is a sense in which the United States Ambassador speaks to the United States, as well as for the United States. I have always seen my role as a thermostat, rather than a thermometer. So I’m going to be actively working…for my own concerns. I have always had people advise me on what to say, but never on what not to say.”

    1955 – Is ordained a minister in the United Church of Christ.

    mid-1950s – Pastor to several churches in Alabama and Georgia.

    1960 – Wins the Peabody Broadcasting and Film Commission Institutional Award for Radio -Television Education given to the National Council of Churches of Christ for the programs “Look Up and Live,” “Frontiers of Faith,” “Pilgrimage” and “Talk-back.”

    1961 – Moves to Atlanta and joins the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC).

    May 3, 1963 – Organizes the anti-segregation march in Birmingham, Alabama, where demonstrators are hosed and set upon by dogs by order of Police Commissioner Eugene “Bull” Connor.

    1964 – Becomes the executive director of SCLC.

    July-August 1966 – Race riots in predominantly white neighborhoods on Chicago’s Southwest Side have Dr. King, Young, SCLC and the Coordinating Council of Community Organizations (CCCO) demonstrating to end housing discrimination.

    April 1968 – Becomes the executive vice president of SCLC after the death of Dr. King.

    August 1969 – Changes SCLC’s focus from integration and anti-segregation activities to voter registration and political activities.

    1970 – Resigns from the SCLC to run for a seat in the US House of Representatives from Georgia’s 5th congressional district. He loses by more than 20,000 votes.

    1972 – Second run for Georgia’s 5th congressional district seat. Redistricting changes the population distribution somewhat and Young wins by 7,694 votes.

    1974 – Wins reelection by 72% of the vote.

    1976 – Wins reelection by 80% of the vote.

    December 16, 1976 – President-elect Jimmy Carter nominates Young as ambassador to the United Nations.

    January 30, 1977 – Is sworn-in as the first African American and 14th US ambassador to the United Nations by Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall.

    August 15, 1979 – Resigns his UN ambassadorship over controversy stemming from an unauthorized July meeting with PLO representatives.

    1979 – Establishes the consulting firm Young Ideas.

    1981 – President Carter presents Young with the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

    October 27, 1981 – Wins Atlanta mayoral race with 65,798 votes (55.1%) beating Georgia Congressman Sidney Marcus with 53,549 votes (44.8%).

    January 5, 1982-January 2, 1990 – Mayor of Atlanta.

    October 8, 1985 – Wins reelection with 81% of the vote. In contrast to the 1981 election where 61% of the registered voters turned out, only 32% turn out for this election.

    1990 – Becomes chairman of the Atlanta Organizing Committee to bring the 1996 Summer Olympics to Atlanta.

    February 5, 1990 – Announces plans to run for Georgia governor.

    August 7, 1990 – Loses the runoff for Georgia Democratic gubernatorial nomination to Lt. Governor Zell Miller.

    September 18, 1990 – The IOC announces Atlanta as host of the 1996 Summer Olympics.

    1996 – Co-founds GoodWorks International, a consulting firm advising on responsible business development in Africa and the Caribbean.

    1998 – Serves on the US Commission on National Security in the 21st Century established by President Bill Clinton.

    2000-2001 – President of the National Council of Churches.

    2007 – Writes and produces documentary “Rwanda Rising.”

    2008 – “Andrew Young Presents,” the documentary series which Young writes and produces premieres.

    February 25, 2011 Receives a special lifetime achievement Emmy Award, the Trustee Award.

    March 9, 2013 – The Democratic Party of Georgia presents Young with the John Lewis Lifetime Achievement Award.

    August 28, 2013 – The sons of Martin Luther King Jr., Dexter King and Martin Luther King III, sue to remove Young from the board of the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change. At issue is Young’s use of images of their father in a documentary produced by Young.

    May 11, 2015 – Young is taken to the hospital in Atlanta as a precaution after a cement truck overturns on his car. He is released the same day.

    May 6, 2018 – Young is taken to the hospital after becoming ill in Nashville, with what he later says was a staph infection. After a few days, he is transferred to Atlanta where he spends several days at Emory University Hospital before being released.

    October 8, 2020 – Greenwood Bank announces it has raised more than $3 million in seed funding. Young cofounded the bank with Michael “Killer Mike” Render, rapper and activist, and Ryan Glover, founder of Bounce TV network. It is inspired by the former Greenwood District of Tulsa, Oklahoma, a Black business community destroyed during the 1921 Tulsa race massacre. The business, which is owned, managed and operated by Black and Latino people, is expected to launch mid-2021.

    October 19, 2023 – Is promoted to the rank of Officer of the Legion of Honor, France’s highest honor, for “his outstanding contributions to human rights and equality.” Young received the rank of Knight in 1984.

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  • Closing arguments to start in bid to remove Fani Willis from Trump Georgia case

    Closing arguments to start in bid to remove Fani Willis from Trump Georgia case

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    Closing arguments to start in bid to remove Fani Willis from Trump Georgia case – CBS News


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    Closing arguments will begin Friday in a hearing over whether to disqualify Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis and her office from prosecuting the Georgia election interference case against former President Donald Trump and several co-defendants. CBS News legal contributor Rikki Klieman breaks down the case.

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  • Missing 90 Day Fiancé Star Seen Being Shoved By Wife Before ‘Ghosting’ Her In Wild Video – Perez Hilton

    Missing 90 Day Fiancé Star Seen Being Shoved By Wife Before ‘Ghosting’ Her In Wild Video – Perez Hilton

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    Apparently, 90 Day Fiancé stars Angela Deem and Michael Ilesanm got into an altercation — long before he suddenly left her this month!

    Just two months after he moved to the US from his native Nigeria to live with Angela, she shared with fans earlier this week that Michael went missing on Friday. Concerned for her husband, Angela got the police in Georgia involved to find him. Well, law enforcement soon located his whereabouts shortly after she sounded the alarm. He was safe. However, it turned out Michael had planned the entire disappearance to get away from Angela!

    Related: Missing 3-Year-Old’s Mother Arrested

    She and a vlogger named John Yates explained on a livestream that Michael reached out to the cops on “a burner phone” after seeing that she’d reported him missing. He then told them he was “in fear of his life here” and “did not want Angela knowing his location,” according to Yates! Angela, for her part, denied ever mistreating Michael and insisted “no one was locked up here.”

    But fans know the couple have had a very tumultuous relationship throughout their time on the TLC show. Videos have even resurfaced online of some eyebrow-raising moments in their marriage, including one in which Angela had shoved Michael on camera!

    In a clip from 90 Day Fiancé, Angela could be seen showing up to her husband’s home in Nigeria unannounced to confront him about being on social media in September 2022 after he allegedly used it to talk to other women. The television personality banged on Michael’s door in the middle of the night and screamed for him to come out. When he didn’t answer, she threatened to “break the windows.” She then began to tear apart his car, claiming it was her property.

    As Angela ripped off the bumper and license plate on the vehicle, Michael walked up to see the shocking damage. And things quickly escalated from there! Angela rushed toward Michael, shoving him against a wall and grappling with him. Becoming understandably upset, he shouted at Angela:

    “Are you mad? You can’t just come to my place like that. Are you crazy?”

    While Michael begins to break down in tears, she calls him a “crybaby” and “a bitch.” Eventually, he kicks her out of his “compound” before yelling:

    “I’m done!”

    Super intense! Watch the entire moment (below):

    And that was not the only wild fight they’ve gotten into! When Michael tried to give Angela a cake as a peace offering, she slammed it in his face and walked away. See the incident (below):

    What a wild and scary situation. Reactions, Perezcious readers? Let us know in the comments below.

    If you or someone you know is experiencing domestic violence, help is available. Consider calling the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 800-799-7233, or text START to 88788, or go to https://www.thehotline.org/

    [Image via 90 Day Fiancé/YouTube]

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    Perez Hilton

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  • Ukraine vows more self-reliance as war enters third year

    Ukraine vows more self-reliance as war enters third year

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    Ukrainians have questions

    On the anniversary of Putin’s aggression, however, uncertainty and irritation were undisguised in Kyiv. Ukrainians wanted to know why Western sanctions on Russia are not working, and why Moscow keeps getting components for its missiles from Western companies. Why Ukrainians have to keep asking for weapons; and why the U.S. is not pushing through the crucial new aid package for Ukraine.

    “We are very grateful for the support of the United States, but unfortunately, when I turn to the Democrats for support, they tell me to go to the Republicans. And the Republicans say to go to the Democrats,” Ukrainian MP Oleksandra Ustinova said at a separate Kyiv conference on Saturday. “We are grateful for the European support, but we cannot win without the USA. We need the supply of anti-aircraft defenses and continued assistance.”

    “Why don’t you give us what we ask for? Our priorities are air defense and missiles. We need long-range missiles,” Ustinova added. 

    U.S. Congressman Jim Costa explained to the conference that Americans, and even members of Congress, still need to be educated on how the war in Ukraine affects them and why a Ukrainian victory is in America’s best interests.

    “I believe that we must, and that is why we will decide on an additional aid package for Ukraine. It is difficult and unattractive. But I believe that over the next few weeks, the US response will be a beacon to protect our security and democratic values,” Costa said.

    The West is afraid of Russia, Oleksiy Danilov, Ukraine’s security and defense council secretary, told the Saturday conference.

     “The West does not know what to do with Russia and therefore it does not allow us to win. Russians constantly blackmail and intimidate the West. However, if you are afraid of a dog, it will bite you,” he said.

    “And now you are losing not only to autocratic Russia but also to the rest of the autocracies in the world,” Danilov added.

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    Veronika Melkozerova

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  • Police Questioning ‘Person Of Interest’ In Death Of Georgia Nursing Student – KXL

    Police Questioning ‘Person Of Interest’ In Death Of Georgia Nursing Student – KXL

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    ATHENS, Ga. (AP) — Police say they are questioning a “person of interest” in the death of a Georgia nursing student.

    The 22-year-old was found dead on the University of Georgia campus in Athens on Thursday after a friend told police she had not returned from a morning run.

    Investigators were checking security cameras in the area.

    The university’s police chief says Laken Hope Riley was unconscious and had “visible injuries” when officers found her.

    School officials advised students to travel in groups and avoid the wooded area where her body was found Thursday.

    After earlier studying at the University of Georgia, Riley had transferred to the Athens campus of Augusta University’s College of Nursing.

    More about:

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    Grant McHill

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  • Alligator’s head has an oddity experts have never seen before, Georgia researchers say

    Alligator’s head has an oddity experts have never seen before, Georgia researchers say

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    This alligator in Georgia had researchers looking for explanations after they realized it had mysterious jaw appendage — with teeth.

    This alligator in Georgia had researchers looking for explanations after they realized it had mysterious jaw appendage — with teeth.

    UGA Coastal Ecology Lab photo

    A 7-foot alligator caught in southeast Georgia has researchers looking for explanations after discovering it had a mysterious jaw appendage — with teeth.

    Alligators are prone to deformities due to their violent lifestyle, but this is something new, the University’s of Georgia’s Coastal Ecology Lab wrote in a Feb. 19 Facebook post.

    “We see a variety of injuries in the alligators that we catch in the Okefenokee Swamp, from missing limbs and eyes to a tooth that pokes through the upper jaw, but we have never seen an injury quite like the one,” lab officials said in the post.

    It’s suspected the alligator was born with a normal jaw that was broken and never realigned after healing, officials say.
    It’s suspected the alligator was born with a normal jaw that was broken and never realigned after healing, officials say. UGA Coastal Ecology Lab photo

    “Her lower jaw appeared to protrude out from under her upper jaw on the left side of her face. … The part of her jaw that is sticking out has teeth in it still.”

    It’s suspected the alligator was born with a normal jaw that snapped in two — perhaps while battling a much larger alligator, lab officials say.

    The alligator survived and her jaw healed, but never realigned. The alligator likely suffered during the healing process, but continued to hunt and eat, experts say.

    “The section where those teeth should be in her jaw has been filled back in with bone and was very solid,” the lab reports.

    “This unique injury does not appear to affect her ability to eat as her body and tail girth were comparable to other alligators of similar size. This is just another example of how resilient the American alligator is.”

    Alligators are known to fight to the death over turf, mates and protecting their young. The species is also not above cannibalism, studies show.

    The fierce battles can leave both winners and losers with missing limbs, gouged-out eyes and snapped-off tails.

    Okefenokee Swamp is in Georgia’s southeast corner, about 45 miles northwest of Jacksonville.

    The Coastal Ecology Lab is studying alligators in and around the area, including a program that tracks their movements, nesting habits and lineage.

    Mark Price is a National Reporter for McClatchy News. He joined the network of newspapers in 1991 at The Charlotte Observer, covering beats including schools, crime, immigration, LGBTQ issues, homelessness and nonprofits. He graduated from the University of Memphis with majors in journalism and art history, and a minor in geology.

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  • Atlanta Courthouse Shootings Fast Facts | CNN

    Atlanta Courthouse Shootings Fast Facts | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Here’s some background information about Brian Nichols and the Atlanta courthouse shootings. On March 11, 2005, 33-year-old Nichols escaped from the Fulton County Courthouse while on trial for rape, and killed four people.

    Birth date: December 10, 1971

    Birth place: Baltimore, Maryland

    Birth name: Brian Gene Nichols

    Children: with Sonya Meredith: a son, March 8, 2005; with Stephanie Jay: Jasmine Jay, 1992

    Judge Rowland Barnes, 64, Fulton County Superior Court Judge

    Julie Brandau, 46, court reporter

    Hoyt Teasley, 43, sheriff’s deputy

    David Wilhelm, 40, US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent

    1995 – Moves to Atlanta with his family.

    1996-1999 – Is on probation from 1996 to 1999 for a felony drug case in Cobb County, Georgia. He is arrested with a small amount of marijuana.

    Summer 2004 – Is charged with the rape of his former girlfriend.

    8:45 a.m. – While being escorted to his retrial for the rape and other charges, Nichols attacks a sheriff’s deputy when she removes his handcuffs, in a struggle that lasts about three minutes and is caught on surveillance video. He takes the key to a lock box where her gun is stored.

    Nichols retrieves the gun, changes clothes and crosses a sky bridge into the next building and heads for the courtroom.

    Nichols then goes to Judge Rowland Barnes’ private chambers, tears out the phone lines, takes three hostages and asks about the judge’s whereabouts. He leaves a number of times, finally returning with another deputy taken hostage.

    8:55 a.m. – Seizes the second deputy’s gun and enters the courtroom from behind the bench, fires a single shot into Barnes’ head, then shoots and kills court reporter Julie Brandau.

    Nichols goes down the stairwell, leaves through an emergency exit and sets off an emergency alarm.

    On Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, witnesses say he fires multiple shots into the abdomen of another sheriff’s deputy, Hoyt Teasley.

    9:05 a.m. – Nichols first steals a dark SUV (2001 Mazda Tribute), drives fewer than three blocks and crashes through the gate of another parking deck.

    9:07 a.m. – A tow truck driver, Deronte Franklin, says that after he directs police into the deck, Nichols comes back down and steals his truck at gunpoint.

    9:14 a.m. – Nichols then drives to another deck about six blocks away where Almeta Kilgo, an employee of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, says he stole her 2004 Mercury Sable. She says she escaped after refusing Nichols’ order to stay in the car.

    9:15 a.m. – Atlanta Police Command staff are notified at APD Communications that a Fulton County deputy has been shot.

    9:16 a.m. – Nichols carjacks a blue Isuzu Trooper from Sung Chung, at 250 Spring St.

    9:19 a.m. – The tow truck (1999 Ford F-350) stolen at 9:07 a.m. is recovered at a parking deck at 98 Cone St.

    9:20 a.m. – Nichols drives a couple more blocks to another deck, Centennial Parking, 130 Marietta St., where he steals the car of AJC reporter Don O’Briant, a green 1997 Honda Accord. He says Nichols orders him into the trunk and pistol-whips him when he refuses. O’Briant manages to run away.

    9:30 a.m. (approx.) – Police say they believe Nichols moved unnoticed across the street through a crowd gathering for a college basketball tournament, making his escape on a MARTA subway train to the Lenox area. Officials say nothing about Nichols’ whereabouts for the next 13 hours.

    9:45 a.m. – The Atlanta Police Department takes command of the crime scene.

    By about 7 p.m. – Authorities announce they are offering a $60,000 reward for information leading to Nichols’ capture.

    10:40 p.m. – Nichols attempts to rob a couple at an apartment on Lenox Road, getting into a scuffle before fleeing.

    Sometime later but less than five minutes away on foot, Nichols encounters US ICE Agent David Wilhelm and he shoots and kills Wilhelm, taking his gun, his badge and his blue Chevrolet pickup.

    11 p.m. – An AJC employee finds O’Briant’s green Honda Accord on a different level of the same downtown parking garage, Centennial Parking.

    About 2:30 a.m. – Ashley Smith returns from running an errand to her apartment in Duluth, about 20 miles northeast of Atlanta. Nichols forces his way into her apartment at gunpoint and binds her hands and feet.

    Smith says as they spoke for hours about religion and family, Nichols began to relax, and eventually unbound her hands and feet.

    After 6 a.m. – Smith says she followed Nichols so he could hide the truck and then took him back to the apartment in her car. She says that Nichols did not take any weapons on the trip, and that she had her cell phone but did not call police.

    About 6:30 a.m.-7 a.m. – Construction workers arrive at David Wilhelm’s home, find his body and call police, who put out an alert for the blue Chevrolet pickup truck.

    Smith says Nichols allowed her to leave to visit her daughter. Nichols gives her money, saying he was going to stay at her apartment for a “few days.”

    About 9:50 a.m. – Smith dials 911 and within minutes, a SWAT team converges on the building.

    About 11:24 a.m. – Nichols is taken into custody after surrendering by waving a white t-shirt or towel.

    READ MORE: Hostage says she gained trust of Atlanta killings suspect

    March 15, 2005 – Nichols makes his first court appearance after being captured.

    May 5, 2005 – A Fulton County grand jury indicts Nichols on 54 counts, including four counts of felony murder. District Attorney Paul Howard says the state will seek the death penalty.

    May 17, 2005 – Nichols pleads not guilty to all 54 counts.

    September 27, 2005 – Smith’s book, “Unlikely Angel,” is published by Zondervan/Harper Collins. The book recounts the seven hours she spent as Nichols’ hostage.

    February 8, 2006 – Superior Court Judge Hilton Fuller rules that Nichols’ trial will take place at the Fulton County Courthouse, the scene of some of the crimes.

    November 9, 2006 – Judge Fuller rules that cameras will be allowed in the courtroom, though he leaves open the possibility of some restrictions once the trial begins.

    October 15, 2007 – Jury selection begins.

    October 17, 2007 – Judge Fuller suspends jury selection indefinitely due to lack of state funding for the defense.

    January 30, 2008 – Judge Fuller announces he is stepping down from the case due to the perception by many that he is biased.

    July 10, 2008 – The trial resumes and jury selection begins. Nichols pleads not guilty by reason of insanity.

    September 17, 2008 – A jury of eight women and four men (six black females, two white females, two black males, one white male and one Asian male) is selected.

    September 22, 2008 – Opening statements begin.

    November 7, 2008 – After 12 hours of deliberation, a jury finds Nichols guilty on all 54 counts. The jurors reject the defense attorneys’ claim that Nichols suffers from mental illness.

    December 13, 2008 – Superior Court Judge James Bodiford sentences Nichols to life in prison without parole, the maximum for all counts, a day after the jury deadlocks on a death penalty sentence.

    READ MORE: Jury deadlocked on penalty for Atlanta courthouse shooter

    August 18, 2015 – Smith’s book, “Unlikely Angel,” is published by HarperCollins/William Morrow as “Captive: The Untold Story of the Atlanta Hostage Hero.”

    September 18, 2015 – The film “Captive” is released by Paramount Pictures and is an adaption of Smith’s book. It stars David Oyelowo as Nichols and Kate Mara as Smith.

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  • Georgia high school football coach held without bond in Maryland girlfriend’s strangling death – WTOP News

    Georgia high school football coach held without bond in Maryland girlfriend’s strangling death – WTOP News

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    A Georgia man who coached high school football is being held without bond after Maryland officials say he confessed to strangling his girlfriend to death last weekend.

    State’s Attorney Aisha Braveboy and Ellen Opdyke speak about the charges against a high school football coach who allegedly confessed to killing his girlfriend.(WTOP/Scott Gelman)

    A Georgia man who coached high school football is being held without bond after Maryland officials say he confessed to strangling his girlfriend to death last weekend.

    Carl Kearney Jr., 43, was denied bail Tuesday. He is charged with first- and second-degree murder in the killing of 38-year-old Patrina Best.

    The State’s Attorney for Prince George’s County Aisha Braveboy said the two were in an “on and off again relationship.”

    Police said Kearney told them the two were arguing on Saturday morning when he strangled Best until she lost consciousness at her home in the 800 block of St. James Court in Accokeek.

    “Once he realized that she was unconscious, he told police officers that he slapped her to try and quote ‘bring her back’” said Ellen Opdyke, assistant chief of the special victims unit. “But unfortunately, she had already passed away.”

    Kearney then took Best’s vehicle and drove to Virginia. He called police, who told him he needed to contact Prince George’s county authorities, Opdyke said.

    He then drove back to Maryland and confessed to the killing at a police station in Clinton, officials said.

    When police reached the home, they found Best “unresponsive in the basement,” according to charging documents. She was pronounced dead at the scene.

    Best’s family is “heartbroken,” Braveboy said.

    “They were unable to be with us today in court due to the grief that they are suffering because of this loss,” Braveboy said.

    Kearney coached football at Spalding High School in Georgia.

    WTOP has reached out to the school system for further information about the current status of Kearney’s employment but hasn’t heard back.

    A preliminary hearing for Kearney is scheduled for March 18.

    Braveboy said there has been an increase in other family relations, and she called strangulation the “most heinous form” of domestic violence.

    “We remain vigilant anyone who commits domestic violence here in Prince George’s County will be prosecuted. We will pursue the toughest sanctions against you because this cannot and will not be tolerated,” Braveboy said.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Jessica Kronzer

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  • Recapping Trump’s legal issues | Feb. 19, 2024

    Recapping Trump’s legal issues | Feb. 19, 2024

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    Recapping Trump’s legal issues | Feb. 19, 2024 – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Donald Trump will likely appeal the ruling made in his civil fraud case last Friday that would force him to pay over $354 million in fines. Attorney and CBS News campaign reporter Katrina Kaufman has more on where things stand with some of the former president’s legal cases.

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


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  • Trump Celebrates After MSNBC Legal Analyst Declares It’s ‘Game Over’ For Fulton County DA Fani Willis

    Trump Celebrates After MSNBC Legal Analyst Declares It’s ‘Game Over’ For Fulton County DA Fani Willis

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    Opinion

    Screenshot: MSNBC YouTube Video

    The MSNBC legal analyst Caroline Polisi declared it is “game over” for Fani Willis in the election fraud trial against former President Donald Trump following bombshell testimony contradicting a sworn statement made by special prosecutor Nathan Wade as to when their romantic relationship began.

    Robin Yeartie, a college friend of Willis, testified that the Fulton County District Attorney’s personal relationship with Wade began in 2019, years before the couple both stated that it had begun and well before he was hired in the Georgia election interference case.

    Willis and Wade, in their court filing, acknowledged a “personal relationship” but said it had not resulted in any direct or indirect financial benefit to the district attorney. Wade’s sworn statement attached to the filing insisted that their relationship began in 2022 after he was hired.

    Yeartie told the court, however, that there was “no doubt” that Willis and Wade were in a romantic relationship before the hiring, adding that she was “certain” of it.

    Revelations that Willis had hired someone who she was involved with romantically to prosecute Trump surfaced with a court filing last month by defendant Michael Roman, a former Trump campaign official.

    RELATED: Filing Alleges ‘Improper’ Relationship Between Trump Prosecutor And Fulton County DA

    MSNBC: ‘Game Over’ For Fani Willis

    MSNBC’s legal analyst Polisi tried to explain to their viewers how bad this revelation was for Willis, using descriptors such as “epic” and “monumental.”

    “Don’t let the legalese fool you,” she said in her analysis. “This is epic. This is monumental. If things are going in the direction we think, Fani Willis lied to the court, it’s game over for her.”

    “She will be disqualified,” Polisi predicted. “If they had a relationship prior to when they represented truth to the court, it’s a huge deal. I can’t overstate.”

    In a statement to the far-left media outlet Mediaite, Polisi said that the case is effectively squashed, at least as far as it relates to Willis and Wade’s role.

    “Willis will be disqualified, which means her entire office is disqualified, which means the case will have to be re-assigned and languish with the PAC of Georgia, effectively killing the case,” Polisi said. “Her credibility is completely shot.”

    RELATED: MSNBC’s Black Barbershop Voter Segment Spells Trouble For Biden: ‘With Trump We Had Money’

    Trump Celebrates The MSNBC Report

    Former President Donald Trump took to his Truth Social media platform to celebrate what he had heard during the MSNBC segment.

    “MSNBC just stated game over for the fake Fani Willis case in Georgia,” he wrote. “Another scam coordinated with the Biden White House for purposes of election interference!”

    Wade took the stand on Thursday to defend claims that his relationship with Willis had not resulted in any direct or indirect financial benefit to the district attorney.

    County records show that Wade has been paid nearly $654,000 in legal fees since January 2022. Remarkably, Wade insists he was paid by the DA’s office in cash and had only one receipt to show for it.

    One receipt. That seems … unlikely.

    Wade also testified that he “doesn’t recall” travel with Willis in 2021 when he was hired.

    He would later complete his testimony and march directly out of the courtroom.

    The case against former President Trump and 14 remaining co-defendants is at stake right now, as a decision to disqualify Willis and her office could result in a significant delay in the trial, and potentially lessen the chance that a trial would be held before the November election.

    Fulton Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee said earlier in the week that Willis could be disqualified from the case depending on his findings after hearing the evidence presented from both sides.

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    Rusty Weiss has been covering politics for over 15 years. His writings have appeared in the Daily Caller, Fox… More about Rusty Weiss

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    Rusty Weiss

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  • Will Georgia prosecutor be removed from election case against Donald Trump? Judge to hear arguments

    Will Georgia prosecutor be removed from election case against Donald Trump? Judge to hear arguments

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    Should District Attorney Fani Willis be removed from the Georgia election interference case against former President Donald Trump because of her personal relationship with a special prosecutor? Lawyers were set to battle over the question during a hearing in Atlanta on Thursday.Willis, the DA for Georgia’s Fulton County, hired outside lawyer Nathan Wade to help investigate whether Trump and his allies committed any crimes while trying to overturn his 2020 election loss in the state. Wade has led the team prosecuting the case since an indictment was returned in August.Willis’ removal would be a stunning development in the most sprawling of the four criminal cases against Trump. An additional delay would likely lessen the chance that a trial would be held before the November election, when he is expected to be the Republican nominee for president. At a separate hearing in New York on Thursday, a judge is expected to confirm whether Trump’s hush-money criminal case will go to trial next month, as scheduled. The Georgia hearing, which will be broadcast live, has the potential to dig into uncomfortable details of Willis and Wade’s relationship. Throughout the case, Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee has made a serious effort to minimize drama in his courtroom and to keep lawyers focused on legal arguments.He suggested during a hearing Monday that he would continue that trend, saying that if there’s anything that amounts to “harassment or undue embarrassment,” he is “not going to feel inhibited from stepping in, even without an objection from counsel, to move this along and keep it focused on the issues at hand.”Since the allegations of an inappropriate relationship surfaced last month in a motion filed by Trump co-defendant Michael Roman, the former president has used them to try to cast doubt on the legitimacy of Willis’ case. Other Republicans have cited them in calling for investigations into Willis, a Democrat who’s up for reelection this year.Roman, a former Trump campaign staffer and onetime White House aide, alleged that Willis and Wade had been involved in an improper romantic relationship that began before Wade was hired. The motion says Willis paid Wade large sums for his work and then benefited personally when he paid for vacations for the two of them, creating a conflict of interest. Roman, who has since been joined by Trump and several other co-defendants, is asking McAfee to toss out the indictment and to prevent Willis, Wade and their offices from continuing to be involved in the case.Earlier this month, Willis and Wade filed a response acknowledging a “personal relationship” but said it has not resulted in any direct or indirect financial benefit to the district attorney. In a sworn statement attached to the filing, Wade said the relationship began in 2022, after he was hired as special prosecutor, and that he and Willis shared travel expenses and never lived together.Willis argued she has no financial or personal conflict of interest that justifies removing her or her office from the case. Her filing called the allegations “salacious” and said they were designed to generate headlines.McAfee said during a hearing Monday that Willis could be disqualified “if evidence is produced demonstrating an actual conflict or the appearance of one.” He said the issues he wants to explore at the hearing are “whether a relationship existed, whether that relationship was romantic or nonromantic in nature, when it formed and whether it continues.” Those questions are only relevant, he said, “in combination with the question of the existence and extent of any personal benefit conveyed as a result of the relationship.”Roman’s lawyer, Ashleigh Merchant, has subpoenaed Willis, Wade, seven other employees of the district attorney’s office and others, including Wade’s former business partner, Terrence Bradley. Merchant has said Bradley will testify that Willis and Wade’s relationship began prior to his hiring as special prosecutor.McAfee on Monday declined Willis’ request to quash those subpoenas, but agreed to revisit that after Bradley testifies.

    Should District Attorney Fani Willis be removed from the Georgia election interference case against former President Donald Trump because of her personal relationship with a special prosecutor? Lawyers were set to battle over the question during a hearing in Atlanta on Thursday.

    Willis, the DA for Georgia’s Fulton County, hired outside lawyer Nathan Wade to help investigate whether Trump and his allies committed any crimes while trying to overturn his 2020 election loss in the state. Wade has led the team prosecuting the case since an indictment was returned in August.

    Willis’ removal would be a stunning development in the most sprawling of the four criminal cases against Trump. An additional delay would likely lessen the chance that a trial would be held before the November election, when he is expected to be the Republican nominee for president. At a separate hearing in New York on Thursday, a judge is expected to confirm whether Trump’s hush-money criminal case will go to trial next month, as scheduled.

    The Georgia hearing, which will be broadcast live, has the potential to dig into uncomfortable details of Willis and Wade’s relationship. Throughout the case, Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee has made a serious effort to minimize drama in his courtroom and to keep lawyers focused on legal arguments.

    He suggested during a hearing Monday that he would continue that trend, saying that if there’s anything that amounts to “harassment or undue embarrassment,” he is “not going to feel inhibited from stepping in, even without an objection from counsel, to move this along and keep it focused on the issues at hand.”

    Since the allegations of an inappropriate relationship surfaced last month in a motion filed by Trump co-defendant Michael Roman, the former president has used them to try to cast doubt on the legitimacy of Willis’ case. Other Republicans have cited them in calling for investigations into Willis, a Democrat who’s up for reelection this year.

    Roman, a former Trump campaign staffer and onetime White House aide, alleged that Willis and Wade had been involved in an improper romantic relationship that began before Wade was hired. The motion says Willis paid Wade large sums for his work and then benefited personally when he paid for vacations for the two of them, creating a conflict of interest.

    Roman, who has since been joined by Trump and several other co-defendants, is asking McAfee to toss out the indictment and to prevent Willis, Wade and their offices from continuing to be involved in the case.

    Earlier this month, Willis and Wade filed a response acknowledging a “personal relationship” but said it has not resulted in any direct or indirect financial benefit to the district attorney. In a sworn statement attached to the filing, Wade said the relationship began in 2022, after he was hired as special prosecutor, and that he and Willis shared travel expenses and never lived together.

    Willis argued she has no financial or personal conflict of interest that justifies removing her or her office from the case. Her filing called the allegations “salacious” and said they were designed to generate headlines.

    McAfee said during a hearing Monday that Willis could be disqualified “if evidence is produced demonstrating an actual conflict or the appearance of one.”

    He said the issues he wants to explore at the hearing are “whether a relationship existed, whether that relationship was romantic or nonromantic in nature, when it formed and whether it continues.” Those questions are only relevant, he said, “in combination with the question of the existence and extent of any personal benefit conveyed as a result of the relationship.”

    Roman’s lawyer, Ashleigh Merchant, has subpoenaed Willis, Wade, seven other employees of the district attorney’s office and others, including Wade’s former business partner, Terrence Bradley. Merchant has said Bradley will testify that Willis and Wade’s relationship began prior to his hiring as special prosecutor.

    McAfee on Monday declined Willis’ request to quash those subpoenas, but agreed to revisit that after Bradley testifies.

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  • Georgia Lawmakers Move to Limit Nation’s Largest Film Incentive

    Georgia Lawmakers Move to Limit Nation’s Largest Film Incentive

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    After studying the issue for the last eight months, Georgia lawmakers unveiled a proposal on Wednesday to limit the state’s lucrative film and TV tax incentive.

    Georgia has the largest production tax credit in the country, with $1.24 billion in credits certified last year. Over the last decade, soundstages have sprouted up around Atlanta and hundreds of productions have come to the state, including “May December,” “Black Panther,” “Stranger Things,” and “The Walking Dead.”

    Unlike in most other states, the Georgia credit is not capped. As it surpassed $1 billion a year, some lawmakers have worried that it poses a risk to state finances and makes it harder to cut income taxes across the board.

    “What we’ve seen from legislative leaders is a clear desire to rein in the overall cost of this program,” said Danny Kanso, a fiscal analyst at the Georgia Budget and Policy Institute.

    Four officials, including the lieutenant governor and the House speaker, unveiled legislation on Wednesday that would limit the amount of credits that can be transferred in a year. The bill would also establish modest requirements to claim the full amount — 30% of in-state production costs — instead of the 20% base.

    “This is all about using the taxpayers’ dollars in the most effective and efficient manner,” said state Sen. Chuck Hufstetler at a press conference.

    The bill, HB 1180, would not cap the amount of tax credits certified by the state. But it would place a limit on productions’ ability to monetize them.

    The Georgia Screen Entertainment Coalition, which represents studios, production facilities and other industry stakeholders, said in a statement that it is studying the bill.

    “We’re reviewing the legislation and we’ll work closely with legislators to protect this program that has successfully built a Georgia-based film industry,” said executive director Kelsey Moore, adding that the tax credit has created “billions of dollars in economic impact to the benefit of Georgians across the state.”

    The bill must still go through both houses of the legislature, and is expected to face a barrage of lobbying and possible amendments.

    A joint House-Senate committee began a top-to-bottom review of all of the state’s tax credits last June, as lawmakers sought to evaluate whether they generate a sufficient return on investment. In November, GSEC issued a report arguing that every $1 in film credits creates $6.30 in economic benefits.

    The incentive enjoys considerable support, as it has created thousands of production jobs and helped promote the state’s image around the world. In 2022, lawmakers quickly shut down an effort to place a strict $900 million cap on the program.

    Stephen Weizenecker, an Atlanta entertainment attorney who focuses on film incentives, said the new bill shows that lawmakers are trying to walk a middle ground.

    “This is a thoughtful plan to balance the interests of the state and the industry, and to continue to encourage the industry to grow in the state,” he said.

    Most production companies are not based in Georgia and do not pay state income tax. They sell their film credits, at a small discount, to Georgia companies and wealthy individuals who do have state tax liability. A recent audit found that 97% of film tax credits are transferred to another party before they are redeemed.

    The bill would limit the amount that could be sold in any year to 2.5% of the state’s estimated revenue — or $902 million for the upcoming fiscal year.

    At the press conference, Hufstetler said the goal was to smooth out the redemption of credits, so the state is not hit with a big liability all at once.

    “Some of these are kept over several years. They could all be redeemed in one year,” he said. “It doesn’t really change the tax credits that are out there.”

    But Kanso said the practical effect will be to limit the size of the program.

    “I think this is viewed as a first step,” he said. “It’s a way to put a cap into law without maybe having to say that in such clear terms.”

    Had the limit been in place in recent years, it likely would have been exceeded in 2017, 2018 and 2019, according to a review of state audit reports and budget data.

    Credit redemptions have declined since 2020 due to the pandemic and a delay in utilization caused by a new auditing requirement. But projections in state audits and budget documents show that the amount of credits expected to be redeemed in 2025 and beyond would again exceed the limit in the bill.

    Under the bill, if any credits cannot be transferred in a particular year, they could carry forward to the next year. Hufstetler noted that there would still be no limit on claiming credits that are not transferred.

    “Anybody that pays taxes in Georgia doesn’t have to transfer them,” he said. “So we might have encouraged some companies to move to Georgia in the process as well.”

    Under current law, credits are worth 20% of in-state costs plus 10% if the film or TV show displays a title card with the Georgia peach logo. The bill would make it a little harder to get the extra 10%, requiring productions to meet at least four out of these nine criteria:

    • at least 50% of the crew is from Georgia
    • at least 50% of the vendors are from Georgia
    • at least $30 million is spent in state
    • at least 50% of photography days are in a rural county
    • at least 50% of studio days are in a Georgia studio, or the company makes capital improvements to a Georgia studio
    • at least 50% of studio days are in a Georgia studio, or the company signs a long-term lease with a Georgia studio
    • at least 20% of post-production or VFX is performed by Georgia vendors
    • participation in a workforce development program, such as the Georgia Film Academy
    • the peach logo

    The bill would also raise the spending threshold to qualify for credits from $500,000 in annual production activity to $1 million per project.

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    Gmaddaus

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