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Political Cornflakes: Federal prosecutors charge attorney Michael Avenatti with stealing millions from his clients

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Michael Avenatti, the attorney who became widely known while representing adult-film star Stormy Daniels, has been charged with stealing millions of dollars from his clients. Federal prosecutors announced the indictment Thursday, accusing Avenatti of using his clients’ money to pay for a private jet, among other things. Avenatti has vowed to fight the charges and plead not guilty in the case. Avenatti is charged in a separate federal case with trying to extort the Nike company. The attorney, a fierce critic of President Donald Trump, has said he’s made powerful enemies by devoting his career to standing up for underdogs. [WaPost]

Happy Friday!

Topping the news: Utah lawmakers praised the U.S. Senate’s decision to confirm David Bernhardt as secretary of the Interior Department, despite environmentalist protests that he is wrapped up in the oil and gas industry he spent a large portion of his career representing. Sen. Mitt Romney said he thinks Bernhardt has the experience necessary to handle the job of overseeing America’s vast public lands. [Trib] [DNews]

-> Residents of an apartment complex in Salt Lake City are concerned about potential identity theft after the discovery that a maintenance worker has a long criminal history. The property managers are blaming the company that performed the criminal background check, saying nothing alarming had shown up on the check when she was hired last fall. [Trib]

-> The Utah Democratic Party’s executive committee voted to stop paying their chairwoman for the rest of her term because the group is strapped for cash. [Trib]

Tweets of the day: @CarlosUDOT: “Grateful to have @SpencerJCox join us today for a media event introducing the autonomous shuttle UDOT & UTA will be deploying at various locations throughout Utah this year. The lieutenant governor truly understands the world-changing significance of this exciting new technology!”

-> @SpencerJCox: “I volunteered to be the guinea pig today to help show the safety of our new autonomous shuttle pilot project. I’m really glad it stopped.”

-> @jennagiesta: “Two things: Yep, the Buttigieg movement is real, and also, he's not really in any different place than Harris/Warren/O'Rourke. #MOEisreal.”

-> @MikeLMower: “How cool when @SpencerJCox, Justin Harding and I all showed up to an event wearing new blue, windowpane suits. #GQ #utpol.”

-> @slcmayor: “Today we launched EmpowerSLC with @UtahCleanEnergy, a program designed to help our west side neighborhoods save $$ by taking energy saving actions, like replacing lightbulbs to LEDs. #climatemayors #cleanenergy.”

Behind the Headlines: Tribune government and politics editor Dan Harrie, reporter Courtney Tanner, and columnist Robert Gehrke join KCPW guest host Marcie Young Cancio to talk about the week’s top stories, including renewed debate over the enforcement of BYU’s Honor Code.

-> Every Friday at 9 a.m., stream "Behind the Headlines" at kcpw.org, or tune in to KCPW 88.3 FM or Utah Public Radio for the broadcast. Join the live conversation by calling (801) 355-TALK.

Friday quiz: Last week, 98% of you knew about a change in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints’ policy on the children of LGBTQ people, but only 48% knew Utah’s best cup of coffee comes from La Barba. Think you kept up with the news this week? Take our quiz to find out. A new one will post every Friday morning. You can find previous quizzes here. If you’re using The Salt Lake Tribune mobile app, click here. [Trib]

In the news: Leonard Leo, executive vice president of The Federalist Society, paid tribute to former Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch on Thursday during a symposium hosted by the Hatch Foundation. Leo said he couldn’t imagine a successful conservative legal movement without Hatch. [Trib]

-> The Utah Department of Transportation and Utah Transit Authority tested the state’s first fully automatic vehicle as part of a pilot project. Lawmakers passed legislation during the 2019 session to allow the testing and operation of the automated street shuttle on sidewalks and state roads. Lt. Gov. Spencer Cox was also present and praised the technology. [Trib] [KUTV]

-> Veronica Pome’e, the first Polynesian woman to be featured in Sports Illustrated’s annual swimsuit edition and the only plus-sized model to be featured among six finalists, is speaking at a conference in Utah to address violence prevention. [Trib]

-> Tribune columnist Robert Gehrke wrote about congressional attempts to pass balanced budget amendments and whether federal lawmakers are sincere about eliminating deficits. [Trib]

-> Tribune cartoonist Pat Bagley illustrated President Donald Trump and Attorney General William P. Barr playing a game of baseball, with Barr protecting the president. [Trib]

Nationally: Police arrested Julian Assange, WikiLeaks founder, in London on Thursday for conspiring to hack into a Pentagon computer network nearly 10 years ago. Assange had taken shelter in Ecuador’s embassy in Britain to avoid arrest but authorities were able to capture him after the Ecuadorean government suspended his citizenship. [NYTimes] [Politico] [WaPost]

-> Former Obama White House counsel Gregory B. Craig was charged with lying and concealing information from the Justice Department about work he did for Ukraine’s government in 2012. Craig called the charges unjustified. [NYTimes] [Politico] [WaPost]

-> President Donald Trump indicated he is open to holding a third summit meeting with Kim Jong-un, the North Korean leader, despite the fact that previous disarmament talks abruptly fell apart more than a month ago. Trump did point out, though, that he has no plans to ease sanctions on North Korea unless the country vows to give up its entire nuclear arsenal. [NYTimes] [WaPost]

-> Deputy White House policy coordinator May Davis wrote an email in November to immigration officials suggesting that authorities could release detainees into “sanctuary cities," in part to send a message to Democrats. Response to the idea was negative, and ultimately, it was not implemented. [NYTimes] [WaPost]

Got a tip? A birthday, wedding or anniversary to announce? Email us at cornflakes@sltrib.com. If you haven’t already, sign up here for our weekday email to get this sent directly to your inbox.

-- Bethany Rodgers and Sahalie Donaldson

https://twitter.com/BethRodgersSLT, https://twitter.com/SahalieD


George Pyle: If we can’t have democracy, let’s have NBA-ocracy

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It becomes more and more obvious that Utah will never be a democracy.

Voter-approved initiatives don’t last long enough for the ink to dry before the Legislature, with the governor’s approval, overwrites them. Then they set out to make the next round of plebiscite democracy that much more difficult to achieve.

The party with a super-majority in public offices is literally in debt to a guy who commands them to hoard their power among a few rather than share it with the many. Keeping the open access to public office that has already been won becomes the best we can hope for, and a full-time job.

So, with real democracy apparently out of reach, we might choose to be like the poor sods in 14th century societies that are riven by rival warlords and throw in our lot with whichever faction of the rich and powerful might, we dare hope, govern us most wisely.

Clearly, the lords we Utahns should all pledge our fealty to are the worthies of the National Basketball Association.

Yes, I said basically the same thing in this space about a year ago. Then I was taken by the strikingly humane stands taken by NBA coaches Steve Kerr, of Golden State, and Gregg Popovich, of San Antonio, as well as league Commissioner Adam Silver.

And it all came back when Kyle Korver, the three-point sharpshooter of the Utah Jazz, published a strikingly honest and self-aware essay on a surprisingly thoughtful and emotional website called The Players Tribune. He wrote about how, as a white guy in a league populated mostly by black men, he often found himself struggling to do right by his black teammates, friends and colleagues on other teams when the ugliness of race in America makes itself obvious.

His key insight was that, as a white man, he is always able to step in and out of the issue, as he feels the need and the strength, while all the black players can never get away from it, faced by inequities that range from being wrongly arrested on the streets of New York to being peppered with racist verbal abuse in the arena of Salt Lake City.

He also pointed out the difference between being guilty of creating the racism that permeates American society — which he isn’t — and being responsible for doing something about it — which he is. As all of us are.

Thus Korver joins the voices in his league that have gone out of their way to take stands against racism, sexism and gun violence in our culture. It all makes professional basketball seem to put more stress on the word “professional,” treating players with more respect, listening to their concerns about how athletes are treated and valuing their right to speak out on issues of public concern.

Unlike, say, the bosses in pro football — who look down on their players even as they pay them millions of dollars — NBA owners seem to value their players more as human beings, as partners. Basketball owners operate more in the nature of a Silicone Valley start-up than the owners of a plantation.

Korver can be proud of the fact that his league, from top to bottom, at least shows more concern about this that many other segments of society. And that pro sports, like the military and show business, are the most integrated parts of American society because, not in spite of, the fact that they are the institutions that are the most merit-driven.

The league as a whole has also been a light onto the world (Major League Baseball is good at this, too) for its efforts to internationalize their sport. Clearly, efforts to import players from around the world will improve the game as the league sells T-shirts, jerseys and TV rights to people of every corner of the globe. But the fact that NBA owners and managers are clear-eyed enough to see that, rather than engage in a Make Basketball Great Again ethnocentrism, puts them both intellectually and morally above, well, so many people who win elections.

Jazz players seem particularly interested in being part of their new community. The most obvious example, of course, is hotshot guard Donovan Mitchell, who follows 30-point nights by taking in a high school or college game, paying for someone’s repair job at the Apple Store or otherwise deliberately avoiding the life of a rich kid who hides behind a coterie of sycophants in his penthouse apartment.

Korver’s essay rightly drew a lot of attention, here and around the county. It reminded me of the time, way back in 1990, that pro golfer Tom Watson resigned from the Kansas City Country Club, his long-time home base, when it came out that it had rejected the membership application of a local Jewish businessman — Henry Bloch of H&R Block fame.

The pitch-perfect comment that led a Kansas City Star sports column the next day: “Nice shot, Tom.”

Nice shot, indeed.

(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Tribune staff. George Pyle.
(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) Tribune staff. George Pyle. (Francisco Kjolseth/)

George Pyle, editorial page editor of The Salt Lake Tribune, has always been utterly inept at all forms of athletic competition. So it kinda bugs him when an athlete writes better than he does. gpyle@sltrib.com




Say goodbye to snow. But after a sunny Saturday, rain is expected for several days.

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Rain and snow made for a slushy commute Friday morning, but the National Weather Service expected the white stuff to be gone by the afternoon. That does not, however, mean that Salt Lake City is done with precipitation — there’s plenty of that forecast for the next few days.

Temperatures are expected to reach about 50 Friday afternoon, with little to no snow accumulation. But rain showers are expected to continue in the afternoon, with a slight chance of thunderstorms.

The weather service is forecasting overnight lows in the 30s; it will still be cold when the Salt Lake Marathon gets underway at 7 a.m. Saturday. But the skies are expected to clear by the time the University of Utah’s spring football game kicks off at 11 a.m. at Rice-Eccles Stadium, with highs in the mid-50s in the afternoon. Temperatures will cool into the 40s during the Real Salt Lake-Orlando City game in Sandy at 7 p.m., but no rain is expected.

However, there’s a 30 percent chance of rain on Sunday, with highs in the mid-60s. That chance increases to 50 percent Sunday night, and rain is likely Monday morning, with showers continuing into Tuesday.

Utah’s Red-White Game is scaled-down football, but there will still be plenty to see

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The Utah Athletics video promoting Saturday’s Red-White Game lasts 52 seconds. That’s longer than many of the Utes’ front-line players will appear in the annual event at Rice-Eccles Stadium to conclude spring football practice.

This is what happens when quarterback Jordan Wynn reflexively dives to recover a fumble: The next generation of starters is held out of the spring game, because coaches worry about anyone being injured in the last of the 15 sessions.

Wynn’s shoulder injury in the 2010 Red-White Game as a returning starter was among “a few bad experiences through the years,” Ute coach Kyle Whttingham said this week. “We’ve gotten more conservative as we’ve gone along.”

So about one-third of Utah’s starters will participate Saturday, Whittingham said, and only for a half. Two scrimmages that were open to the public offered a much better look at top players and the new offensive scheme than will be seen Saturday, when the Pac-12 Networks will televise the event. Even so, it’s free and it’s football. And other reasons exist for fans to attend the event, in the last chance to see the Utes on the field before the Aug. 29 season opener at BYU.

• The offensive line will get extensive work. Utah’s biggest personnel questions revolve around this group, and the linemen will play for both teams, due to their low numbers. The linemen showed improvement in last week’s major scrimmage and need a strong finish of the spring to reduce some fears about them, with other key players arriving on campus this summer.

• Utah needs to discover a kicker. Chayden Johnston and Jadon Redding will test themselves in a game environment, after each performed inconsistently in the scrimmages. Matt Gay is gone, after making 56 of 65 field goal attempts in two seasons. Maybe one of the kickers will have a game-winning opportunity’s like Gay’s 57-yarder last April.

• The passing game is evolving. Regardless of whether starting quarterback Tyler Huntley plays Saturday, some elements of offensive coordinator Andy Ludwig’s scheme will be displayed. One-on-one competition between the receivers and defensive backs has been interesting to watch this spring, partly because of the precise, intricate routes of the receivers. And quarterbacks Jason Shelley, Drew Lisk and Cameron Rising all have done some good things.

• There’s a good cause. Fans are being asked to wear gold, promoting awareness of pediatric cancer and support of the Hayes Tough Foundation, an initiative of former Ute defensive back Steve Tate. The first 500 fans will receive a T-shirt and bracelet, with the west gates opening at 9 a.m.


The White House proposed releasing immigrant detainees in sanctuary cities as a form of retaliation

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Washington • White House officials have tried to pressure U.S. immigration authorities to release detainees onto the streets of “sanctuary cities” to retaliate against President Donald Trump’s political adversaries, according to Department of Homeland Security officials and email messages reviewed by The Washington Post.

Trump administration officials have proposed transporting detained immigrants to sanctuary cities at least twice in the past six months — once in November, as a migrant caravan approached the U.S. southern border, and again in February, amid a standoff with Democrats over funding for Trump’s border wall.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's district in San Francisco was among those the White House wanted to target, according to DHS officials. The administration also considered releasing detainees in other Democratic strongholds.

White House officials first broached the plan in a Nov. 16 email, asking officials at several agencies whether members of the caravan could be arrested at the border and then bused "to small- and mid-sized sanctuary cities," places where local authorities have refused to hand over illegal immigrants for deportation.

The White House told U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement that the plan was intended to alleviate a shortage of jail space but also served to send a message to Democrats. The attempt at political retribution raised alarm within ICE, with a top official responding that it was rife with budgetary and liability concerns, and noting that "there are PR risks as well."

After the White House pressed again in February, ICE's legal department rejected the idea as inappropriate and rebuffed the administration.

A White House official and a spokesman for the DHS sent nearly identical statements to The Post on Thursday, indicating that the proposal is no longer under consideration.

"This was just a suggestion that was floated and rejected, which ended any further discussion," the White House statement said.

Pelosi's office criticized the plan.

"The extent of this administration's cynicism and cruelty cannot be overstated," said Pelosi spokeswoman Ashley Etienne. "Using human beings — including little children — as pawns in their warped game to perpetuate fear and demonize immigrants is despicable."

Trump has made immigration a central aspect of his administration, and he has grown increasingly frustrated at the influx of migrants from Central America. He often casts them as killers and criminals who threaten U.S. security, pointing to cases in which immigrants have killed U.S. citizens — including a notable case on a San Francisco pier in 2015. And he has railed against liberal sanctuary city policies, saying they endanger Americans.

"These outrageous sanctuary cities are grave threats to public safety and national security," Trump said on Dec. 7, in a speech to the Safe Neighborhoods Conference in Kansas City, Missouri, less than a month after the White House asked ICE about moving detainees to such cities. "Each year, sanctuary cities release thousands of known criminal aliens from their custody and right back into the community. So they put them in, and they have them, and they let them go, and it drives you people a little bit crazy, doesn't it, huh?"

The White House believed it could punish Democrats — including Pelosi — by busing ICE detainees into their districts before their release, according to two DHS whistleblowers who independently reported the busing plan to Congress. One of the whistleblowers spoke with The Post, and several DHS officials confirmed the accounts. They spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations.

Senior Trump adviser Stephen Miller discussed the proposal with ICE, according to two DHS officials. Matthew Albence, who is ICE's acting deputy director, immediately questioned the proposal in November and later circulated the idea within his agency when it resurfaced in February, seeking the legal review that ultimately doomed the proposal. Miller and Albence declined to comment Thursday.

Miller's name did not appear on any of the documents reviewed by The Post. But as White House senior adviser on immigration policy, officials at ICE understood that he was pressing the plan.

Trump has been demanding aggressive action to deal with the surge of migrants, and many of his administration's proposals have been blocked in federal court or, like the family separation policy last year, backfired as public relations disasters.

Homeland Security officials said the sanctuary city request was unnerving, and it underscores the political pressure Trump and Miller have put on ICE and other DHS agencies at a time when the president is furious about the biggest border surge in more than a decade.

"It was basically an idea that Miller wanted that nobody else wanted to carry out," said one congressional investigator who has spoken to one of the whistleblowers. "What happened here is that Stephen Miller called people at ICE, said if they're going to cut funding you've got to make sure you're releasing people in Pelosi's district and other congressional districts."

The idea of releasing immigrants into sanctuary cities was not presented to Ronald Vitiello, the agency's acting director, according to one DHS official familiar with the plan. Last week the White House rescinded Vitiello's nomination to lead ICE, giving no explanation, and Vitiello submitted his resignation Wednesday, ending his 30-year-career.

Trump told reporters the following day he wanted to put someone "tougher" at ICE. DHS officials said they do not know whether ICE's refusal to adopt the White House's plan contributed to Vitiello's removal. His departure puts Albence in charge of the agency as of Friday.

The White House proposal reached ICE first in November as a highly publicized migrant caravan was approaching the United States. May Davis, deputy assistant to the president and deputy White House policy coordinator, wrote to officials with U.S. Customs and Border Protection, ICE, and the Department of Homeland Security with the subject line: "Sanctuary City Proposal."

"The idea has been raised by 1-2 principals that, if we are unable to build sufficient temporary housing, that caravan members be bussed to small- and mid-sized sanctuary cities," Davis wrote, seeking responses to its operational and legal viability. "There is NOT a White House decision on this."

Albence replied that such a plan "would create an unnecessary operational burden" on an already strained organization and raised concerns about its appropriateness, writing: "Not sure how paying to transport aliens to another location to release them — when they can released on the spot — is a justified expenditure. Not to mention the liability should there be an accident along the way."

The White House pushed the issue a second time in the midst of the budget standoff in mid-February, according to DHS officials, and on the heels of a bitterly partisan 35-day government shutdown over Trump's border wall plan. The White House discussed the immigrant release idea as a way to punish Democrats standing in the way of funding additional detention beds.

ICE detainees with violent criminal records are not typically released on bond or other "alternatives to detention" while they await a hearing with an immigration judge, but there have been instances of such detainees being released.

The White House urged ICE to channel releases to sanctuary districts, regardless of whether immigrants had any ties to those places.

"It was retaliation, to show them, 'Your lack of cooperation has impacts,' " said one of the DHS officials, summarizing the rationale. "I think they thought it would put pressure on those communities to understand, I guess, a different perspective on why you need more immigration money for detention beds."

Senior officials at ICE did not take the proposal seriously at first, but as the White House exerted pressure, ICE's legal advisers were asked to weigh in, DHS officials said.

A formal legal review was never completed, according to two DHS officials familiar with the events, and senior ICE attorneys told Albence and others that the plan was inappropriate and lacked a legal basis.

"If we would have done that, we would have had to expend transportation resources, and make a decision that we're going to use buses, planes, etc. to send these aliens to a place for whatever reason," a senior DHS official said. "We had to come up with a reason, and we did not have one."

The proposal faded when House Democrats ultimately relented on their demand for a decrease in the number of detention beds, a final sticking point in budget talks between the White House and House Democrats.

The number of immigrant detainees in ICE custody has approached 50,000 in recent months, an all-time high that has further strained the agency's budget. Those include immigrants arrested in the U.S. interior, as well as recent border-crossers transferred from Border Patrol. With unauthorized migration at a 12-year-high, the vast majority of recent migrants — and especially those with children — are quickly processed and released with a notice to appear in court, a system that Trump has derided as "catch and release."

The process has left Trump seething, convinced that immigration officials and the DHS more broadly should adopt a harsher approach.

Vitiello’s removal from ICE last week was followed Sunday by the ouster of DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, who lost favor with Trump and Miller by repeatedly warning the White House that the administration’s policy ideas were unworkable and likely to be blocked by federal courts.

The sanctuary city proposal ran contrary to ICE policy guidelines, as well as legal counsel. ICE officials balked at the notion of moving migrants to detention facilities in different areas, insisting that Congress only authorizes the agency to deport immigrants, not relocate them internally, according to DHS officials.

The plan to retaliate against sanctuary cities came just after Trump agreed to reopen the government in late January, following a five-week shutdown over wall funding. The president gave lawmakers three weeks to come up with a plan to secure the border before a second fiscal deadline in mid-February.

During the talks, Republicans and Democrats sparred over the number of detention beds, with House Democrats pressing for a lower number amid pressure from their left flank.

It was during that mid-February standoff that one whistleblower came to Congress alleging that the White House was considering a plan to punish Democrats if they did not relent on ICE funding for beds. A second official independently came forward after that.

According to both, there were at least two versions of the plan being considered. One was to move migrants who were already in ICE detention to the districts of Democratic opponents. The second option was to bus migrants apprehended at the border to sanctuary cities, such as New York, Chicago and San Francisco.

The Washington Post’s Josh Dawsey contributed to this report.

4 Corners Airport hopes its upgrades will woo commercial flights

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Farmington, N. M. • Officials at the Four Corners Regional Airport in northwestern New Mexico hope proposed upgrades will bring commercial airlines back.

The Farmington Daily Times reports a five-year $23.2 million plan presented this week calls for improvements to runways, installation of an engineered material arresting system and taxiway relocation.

Airport Manager Mike Lewis told the Farmington City Council the upgrades could be used to attract commercial air service back to the airport.

No commercial airline has landed a plane at the Four Corners Regional Airport since 2017.

Farmington Economic Development Director Warren Unsicker says the commercial air service will help Farmington as it works to accomplish goals like increasing tourism, attracting retirees and building an aerospace industry.

‘We want to be better people’: Hundreds of students protested how BYU enforces its Honor Code

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(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) Tyler Glade and Zoe Calcote stand for a moment of silence as they gather with hundreds of BYU students in Provo to protest how the school enforces its Honor Code, Friday, April 12, 2019.(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)       Hundreds of BYU Students sing "I am a Child of God" as they gather on campus in Provo to protest how the school enforces its Honor Code Friday, April 12, 2019.(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) Alex Laurenco holds a sign at a protest  at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, on April 12, 2019, about changes BYU students would like to see in how the Honor Code is enforced.(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)        Matt Easton chants with protesters as they gather on the campus of Brigham Young University, with hundreds of BYU students at a rally to oppose how the school’s Honor Code Office investigates and disciplines students, Friday, April 12, 2019.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)        Riley Mabry, from Memphis Tennessee, sings a hymn along with hundreds of BYU students, as gather on the quad near the Wilkinson Center to protest the honor code on BYU Campus in Provo, Friday, April 12, 2019.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)        Hundreds of students gather on the campus of Brigham Young University, for a rally to oppose how the school’s Honor Code Office investigates and disciplines students, Friday, April 12, 2019.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)        Sidney Draughon gets emotional, she listens to students tell their experiences with the honor code office, as hundreds of students gather on the campus of Brigham Young University, to oppose how the school’s Honor Code Office investigates and disciplines students, Friday, April 12, 2019. Draughon started an anonymous Instagram account to post about her experience with the honor code office and to ask other students to share theirs. 


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)        Many students choose to watch from afar, rather than joining hundreds of students as the gather on the campus of Brigham Young University, for a rally to oppose how the school’s Honor Code Office investigates and disciplines students, Friday, April 12, 2019.


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)        Sidney Draughon speaks during a rally, as hundreds of students gather on the campus of Brigham Young University, to oppose how the school’s Honor Code Office investigates and disciplines students, Friday, April 12, 2019. Draughon started an anonymous Instagram account to post about her experience with the honor code office and to ask other students to share theirs. 


(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)        Sidney Draughon gets emotional, she listens to students tell their experiences with the honor code office, as hundreds of students gather on the campus of Brigham Young University, to oppose how the school’s Honor Code Office investigates and disciplines students, Friday, April 12, 2019. Draughon started an anonymous Instagram account to post about her experience with the honor code office and to ask other students to share theirs.

Provo • An estimated 500 protesters gathered at a noon rally at Brigham Young University to oppose how the school’s Honor Code Office investigates and disciplines students, chanting, “Hey hey, ho ho, bring honor to the HCO.”

For two hours, students listened to speakers, sang hymns and chanted, “If God forgives me, why can’t you?” The demonstration is a rare occurrence at this private religious campus.

The protest came after renewed criticism that BYU, owned by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, focuses more on punishing those who violate its rules than helping them. Especially in the last week, current and former students have been sharing their stories on social media, some describing being suspended for consensual touching in a relationship or breaking curfew.

“So many people have been affected, but nobody talks about it,” alumna Sidney Draughon told The Salt Lake Tribune about starting an Instagram campaign to publish her experience and ask others to post theirs. It has taken off and her inbox flooded with stories she posts anonymously.

Criticism of Honor Code enforcement has not been unanimous on campus. During a 5-minute moment of silence for LGBTQ students, who have complained of being targeted with extra scrutiny, someone yelled from a nearby building: “If you don’t like the Honor Code, go to a different school."

“We came here because we want to be better people and we are not going to leave,” Draughon told the crowd at Friday’s rally, thanking students for coming.

BYU administrators have reached out to several students in the past week to talk about their concerns. In a statement Friday, the school said it expects ongoing dialogue “will lead to a better understanding of how the Honor Code Office can best serve our students.”

The statement added: “BYU cares deeply about the welfare of our students. We want every one of them to have a positive experience at BYU. ... These conversations have been very constructive, as students have shared with us their concern for certain processes within the Honor Code Office.”

Most of the students who are sharing their stories say they support the church, BYU and the Honor Code. Their objections focus on how the school responds to allegations of misconduct and imposes punishment, which can range from being put on probation to being suspended, sometimes for multiple years, to being expelled.

The code discourages premarital sex, sets certain rules for when and how dating occurs, contains a dress code and prohibits the consumptions of alcohol, drugs, coffee and tea.

The rally began at noon outside the Wilkinson Student Center, where the Honor Code Office is located.

It follows a similar protest at the school’s campus in Idaho Wednesday where officials declined to meet with those who came to their offices to talk.

The organizers at both locations want to do away with anonymous reporting of student misconduct, allowing it only when a student has been the victim of assault or abuse. Kevin Utt, director of the Honor Code Office on the Provo campus said this week that is the general policy there. The Idaho campus appears to not have the same policy.

( Jessica Miller | The Salt Lake Tribune ) Students at Brigham Young University rallied to protest how the school's Honor Code Office investigates and disciplines students.
( Jessica Miller | The Salt Lake Tribune ) Students at Brigham Young University rallied to protest how the school's Honor Code Office investigates and disciplines students.

Organizers also want students to be able to bring in peer and faculty witnesses during the disciplinary process, and they want Honor Code administrators to receive better training. Many also are asking to end pressure to report on their peers, a culture that has been largely encouraged up to now by school and faith leaders, they say.

Some of the issues raised by students don’t reflect current practices, said BYU spokeswoman Carri Jenkins.

“The policy that we do not act on anonymous reports, except where the reported behavior could impact the physical safety of members of our campus community, has been in place since at least 2008,” she said in an email. “What has been evolving since then is the current practice of sharing the reporting person’s name with a student.”

Most cases handled by the Provo campus office are initiated by students reporting themselves, Utt said this week, and the “vast majority” of the students remain enrolled. On average, between 10 and 15 students are expelled a year, from a population of 33,000 students, he said.

On Friday, Jenkins said that an annual average of between 40 and 50 students have been temporarily suspended during the last three years, with more than 80 percent choosing to return.

The protest movement started to gain new traction last month after several former BYU athletes took to social media expressing their frustration with the way the school has handled investigations into alleged student misconduct. One of them, former football player Derik Stevenson, spoke at the rally. He has previously told The Tribune that he did not seek treatment for a painkiller addiction for fear of Honor Code discipline.

Stevenson and other former athletes were responding to a Feb. 28 article in The Salt Lake Tribune that detailed how state investigators found that a former BYU police lieutenant looked at private reports created by other Utah County law enforcement agencies and passed information to university officials — including Honor Code investigators.

As part of sweeping reform in 2016, BYU granted amnesty for Honor Code violations to students reporting sexual abuse. Some students say BYU had disciplined them if they were violating the code at the time they were allegedly assaulted; others said they did not report sex crimes because they feared such punishment.

Utt responded to issues raised by the students with a Q&A posted Wednesday on the university’s website. He said students cannot get in trouble for failing to report misconduct to the office.

The Salt Lake Tribune will update this developing story.

Fire-resistant upgrades could be a game-changer in wildfires

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Paradise, Calif. • The sky was turning orange and the embers were flying from the Camp Fire when Oney and Donna Carrell and Donna’s father sped away from their Paradise home.

"I thought, 'Oh, well, the house is done,'" Oney Carrell said.

A few days later, they learned otherwise. The Carrells’ home survived the deadliest and most destructive wildfire in California history with a couple of warped window frames, a partially charred down spout and a stubborn smoky smell inside.

In this March 19, 2019 photo, Oney and Donna Carrell stand near the ashes of her father's house in Paradise, Calif. Their property had two homes on it before the fire, but the only one to survive visible behind them was built to fire-resistant standards that went into effect in 2008. (Hector Amezcua/The Sacramento Bee via AP)
In this March 19, 2019 photo, Oney and Donna Carrell stand near the ashes of her father's house in Paradise, Calif. Their property had two homes on it before the fire, but the only one to survive visible behind them was built to fire-resistant standards that went into effect in 2008. (Hector Amezcua/The Sacramento Bee via AP) (Hector Amezcua/)

Most of their neighborhood was destroyed. A guest house in their backyard, where Donna's father lived, was reduced to ashes, along with a couple of sheds. Yet their beautifully restored 1940 Studebaker sat untouched in the garage.

The arc of destruction the Camp Fire carved through Paradise was seemingly random: Why were some houses saved and others incinerated? As millions of Californians brace for another wildfire season , a McClatchy analysis of fire and property records shows the answer might be found in something as simple as the roofs over their heads — and the year their house was built.

A landmark 2008 building code designed for California's fire-prone regions — requiring fire-resistant roofs, siding and other safeguards — appears to have protected the Carrells' home and dozens of others like it from the Camp Fire. That year marks a pivotal moment in the state's deadly and expensive history of destructive natural disasters.

All told, about 51 percent of the 350 single-family homes built after 2008 in the path of the Camp Fire were undamaged, according to McClatchy's analysis of Cal Fire data and Butte County property records. By contrast, only 18 percent of the 12,100 homes built prior to 2008 escaped damage. Those figures don't include mobile homes, which burned in nearly equal measure regardless of age.

"These are great standards; they work," said senior engineer Robert Raymer of the California Building Industry Association, who consulted with state officials on the building code.

Yet despite this lesson, California may end up falling short in its effort to protect homes from the next wildfire.

Mushrooming cities such as Folsom, where an 11,000-home development is springing up, have the ability to bypass the state's safety standards in spite of considerable fire risks. The state, which offers cash incentives to bolster old homes against earthquakes, so far has done nothing to get Californians to retrofit homes built before 2008 for fire safety.

It hasn't helped that housing construction went into a deep dive in 2008 and has been slow to recover. Raymer said only 860,000 homes and apartments have been built statewide since the code went into effect. That's just 6 percent of the state's housing stock.

According to Cal Fire, as many as 3 million homes lie within the various "fire hazard severity zones" around the state. Dave Sapsis, a Cal Fire wildland fire scientist, said there's no way to know definitively how many of those homes were built before 2008, but he believes "it's the preponderance of them, the majority."

The situation is worse in rural California, where housing construction lags but the fire hazards are among the worst in the state, Raymer said. Fewer than 3 percent of the homes in the path of the Camp Fire were built after 2008.

"Most of our inventory that was here prior to the fire was (built) between the '40s and the '70s," said Paradise Town Councilman Michael Zuccolillo, a real estate agent. "The average home here was from the '70s."

That leaves thousands of homes at risk from the next inferno across California, their wood-shake shingles waiting to ignite.

"What are we going to do about the existing housing stock that's been built in these places?" said Max Moritz, a wildfire specialist at UC Santa Barbara. "For the existing housing stock that's out there, that isn't built to these codes, we have a massive retrofitting issue on our hands. They have structure ignition vulnerabilities that are built into the situation, they're baked into the problem."

‘The Weakest Link’

The Carrells, now living in a rental in Roseville, designed their Paradise home and did much of the interior work themselves; they knew that home was built with fire safety in mind.

"I knew we were in the middle of the forest," Oney Carrell said during a recent visit to Paradise. "Why wouldn't you do everything you could to make it last?"

But even he's amazed that their home made it. Stepping over a blackened patio drain just a few feet from the back of the house, he wondered aloud: "I don't know why it stopped here."

It's almost impossible to say for certain why some homes are still standing in Paradise, while others were ruined. Landscaping surely played a role ; fire experts say homes buffered by so-called "defensible space" probably did better than those wrapped in shrubs. Luck was a big factor, too, as homes were no doubt spared by last-second shifts in the winds.

Nevertheless, experts say, McClatchy's analysis reinforces their belief that California's fire-safe building code can make a difference in an era of increasing vulnerability. Daniel Gorham, a former firefighter and U.S. Forest Service researcher who works for the Insurance Institute for Business & Home Safety in South Carolina, said the California code is becoming a model for other fire-prone states.

"California is leaps and bounds ahead of other parts of the country," Gorham said. "California is on the forefront."

Advocates say fire-resistant building materials aren't particularly expensive. A study last fall by Headwater Economics, a consulting firm in Bozeman, Mont., found that "a new home built to wildfire-resistant codes can be constructed for roughly the same cost as a typical home."

But getting Californians to retrofit homes built before 2008 is an enormous task. The state requires property owners in fire zones who replace at least half their roof to install "fire-retardant" materials on the entire roof. Other than that, however, there's nothing forcing Californians to safeguard their existing homes against fire hazards.

A few California cities have taken matters into their own hands. In 2008, the City Council in Big Bear Lake, a community of 5,200 in San Bernardino County, passed an ordinance declaring wood shake shingle roofs "a severe fire hazard and danger" and ordered homeowners to replace them by 2012. Armed with state and federal grants, it offered cash incentives of up to $4,500 apiece for new roofs.

Although the grant program has run out, "I can't think of the last time I saw a shake roof in Big Bear," said Patrick Johnston, the city's chief building official.

Most Californians, however, are on their own when it comes to spending the tens of thousands of dollars needed to replace a roof or install fire-resistant siding. The state offers no financial incentives for fire safety the way it does, say, for earthquakes — homeowners in quake zones can get up to $3,000 apiece from the state to gird their homes against seismic disaster.

There are signs, however, that the state is beginning to get more serious about retrofitting homes for fire safety.

A law signed last year by former Gov. Jerry Brown requires the state fire marshal to develop a suggested list of "low-cost retrofits" by January 2020. The state would then promote these retrofits in its education and outreach efforts.

California also might start throwing cash at the problem.

A new bill, AB 38, introduced earlier this year by Democratic Assemblyman Jim Wood of Santa Rosa, would create a $1 billion "fire hardened homes revolving loan fund" to help homeowners retrofit their properties.

The issue is personal for Wood, a dentist who spent weeks helping identify victims from the Camp Fire and the wine country fires of October 2017. Although eligibility terms haven't been spelled out, the bill would offer low-interest and no-interest loans to help those who otherwise couldn't pay for new roofs or other safeguards.

"A lot of these small towns are not as well off financially," he said. "We need to find a way to help them, especially if they're poorer."

The fund might not be nearly enough to go around — not with hundreds of thousands of homes in need of retrofits, and a new roof alone costing $10,000 or more. "The $1 billion, indeed, that's not enough to rehab every home," said the Building Industry Association's Raymer. But he said it's "an absolutely excellent way to kick things off."

Wood said state officials would have to figure out a plan for parceling out the money to where it's needed most — probably starting with lower-income areas near forests.

"Obviously we want to affect the areas with the highest risk first," the assemblyman said. "A lot of these small towns are not as well off financially. We need to find a way to help them, especially if they're poorer."

Mapping ‘Severity Zones’

The fire-safe building code had its origins in two significant fires from a generation ago — the Panorama Fire of 1980, which spilled out of the mountains into the city of San Bernardino; and the monstrous Oakland Hills Fire of 1991, which wiped out 2,500 homes and killed 25 people.

In response, the Legislature ordered the Department of Fire Protection and Forestry to start mapping major fire risks in California, in the hinterlands as well as urban areas. The result was a collection of maps of the state's "fire hazard severity zones," encompassing more than one-third of California's land mass.

Based on factors such as terrain, vegetation and weather patterns, the zones represent Cal Fire's attempt to predict the probability of a fire starting and the likelihood that it could become significant, said Cal Fire's Sapsis.

The maps spawned tighter building standards. The Legislature mandated fire-resistant roofs in these fire-prone areas. Then in 2008 the state laid out a more comprehensive scheme. The California Building Standards Commission rolled out a suite of regulations, known as Chapter 7A, that set strict rules for roofing materials, siding, windows, decks and other elements of a home built in 2008 or later — right down to the minimum specs for the wire mesh that must be installed on attic vents to keep embers out (no more than a quarter-inch of space between the wires).

Experts said the regulations seem to be particularly effective at protecting structures from the types of wildfires that are increasingly common in California, where wind gusts can blow embers a mile or two ahead of the main wall of flames and do some of the worst damage.

"A window breaks, a vent breaks, the fire gets into your home and you've got an interior structure fire," said Joe Poire, the city of Santa Barbara's fire marshal.

Enforcement of the building code carries a few wrinkles. In the mainly rural areas where Cal Fire is in charge of fire protection, the Chapter 7A code is automatically enforced in any region that Cal Fire has designated as a "severity zone" — moderate, high or very high.

In urban areas that have their own fire departments, the code is generally used only in spots where Cal Fire says the threat is very high. Local governments have the discretion of rejecting the Cal Fire designation, and Sapsis said some city councils have been squeamish about the state's maps because of fears that the Chapter 7A code will inflate construction costs, or for other reasons.

Yet interviews with local officials throughout California by McClatchy indicate that the vast majority of cities and towns go along with Cal Fire's recommendations. Santa Barbara city officials extended the building code to coastal areas that had been overlooked by Cal Fire's mappers. The map omits small portions of Paradise, but the building code is enforced across the entire town, said Paradise public information officer Colette Curtis.

Danger in Santa Rosa, Folsom?

Nevertheless, there are places where local officials are reluctant to impose strict building codes — even where fire has caused catastrophe.

Before Paradise exploded, Santa Rosa's Coffey Park was the poster child for recent California wildfire disasters: Five people died and 1,321 homes were destroyed by the Tubbs Fire in October 2017.

Coffey Park wasn't subject to California's Chapter 7A building code. It still isn't.

Unlike some areas of Santa Rosa, the neighborhood hasn't been designated a "very high fire hazard" zone by Cal Fire. City officials are OK with that. Although developers rebuilding Coffey Park are being urged to consider fire-resistant materials, city spokeswoman Adriane Mertens said the city doesn't see any reason to impose the 7A code in the neighborhood.

"There were very, very high winds that night," Mertens said. "There were embers that were blown across the (Highway 101) freeway, across six lanes of freeway, into Coffey Park."

Jack Cohen, a fire scientist in Montana who helped develop the 7A code, said he thinks Santa Rosa is committing "an error in judgment" by rebuilding without the safeguards.

In any event, Cal Fire is updating its fire hazard maps over the next year or so, taking into account more sophisticated data on wind and other climate factors, and Sapsis said spots such as Coffey Park could wind up designated as high-risk areas. Once the maps are done, any region placed inside Cal Fire's "very high fire" zone will have no choice but to comply, under a bill signed into law by Brown last year.

But there will still be ways for cities to skirt the state building code.

Look at Folsom, widely considered one of the most vulnerable places in greater Sacramento to fire. The county's hazard mitigation plan says 44,000 residents of Folsom are already at "moderate or higher wildfire risk."

Now the suburb is building a development called Folsom Ranch, eventually to be home to 25,000 people, on a parcel south of Highway 50.

The development is on land that used to be subject to the strict state building code. Now it isn't.

How did that happen? Years ago, the land was outside Folsom's city limits and Cal Fire was responsible for its safety. Cal Fire's maps put the land in the "moderate" risk zone — a threat level high enough that, under the state's regulations, the fire-safe building code took effect. As it happened, no construction took place during that time, city officials say.

The situation changed when the city annexed the land to forge ahead with Folsom Ranch. Because the land has never been in the state's "very high" risk zone, the city feels comfortable letting Folsom Ranch develop without the Chapter 7A building code.

Fire Chief Felipe Rodriguez said Folsom officials are still open to "the possibility of strengthening, hardening, our future homes." But for now, the city is only requiring homeowners' associations to implement a "vegetation management" plan and install fire-resistant fencing around properties that abut open space areas, Rodriguez said.

Is Folsom courting danger? Rodriguez doesn't think so. The city will build two fire stations in the development and will "be able to suppress a fire during its early stages," he said.

‘Sticks in a fireplace’

The hundreds of thousands of older homes in fire zones aren't just more vulnerable in their own right.

Experts say they spread danger to new homes built to stricter standards.

"One little house built to a new standard, surrounded by a bunch of older stuff, is likely to get swamped," Sapsis said.

Paradise provided a grim reminder of that problem. The Camp Fire destroyed more than 80 percent of the 4,100 mobile homes in its path, whether they were built to the new code or not, according to McClatchy's data analysis. That isn't surprising, Sapsis said, given that many of Paradise's mobile homes were jammed alongside one another in mobile home parks.

"They're stacked so close together, they're like sticks in a fireplace," Sapsis said.

Sapsis and others say the lesson is that strong building codes aren't enough. In particular, experts say communities must pay more attention to how they lay out their neighborhoods, allowing for firebreaks and enough space between houses.

"In the name of affordable housing, we're moving housing closer and closer to one another," said Chris Dicus, a forestry and fire expert at Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo. "That serves to have house-to-house-to-house ignition."

The problem isn't limited to densely-packed urban areas. "I live in a rural community, and I have got six feet basically separating me from my neighbor," said Dicus, who lives outside of Morro Bay.

In addition, experts say California is struggling to enforce the state law regarding "defensible space" around properties.

The law requires that property owners maintain as much as 100 feet of defensible space around homes and other buildings in and around "a mountainous area, forest-covered lands, brush-covered lands, grass-covered lands, or land that is covered with flammable material." That means keeping trees and shrubs pruned and spaced far apart. Within five feet of the building, property owners are supposed to remove anything that could catch fire: mulch, plants, woodpiles and so on.

In practice, however, enforcement of the defensible space law has been spotty at best. Raymer, of the California Building Industry Association, said most property owners don't understand how to maintain their yards. The state doesn't impose penalties for non-compliance, and only a few local governments have chosen to do so, Raymer said.

Legislation could change that. SB 190, by Sen. Bill Dodd, D-Napa, would require the state fire marshal to develop a "model defensible space program," including penalties, that local governments could adopt.

The problem extends beyond homeowners' property lines. Gov. Gavin Newsom, finding some rare common ground with the Trump administration, is advocating for more aggressive management of forested lands.

A thinned forest northeast of Paradise provided one of the rare victories of the Camp Fire. As the fire raged out of the tiny community of Pulga, it essentially spared the northern part of Magalia. The reason was a series of forest-thinning projects conducted in recent years and overseen by the U.S. Forest Service, Sierra Pacific Industries and the volunteer Butte County Fire Safe Council. The council also worked diligently with area residents to clear brush from their property.

All that work "did exactly what we hoped it would do," said Calli-Jane DeAnda, executive director of the council, which secured $1 million in grants to remove fuels from forested areas. "This investment of public money is so worth the effort."

The Paradise ‘lab experiment’

The rebuilding of Paradise means thousands of homes are going to be constructed in the coming years to the stricter standards promulgated by the state in 2008. It represents the single largest test of the effectiveness of the building code.

"That is an absolute lab experiment for us," Sapsis said.

On the streets of Paradise, though, community leaders are taking a more measured view. Zuccolillo, the town councilman, said asphalt roofs and stucco siding might "give us more of a chance" but he doubts they will guarantee Paradise's safety.

"I saw metal buildings, metal and stucco buildings, burn to the ground," he said.

Still, there's plenty of evidence, all over Paradise, that the state's building code can protect property.

(Hector Amezcua  |  The Sacramento Bee via AP)  In this photo taken March 19, 2019, Dawn Herr and her son Liam, 8, visit their home in Paradise, Calif., that survived the Camp Fire. The Herrs' home, built in 2010, was scorched and had smoke damage inside so the family is living temporarily in nearby Chico. The Herrs credit the home’s survival to strict building codes and to gravel that encircled the building and kept the flames back.
(Hector Amezcua | The Sacramento Bee via AP) In this photo taken March 19, 2019, Dawn Herr and her son Liam, 8, visit their home in Paradise, Calif., that survived the Camp Fire. The Herrs' home, built in 2010, was scorched and had smoke damage inside so the family is living temporarily in nearby Chico. The Herrs credit the home’s survival to strict building codes and to gravel that encircled the building and kept the flames back. (Hector Amezcua/)

The other day, Sean Herr pulled into his driveway on the west side of Paradise, where he and his wife Dawn were raising their two young children.

The first thing he did was bring out the ultimate symbol of resiliency: an American flag, the same one that flew on his front porch the day of the Camp Fire.

Like the flag, the house is still standing. The Herrs' home, built in 2010, suffered a bit of scorching and some interior smoke damage — the smoke is bad enough that they're still temporarily living in Chico and aren't certain they'll move back.

Still, they marvel at what a close call they had. A Ford Excursion and a boat parked in the front yard, just a few feet from their porch, were destroyed. Five motorcycles locked in a shed behind the house got ruined. Most of their neighborhood is gone.

The Herrs believe their attention to defensible space — the house is mostly encircled in gravel — and the strictness of the building code probably made the difference.

"Our yard and the construction of the house saved it for sure," Dawn Herr said, gesturing to a small scorch mark by the side of the house. "You can see it tried to catch on fire."

Ryan Sabalow of The Sacramento Bee and Steve Schoonover of the Chico Enterprise-Record contributed to this report.


‘The Rise of Skywalker’ is the title for the next ‘Star Wars’ film

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“No one is ever really gone,” says the voice of Luke Skywalker in the first teaser trailer for “Star Wars: Episode IX,” which audiences finally learned will be called “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker” Friday at a fan event in Chicago.

The closely guarded film from director J.J. Abrams will put an end to the Skywalker saga that began over 40 years ago, but even as characters and actors have passed on, the footage shown at Star Wars Celebration suggests that as with all “Star Wars” films, death is just a technicality a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away.

Mark Hamill's Skywalker may have died at the end of the most recent installment but his voice dominates the teaser trailer, telling someone, possibly Daisy Ridley's Rey, that, "this is your fight now." And audiences got a tantalizing tease from another figure from the past: Emperor Palpatine from the original and prequel trilogies, whose ominous laugh closes out the promotional spot.

Carrie Fisher’s Leia Organa is back as well, despite the actress’s untimely passing in Dec. 2016, thanks to unused footage from “The Force Awakens” which Abrams was able to craft into its own narrative for this new film.

"You can't just recast and you can't just have her disappear," Abrams said. "The idea of having a CG character wasn't even an option."

He's currently in the process of editing and adding visual effects to the film which will hit theaters on Dec. 20 and said that despite Fisher's death, "We're working with her every day."

"Princess Leia lives in this film in way that is mind-blowing to me," Abrams said.

Abrams was joined on stage at the event by Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy and actors and droids alike including Ridley, Oscar Isaac (Poe), John Boyega (Finn), Kelly Marie Tran (Rose), Joonas Suotamo (Chewbacca), newcomer Naomi Ackie, who plays a character named Jannah, Anthony Daniels (C-3PO) and even Billy Dee Williams, who reprises his role as Lando Calrissian in the new film after decades away.

"How did I find Lando again?" Williams said. "Lando never left me."

"Star Wars" superfan Stephen Colbert moderated the panel, doing his best to get the tight-lipped cast and creators to reveal anything about the film. Although no one cracked under pressure, Abrams did reveal some previously known details, like the fact that "The Rise of Skywalker" will pick up "some time" after the events of "The Last Jedi."

"This is an adventure that the group goes on together," he teased, although he wouldn't reveal whether or not that meant the group on stage or some other combination.

"This movie is about this new generation and what they've inherited, the light and the dark," Abrams added. "As they face this greatest evil, are they prepared?"

Besides Hamill, another person who wasn't in attendance was Kylo Ren actor Adam Driver, who as the son of Han Solo and Leia is the only known Skywalker left.

When prodded about what will happen with the complex relationship between Kylo and Rey, Ridley demurred, "I guess the Kylo and Rey thing, we'll have to see."

She added: "I think I can confirm there are no more semi-naked Kylos." That's a reference to the scenes of a shirtless Driver in "The Last Jedi" that surprised fans.

Although fans are salivating for any morsel of information, the panelists stayed as vague as possible, and kept things light-hearted debating questions like "who's a better pilot: Poe or Han" and even taking a break so that the audience could sing an unprompted Happy Birthday to Ridley, who turned 27 on Wednesday.

Kennedy, quoting George Lucas, said however that “Episode IX” is indeed the third act of a three-act structure.

Democrats gripe that Latino town hall was a Utah Republican event masquerading as a nonpartisan forum

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Democratic state Rep. Angela Romero wondered why her phone erupted with texts Thursday evening asking why she wasn’t attending an event promoted on Facebook as Utah’s “First Latino Town Hall” to discuss politics.

Some attendees questioned why the only officials speaking at the Taylorsville City Hall event were six white Republicans. No Latino legislators — all of whom in Utah are Democrats — were present.

“It was a Republican-sponsored event, but the Facebook ads didn’t say that,” an upset Romero, D-Salt Lake City, said in a Tribune interview Friday. “I applaud Republicans for trying to reach out to Latinos, but the way they did it was misleading. To advertise it as a first Latino town hall and then not include your Latino elected officials, I think, is a disservice to the community.”

It led to some caustic Democrat vs. Republican jousting on social media.

After some attendees asked online why no Latino legislators were there, Republicans tweeted that the event was open to all. Romero took issue with that, tweeting that she wasn’t invited, nor were any Democrats — and complained the GOP event was marketed as something it was not.

“Lots of missed opportunities here but of course it’s ‘my fault’ for not attending. I should have seen the event advertised on social media,” Romero tweeted.

Sen. Dan McCay, R-Riverton, criticized the criticism.

He said instead of Romero saying it was a bad event with missed opportunities because she wasn’t invited, “How about this instead: ‘I’m so impressed that 6 weird white guys decided to spend an evening listening to another culture. This is how we will bring America together!’”

Romero tweeted in response, “Thanks for mansplaining me! P.S. I never said it was a bad event. It’s about transparency. This was a GOP sponsored event. Don’t market it as something it’s not.”

Utah Republican Party Chairman Rob Anderson said Friday that the event was sponsored by the Utah Republican Latino Coalition, one of the party’s official auxiliaries. But the Facebook ads, which were still online Friday, did not make that clear.

Anderson said some of the coalition’s leaders told him after the last election that the party is losing Latinos. They asked for a town hall with top leaders where Latinos could ask questions.

The GOP leader agreed that it was a good idea and coordinated schedules to invite and feature Lt. Gov. Spencer Cox, Senate President Stuart Adams and Rep. Jefferson Moss.

Some additional legislators saw it advertised online, and attended, Anderson said, and upon their arrival they were asked to sit on the stand. All of them were Republicans.

Anderson said advertising the event was left to the Republican Latino Coalition. He estimates that 250 people attended.

“It was packed. There was no intent to exclude anyone. Everyone was welcome,” Anderson said. As he opened the meeting, he said people of any party were welcome, and officials were there to listen to their concerns.

“I shook my head last night when I saw Angela’s comments. Can’t politics occur without divisiveness without someone feeling left out? It doesn’t have to be that way,” he said.

Democrat Ernie Gamonal for one applauded Republican efforts.

He congratulated the GOP on “their successful Latino event.”

“While I cannot avid the #PartyofTrump, this is America where we can choose,” Gamonal tweeted. “I applaud any effort to insprie and engage the majority-minority in governance. The @UtahDemocrats got some catching up to do.”

He suggested it was time for “Dems to reexamine Latino commitment,” noting a recent decline in Latinx representation in the Legislature. The retirement of Rep. Rebecca Chavez-Houck reduced the number from four to three in the 104-member Legislature, all of them Democrats.

Donald Aguirre, who attended the meeting, tweeted, “You bring America together by having all relevant leadership members at the table. Props on having a Latino town hall, but to glaze over the fact that no Latino leadership from the state House in attendance is a missed opportunity. It’s ok to admit that. You won’t melt.”

And Romero complains that the event advertising was misleading.

“It’s nice they are trying to reach out to Latinos, but to advertise it as a nonpartisan event and state that it was the first Latino town hall I think is a misrepresentation.”

She added it wasn’t really the first Latino town hall because Democrats have “hosted many town halls for the Latino community.”

Romero said 57 percent of her district’s residents are people of color, with the majority Latino. “So many of us don’t need to do town halls. We interact with the Latino community all the time because we are the Latino community and because we truly represent them in the Legislature.”

Chavez-Houck also tweeted about Republicans, “The irony is that they are working out outreach yet failed to fund any outreach and education for the 2020 Census. #fail


Sam Johnson, Real Salt Lake’s new striker, hasn’t scored a goal in five games. But his rise in confidence tells him he’s not far off.

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Herriman • When Sam Johnson arrived at Real Salt Lake, the sentiment around the team and fan base alike was that the organization had finally found its striker after almost a year of looking. But so far, the Liberian has been hampered by a knee injury he suffered in the preseason, and relegated to 25 minutes or so off the bench.

By his own admission, Johnson’s first Major League Soccer season has been “up and down.” He has played five games but has yet score a goal. And for a player who has scored 69 goals in 180 career appearances all over the world, the lack of scoring and playing time has affected his confidence.

“Since I started my football career, I’m not a bench player. I never sit on the bench before, every team I’ve been to,” Johnson told The Salt Lake Tribune earlier this week. “It’s not going good for me, I can say, because [playing five] games now and not scoring — no. It bothers me a little bit.”

But after playing for the Liberian national team two week ago and making his first MLS start in last weekend’s loss to the Seattle Sounders, Johnson is starting to get some of that confidence back. He played 69 minutes against the Sounders and got off two shots, one of which came close to finding the back of the net when RSL looked to tie the game.

“It was good to bring my courage back,” Johnson said of his first start.

(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)     Vancouver Whitecaps defender Doneil Henry (2) goes for the ball along with Real Salt Lake forward Sam Johnson (50), in MLS soccer action at Rio Tinto Stadium in Sandy, Saturday, March 9, 2019.
(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Vancouver Whitecaps defender Doneil Henry (2) goes for the ball along with Real Salt Lake forward Sam Johnson (50), in MLS soccer action at Rio Tinto Stadium in Sandy, Saturday, March 9, 2019. (Rick Egan/)

RSL coach Mike Petke liked Johnson’s work rate in the Seattle game, and said the two attempts at goal that he missed will probably go in as he gets more acclimated to his teammates and the speed of play. Petke added that Johnson impacts RSL’s attack with his pace, his knack of getting good scoring opportunities, and his ability to keep the opposing team’s center backs on one side of the field with Real are on defense.

“He’s got quality, he’s getting more comfortable, he’s getting his confidence,” Petke said of Johnson. “You saw it in a lot of spurts in that game.”

Johnson hurt his knee fighting for a ball in the air during a preseason game in Hawaii. He said when he landed, his knee twisted. He said his knee is not yet 100 percent, but he doesn’t want to sit out of games because he joined RSL to be on the field.

He also alluded to more bottom line reasons as to why he is fighting through the injury.

“I’m just trying to bear the pain,” Johnson said. “I don’t want to sit because I came here to play. The more I sit, the more my value drops. So I’m trying to fight it hard to be back.”

With only one start so far this season, Johnson hasn’t been able to spend much more than practice time with the players who could be tasked with finding him in positions to score during games. In previous stops throughout his career, his teammates would have no problem feeding him five or six balls because they knew that even if he missed most of those opportunities, they trusted him to make something happen with at least one or two.

That level of trust hasn’t happened yet with his RSL teammates, Johnson said. But he knows it is only a matter of time before it does.

“I haven’t delivered for the club yet,” Johnson said. “They have other players who have been delivering. … I’m just there to be there and get my chance. Maybe if I score one of two goals, they will know like, ‘OK this guy, he can deliver.’”

Holly Richardson: We could all use a little more awe

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This week, the world caught its first-ever glimpse of a black hole, something once thought unseeable. It now has a name: Powehi, a word from an 18th century Hawaiian creation chant. The word means “embellished dark source of unending creation” and was chosen by University of Hawaii-Hilo Professor Larry Kimura.

When one of the key researchers, Dr. Katie Bouman, saw the image of an orange ring of light surrounding, well, a black hole, she reacted with obvious joy — and awe.

Awe, scientists tell us, is an emotion we feel in response to something vast and that does not fit in our existing frame of reference. The vastness can be physical size, like the Grand Canyon, or a black hole, “social size” like fame, or authority and even loud sounds or shaking ground, like in an earthquake. The second component of awe is that we just don’t have the framework to plug those experiences into: seeing your first child born, for example, or watching a flawless Olympic performance that makes you shake your head and wonder how on earth they did that.

Seeing ourselves in the context of a greater whole keeps us humble. We spend less time focusing on ourselves and more time being focused outward. Work by Drs. Jennifer Stellar, Amie Gordon and others finds that feeling awe lessens feelings of entitlement, arrogance and narcissism and make us want to engage with others and feel more connected to others. In their 2018 study on “Awe and Humility,” they also found that feelings of awe led participants to “present a more balanced view of their strengths and weaknesses to others” and “acknowledge, to a greater degree, the contribution of outside forces in their own personal accomplishments.”

Feelings of awe have also been linked with increased volunteerism, a feeling that you have more time in your day, better immune health, decreased symptoms of PTSD and anxiety, increased feelings of general happiness, social wellbeing and satisfaction in life.

So how do we increase our experiences of awe? Well, you could spend years pursuing the elusive black hole. You could have a baby. Or, you could do some things that are considerably easier.

One of the top items consistently named as awe-inducing is simply spending time in nature. Utah has many places where the sounds soften and the awe increases. Studies have consistently found that time in nature lowers heart rate and blood pressure and decreases cortisol, the stress hormone. Think of all the times you see photos of people getting their “Vitamin Sea” at the beach. It really works.

Get out of your comfort zone and out of your normal routine. Visit somewhere you’ve never been. Try something you’ve never done before. Look for new ways of seeing and approaching the world. Ask questions. Be curious.

Disengage from electronics. It’s one thing to see a waterfall on a tiny phone screen. It’s quite another to stand in the spray and hear the cacophony of thousands of gallons of water plummeting off a cliff. Visit a forest and look up. Attend the symphony in person. Watch the sunset. Or the sunrise.

Be inspired. Read a book about someone you admire. Write a book about someone you admire. Capture one awe-inducing event with your camera, or in your journal. Describe it in enough detail that anyone reading it would begin to understand how it felt.

Abraham Maslow described “peak experiences” in 1964. They are those experiences that are “especially joyous and exciting moments in life, involving sudden feelings of intense happiness and well-being, wonder and awe.” In the middle of many mundane experiences, let’s also take a little time for awe.

Holly Richardson, a regular contributor to The Salt Lake Tribune, thinks the black hole picture is awe-inspiring — and looks an awful lot like the Eye of Sauron.

Deadline extended: There is still time to nominate your company for The Tribune’s 2019 Top Workplaces competition

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Love where you work?

The Tribune is seeking nominations for its 2019 Top Workplaces award and now you have more time to vote. Nominations will be accepted at sltrib.com/nominate until May 17.

Dozens of companies have been recognized for their collegial environment, employee-friendly practices, team spirit and more since The Tribune launched the competition in 2013 in partnership with Energage, an employee research and consulting firm based in Philadelphia.

Twistlab Marketing is among the 2018 Utah’s Top Workplace winners. The full-service marketing agency based in Cottonwood Heights caters to small businesses inside and outside of Utah. It prides itself in providing clients with exceptional marketing strategies, campaigns and products with a twist.

“My favorite part about Twistlab is the welcoming environment to creative ideas,” said account manager Satin Tashnizi. “It feels refreshing to be supported by your team to make suggestions and even spearhead projects. This has been a unique experience to Twistlab.”

Twistlab was one of 85 companies in Utah recognized in 2018 based on surveys completed by their employees about the office culture and environment. Twistlab ranked fourth in the small company/organization category last year and the company embraced the recognition, said Sam Omer, business manager at Twistlab.

“The response was overwhelmingly positive," he said. “Everyone felt honored to be a part of this and felt proud to have helped Twistlab get to this point.”

Twistlab employee Emily Farr agrees. “There was a ‘high-five’ atmosphere, and it really motivated us to work harder by reinforcing something that we already knew — that Twistlab was a great place to be. I think that it attracted people to work for the company as well because we saw a bit of a surge in applicants.”

How to nominate a business

Year six is now at hand, and The Tribune is still seeking nominations from workers who believe their companies — whether small, medium or large — look out for their employees, show them that they are valued and give them the resources to do their jobs in an efficient and satisfying manner.

Any organization with 35 or more employees in Utah — public, private, nonprofit, government — is eligible to participate. Once an organization is nominated, its employees will be emailed a short 24-question survey seeking information about aspects of workplace operations that can separate the good from the mediocre. The survey period runs March through May.

In past years, said Energage CEO Doug Claffey, employees have been eager to respond to these questionnaires. Last year, organizations sent surveys to 35,827 Utah employees at 125 companies and agencies, with more than 800 organizations invited to participate. It got 22,686 back, a response rate of nearly 63 percent.

Energage conducts Top Workplaces surveys for 50 major metro newspapers and surveyed 2.6 million employees at more than 7,500 organizations across the country in 2018.

And the winners are ...

Many of Twistlab’s employees feel a sense of community at their work. “I feel open to ask my colleagues for help whenever I need it and never feel discouraged to suggest improvements,” said Martika Heath, analytics manager.

While Twistlab Marketing made the ranks in 2018 for the first time (along with 29 other Utah businesses), a number of companies have won Top Workplace awards for the past five years.

Small (1-124 employees)

  • Diversified Insurance Group, Salt Lake City.
  • Get Away Today Vacations, South Ogden.
  • Pinnacle Quality Insight, Sandy.
  • HealthInsight Utah, Murray.

Midsize (125-399 employees)

  • BambooHR LLC, Lindon.
  • Encompass Home Health & Hospice, Dallas.
  • Health Catalyst, Cottonwood Heights.
  • Sirsi Corp., Lehi.

Large (400+ employees)

  • Prestige Financial, Draper.
  • O.C. Tanner, Salt Lake City.
  • Discover Financial Services, Riverwoods, Ill.
  • Salt Lake County Public Library, West Jordan.

To join the survey, an employee, employer or customer may nominate a Utah company by May 17 at sltrib.com/nominate or by calling 801-803-6841.

Tribune Editorial: We need correct figures about corrections

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Ancient alchemists searched for a way to turn lead into gold. Modern politicians offer plans to provide more and better government services for less money.

The latter of those might sometimes be possible, if our elected officials would be more willing to approach old problems in new ways. And if they don’t over-promise what can be done and how fast.

It is unlikely that anyone who was paying attention to the whole process was all that surprised when it came out that Utah’s new state prison, for which the ground was broken less than two years ago, is going to take more time, hold fewer prisoners and cost more money than what the leaders of the Legislature told us when they rushed through the sight selection process back in 2015.

None of that necessarily means that building a new prison, with state-of-the-art facilities and programs, is no longer a good idea. Besides, it’s too late to turn back now.

But would it be too much to ask that, as we go forward with the prison and all the other facilities and programs that make up state and local corrections efforts, that the people of Utah get an honest accounting of what we are likely to spend and what we can expect to get for it?

A recent report from the Utah Department of Administrative Services tells us that a prison that was supposed to cost taxpayers $650 million will actually set us back an additional $130 million, that it will have room for 3,600 inmates instead of the 4,000 that was promised, and that it won’t be open until the early part of 2022, 18 months behind the original schedule.

Marilee Richins, deputy director of the Utah Department of Administrative Services, wasn’t wrong when she explained that costs are rising above the original estimates for at least some reasons beyond the state’s control. There are other big projects going on around here — notably the giant rebuild of Salt Lake International Airport — which are sucking up both qualified construction workers and the materials they work with, driving up the price of everything. The president’s tariffs on steel and other building materials are also a factor.

But it is also true that, well after decisions were made and construction begun, it dribbled out that the original ballpark estimates from prison-building experts was that this one would probably cost $860 million. Members of the state’s Prison Relocation Commission — the goal of which was pre-determined by its very name — insist that they weren’t lowballing anyone and that their intent was that costs could come down if the project got smaller.

Which it did. But, in a state that is growing as fast as ours is, building a smaller prison instead of a bigger one will only work if other plans to divert people from the Big House and into smaller treatment, educational and rehabilitation programs are aggressively implemented. Which means aggressively funded. Which, in a less reactionary state, would have meant accepting full Medicaid expansion and the hundreds of millions of dollars that would have come with it.

Smart corrections programs that hold the truly dangerous while giving everyone else a second chance are worth their cost. As long as our elected officials don’t go back to a pattern of promising us the moon while being proud of only paying for a pebble.

Test taker pleads guilty in college admissions bribery scam

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Boston • A former Florida prep school administrator pleaded guilty Friday to taking college entrance exams for students in exchange for cash to help wealthy parents get their kids into elite universities across the country.

Mark Riddell admitted to secretly taking the SAT and ACT for students, or correcting their answers, as part of a nationwide college admissions cheating scheme, which has ensnared celebrities, business executives and athletic coaches at sought-after schools such as Stanford and Yale.

Riddell, who has been cooperating with authorities since February in the hopes of getting a lesser sentence, pleaded guilty to fraud and money laundering conspiracy charges.

The 36-year-old, wearing a dark suit and glasses, looked straight ahead and showed no emotion as assistant U.S. Attorney Eric Rosen explained that prosecutors will seek a sentence at the low end of the guidelines, which call for 33 to 41 months in prison. Riddell's lawyer declined comment.

The Harvard graduate oversaw college entrance exam preparation at IMG Academy, a Bradenton school founded by renowned tennis coach Nick Bollettieri that bills itself as the world's largest sports academy. Riddell has since been fired.

Authorities say the admissions consultant at the center of the scheme, Rick Singer, bribed test administrators to allow Riddell to pretend to proctor the exams for students so he could cheat on the tests. Singer typically paid Riddell $10,000 per test to rig the scores, prosecutors said.

U.S. Attorney Andrew Lelling has said Riddell knew all the answers because he was "just a really smart guy."

Riddell was among 50 people charged last month in the scam , which embroiled elite universities across the country and laid bare the lengths to which status-seeking parents will go to secure their children a coveted spot. Others arrested include actresses Felicity Huffman and Lori Loughlin along with Loughlin’s fashion designer husband, Mossimo Giannulli.

In addition to the exam-rigging scheme, prosecutors say parents paid Singer tens of thousands of dollars to bribe coaches into pretending that their kids were athletic recruits to boost their chances of getting accepted.

Huffman, the 56-year-old Emmy-winner who stared in ABC’s “Desperate Housewives,” and 12 other parents have agreed to plead guilty. Huffman is scheduled to appear in Boston on May 21 to enter her plea.

Parents who are still fighting the allegations — including Loughlin, 54, who appeared in the 1980s and '90s sitcom "Full House" — were hit this week with a money laundering conspiracy charge on top of the mail fraud conspiracy charge they were already facing.

Singer flipped on the parents and helped the FBI build the case against for a chance at a lenient sentence. He pleaded guilty last month to charges including racketeering conspiracy.


Ute athletic director Mark Harlan is ‘very bullish’ about Larry Krystkowiak’s basketball program, labeling him ‘an elite coach’

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Utah's 6-6 record in nonconference basketball games in 2018-19 meant that an 11-7 showing and a third-place finish in the Pac-12 would be insufficient for an NCAA Tournament bid.

In his eighth season, coach Larry Krystkowiak strengthened his November/December schedule in an effort to match the selection committee's blueprint. The Utes just skipped the part about winning some of those games.

“You really can't afford to wait too long to play better,” Krystkowiak said Friday in one of a series of season-review media interviews. “We've got to figure out a formula to be more functional come November than we have been. There's a sense of urgency to do it faster.”

Krystkowiak and his staff will have to do that without senior guards Sedrick Barefield and Parker Van Dyke and possibly without junior center Jayce Johnson, who entered the NCAA transfer portal this week. Utah also is searching for an assistant coach for the first time in eight years, with DeMarlo Slocum having joined the UNLV staff in his hometown.

Krystkowiak, whose contract goes through the 2022-23 season, addressed Utah’s three-year absence from the NCAA Tournament, player transfers and his coaching style, while pointing to a five-year run of top-four finishes in the Pac-12, the conference’s longest current streak.

In response to one question, Krystkowiak referenced a recent meeting with athletic director Mark Harlan and university president Ruth V. Watkins. “I feel like a lot of times there’s an indictment, like something’s broke here," he said. "There’s nothing broke here, and they know that. They’re fine with what’s going on.”

Harlan validated that viewpoint in a subsequent interview Friday, endorsing the character of the players being recruited and developed. “I think Larry Krystkowiak is an elite basketball coach, and I'm very honored that he's here,” Harlan said. “Matter of fact, I'm very bullish on where we can be, in so many respects.”

Krystkowiak's thoughts on key subjects:

The NCAA Tournament

The Utes never were in NCAA consideration during a 17-14 season that ended with a quarterfinal loss in the Pac-12 tournament to Oregon, an eventual Sweet 16 contestant. “We ran into the wrong team in Vegas,” Krystkowiak said.

Watching the first round of the tournament from a few rows up at Vivint Smart Home Arena was educational for Krystkowiak, and made him miss being on the sideline.

“It makes me sick to not be a part of it,” Krystkowiak said. “There's nothing like being in it. It's obvious, that's what we want to do.”

That remains the standard for Utah. “Larry will be the first to attest, and I concur, that we want his team in the NCAA basketball tournament,” Harlan said. “But what we do know is we got better [in Pac-12 play] and now we're back to work to attain that goal in the future. … This is a historic program; he's been a big part of our history and we're going to work very, very closely to get after it next year.”

Asked what the three-year NCAA shortcomings say about the program, Krystkowiak said, “That's up to [others] to define. I know I'm not going to define myself based on that.”

Krystkowiak maintains that his 2017-18 NIT runner-up team was NCAA-worthy. “I also think we're not that far away,” he said, “and I like where we're going next year.”

With his staff having studied all of this year’s Sweet 16 teams, Krystkowiak said defense — and shot-blocking, in particular — have to become areas of emphasis in 2019-20.

With or without Johnson, the 2019-20 Utes will be built around starting forwards Donnie Tillman and Timmy Allen, plus rising sophomores Both Gach and Riley Battin and redshirt freshmen Lahat Thioune and Naseem Gaskin. Finnish forward Mikael Jantunen is expected to be a major contributor as a freshman and four in-state scholarship players are joining the program: Rylan Jones, Matt Van Komen, Jaxon Brenchley and Branden Carlson.

Coaches are not allowed to speak about recruits. Utah is known to be awaiting a decision from Texas junior college guard Tazjmel Sherman, who's visiting West Virginia this weekend.

Transfers

Johnson is in the NCAA transfer portal, with one year of eligibility remaining. He may end up staying at Utah after a process that is “hopefully, coming to a head here soon,” Krystkowiak said. “We’re still working through those things.”

Krystkowiak defended his coaching style, pointing to the development in his program of Los Angeles Lakers forward Kyle Kuzma. “I've never coached anybody harder in my life,” Krystkowiak said. “If anybody should have left, it's probably Kuz.”

Speaking in general about why some players transfer and most of them stay, Krystkowiak said, “The circle of influence away from our program is costly. We've got a lot of kids that have the right circle of influence.”

Staffing

As Slocum considered moving to UNLV, “There was a lot of emotion for a week,” Krystkowiak said. “Nobody’s going to take away that bond that all of us have had.”

On-campus interviews are scheduled with potential replacements for Slocum, Krystkowiak said, clarifying that he's looking for another coach who can fill a multidimensional role of recruiting, coaching and scouting, as opposed to being a specialist in one area.

Scheduling

The Utes’ 2019-20 schedule has few openings, with return games vs. Minnesota (home) and Nevada (road), plus Kentucky in Las Vegas, BYU at home, Weber State at Vivint and an eight-game tournament in Myrtle Beach, S.C. Krystkowiak didn’t mention a road game that Utah still owes Missouri, while hinting about more ambitious bookings to come.

Jennifer Rubin: Democrats need to say why Trump’s praise of Wikileaks matters

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By now you've probably seen a montage of clips showing then-presidential candidate Donald Trump praising WikiLeaks and its distribution of hacked Democratic emails. It is of course telling that Trump now says he knows nothing about WikiLeaks (if he's being truthful, he really does have an alarming memory problem), but it is far from the most important aspect of this.

What's key here is the degree to which Trump invited and praised the release of emails illegally obtained by a hostile power. Well in excess of 100 times in the closing weeks of the campaign, Trump relied on the Russian handiwork to help his election prospects.

When we see more of (or, we hope, all of) Robert Mueller's report, we will see how the special counsel characterizes this behavior. Was there insufficient evidence of conspiracy/coordination, or rather, was there parallelism in which Russia's campaign for Trump and Trump's campaign for Trump proceeded along similar lines?

The clips substantiate a key point critics of the president have made (and which apologists are only too happy to ignore): Never in our history has someone won the White House relying on and amplifying the skullduggery of an enemy of the United States. Whatever the legal ramifications, there are moral and political implications to consider.

On the moral front, Trump's cheerleading for WikiLeaks, a conduit for Russian hackers, was a celebration of a crime, the hacking of the Democratic National Committee's and the Clinton campaign emails. The candidate running to be chief executive found nothing wrong with this crime - in fact, he celebrated it. Beyond that, he betrayed his country and our democracy, which posits that the American people choose our leaders in free and fair elections. Trump found nothing wrong with letting a hostile foreign power put its thumb on the scale. Anything to help him is great! That's his narcissistic mind-set.

On the political front, we will never know if Russia/WikiLeaks made Trump president. As with the actions of then-FBI Director James B. Comey, one can logically infer that some people changed their minds or decided either to vote or stay home based on these intrusions into the election. There are many "but for" causes of Hillary Clinton's loss ("but for not campaigning in Wisconsin . . . " and "but for her decision to use a private email server . . ."). What is certain is that Trump - having encouraged and reveled in Russian hacking - cannot definitively say he won this on his own. To the contrary, the problem with using a foreign power to get elected is that you deprive yourself of absolute political legitimacy.

With the imminent release of the Mueller report, it is fair to ask whether we (unbelievably) need a specific statute making illegal private or public requests for help from a foreign power and/or its surrogates. Maybe we need a law requiring campaigns, along with financial filings, to report contacts with foreign governments. That we even have to imagine such rules demonstrates the degree to which Trump and his apologists have debased themselves and undermined our democracy. Those clips of Trump praising WikiLeaks, a Russian cut-out, will live on as a constant reminder.

Delta enters the seat recline wars

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Delta Air Lines will reduce the amount that seats recline on some planes by about two inches, aiming to preserve the workspace of multitasking business travelers.

The first Airbus A320s to get the modified seats will debut this weekend, the carrier said Friday. The distance that seats recline will drop to 3.5 inches from 5.4 in first class, and to 2 inches from 4 in Comfort Plus and coach. The A320s generally are used on flights of two hours or less.

The change — made in response to customer complaints — should make life easier for business travelers trying to work on laptops perched on tray tables, often while viewing mobile phones and seat-back video screens, Delta said.

"It's all about protecting customers' personal space and minimizing disruptions to multitasking in flight," the Atlanta-based airline said by email.

Altering the seats can be done overnight and will take two months for all of Delta's 62 A320s. Delta isn't reducing the space between rows on the single-aisle jet, which seats 157 passengers. Feedback from travelers and employees will help determine whether Delta retrofits other aircraft.

The change was reported earlier by The Points Guy travel blog.

Too many dogs go postal — 29 Utah mail carriers bitten last year

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Think your job bites? The U.S. Postal Service says 29 carriers in Utah were bitten by dogs last year, an announcement made as part of National Dog Prevention Week.

It says dogs aren’t the problem, it’s the owners who fail to restrain them.

“The dogs are only doing what is instinctive to them, which is protecting their property and family,” said Salt Lake City Postmaster Steve Chaus. “It’s the dog owners who need to step up and restrain their dogs so carriers can safely deliver the mail.”

In 2018, 10 carriers were bitten in Salt Lake City; three in Magna; and two each in Clearfield, Lehi and Payson with others scattered statewide.

Chaus said if a dog is not properly restrained, the postal service may cease delivery to the home of the owner and surrounding houses to protect the carrier.

“Unfortunately, too many dogs are allowed to run unrestrained,” he said. “We take the safety of our employees very seriously. We will not wait until a carrier is attacked before taking preventive action.”

Nationally, the number of postal employees attacked by dogs fell to 5,714 in 2018 — about 500 fewer than in 2017 and more than 1,000 fewer since 2016. Dog bites decreased by three in Utah last year.

Two Utah companies are criticized for a lack of diversity in their ads, and experts say businesses need to be more inclusive

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A new marketing campaign from a Provo-based swimsuit company looks to celebrate each day’s “little victories” in 12 video interviews with Utah women “from all walks of life.”

The problem? Nine of the women are blonde and all appear to be white.

“‘All walks of life’ should include different ethnicities, races, and backgrounds,” a commenter wrote on the blog post on the website of business Kortni Jeane. “This feels shortsighted to me.”

Several women of color on Twitter and Instagram agreed and asked the company why there were no women of color included in the campaign.

The response? It’s more difficult than you’d think to find models who are also people of color in Utah, the company said.

“We did a model call just two weeks ago with over 200 applicants and none of which were of color,” the company said in a now-deleted response to criticisms on Instagram. “Honestly harder than it may seem but if you know anyone in Utah willing to put a swimsuit on please send them our way.”

That’s when Stacy Horton, 28, took to Twitter to prove a point, calling on women and men of color in Utah to drop a picture of themselves in her thread.

More than 100 did.

“@KortniJeane here is a thread of 100+ beautiful multicultural men, women, and children that live in the Utah area,” she wrote to the company on Twitter. “Reach out, include us, enhance your company with values that are accepting of everyone no matter the color or size. It's 2019, "harder than it seems" is no excuse.”

Kortni Niccoli, the company’s owner and founder, said she was surprised by the backlash to the campaign on social media.

“The campaign was focused on people’s stories and their background and they all came from incredible, different walks of life, and so I was focused not on the color of anyone’s skin or their outward appearance but it was more their stories and I wanted to share a message of celebrating women,” she said. “So it was a shock ... having a backlash on diversity and body image when the campaign was meant to do the opposite.”

Niccoli said the company strives to include diversity but acknowledged it could do more to reach out to women of color. In the future, she said, she’ll be more “gung-ho” about doing so.

“I love to be pushed and I love to hear people’s concerns and comments and feedback because my company wouldn’t be able to grow and reach all walks of life if I didn’t have that feedback and didn’t have people pushing me to be better,” she said.

Utah companies are behind the curve when it comes to representing diverse groups, according to Arul Mishra and Himanshu Mishra, marketing professors at the University of Utah. But it makes business sense for companies to start thinking more critically about who they portray in advertisements, they said.

“Businesses reap benefits when different groups of consumers can relate to the advertising message,” they said in an email. “If people cannot connect to those represented in advertisements and marketing efforts, they would not be interested in the message. No business would want to lose out on a sizable chunk of their audience by not representing them in their marketing efforts.”

But even as booming population growth alters the state’s demographics, there’s a persistent myth of a blonde-haired, blue-eyed, white Utah — one that doesn’t hold up to the lived experiences of many of the state’s residents.

And marketing like Kortni Jeane’s perpetuates that fallacy, said Alessandra Cuneo, 28, making “a group that’s already minimized” feel even more invisible.

“I think it’s really damaging,” she said. “It still creates kind of an us versus them mentality, right?”

Cuneo, who is Latina, weighed in on the issue on Twitter and told The Salt Lake Tribune she’d like to see Utah boutiques represent more people of all shapes, sizes and backgrounds — hiring not only more people of color but also more plus-size models and members of the LGBTQ community.

Horton agreed, noting that while she’s almost come to expect poor representation from businesses in Utah, she was mostly upset by Kortni Jeane’s initial response to questions and criticisms from women about its lack of representation: it deleted their questions.

“I think having that diversity and having those different colors and different shapes in whatever business you’re running is going to attract different people and that brings in more business,” Horton said. “And so it just baffles me when people are so almost defensive when someone asks about it.”

The same week that Kortni Jeane launched its new ad campaign, the Utah-based boutique Piper & Scoot came under fire for posting a marketing video online that featured a cast of white-presenting models dancing to rapper Cardi B’s “I Like it.”

The video appears to have since been deleted from Instagram and the only evidence of it remains from a Twitter user who said she made a screen recording of the video from Piper & Scoot’s YouTube channel. Her original recording, which she shared with The Salt Lake Tribune, shows the video was titled “Piper & Scoot: Bridesmaid Collection 2019” but does not have the company’s branding.

Several commenters on the video posted on Twitter again asked where the women of color were, pointing out that they thought it was a poor choice to use a woman of color’s song in an advertisement that appeared to highlight no people of color.

“I just feel like these boutiques don’t really think about it,” Horton said. “They’re not out to attack. But there is importance in it.”

Piper & Scoot did not respond to requests for comment.

While Cuneo and Horton said it’s important for businesses to represent diverse groups, they also noted that there’s a difference between inclusion and tokenization, or a merely symbolic effort to be inclusive to members of minority groups.

Businesses can walk that line by hiring more than a single diverse model in their marketing campaigns, Cuneo said, to ensure their attempts feel authentic and not just like a box they were looking to check off.

Some organizations have also overcome obstacles to representing diverse groups in part by hiring diverse staff, according to Arul Mishra and Himanshu Mishra.

“Understanding how humans uniquely view themselves is not an easy task,” they said in an email. “Understanding it and then customizing the marketing efforts to customers takes commitment.”

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