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Hurricane Mop Deal
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Tue Nov 26 16:14:12 UTC 2013
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May 2, 2013: Family and supporters of 18-year-old Abdella Ahmad Tounisi,
including his father, Ahmad Tounisi, left, leave federal court in Chicago.APCHICAGO
Federal prosecutors in Chicago plan to appeal a judge's surprise decision
to release an Illinois teenager charged with seeking to travel abroad and
join an Al Qaeda-linked militant group in Syria.The U.S. Attorney's Office
announced their plan to appeal Thursday afternoon in the case of 18-year-old
Abdella Ahmad Tounisi. Hours earlier, the judge said Tounisi could be released
under home confinement.Judge Daniel Martin stayed his own order for 24 hours
to give prosecutors a chance to appeal. That means Tounisi wasn't immediately
released.Tounisi, an Aurora resident, was arrested at O'Hare International
Airport last month as he allegedly prepared for the first leg of
a trip to join Qaida-affiliated Jabhat al-Nusrah, which is fighting Syrian
President Bashar Assad's regime.In arguing for continued detention, prosecutors
also noted Thursday that Tounisi had allegedly spoken with a friend of
his last year about bombing targets in Chicago. Tounisi is not charged
in that case, though the friend, Adel Daoud, was and is in
jail awaiting trial.After announcing his ruling, the otherwise soft-spoken
U.S. magistrate judge leaned forward on his bench Thursday and raised his
voice, telling the teenager he should take the allegations seriously."This
is no game, Mr. Tounisi. OK?" Judge Martin told hi
The White House budget office is recalculating how to apply automatic spending
cuts for a handful of agencies, freeing up almost $4 billion for
the Pentagon and another $1 billion or so for Homeland Security Department
and NASA.Capitol Hill aides familiar with the White House changes say the
administration has identified almost $5 billion in cuts that can be restored
under its reading of the arcane budget rules governing the across-the-board
cuts, known as sequestration. The calculations would restore $5 billion
of the scheduled $85 billion in automatic sequestration cuts.An administration
official confirmed the calculations Friday but declined to comment further
because the process is ongoing. The official and congressional aides spoke
on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the
changes publicly.The move comes amid increasing public pressure to find
ways to lessen the impact of sequestration. Federal agencies are warning
that the mandatory cuts could mean cutbacks in services. Last week, Congress
passed and President Obama signed legislation giving the Federal Aviation
Administration the ability to avoid furloughs that were causing flight delays
by tapping money in other accounts.The cuts officially began in March after
Congress and Obama could not reach an agreement on a broader budget
deal. The automatic cuts had been imposed under a hard-fought 2011 debt
and budget pact.The cuts have so far failed to live
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