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Cua appointed PCSO head; ambassadors to US, UN named 

FORMER lawmaker Junie E. Cua took his oath as chair of the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office (PCSO) on Tuesday, according to the presidential palace. 

He was among the appointees who were sworn in by President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. on Tuesday, Malacañang said in a statement. 

He will lead an agency that raises funds for health services and charities of national character through sweepstakes and lottery games, which need to compete with emerging games that the previous administration had accommodated.  

Mr. Cua, who represented the lone district of Quirino province in the previous Congress, will also need to digitize the agencys gaming operations to maximize online sales and ensure that revenues are accounted for. 

The agency has been marred by corruption, with state auditors flagging irregularities in its operations. 

Others who took their oath of office on Tuesday were: Mark T. Lapid, who was reappointed as chief operating officer of the Tourism Infrastructure and Enterprise Zone Authority; Abdulghani Salapuddin as administrator of the Southern Philippines Development Authority; Romeo Lumagui, Jr as deputy commissioner for operations of the Bureau of Internal Revenue;  Amenah Pangandaman as secretary of the Department of Budget; and Jose Arnulfo A. Veloso as president and general manager of the Government Service Insurance System.  

Antonio Manuel R. Lagdameo, the new permanent representative of the Philippines to the United Nations, and Jose Manuel D. Romualdez, who will maintain his post as ambassador of the Philippines to the United States, also took their oaths.  

Tirso S. Cruz III is the new chairperson and chief executive of the Film Development Council while Juan Revilla was sworn in as a new board member at the Movie and Television Review and Classification Board.  

At the Bureau of Immigration, Regulation Division Chief  Rogelio D. Gevero, Jr. has been designated as officer-in-charge by Justice Secretary Jesus Crispin C. Remulla.  

Mr. Gevero will have authority over the bureau until July 31 or until a replacement has been appointed or designated, according to July 4 order signed by Mr. Remulla. Kyle Aristophere T. Atienza and John Victor D. Ordonez 

Ople assures preparations underway for simplified processes at new migrant workers agency 

PHILSTAR

SECRETARY Susan V. Ople of the newly-formed Department of Migrant Workers (DMW) on Wednesday assured that preparations are underway to ensure simplified transactions and faster delivery of assistance to Filipinos working overseas.   

In an online forum, Ms. Ople said one of the plans is to streamline their website as well as that of the Department of Labor and Employment to make them more accessible and user-friendly.   

She said work is being carried while the department is under transition and has yet to finalize its manpower.  

Ms. Ople noted that she is still waiting for the Department of Budget and Management to approve the DMW’s proposed staffing pattern to create new positions within the agency. 

“We already have a team planned for the department, but since our staffing pattern has not been approved yet, I will not present them officially yet,” she said.  

The new DMW chief said the agency will have four undersecretaries focusing on finance, foreign employment, welfare, and international cooperation.  

The law establishing the DMW was signed in December 2021. The new department will be absorbing the different existing government agencies dealing with overseas Filipino workers to ease procedures relating to migrant workers. John Victor D. Ordoñez 

Measure expanding telecommuting law coverage to government workers refiled  

A SENATOR has refiled a bill expanding the coverage of the Telecommuting Act to government workers.   

The proposed measure, filed by Senator Francis N. Tolentino, seeks to amend Republic Act 11165, which allows private companies to offer work-from-home and other alternative work arrangements to employees.   

Telecommuting refers to the ability of an employee to complete work assignments outside of traditional workplaces through the use of telecommunications tools such as email, phone, chat and video applications. 

Under the bill, telecommuting public sector workers will be provided with a non-taxable monthly allowance of at least P1,000 to cover additional utility costs.  

Working from home tends to increase utility consumption, particularly electricity,said Mr. Tolentino in the bill. Residential energy use has risen due to more people staying at home. Some workers even purchase their own equipment for working at home.”  

Violators of the bills provisions could face a fine of up to P100,000. 

The Department of Labor and Employment, Department of Finance, and the Bureau of Internal Revenue will be responsible for the implementation of this Act within 90 days of its effectivity.  

The Civil Service Commission (CSC), in a resolution promulgated in May, has already approved flexible work arrangements in the public sector.  

The CSC seeks to institutionalize flexible work arrangements as part of the nationwide effort to transition from a state of public health emergency to the new normal,it said in a June 6 statement, noting the need for preventive measures to safeguard the health and safety of workers.  

There are about 1.7 million government workers, according to the CSC. Alyssa Nicole O. Tan

House bill filed allowing civil partnership of same-sex couples   

A PARTY-LIST LAWMAKER has refiled a bill that seeks to recognize civil partnership of same-sex couples.  

Bagong Henerasyon Party-list Rep. Bernadette Herrera-Dy has refiled House Bill 1015 or the Civil Partnership Act, calling it a landmark effort to provide civil rights, benefits and responsibilities to couples previously unable to marry, giving them due recognition and protection from the state.” 

The bill had been filed in both the 17th and 18th Congress but failed to pass into law. The lawmaker, however, remains hopeful this time, noting that there has been greater acceptance of minority groups in recent years.  

It is about time that the Philippine government grant couples whether they are of the opposite or of the same sex adequate legal instruments to recognize their partnerships, respecting their dignity and recognizing equality before the law,Ms. Herrera-Dy said in the bill.  

She noted that the bill will allow members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) community to declare their partners as beneficiaries under social security and insurance plans, as well as inherit through intestate rights upon the death of their partner, among other benefits.  

Under the proposed measure, the civil partners will be given all the benefits and protections granted to married couples under existing laws, rulings and orders. Alyssa Nicole O. Tan 

SC issues restraining order vs Comelec in favor of disqualified Agoo town candidate 

THE SUPREME Court (SC) on Wednesday issued a temporary restraining order (TRO) against the Commission on Elections (Comelec) in favor of Frank O. Sibuma, who won in May as mayor of Agoo town in La Union but was disqualified by the election body. 

The TRO also directs Comelec to annul the proclamation of Stefanie Ann E. Calongcagon, who was declared Agoo mayor on Tuesday afternoon. 

Comelec earlier canceled Mr. Sibuma’s certificate of candidacy over residency issues. 

The tribunal also ordered Comelec to submit its comment to the court within a non-extendable period of 10 days from notice. 

Mr. Sibuma had received 21,364 votes against Ms. Calongcagon’s 16,603 votes in the May 9 national and local elections.  

Acting Comelec Spokesperson John Rex Laudiangco told reporters in a Viber message that she was proclaimed mayor on Tuesday at the Comelec’s office in Manila before the clerk of the commission had received any notice or order of the TRO.  

“We have just been informed that the clerk of the commission received the same (TRO) this noon via email,” Mr. Laudiangco said.  

“Per standard protocols and procedures, we will be referring the matter to the Office of the Solicitor General, requesting their good office to represent the Commission.” John Victor D. Ordoñez

Folayang wants his rematch with Alvarez in legend vs legend bout

EDUARD FOLAYANG — ONE CHAMPIONSHIP

EDUARD Folayang feels he has unfinished business with Eddie Alvarez.

The two squared off at “ONE: Dawn of Heroes” with Mr. Alvarez taking the first-round submission win in front of a stunned Filipino crowd in August of 2019.

It was a match that perfectly displayed the strengths of the two fighters with Mr. Folayang raining down menacing strikes on the feet and Mr. Alvarez swooping in with his grappling.

Mr. Folayang said a rematch between him and Mr. Alvarez is indeed an intriguing prospect and he hopes that a second meeting between them could eventually happen sooner than later.

Mr. Folayang had the Mall of Asia crowd rocking in the first minute of the fight when he landed a brutal leg kick that sent the former Bellator and UFC lightweight champion to the mat.

Taking advantage of his downed opponent, Mr. Folayang proceeded to land a hellacious ground-and-pound on Mr. Alvarez.

Despite Mr. Folayang’s aggression, “The Underground King” managed to survive and eventually took top position. Mr. Alvarez then took Mr. Folayang’s back and slapped in a tight rear-naked choke to take the submission win 2:16 into the fight.

Mr. Folayang admitted that he made mistakes in his first fight against Mr. Alvarez, nevertheless, the former ONE Lightweight World Champion is eager to erase his errors.

The 38-year-old added he needs to undergo an intense training camp, harder than his previous ones if he eventually gets his rematch against the American legend.

ONE Championship returns this July 22 with the stacked “ONE 159: De Ridder vs. Bigdash” which will be broadcast live from the Singapore Indoor Stadium.

Just like any other fight fan, Mr. Folayang will be tuned in to ONE 159 especially with two title fights in the card.

Reinier de Ridder will defend the ONE Middleweight World Championship against former champion Vitaly Bigdash in the main event.

Striking superstars Janet Todd, the reigning ONE Atomweight Kickboxing World Champion, and Lara Fernandez will duke it out for the ONE Interim Atomweight Muay Thai World Title in the co-main event.

Djokovic battles back from two sets down to win

NOVAK Djokovic of Serbia — REUTERS

LONDON — Just when Novak Djokovic’s troubling year looked like hitting another low he salvaged his bid for a fourth successive Wimbledon title by coming back from two sets down to beat Italian Jannik Sinner in the last eight on Tuesday.

The Serbian top seed had looked in all kinds of trouble against the inspired 20-year-old after being outplayed for two sets but stormed back to win 5-7, 2-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-2 and set up a clash with Britain’s surprise semifinalist Cameron Norrie.

In the end there was an air of inevitability about the outcome as the battle-hardened 35-year-old seized control to reach his 43rd Grand Slam semifinal and 11th at Wimbledon.

He also extended an unbeaten run at Wimbledon that goes back to 2017 and now stands at 26 matches.

Djokovic has not added to his 20 major titles this year after being deported before the Australian Open following a coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) standoff and then losing to old adversary Rafa Nadal in the quarter-finals of the French Open.

He might even be barred from the US Open over his decision to shun a COVID-19 vaccine but kept alive the prospect of facing Spaniard Nadal in Sunday’s Wimbledon final with a seventh career comeback from two sets down.

After taking the acclaim of the crowd on Centre Court, Djokovic explained how he had turned it around.

“The first two sets compared to the last three was like two different matches,” said Djokovic, who is now joint second all-time with Jimmy Connors on 83 Wimbledon match wins.

“He (Sinner) was the better player for two sets, then I went out and had a toilet break and had a little pep talk with myself in the mirror, it’s actually true.

“I broke early in the third set and that gave me a confidence boost and I saw a little doubt in him.”

DJOKOVIC ONSLAUGHT
Sinner, the 10th seed, looked primed for the biggest win of his career to follow in the footsteps of compatriot Matteo Berrettini who reached last year’s showpiece match.

But he wilted under a Djokovic onslaught.

When Djokovic produced a miraculous winner on the slide to earn a break point for a double break in the seventh game of the fifth set, ending up on his belly in a superman pose, Sinner knew he was facing mission impossible.

The Italian belted a volley long on the next point and then Djokovic held to love to seal victory.

Sinner began his third Grand Slam quarterfinal anxiously, losing the first seven points and then trailing 4-1.

But he then produced an astonishing level of tennis to give the world number three the runaround.

He sent a forehand whistling past an outstretched Djokovic to break serve at 5-5 and took the opener after a drop shot gave him a second set point.

Oozing confidence, Sinner dominated the second set as Djokovic seemed at a loss about how to keep the Italian at bay.

The Serbian’s team, including wife Jelena and former Wimbledon champion Goran Ivanišević, looked pensive.

But they need not have worried as, after Djokovic’s face-to-face in the mirror, their man came back in defiant mood.

A superb volley helped him break serve for a 3-1 lead in the third set and after shoveling up a drop shot to win a point at 30-30 in the next game, Djokovic conducted the fans’ cheers.

Two Sinner double faults in the first game of the fourth set were a gift for Djokovic who raced into a 4-0 lead.

Sinner clenched his fist when he held serve at the start of the decider, but Djokovic was relentless and once he got his nose in front, he was unstoppable. — Reuters

Jabeur rallies past Bouzkova to reach maiden major semifinal

LONDON — Tunisian third seed Ons Jabeur, the highest surviving seed in the women’s draw, recovered from losing her first set at this year’s Wimbledon to beat Czech Marie Bouzkova 3-6, 6-1, 6-1 on Tuesday and reach her maiden Grand Slam semifinal.

Since losing in the opening round at this year’s Roland Garros in a shock defeat, Jabeur has won 10 straight matches on grass, having arrived at the All England Club with a title in Berlin in the leadup.

Currently playing at her highest career ranking of second, Jabeur will next meet her friend — 103rd-ranked Tatjana Maria, who earlier beat fellow German Jule Niemeier, for a place in Saturday’s final.

Jabeur said it will be tough to play against her “barbecue buddy” Maria, who returned from maternity leave only last year after giving birth to her second daughter and reached her first major semifinal at the 47th attempt.

“I love Tatjana so much and her family is really amazing,” Jabeur said. “She’s a great friend. I am really happy for her that she’s in the semifinal.

“She’s one of the examples that I wish players look up to because she really suffered to play and to win rounds in Grand Slams and look at her now. She’s in a semifinal after having two babies. It’s a really amazing story.”

The story of Jabeur, 27, has been no less amazing as she became the first Arab to reach a Grand Slam singles semifinal and is bidding to become the first woman from Africa to win a major.

Jabeur, who had also reached the last eight of the 2020 Australian Open, said she was trying to inspire a new generation of tennis players in her country.

“I hope this could push them more to do better and see more players on tour,” she said.

STOIC DEFENCE
Coming into her second straight Wimbledon quarterfinal, Jabeur had yet to lose a set in her four rounds.

She used plenty of drop shots in the opening stages of the first set against Bouzkova, but the 23-year-old Czech read them well to blunt one of the Tunisian’s main weapons.

Jabeur failed to find a way past the Czech’s stoic defence as Bouzkova chased down most of her groundstrokes and was rewarded with a break of serve in the fifth game. A second break in the ninth got her the opening set.

As the first set, Jabeur had lost in this year’s tournament it seemed to wake up the Tunisian.

The 27-year-old stepped up her aggression, started hitting her groundstrokes flatter and broke Bouzkova’s first service game of the second set.

A second and a third break followed and the Tunisian soon leveled the match as her favourite drop shots once again found the mark on the lush green lawns.

BATHROOM BREAK
The Czech, who came into the Centre Court contest with six career wins over top-10 players, headed off for a lengthy bathroom break but could not change the momentum.

Bouzkova, who had never got past the second round of a Grand Slam before this year’s championships, was 40-0 up in the second game when Jabeur won five straight points to break serve and then consolidated her advantage with a hold to love.

Jabeur had won eight straight games to jump into a 4-0 lead before the Czech halted the juggernaut with a break to get on board in the third set.

However, it proved to be only a minor hiccup for Jabeur who picked up another break in the next game and then held serve to love to seal the contest on her first match point.

“I knew she was going to come and really make me work to win a point,” Jabeur said. “She’s a talented player, and I’m really happy that I woke up during the second set and I played much better in the third set.

“I’m glad I stepped in with my game. I was more aggressive in the second set, and especially tactically I was playing some angles that she didn’t like much.” — Reuters

BusinessWorld Insights: Fintech Space as the Thriving Ground for Upgrading Financial Services

The latest Philippine Venture Capital report by the Boston Consulting Group and Foxmont Capital Partners shows that the fintech industry in the Philippines has taken the “lion’s share” (77%) of Filipino startup funding for the second consecutive year, with a total of US$680.1 million raised. With such great support, fintech can be further expected to innovate how financial services are offered and delivered to Filipinos across the nation — from the urban areas to the countryside.

This July 6, 2022 (Wednesday) at 11 a.m., join the last session of the two-part BusinessWorld Insights series themed “Fintech PH: Making Financial Services More Accessible and Inclusive” LIVE and FREE together with high-caliber speakers and experts in an intelligent online discussion about today’s most relevant issues to help the country accelerate the push for a more financially inclusive and resilient economy through our thriving fintech industry.

This session of #BUSINESSWORLDINSIGHTS is sponsored by  Maya and Gcash and supported by the British Chamber of Commerce Philippines, European Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines, Financial Executive Institute of the Philippines, Makati Business Club, Management Association of the Philippines, Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry, and The Philippine STAR.

UK’s Boris Johnson on the brink as ministers quit

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson via Chatham House/Flickr

LONDON — British Prime Minister Boris Johnson will face questions in parliament followed by a grilling by senior lawmakers on Wednesday, with his premiership on the brink after a slew of resignations from ministers saying he was not fit to govern.

Mr. Johnson’s finance and health secretaries quit on Tuesday, along with a number of junior ministers, saying they could no longer stay in government in the wake of the latest of a series of scandals to have blighted his administration in recent months.

A growing number of lawmakers in his ruling Conservative Party have said the game is up for Mr. Johnson. But he showed his determination to remain in office by appointing Nadhim Zahawi, previously education minister, as his new finance minister, and filling some of the other vacancies.

The level of hostility he is confronting from within his own party will be laid bare later when he appears before lawmakers for his weekly question session, before later facing the chairs of parliamentary committees for a scheduled two-hour grilling.

“I suspect we will have to drag him kicking and screaming from Downing Street,” one Conservative lawmaker told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity. “But if we have to do it that way then we will.”

Mr. Johnson’s leadership has been mired in scandals and missteps over the last few months, with the prime minister fined by police for breaking COVID-19 lockdown laws and a damning report published about the behavior of officials at his Downing Street office who breached lockdown rules.

There have also been policy U-turns, an ill-fated defense of a lawmaker who broke lobbying rules, and criticisms that he has not done enough to tackle a cost-of-living crisis, with many Britons struggling to cope with rising fuel and food prices.

The latest scandal saw Mr. Johnson apologizing for appointing a lawmaker to a role involved in offering pastoral care and handling party discipline, even after being briefed that the politician had been the subject of complaints about sexual misconduct.

It prompted Rishi Sunak to quit as Chancellor of the Exchequer — finance minister — and Sajid Javid to resign as Health Secretary, while half a dozen others left their junior ministerial or envoy roles.

LOST CONFIDENCE
“It is clear to me that this situation will not change under your leadership — and you have therefore lost my confidence too,” Mr. Javid’s resignation letter said.

A snap YouGov poll found 69% of Britons thought Mr. Johnson should step down as prime minister but for the time being the remainder of his top ministerial team offered their backing.

“I fully support the prime minister,” Scottish Secretary Alister Jack said. “I am sorry to see good colleagues resign, but we have a big job of work to do, and that’s what we’re getting on with.”

A month ago Mr. Johnson survived a confidence vote of Conservative lawmakers, and party rules mean he cannot face another such challenge for a year.

However, some lawmakers are seeking to change those rules, while he is also under investigation from a parliamentary committee over whether he lied to parliament about COVID-19 lockdown breaches.

Only two-and-a-half years ago, the ebullient Mr. Johnson won a huge parliamentary majority on a promise to sort out Britain’s exit from the European Union after years of bitter wrangling.

But since then, his initial handling of the pandemic was widely criticized, and the government has lurched from one predicament to another.

Although Mr. Johnson has won wider plaudits for his support of Ukraine, it has not materialized into a boost in opinion polls, which show the Conservatives trailing the opposition Labour Party and his own popularity ratings at all-time lows.

“After all the sleaze, the scandals and the failure, it’s clear that this government is now collapsing,” Labor leader Keir Starmer said. — Reuters

Inflation taking toll on PM Kishida’s popularity

REUTERS

TOKYO — The rising cost of living is turning into a thorny political issue ahead of Japan’s upper house election this weekend, as opposition parties peg blame for recent price hikes on Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s policies.

While Mr. Kishida’s ruling coalition is set to win a majority, public discontent over inflation may undermine efforts to strengthen his grip on power and phase out the legacy of his predecessors’ economic policies.

Already, rising prices are taking a toll on the strong popularity Mr. Kishida had enjoyed since taking office in October, with a poll by public broadcaster NHK on July 4 showing his approval rating at 54%, down from 59% three weeks earlier.

Fuka Sato, a 28-year-old stylist working at a magazine publisher, says she will vote for an opposition party for the first time in her life.

“I feel extremely insecure about the future,” said Ms. Sato, who says she eats out less often and gave up buying fruit because it became too expensive.

Soaring commodity costs, fueled by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, pushed Japan’s consumer inflation above the Bank of Japan’s 2% target for the first time in seven years.

While the rate of inflation is still modest by global comparisons, it has shocked a population that has not experienced steady inflation for decades and hasn’t seen wages rise enough to compensate for the cost of living.

Households, restaurants and schools have had to adjust their food purchases just to cope.

Opposition politicians have used the label “Kishida inflation” in their criticisms of the government’s response to price pressures.

Tabloids and blogs are full of features on how households can mitigate the pain from rising prices, a new development in a country where deflation, not inflation, had long been the economy’s enemy No. 1.

For now, Mr. Kishida’s victory seems solid thanks in part to a weak and fragmented opposition.

He has set a low bar for himself, saying the ruling coalition, which comprises his Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and junior partner Komeito, aims to secure a majority in the election.

To achieve this, the ruling camp needs to win at least 55 of the 125 seats up for re-election.

“It’s true voters are concerned about inflation and rising costs of living, and that they feel the government’s response has been far from enough,” said veteran political analyst Atsuo Ito.

“That said, many voters have not reached a point where they would vote for the opposition to punish Kishida.”

The bite from inflation, however, may dash Mr. Kishida’s hopes of achieving a more ambitious goal for the LDP to win an absolute majority. That requires winning 69 seats — no easy feat with an opinion poll on Monday showing the LDP landing about 60.

“The LDP will win but the victory will be less impressive than initially hoped, given Kishida’s sliding approval rates blamed on inflation,” said Yasuhide Yajima, chief economist at NLI Research Institute in Tokyo.

“After the election, he’ll probably seek to win political points with steps to combat inflation and curb fuel costs, such as by moving faster toward restarting nuclear power plants.”

NO RESPITE
While the upper house elections are unlikely to immediately affect policy, Mr. Kishida’s performance this weekend will be important for his own political fortunes.

Mr. Kishida belongs to a smaller LDP faction and needs the political capital upper house gains would deliver to fend off rivals such as former prime minister Shinzo Abe, who belongs to a bigger faction.

For now, Mr. Kishida is likely to maintain current policies that support growth with legacy “Abenomics” stimulus, notably big spending and ultra-low interest rates.

But going forward, he may seek to differentiate his policies from Abe’s.

“He has adopted Abenomics as the party’s current economic orthodoxy, but at heart he is more of a fiscal hawk,” said James Brady, a vice president analyzing Japan at US advisory firm Teneo.

“Kishida is not inclined to phase out Abenomics in the short term, but won’t want to continue down that free-spending, debt-ballooning path in the medium-to-longer term.”

So far, Mr. Kishida has pledged to use fiscal spending to cushion the inflation blow, such as gasoline subsidies, which analysts say are unsustainable for a country saddled with a huge public debt.

A better way to soothe public anxiety would be to convince companies to raise wages to help households deal with rising costs, and boost productivity, analysts say.

However, these remain longer-term objectives that have also eluded past administrations.

“Ideally, the focus for Kishida’s post-election should be on adapting Japan to a post-COVID world such as through digitalization and flexible working styles,” said Yuri Okina, chairperson of Japan Research Institute, a think tank.

“But the situation surrounding the economy is very difficult due to rising prices and a weak yen…Inflation is a huge problem for Japan. It’s something that affects everyone.” — Reuters

July 4th parade shooting suspect slipped past Illinois ‘red flag’ law safeguards

STOCK PHOTO | Image from Pixabay

HIGHLAND PARK, Ill. — The man charged with killing seven people at a Chicago-area July Fourth parade slipped past the safeguards of an Illinois “red flag” law designed to prevent people deemed to have violent tendencies from getting guns, officials revealed on Tuesday.

The disclosures raised questions about the adequacy of the state’s “red flag” laws even as a prosecutor lauded the system as “strong” during a news conference announcing seven first-degree murder charges against the 21-year-old suspect, Robert, E. Crimo III.

Sergeant Chris Covelli of the Lake County Sheriff’s Office said earlier in the day that Mr. Crimo had legally purchased a total of five guns, including the suspected murder weapon, despite having come to law enforcement’s attention twice for behavior suggesting he might harm himself or others.

The first instance was an April 2019 emergency-911 call reporting Mr. Crimo had attempted suicide, followed in September of that year by a police visit regarding alleged threats “to kill everyone” that he had directed at family members, Mr. Covelli said.

According to Mr. Covelli, police responding to the second incident seized a collection of 16 knives, a dagger and a sword from Mr. Crimo’s home in Highland Park, Illinois, the Chicago suburb where the shooting occurred on Monday. But no arrest was made as authorities at the time lacked probable cause to take him into custody, the sheriff’s sergeant said.

“There were no complaints that were signed by any of the victims,” Mr. Covelli explained.

Later on Tuesday came a separate statement from the Illinois State Police recounting that the agency had received a report from Highland Park Police declaring Mr. Crimo a “clear and present danger” after the alleged threats against relatives in September 2019.

At the time, however, Mr. Crimo did not possess a state “firearm owners identification (FOID)” card that could be revoked or a pending FOID application to deny. So state police involvement in the matter was closed, the agency said.

State police also said no relative or anyone else was willing “to move forward with a formal complaint” or to provide “information on threats or mental health that would have allowed law enforcement to take additional action.”

BACKGROUND CHECKS PASSED
Three months later, at age 19, Mr. Crimo applied for his first FOID card, under his father’s sponsorship. But because no firearm restraining order or other court action against Mr. Crimo had ever been sought, “there was insufficient basis to establish a clear and present danger and deny the FOID application,” state police said.

Mr. Crimo passed four background checks in the purchase of his guns, all of them conducted in 2020 and 2021, well after the 2019 incidents that drew police attention, according to the state police.

State police said the only offense detected in Mr. Crimo’s criminal history during background checks was for unlawful possession of tobacco in 2016, and that “no mental health prohibiter reports” from healthcare providers ever surfaced.

The state police said that when officers who visited the family’s home over the alleged threats Mr. Crimo made in September 2019, they asked him “if he felt like harming himself or others,” and that “he responded ‘no’.”  

“Additionally and importantly, the father claimed the knives were his and they were being stored in (his son’s) closet for safekeeping,” state police said. “Based upon that information, the Highland Park Police returned the knives to the father later that afternoon.”

A number of US politicians in both parties have urged more widespread enactment and enforcement of “red flag” laws, which typically enable courts to issue restraining orders allowing authorities to confiscate firearms from individuals, or to prevent them from buying weapons, when they are deemed to pose a significant threat to themselves or others.

But Reinhart, the state’s attorney who charged Mr. Crimo on Tuesday, was at a loss to explain how Mr. Crimo could be permitted to legally obtain weapons without the alleged 2019 threat and “clear and present danger” report triggering the state’s “red flag” measures.

Congress last month passed a national gun reform bill including provisions to provide federal funding to states that administer red flag statutes. — Reuters

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