Serena Williams tops Forbes list for highest-earning female athletes

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Serena Williams earned just $62,000 (£48,050) from prize money after giving birth to her daughter Olympia

Eight of the top 10 highest earning female athletes are tennis players, with 23-time Grand Slam champion Serena Williams topping the Forbes list.

Williams earned just $62,000 (£48,050) from prize money during the past year – owing largely to her 14-month break to have a baby – but made $18m (£13.95m) through endorsements.

Badminton’s PV Sindhu and race car driver Danica Patrick are the only non-tennis players in the top 10.

In June, the Forbes rankings of the world’s top 100 highest earning athletes did not feature a woman after Williams dropped out of the chart.

US boxer Floyd Mayweather topped the list followed by football’s Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo.

The top 10 highest earning female athletes earned $105m (£81.4m) in total from June 2017 to June 2018.

That figure is down 4% from last year and 28% from five years ago.

Williams’ total earnings ensure she tops the list for the third successive year, making twice as much away from the tennis court as any other female athlete.

Caroline Wozniacki is second on the list having won her first Grand Slam title at the Australian Open earlier this year – a victory that secured her $3.1m (£2.4m) in prize money to push her total earnings to $13m (£10.1m).

Completing the top five are Sloane Stephens, Garbine Muguruza and Maria Sharapova.

Russian Sharapova was the top-earning female athlete for 11 consecutive years but has seen her earnings drop after her 15-month doping ban.

Indian Olympic and world silver medallist Sindhu and Patrick – the most successful female race car driver – are seventh and ninth on the list respectively.

The top 10 and their total earnings

  1. Serena Williams (tennis) – $18.1m (£14m)
  2. Caroline Wozniacki (tennis) – $13m (£10.1m)
  3. Sloane Stephens (tennis) – $11.2m (£8.7m)
  4. Garbine Muguruza (tennis) – $11m (£8.5m)
  5. Maria Sharapova (tennis) – $10.5m (£8.1m)
  6. Venus Williams (tennis) – $10.2m (£7.9m)
  7. PV Sindhu (badminton) – $8.5m (£6.6m)
  8. Simona Halep (tennis) – $7.7m (£6m)
  9. Danica Patrick (race car driving) – $7.5m (£5.8m)
  10. Angelique Kerber (tennis) – $7m (£5.4m)

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Verizon explains why it throttled a fire department’s data during wildfire

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Firefighters battling the Mendocino Complex fire earlier this month were forced to pay more for data service.
Firefighters battling the Mendocino Complex fire earlier this month were forced to pay more for data service.

Image: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Earlier this summer, the Santa Clara County Fire Department sent a team to fight the largest wildfire in the history of California. 

The problem? During the fire, Verizon throttled the department’s “unlimited” data once it reached its limit. 

As part of its emergency services, the department “relies upon Internet-based systems to provide crucial and time sensitive public safety services,” Fire Chief Anthony Bowden wrote in an addendum added this week to a lawsuit fighting to overturn the FCC’s net neutrality repeal.

“The Internet has become an essential tool in providing fire and emergency response, particularly for events like large fires which require the rapid deployment and organization of thousands of personnel and hundreds of fuel engines, aircraft, and bulldozers,” Bowden continued in his declaration, as Ars Technica first reported. 

Bowden detailed how his department’s data service from Verizon Wireless was limited, or throttled, and how his team was “forced” to use other fire agencies’ ISPs and personal devices to effectively communicate and coordinate firefighting plans. Eventually Verizon stopped throttling the department’s data after they paid for a more expensive plan. 

On Tuesday afternoon a Verizon spokesperson told Mashable in an email that the “situation has nothing to do with net neutrality.” Instead the throttling and extra cost for the Santa Clara Fire Department was “a mistake in how we communicated with our customer about the terms of its plan.”

For the firefighters, this was a dangerous mistake. 

“This throttling has had a significant impact on our ability to provide emergency services,” Bowden wrote. “Verizon imposed these limitations despite being informed that throttling was actively impeding County Fire’s ability to provide crisis-response and essential emergency services.”

“This was a customer support mistake”

Verizon on Tuesday said the fire department’s plan shouldn’t have mattered. “Regardless of the plan emergency responders choose, we have a practice to remove data speed restrictions when contacted in emergency situations,” the spokesperson wrote in an email. 

“In this situation, we should have lifted the speed restriction when our customer reached out to us. This was a customer support mistake. We are reviewing the situation and will fix any issues going forward.”

Just a “customer support mistake,” everyone. We’re California’s firefighters feel very reassured. 

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Bachelor in Paradise week 3: Who’s hooking up and who’s breaking up?

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What a week, rose lovers! Jordan continued to entertain with this outfits and freak-outs, a stuntman came between Kendall and Grocery Joe, and we said goodbye to four “ladies.” Let’s recap week 3 of Bachelor in Paradise:

Tia and Chris and Krystal
When last we left Tia, she was storming over to cook Chris’s goose because he kissed Krystal. Chris’s strategy in the face of this confrontation with the truth seems to be of the “Jedi mind trick” variety, because he tries to assure Tia that kissing Krystal doesn’t mean that everything he said about being committed to her is a lie. Yeah, she’s not buying it.

“I don’t believe you,” she replies. Fortunately, Chris’s attempts at gaslighting Tia — “there’s no facts” and “you’re making no sense” — do not work, and when Krystal wanders up to become the third point to this triangle, Tia does her best to warn her that Chris is talking out of both sides of his scruffy face. Upon witnessing this tense discussion, Krystal knows exactly what to do.

Girl, pour one for me, too. Chris goes on to inform Tia that she can’t dump him because he already dumped her — she just didn’t know it yet! What an asshat. Krystal almost has enough sense to flee from Chris while she has the chance, but there’s something between them that she “can’t refuse,” and they end up making out on the beach bed. “They’re like the two crazies who just deserve each other in the corner,” says Kevin. Krystal gets Chris’s rose. (Also, it’s a Roth IRA, not an “IRA Roth,” you nincompoops.)

Tia and Colton (again)
Of course, now that Chris has shown himself to be a tool of epic proportions, Tia’s love pendulum swings right back to Colton. “I want to date him!” she announces. Wouldn’t you know it, that’s juuuuust when Jacqueline the psychiatry grad student from Arie’s season shows up. And wouldn’t you know it, she feels a “gravitational pull” toward Colton. But — twist! — when Jacqueline asks Colton to go on a date, he says no, because he doesn’t want to make Tia feel bad.

“All my eggs are in his basket, but he doesn’t even have a f—ing basket!” Tia huffs. Honestly, both of you just need to go home… but something (in the form of a whole bunch of producers begging, most likely) pushes Colton to give it the ol’ college try with Tia. And she LOVES it.

They share a celebratory kiss, though Tia has some constructive criticism for her new man: “Like, use your tongue!”

Their happiness is short-lived, of course. On Tuesday’s episode, Raven (a.k.a. Other Tia) arrives with her Paradise season 4 beau, Adam, but she doesn’t have anything encouraging to say about Tia’s new relationship. “Colton’s past dating history has been the ‘It Girl,’” she says, implying that the former football player is just chasing the limelight via reality TV dating shows. Raven tearfully urges Tia to listen to her “God-given woman’s intuition,” and then offers this chilling warning: “If this ends badly, I’ma cut his penis off, and then he can’t ever lose that virginity!” She means it, too.

Chastened, Tia implores Colton to be honest with her about his feelings: “I’d rather you hurt my feelings with the truth than comfort me with bulls—.” Colton agrees – I think the poor shmuck means it, too – and then asks Tia to be his girlfriend. Great — now can we stop spending 75 percent of Paradise’s weekly running time on their drama? Thanks. (Next: Jordan’s in the doghouse

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Amid mounting legal troubles, Trump protests: ‘Where is the collusion?’

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Tuesday was a bad day in court for former associates of President Donald Trump, and it could foreshadow tough days ahead for the president. AP’s Washington Bureau Chief Julie Pace looks at what it all means for Trump’s White House. (Aug. 21)
AP

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump made only the most passing mention of the political and legal troubles rapidly enveloping his presidency during a rally of West Virginia Tuesday night, saying there’s still no proof his campaign worked with Russian agents to win the 2016 presidential election. 

“Fake news. How fake are they?” he said, pointing to news cameras at the back of the Charleston Convention Center. “Fake news and the Russian witch hunt. We’ve got a whole, big combination. Where is the collusion? You know, they’re still looking for collusion! Where is the collusion? Find some collusion. We want to find the collusion.”

Trump’s rally in West Virginia came scarcely three hours after nearly simultaneous legal developments that threaten his presidency: A guilty verdict against former campaign chairman Paul Manafort on tax and bank fraud charges, and a guilty plea by his former personal attorney Michael Cohen for tax evasion bank fraud and illegal campaign contributions.

More: President Donald Trump put on defense as Paul Manafort, Michael Cohen fall in court

Arriving in Charleston on Air Force One, Trump addressed reporters about Manafort – but walked away when the subject turned to Cohen.

Manafort, he said, was “a good man” who worked for previous Republican presidential candidates Ronald Reagan and Bob Dole.

“He was with a lot of different people over the years and I feel very sad about that. Doesn’t involve me but I still feel, you know, it’s a very sad thing that happened,” he said. “Had nothing to do with Russian collusion. We continue the witch hunt.”

Trump then met with supporters for a fundraiser and held a 75-minute campaign rally for Patrick Morrisey, the GOP Senate candidate challenging Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va. 

As he does at campaign rallies, Trump offered up a meaty stew of off-the-cuff one-liners on immigration, trade, judicial nominations, jobs and taxes. He criticized sports network ESPN for not broadcasting the national anthem at football games, commented on the arrest of an undocumented immigrant in the death of an “incredibly beautiful young woman” in Iowa, and blasted New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo for saying “America was never that great.”

“That’s the Democrats’ new theme,” Trump said. 

Trump’s visit to the heart of coal country came the same day as his Environmental Protection Agency proposed new rules allowing states to adopt less stringent regulation on older, coal-fired electric plants.

“We love clean, beautiful West Virginia coal. We love it. You know, that’s indestructible stuff,” he said, suggesting that coal was more durable than wind, solar or even petroleum. 

The West Virginia capital is the latest destination in what the White House said would be a blitz of political appearances in key states in advance of November’s congressional election.

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Aretha Franklin left no will or trust, attorney says

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The finances of an intensely private Aretha Franklin soon will become very public in Oakland County Probate Court because she apparently left no will or trust.

Her four sons filed a document Tuesday afternoon listing themselves as interested parties in her estate. Franklin’s niece Sabrina Owens asked the court to appoint her as personal representative of the estate. The case is assigned to Judge Jennifer Callaghan.

“I was after her for a number of years to do a trust,” said Los Angeles attorney Don Wilson, who represented Franklin in entertainment matters for the past 28 years. “It would have expedited things and kept them out of probate, and kept things private.”

As Franklin’s attorney in copyright matters, song publishing and record deals, Wilson said he would have been consulted about her holdings for any estate planning purposes.

Wilson said that at this point it’s impossible to place a dollar figure on the value of her song catalog. He did say that she maintained ownership of her original compositions, which include well-known hits such as “Think” and “Rock Steady.” 

More on Aretha Franklin:

Aretha Franklin funeral will be private, family reaffirms

Aretha Franklin to join her family, Rosa Parks at Woodlawn Cemetery

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TMZ, citing court records, also reported Tuesday that Franklin died without a will. Under Michigan law, the assets of an unmarried person who dies without a will are divided equally among any children.

Franklin’s decision to not create a will before she died could prompt a court battle over her assets by creditors or extended family members seeking a portion of her estate. One case Wilson has been involved with is that of musician Ike Turner, whose estate is still being litigated 11 years after his death.

“I just hope (Franklin’s estate) doesn’t end up getting so hotly contested,” Wilson said. “Any time they don’t leave a trust or will, there always ends up being a fight.”

Wilson said many people, famous and not, fail to prepare a will.

“Nobody likes to give careful thought to their own demise,” he said.

Franklin died Thursday at home in Detroit. Her funeral is Aug. 31 at Greater Grace Temple, following public viewings at the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History (Aug. 28-29) and New Bethel Baptist Church (Aug. 30).

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At the Detroit Music Weekend, Aretha Franklin asked the audience to keep her in their prayers. It would be the last time she performed in Detroit.
Detroit Free Press

Contact Detroit Free Press Music Writer Brian McCollum: 313-223-4450 or bmccollum@freepress.com.

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Johanna Konta withdraws from Connecticut Open with viral illness

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Johanna Konta is not seeded for the US Open this year, having been the seventh seed last year

British number one Johanna Konta has pulled out of her second-round tie at the Connecticut Open with a viral illness, tournament organisers say.

The 27-year-old was due to face Spain’s Carla Suarez Navarro on Tuesday at New Haven in the final warm-up event before the US Open, which starts on 27 August.

She has also withdrawn from the doubles competition with American partner Nicole Melichar.

World number 46 Konta beat Germany’s Laura Siegemund in the first round.

She is the only British woman with direct entry into the main draw of the US Open, but Naomi Broady is now two matches away after upsetting fellow Briton Katie Boulter 6-4 4-6 6-1 in the first round of qualifying on Tuesday.

Boulter, the British number two and seeded second in the qualifying tournament, fought back to level the match but Broady eased into a 4-0 lead in the deciding set before claiming victory in one hour 52 minutes.

Broady, 28, will play Spain’s Georgina Garcia Perez in the second round of qualifying.

British number eight Katy Dunne was beaten 6-2 6-1 by Turkey’s Ons Jabeur.

Heather Watson, Harriet Dart, Gabrielle Taylor and Katie Swan are the other British women involved in US Open qualifying this week.

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Facebook says political influence campaign tied to Iranian state media

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Dirty deeds.
Dirty deeds.

Image: Dominic Lipinski – PA Images/getty

Stop me if you’ve heard this one before. 

On Tuesday afternoon Facebook released yet another detailed look at an elaborate political influence campaign taking advantage of its platform. According to the social media giant, this time around Iranian state media attempted to use the power of Facebook to shape political opinions around the globe. Oh, and there was some more Russian stuff, too. 

This, of course, is just three weeks after Facebook revealed in another blog post a separate campaign run by so-called “inauthentic” accounts with the goal of influencing U.S. politics.  

But don’t let this newfound focus on Iran trick you into thinking that the Russia-linked Internet Research Agency has stopped attempting to use the power of Facebook to influence foreign elections. According to Facebook, it probably hasn’t.

“[We’ve] removed Pages, groups and accounts that can be linked to sources the US government has previously identified as Russian military intelligence services,” read the company’s blog post. “This is unrelated to the activities we found in Iran.”

Speaking of Iran, Facebook noted the removal of scores of accounts and pages that it claims exhibited “coordinated inauthentic behavior on Facebook and Instagram” — at least some of which the company claims were tied to Iranian state media. 

Founded in a dorm room.

Founded in a dorm room.

“We’ve removed 652 Pages, groups and accounts for coordinated inauthentic behavior that originated in Iran and targeted people across multiple internet services in the Middle East, Latin America, UK and US,” read the blog post, which gave credit to cybersecurity firm FireEye for helping Facebook uncover a network of bad actors. 

“Based on FireEye’s tip, we started an investigation into ‘Liberty Front Press’ and identified additional accounts and Pages from their network,” continued the announcement. “We are able to link this network to Iranian state media through publicly available website registration information, as well as the use of related IP addresses and Facebook Pages sharing the same admins.”

Basically, every shady government or quasi-government agency is attempting to get in on the Facebook-enabled misinformation fun. 

Maybe keep that in mind the next time you check your News Feed.

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Craig Zadan, producer of movie musicals Chicago and Hairspray, dies of complications from surgery at 69

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Craig Zadan, one of film and TV’s most prolific producers of musicals, has died. He was 69. Zadan’s death was announced Tuesday by NBC Entertainment Chairman Robert Greenblatt.

“It is with profound sadness that I am announcing the passing of my dear friend and colleague Craig Zadan, who died of complications following shoulder replacement surgery,” the statement read. “On behalf of his life partner, Elwood Hopkins, and his producing partner, Neil Meron, we are stunned that the man behind so many incredible film, theatre, and television productions — several of them joyous musicals — was taken away so suddenly. Craig’s distinguished career as a passionate and consummate producer is eclipsed only by his genuine love for the thousands of actors, directors, writers, musicians, designers, and technicians he worked with over the years. His absence will be felt in our hearts and throughout our business.”

Zadan, together with his producing partner Neil Meron of Storyline Entertainment, was responsible for big screen versions of Chicago and Hairspray, as well as five live musicals for NBC that began with The Sound of Music and included this year’s Jesus Christ Superstar Live in Concert. They also were behind the cult hit Smash and produced three Oscar telecasts.

He and Meron produced Gypsy starring Bette Midler for CBS, as well as a string of musicals for ABC’s Wonderful World of Disney such as Cinderella that starred Brandy. In addition, the kept themselves busy on Broadway with revivals of “How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying” and “Promises, Promises.”

Business partners since the ’70s, Zadan and Meron have earned six Academy Awards, five Golden Globes, 17 Emmy Awards, two Peabody Awards, a Grammy Award, six GLAAD Awards, four NAACP Image Awards and two Tony Awards.

Zadan, a native of Florida, was the author of “Sondheim & Co.,” a definitive biography of Stephen Sondheim.

 

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Mueller investigation: Here’s what the fates of Paul Manafort and Michael Cohen will mean for the Russia probe

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A federal jury has found the former Trump campaign manager guilty on five counts of submitting false tax returns, one count of failing to report foreign bank and financial accounts, and two counts of bank fraud.
USA TODAY

WASHINGTON – For months, Russia special counsel Robert Mueller and his team have been ridiculed and undercut in the court of public opinion by none other than President Donald Trump.

On Tuesday, Mueller’s team and federal prosecutors won big in the court of law.

Within an hour, Michael Cohen, the president’s former attorney and personal fixer, pleaded guilty to eight felony charges in New York, while Paul Manafort, his former campaign chairman, was convicted by a federal court jury on eight separate felony counts of financial fraud in Alexandria, Virginia.

Both cases grew out of Mueller’s far-flung investigation into Trump’s inner circle. And the repercussions are sure to be lasting, especially in the White House, as Mueller continues his inquiry into Russian meddling in the 2016 election and possible obstruction of justice by the president. 

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President Donald Trump’s former personal attorney Michael Cohen pleaded guilty to campaign finance and other charges. Deputy U.S. Attorney Robert Khuzami told reporters that Cohen thought “he was above the law.”
USA TODAY

At virtually every turn, Trump has sought to dismiss Mueller’s inquiry as “a hoax.”

And as the president arrived Tuesday evening in Charleston, West Virginia, for a prescheduled rally, he kept up the attack on Mueller and the Justice Department, calling Manafort’s conviction “very sad,” while continuing to assail Mueller’s inquiry as a  “witch hunt.”

But legal analysts said that Tuesday’s rapidly unfolding developments gave new legitimacy to Mueller’s work that even the even the most ardent of Trump supporters could not ignore.

“The saying goes that justice rides a slow horse, but it gets there eventually,” said Bruce Udolf, a criminal defense attorney in Florida who served as an associate independent counsel during the Whitewater investigation. “It got there Tuesday.”

Udolf said Trump’s vocal support of Manafort, especially while the jury was deliberating the past four days, could place him in greater jeopardy with Mueller.

Last week, as Trump was leaving the White House to spend the weekend at his golf club in New Jersey, he lamented Manafort’s plight in the midst of jury deliberations, calling him “a good man.”

“The law makes it a crime to endeavor to obstruct justice,” Udolf said. “I think – by his statements in support of Manafort – he was endeavoring to obstruct justice by attempting to influence the jury.”

Ron Hosko, a former FBI assistant director who worked under Mueller when he was FBI director, said Tuesday’s court victories have no doubt boosted Mueller’s credibility in the public eye.

While the entire case against Manafort was investigated and prosecuted by Mueller’s team, the Cohen investigation was started by Mueller and then transferred to federal prosecutors in Manhattan.

“The public now can see who the president chose to surround himself with,” Hosko said of Trump’s credibility. “These people were within the president’s circle of trust and now are facing prison time.”

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He said that while Tuesday marked clear victories, there appears to be no end in sight for the larger Mueller investigation.

“We’re still left sort of hanging here, but I do think today brought us all one step closer to a conclusion to all of this,” he added.

Though the charges against Manafort were not related to Russia’s interference in the 2016 presidential election, the case marked the first contested prosecution brought to trial by Mueller’s team.  

Even as the case against the veteran political operative wound toward trial, Trump repeatedly questioned its merit – once suggesting that the allegations against Manafort were overblown as if he were famed gangster “Al Capone.”

Though he told reporters that he was saddened by the verdict against his former campaign manager, he added that the trial “didn’t involve me.”

“This has nothing to do with Russian collusion,” Trump said. “This is a witch hunt that ends in disgrace. But this has nothing to do what they started out, looking for Russians involved in our campaign. There were none.”

Nevertheless, Trump’s profile loomed large throughout Manafort’s trial. The government’s star witness, former Manafort business partner Rick Gates, served as deputy campaign manager to Trump and later helped direct the inauguration.

During the trial, Gates acknowledged that he may have billed the inaugural committee for his own personal expenses.

While Trump escalated his attacks this week, calling  Mueller “disgraced and discredited” in a series of posts on Twitter, prosecutors did nothing to acknowledge them.

Asked late Tuesday if prosecutors would be making a statement following the Manafort verdicts, a spokesman offered a single word response entirely in keeping with Mueller’s efforts to remain out of the public eye.

“Nope,” the spokesman said.

The Manafort saga is still unfinished. His separate trial on foreign lobbying and money laundering charges is scheduled to start next month in Washington. And this time, prosecutors have even more evidence – nearly three times as much. 

More: 7 things to know about Robert Mueller, new special counsel for Russia investigation

More: Paul Manafort trial: Key takeaways as the prosecution prepares to rest

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Arrest of undocumented immigrant in Iowa murder case may play into 2018 race

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Police say a man in the country illegally has been charged with murder in the death of Iowa college student Mollie Tibbetts. (Aug. 21)
AP

With two words, the lead investigator in the death of a 20-year-old Iowa college student may have ratcheted up the debate over illegal immigration going into the last three months of the 2018 mid-term elections.

During a press conference on Tuesday, Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation Special Agent Rick Rahn said the man accused of killing Mollie Tibbetts, who went missing in July while jogging in Brooklyn, Iowa, is an “illegal alien.” Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) confirmed that Cristhian Bahena Rivera, 24, is an undocumented immigrant from Mexico.

Rahn’s press conference was barely finished before proponents of stronger border security were flooding Twitter and conservative media outlets, using Rivera’s arrest as proof that the U.S. needs to strengthen immigration laws and punish so-called “sanctuary cities.”

“OUTRAGE!” Tweeted conservative radio host Laura Ingraham.

“If found guilty, he will be reminder why sanctuary cities & open borders are as stupid as the politicians who promote them,” Tweeted former Arkansas governor and presidential candidate Mike Huckabee.

“This goes on and on and on,” attorney David Wohl, a Trump campaign surrogate, said on FOX News.

During a rally in West Virginia, President Donald Trump told the crowd that an “incredible, beautiful young woman” was a victim of immigration laws that are “such a disgrace.”

“Should have never happened,” Trump said of Tibbetts’ death.

Republican Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds slammed the country’s failed immigration system.

“As Iowans, we are heartbroken, and we are angry,” she said. “We are angry that a broken immigration system allowed a predator like this to live in our community, and we will do all we can (to) bring justice to Mollie’s killer.”

Immigration advocates also responded to the news, highlighting studies that show that undocumented immigrants are less likely to commit violent crimes than native-born Americans, and that “sanctuary cities” have lower crime rates than other cities.

But conservatives dismissed the studies. Instead, many, like former Illinois congressman Joe Walsh, immediately drew a connection with the last high-profile murder allegedly committed by an undocumented immigrant.

“First, Kate Steinle. Now, Mollie Tibbetts. Unacceptable,” Walsh Tweeted.

Walsh was referring to the 2015 shooting death of the 32-year-old Steinle, whose case became a flash point throughout the 2016 campaign season. The man accused of killing her — Jose Inez Garcia Zarate — had previously been deported five times and charged with selling marijuana, but had been released by the San Francisco Sheriff’s Department because of its policies that limit cooperation with federal immigration agents.

Throughout the summer of 2016, President Donald Trump seized upon Steinle’s case to decry America’s loose borders and call for the completion of the border wall along the southwest border with Mexico. Republicans in the House of Representatives followed suit, passing a bill known as “Kate’s Law” to increase penalties and prison terms for repeat border-crossers.

Zarate was found not guilty of murder and manslaughter during his trial in November, where he said the shooting was accidental after he picked up a gun wrapped in a T-shirt under a seat on the San Francisco pier. But Trump called that verdict “disgraceful” and Steinle’s death has remained a focal point for anti-immigration groups.

Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center for Immigration Studies, a group that has advised the White House on policies to reduce legal and illegal immigration, said it’s too early to tell whether Tibbetts’ murder will become the political focal point in 2018 that Steinle’s case was in 2016.

“That’s entirely possible,” he said.

But Krikorian said more details need to emerge before that can happen.

Steinle’s case drew such widespread attention because it raised the issue of so-called “sanctuary cities,” local governments that do not fully cooperate with federal immigration authorities. San Francisco is deemed a sanctuary because it does not honor ICE “detainers” — requests to hold suspects for up to 48 hours for the sole purpose of giving ICE time to determine if that person committed any immigration violations. The department ignored such a request when it released Zarate.

Krikorian said the man charged in Tibbetts’ death would have to have a similar background to become a storyline that permeates throughout the 2018 election. But so far, it appears that may not be the case.

In its statement, ICE did not say whether Rivera had any previous contact with federal immigration authorities. It did not say whether he had previously been deported, or whether any judge had ordered him deported.

Krikorian acknowledged that ICE would have quickly publicized any such details if they existed. But absent any previous history with law enforcement, Krikorian said it would be difficult to use Tibbetts’ death as a political rallying cry leading up to November.

The difference, he said, is that the San Francisco case showcased a glaring flaw where local law enforcement are not assisting in federal immigration efforts.

“The real failure comes when the an illegal immigrant is actually in custody and not deported, or has been deported repeatedly but not jailed,” he said.

Barbara Rodriguez of the Des Moines Register contributed.

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