'Chaos': Fired Highland Park rec director details trauma of July 4 mass shooting

CHICAGO — Local government officials in Highland Park, Ill., recently fired their former director of recreation, Chris Maliszewski, 41, who says he was unable to work after experiencing trauma after working during the mass shooting that occurred at the Chicago suburb’s Fourth of July parade in 2022, Raw Story has exclusively revealed in a new investigation.

Maliszewski says his firing is “bulls---” and is “exploring pathways to justice" including legal options. Local government officials confirmed he is no longer employed by the Park District of Highland Park but declined to comment further, citing personnel confidentiality issues.

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Highland Park fires rec director who’s suffering from mass shooting-induced PTSD

CHICAGO — A recreation director in Highland Park, Ill., who says he suffered psychological trauma following a mass shooting at the suburban city’s 2022 Fourth of July parade, has been fired, according to interviews and government records reviewed by Raw Story.

On Dec. 27, Highland Park officials terminated Chris Maliszewski, 41, who says he is actively being treated for depression, anxiety, insomnia and post-traumatic stress disorder stemming from the massacre, during which seven people died and at least 48 were injured. Maliszewski is in the midst of a workers’ compensation case initiated while he was on leave from his job through the Family and Medical Leave Act.

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Capitol offense: King of GOP Never Trumpers just hurt a lot of big Republican feelings

WASHINGTON – Most Senate Republicans didn’t tune in to watch Chris Christie formally exit the Republican Party presidential primary this week, but the former New Jersey governor landed a verbal blow that’s left many of the Capitol’s top GOPers smarting.

On his way out the door, Christie tripled down on his losing anti-Trump campaign theme when he accused Republican elected officials of “cowardice and hypocrisy.”

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Pat Sajak blasts ‘far-left propaganda’ that has ‘infected’ colleges: letter

Pat Sajak guides the realm of letter-turning and phrase-guessing as host of the enduring game show Wheel of Fortune, maintaining an amiable, everyman persona for more than four decades.

But when the subject turns to politics, Sajak becomes something quite different — a sharp-elbowed culture warrior who serves as chairman of the Board for Hillsdale College, a small private institution in Michigan beloved by Christian conservatives.

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Birtherism is back. But these top GOPers are tired of Trump’s citizenship conspiracies.

WASHINGTON – Birtherism’s back. But it’s tired. At least at the U.S. Capitol.

Ahead of Monday’s Iowa Republican caucus, former President Donald Trump has pulled out his old xenophobic playbook and is questioning the citizenship of former Gov. Nikki Haley (R-SC) – Trump’s own former ambassador to the United Nations.

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'Oh yeah, we're really afraid of you': Dem drips with sarcasm in response to MTG

Democratic lawmakers are both mocking and knocking Republicans for their chaotic attempt Wednesday to hold Hunter Biden in contempt — as he sat watching in the front row.

After Republican Oversight and Reform chair Rep. James Comer (R-KY) made it clear that he wasn't going to allow Biden to speak, the president's son stood and walked out. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) told reporters after the fact that he was too scared to face them. She even went so far as to say Hunter Biden was having a "temper tantrum."

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Listen: Trump’s top Senate allies try – and fail – to defend his immunity claim

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump is demanding a federal court grant him blanket immunity from prosecution for anything he did during his four years in the White House.

But even some of Trump’s top allies in Congress rejected Trump’s latest legal claim.

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Marjorie Taylor Greene broke an election law. Her donors — not MTG — paid the fine.

The Federal Election Commission recently fined Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene $12,000 after determining the Georgia congresswoman personally violated an election law after illegally fundraising for a conservative super PAC.

But Greene’s campaign donors — not Greene herself — are footing the bill, according to an image of the payment check that Raw Story obtained from the FEC.

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Telemarketing ‘scam PAC’ tycoon bemoans his ‘inconceivable’ jail conditions

Telemarketing tycoon Richard Zeitlin, who could spend the rest of his life in prison for allegedly defrauding untold numbers of political and charitable donors, is begging a federal judge to free him from what his lawyer describes as “intolerable” pretrial jail conditions.

The conditions at New York City’s Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, N.Y., are so dire that they “substantially impair [Zeitlin’s] ability to prepare for trial,” attorney Joshua L. Dratel wrote January 2 to U.S. District Judge Lewis A. Kaplan.

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Fined: Marjorie Taylor Greene must pay up for election violation

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), one of former president Donald Trump’s most vociferous supporters in Congress, has agreed to pay a $12,000 fine for violating federal election law, according to Federal Election Commission records reviewed by Raw Story.

An investigation by the FEC found that Greene violated the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 when she improperly shared an ad produced by the Stop Socialism Now PAC on her campaign Facebook page and Twitter account in December 2020.

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‘Official’ Trump calendar omits a critical detail

A “2024 Official Calendar” published by Donald Trump Jr. comes replete with “Incredible photographs from President Donald J. Trump's time in the White House.”

Trump-y historical facts accompany many of the dates.

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Republican congressman violates federal law with botched cryptocurrency disclosures

A Republican congressman violated a federal financial disclosure law by reporting two cryptocurrency purchases as much as a month past a mandatory deadline, a Raw Story review of congressional documents indicates.

Rep. Mike Collins (R-GA) reported two purchases of Ethereum cryptocurrency, each valued between $1,001 to $15,000.

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Five unresolved questions surrounding the Jan. 6 attack

America is coming up on the three-year anniversary of the day former President Donald Trump’s supporters stormed the Capitol. The attack upended the orderly and peaceful transfer of presidential power to Joe Biden during Congress’ certification of the 2020 election and ultimately resulted in the loss of seven lives and dozens of injuries to law enforcement officers.

The FBI has arrested more than 1,200 people on federal charges related to the siege of the Capitol. The leaders of the Oath Keepers and the Proud Boys — two far-right extremist groups — are already serving long prison sentences for seditious conspiracy, and hundreds of others have pleaded guilty or been convicted by juries on various charges.

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