Groups sue EPA over canceled $7 billion solar program intended to help poorer Americans

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By ALEXA ST. JOHN and JENNIFER McDERMOTT, Associated Press

Several groups and nonprofit organizations filed a lawsuit Monday against the Environmental Protection Agency over the canceling of a $7 billion Solar for All program intended to make solar power accessible to more than 900,000 lower-income Americans.

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They say the Trump administration’s termination of the program was illegal and they want a federal judge to direct the EPA to reinstate it. The program is affiliated with another $20 billion in green funding also terminated under President Donald Trump that EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin had characterized as a fraudulent scheme fraught with waste.

The EPA said in an email Monday that it does not comment on litigation.

The lawsuit is the latest legal action against the administration amid its assault on clean energy policy and related funding and programs across the country. Trump has moved to boost production of fossil fuels such as oil, natural gas and coal.

The lawsuit filed in Rhode Island by the Rhode Island AFL-CIO labor organization and others — including the public interest law center Rhode Island Center for Justice and the nonprofit Solar United Neighbors — detailed the importance of the program for local workforces and lower-income communities looking for access to clean-energy project funding.

Patrick Crowley, president of the Rhode Island AFL-CIO, said Monday that the program’s termination kills jobs and will drive up electricity prices.

EPA rescinded Solar for All in August

The Solar for All money was rescinded after Trump’s massive tax and spending law passed in Congress in July. Zeldin said in a statement on social media at the time, “the bottom line is this: EPA no longer has the statutory authority to administer the program or the appropriated funds to keep this boondoggle alive.”

The groups argued in the lawsuit that the law only revoked climate grants not yet awarded by the EPA and that these solar funds were already awarded.

“The Trump administration’s rollback of the Solar for All program is a shameless attempt to prop up fossil fuel companies at the expense of families,” said Kate Sinding Daly, senior vice president for law and policy at the Conservation Law Foundation, one of the nonprofit legal advocacy groups representing the plaintiffs.

“This program would provide families with low incomes access to clean, affordable solar power: energy that lowers bills, improves air quality, and keeps people safer during extreme heat,” she added in a statement.

The lawsuit cites previous EPA estimates that the program would have saved recipients about $400 each year on electricity bills and cumulatively reduced or avoided greenhouse gas emissions by over 30 million metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent.

The program was part of a larger, climate-friendly funding push

The $7 billion Solar for All program was part of the $27 billion “green bank,” formally known as the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund. It was established in the Democratic-backed climate law passed in 2022 under former President Joe Biden.

The other $20 billion, canceled by the Trump administration in March, was slated for eight community development banks and nonprofit organizations for tens of thousands of projects to combat the effects of climate change, such as residential energy efficiency projects to larger-scale investments such as community cooling.

Groups have also sued over the cancelation of that money — with a federal judge saying they must have access to some of the funds — though recently, an appeals court ruled that federal officials can move forward with its termination.

Trump’s assault on environmental policy and regulation

The Trump administration has targeted a host of programs and policies dedicated to clean energy.

Just last week, the administration canceled $7.6 billion in grants for hundreds of climate-friendly projects across 16 states. It has also interfered with nearly complete offshore wind developments, moved to rescind the crucial ‘endangerment finding’ that allows climate regulation, is looking to end greenhouse gas emissions reporting requirements for large polluters, and taken a slew of other deregulatory measures.

Read more of AP’s climate coverage.

The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

Former NFL quarterback Mark Sanchez is now facing a felony charge in Indianapolis altercation

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By MICHAEL MAROT, AP Sports Writer

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Former NFL quarterback Mark Sanchez is now facing a felony charge of battery involving serious bodily injury in addition to the misdemeanor charges stemming from a weekend incident in Indianapolis that led to his arrest.

Marion County prosecutor Ryan Mears made the announcement about the new charge, which carries a potential sentence of one to six years in prison, during a news conference Monday with Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department Chief Chris Bailey. Mears said the investigation is ongoing.

“One of the challenges you have in a case like this is that you are dealing with individuals who are receiving medical care and that’s, obviously, the most important thing, that individuals are treated appropriately,” Mears said. “But once we were provided with additional information about the victim’s current medical condition, it became clear to us that additional charges needed to be filed.”

Sanchez had been scheduled for a court hearing Tuesday on the original charges but that was rescheduled to Nov. 4. Sanchez remains hospitalized and was listed in stable condition Monday morning.

One of Sanchez’s attorneys, James Voyles, declined to comment on the case.

The Fox Sports analyst was pepper-sprayed and stabbed multiple times during a late-night altercation in a downtown Indianapolis alley over the weekend, which resulted in criminal charges against him, according to court records filed Sunday.

A police affidavit alleges that Sanchez, smelling of alcohol, accosted a 69-year-old truck driver who backed into a hotel’s loading docks, leading to a confrontation outside the vehicle that prompted the driver to pull out a knife to defend himself.

Sanchez was hospitalized with stab wounds to his upper right torso, the affidavit signed by a police detective said. The truck driver, identified as P.T., had a cut to his left cheek, it said.

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Mears said his office received an amended probable cause affidavit Monday, which led to the additional charge because the truck driver suffered serious injuries.

Mears said police are still gathering information and have several outstanding warrants.

“The chief and his team continue to work on this matter, continue to track down additional details for us and really supplement that probable cause affidavit,” Mears said. “I cannot say enough good things about the work that took place at IMPD. There’s a ton of information to sift through and gather.”

‘I Got a Lot of People Believing in Me’: Robert Roberson Stares Down Death, Again

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What are set to be the final days of Robert Roberson’s life will be busy. He has lots of people to see before his October 16 execution date. 

He’ll meet with his pro bono lawyer Gretchen Sween and others on his defense team; facing a ticking clock, his lawyers will be scrambling to save his life, as they have for nearly a decade. His wife Manuela Doris Roberson, whom he married in 2022, will come to the Polunsky Unit in Livingston, where men’s death row is located, for special four-hour visits. He’ll sit down for multiple interviews with reporters, as news of his innocence case draws international attention. His mother, brother, friends, and spiritual advisors will stop by. Then, at noon on Thursday, October 16, prison staff will come to take him to the unit that houses Texas’ execution chamber in nearby Huntsville. 

“I was hoping and praying to be gone by now, you know? Gone home,” Roberson told the Texas Observer in an interview at Polunsky last week, referring to his hope that the courts would have recognized his longstanding innocence claim. 

Roberson has an idea of how the rest of his execution day will go—because he’s lived it before. It will be exactly 365 days since his last execution was halted by Texas lawmakers. On that day, courts in Austin argued over whether the killing should proceed, while Roberson and his supporters gathered in Huntsville, expecting him to become the first person in the United States to be executed based on the controversial “shaken baby syndrome” diagnosis. (The diagnosis has been renamed “abusive head trauma,” but it is still commonly referred to as “shaken baby” or “SBS/AHT.”)

Robert Roberson in family pictures including his daughter (Courtesy/Roberson Family, Innocence Project, Gretchen Sween)

The last year has been plagued by uncertainty. In June, Anderson County District Attorney Allyson Mitchell unexpectedly handed Roberson’s case over to the Attorney General’s office, which quickly requested a new execution date. Roberson’s team continued, and continues, waiting to hear from state and federal courts about pending legal maneuvers. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (CCA) has yet to decide whether to reconsider Roberson’s case, eight months after his lawyers filed the request. Last week, his lawyers filed a new request in the federal Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. His defense team has opted not to formally ask the governor for clemency—which wouldn’t address his underlying innocence claim, they reason—instead focusing on getting him a new trial. 

“I think the main thing is not knowing, but continuing, continually, remaining faithful and hopeful and stuff,” said Roberson, who speaks in a thick East Texas drawl, displays vocal tics and repeats phrasing, and often avoids eye contact. In 2018, he was diagnosed with autism—an unrecognized impediment to his legal defense two decades ago, his supporters argue. “Because I’ve got a pretty good defense team, you know, attorneys and stuff and support stuff, you know. And I know they’re not going to give up on me, you know. And I got a lot of people believing in me.” 

Roberson was convicted in 2003 of causing the death of his two-year-old daughter Nikki in what his own former lawyers referred to at trial as a “shaken baby case.” Roberson had rushed Nikki to the Palestine Regional Medical Center hospital when he found her unconscious and not breathing the morning of January 31, 2002. She had been ill most of her short life, being rushed to the hospital on several occasions for suddenly ceasing to breathe, according to court records. Roberson had recently won custody of Nikki, whom he described to the Observer as “a sweet little angel” who didn’t “see no strangers in nobody.” 

She was transferred to Children’s Medical Center in Dallas, where a child abuse specialist noted three symptoms then believed to be indicative of shaking injury: bleeding between the brain and the skull, retinal hemorrhages, and brain swelling. She posited Nikki had been violently shaken. On February 1, 2002, based on the false belief that Nikki’s maternal grandparents had custodial rights, hospital staff took Nikki off of life support without Roberson’s consent. Police arrested him that night on capital murder charges. 

Today, medical professionals no longer presume abuse when they see the three symptoms, once believed to be “virtually unique” to shaking or other extreme circumstances. Now, experts acknowledge illnesses, congenital abnormalities, and even short falls can cause the symptoms. 

“That’s a dramatic shift,” said Keith Findley, co-editor of the 2023 book Shaken Baby Syndrome: Investigating the Abusive Head Trauma Controversy. “From going from a presumption of abuse and a belief that nothing causes it except violent shaking … to now saying a lot of things can cause it, including accidents and diseases and whatnot. You can’t diagnose it on the basis of any particular findings. You have to rule out all plausible alternatives.”

Based on the analysis of several independent medical professionals, Roberson’s current defense believes Nikki died of pneumonia after struggling with chronic illnesses, including apnea and a bleeding disorder, and being improperly prescribed medication that made it more difficult for her to breathe. 

“The overwhelming evidence demonstrating that no crime occurred and that Robert’s daughter died, tragically, from a pneumonia that her doctors missed, has taken years of fighting to amass,” Sween wrote in an October 1 press release. “We can prove that Robert is innocent, and no reasonable jury would find otherwise if presented with all relevant medical evidence.”

SBS diagnoses and prosecutions were common when Roberson was sentenced to death. In the decades since, they’ve proven to be extremely problematic: According to the National Registry of Exonerations, 39 people have been exonerated after being convicted on faulty SBS evidence since 1989, including two in Texas. 

Just last year, the CCA overturned a North Texas man’s SBS-based conviction. Andrew Roark had been sent to prison in 2000 based on the testimony of the same child abuse specialist from Roberson’s case, Dr. Janet Squires. Squires didn’t believe the 13-month-old Roark was caring for, who eventually recovered, had developed injuries from multiple minor falls, as Roark said. He was sentenced to 35 years in prison. 

Dallas-based attorney Gary Udashen was Roark’s appeals attorney for more than two decades, ultimately securing his exoneration last November, when Dallas County dismissed the case. Udashen said it’s significant that issues with SBS-based cases have been “popping up all over the country from appellate courts” and that judges are recognizing the new science.

“A lot of what they said, they could not necessarily have said 10 years ago,” Udashen told the Observer, referring to the CCA’s opinion in Roark’s case. “A lot of what they relied upon was even more recent new science and even more recent new law from other courts.”

Roberson’s attorneys believe that the CCA should make the same determination in Roberson’s case, which is remarkably similar. In an additional complicating factor, Roberson’s case was colored by perceptions of his undiagnosed autism disorder, leading police and jurors to see his lack of seemingly appropriate emotional response as further evidence of guilt.  

Brian Wharton, a former Palestine Police Department sergeant, supervised the early-aughts investigation into Nikki’s death. He remembers being suspicious of Roberson’s behavior at the hospital. 

“We’re there because medical professionals have already said somebody has hurt this child, you know. And so, that’s the focus. Who hurt this child?” Wharton told the Observer in an interview at his church in Onalaska, not far from the Polunsky Unit, where he is now a pastor. 

Wharton testified for the state at Roberson’s 2003 trial, but in recent years he’s completely reversed his stance. Now, he believes Roberson is innocent and the investigation was marred by confirmation bias. He said medical professionals believed Roberson had shaken Nikki, and, since no one hinted that there may have been other possibilities, the investigation focused on supporting that theory. “All along, nobody was looking for anything else,” he said. 

He said if SBS is taken off the table, “The whole thing falls apart. It’s a house of cards.” 

Brian Wharton at his church office on October 1 (Michelle Pitcher)

Exonerees have joined the public rallying behind Roberson, with some gathering for a rally held at the Capitol on October 4. Josh Burns, whose 2015 conviction for child abuse was officially vacated last year after courts reviewed the SBS evidence used against him, addressed the crowd. He had also testified last year in front of the Texas House Committee on Criminal Jurisprudence, the group behind the subpoena that halted Roberson’s 2024 execution. 

“This can happen to anyone,” Burns told the Observer. “You can be going about your normal life and be accused by your government of something so horrific that has complete medical explanations and find yourself in a battle like this. That’s a battle for your life, for your family. In Robert’s case, this is a life and death situation.”

Popular author John Grisham is also publicly supporting Roberson’s innocence claim, with a book coming next year. “Innocence cases, like Robert’s, are harrowing tales with common threads,” he wrote the Observer in an email. “Bad trial lawyers. Overreaching prosecutors. Junk science. State officials who value finality over truth and justice. But not all wrongful conviction death penalty cases have to have a bad ending.”

Representative John Bucy attends the October 4 Capitol rally. (Michelle Pitcher)

Roberson’s wife, who lives in Germany, has known him since 2018, and she was with him the day of his last scheduled execution. She remembers learning that he had received a stay. “My legs broke down,” she told the Observer. “I sat on the floor. It’s one year ago now, and I still feel it.” 

She said she never thought he would get a new execution date, given the pending appeals and all of the experts who came forward to support the idea that Nikki had died of a slew of medical issues, not abuse. “I hope he gets a stay,” she said. “That’s on my heart now and my mind. But there are possibilities we have to talk about if [the execution] happens. It’s hard to talk about.” 

Back at Polunsky, Roberson struggled in his interview with the Observer to think of a message to leave people with. He ultimately said that he hopes his story, however it ends, will mean something. 

“I would want them to keep on fighting, you know, no matter what happens October 16, you know, and to be able to make a change in the system.”

The post ‘I Got a Lot of People Believing in Me’: Robert Roberson Stares Down Death, Again appeared first on The Texas Observer.

Fishermen in Trinidad and Tobago fear for their lives and jobs after US strikes in the Caribbean

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By ANSELM GIBBS, Associated Press

PORT-OF-SPAIN, Trinidad (AP) — On a recent afternoon, Kenrick Modie finished untangling his fishing net in a quiet Caribbean village.

As he slipped into a hammock at his home overlooking the sea, he worried that his life and livelihood could be wiped out by a U.S. military strike.

Modie lives in the Caribbean twin-island nation of Trinidad and Tobago, which is now entangled in a geopolitical face-off between the United States and Venezuela, just 11 miles away.

U.S. President Donald Trump, “is giving instructions to shoot and kill people,” Modie said about recent U.S. military strikes targeting suspected drug vessels in the Caribbean as it bulks up its military presence in the region. “What could we do? We’re just a little dot.”

His concerns heightened after Trump declared in a memo obtained by The Associated Press that the U.S. was in an “armed conflict” with drug cartels in the Caribbean, alleging they are trying to bring “deadly poison” to U.S. shores. And on Friday, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said he had ordered another strike on a small boat he accused of carrying drugs in the waters off Venezuela — the fourth since revelations that Trump told lawmakers he was treating drug traffickers as unlawful combatants.

Meanwhile, Venezuela has accused the U.S. of military buildup and aggression, prompting President Nicolás Maduro to place the country’s military and civilians willing to take up arms on high alert.

Stuck in the middle is Trinidad and Tobago, a nation with a multimillion-dollar fishing industry that employs thousands of fishermen who cast their nets almost daily to sustain themselves and their family.

‘If we die, we die’

Trinidad and Tobago’s Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar has said that drug cartels have contributed to pain and suffering in her country, and she has urged the U.S. to “kill them all violently.”

She also said she is willing to grant the U.S. access to Trinidad and Tobago, if needed, so Americans can defend Guyana from neighboring Venezuela, which has claimed two-thirds of Guyana as its own.

Maduro said that Persad-Bissessar’s willingness to grant such access is like declaring war against Venezuela. The Venezuelan president has called for a return to good relations with its Caribbean neighbor, even as Trinidad and Tobago’s government claims there’s no bad blood between the countries.

While those in authority trade words and military commanders ramp up their posturing, dozens of fishermen in Trinidad and Tobago feel their lives are at risk given the ongoing U.S. strikes and escalation of tensions with Venezuela.

“If we die, we die, that’s how this life is,” Modie said.

He fears being killed by a U.S. military strike while out fishing because he believes his boat could be mistaken for a drug-smuggling vessel. Modie said he hasn’t seen substantial evidence that those killed in the U.S. strikes were indeed transporting drugs. He also worries about innocent fishermen being killed and falsely labelled as narco-terrorists by authorities, with the dead men being unable to clear their names.

Fishing in fear

Only seven miles separate Trinidad and Venezuela at their closest point. On a clear day, Venezuela is visible from the village of Icacos, which is located on Trinidad’s southwestern tip.

Driving around Icacos and neighboring Cedros village, dozens of boats strewn along the shoreline show how heavily these communities depend on fishing.

Fishermen in these two villages say they are already under threat from pirates, and the military buildup at sea now adds yet another threat.

Watching three other fishermen unload their catch for the day at the Cedros Fishing Complex, Kamal Bikeran said his crew now stays in shallower waters and aren’t going as far out to sea as before, because of the tension involving the three countries.

“The U.S. has come there, and the Venezuelan military is saying they are more present, so you have to watch out,” Bikeran said. “At any point in time, outside there, you could be taken out.”

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Forced to fish in shallower waters, Bikeran and other fishermen said the heightened regional tension is drying up their livelihoods, as they are now catching fewer fish.

Trump gave fishermen a reason to worry after the first U.S. military strike on Sept. 2, which he said killed 11 suspected narco-terrorists.

“Boat traffic is substantially down,” Trump said in early September. “I don’t even know about fishermen. They may say, ‘I’m not getting on the boat.’”

Two more fatal U.S. strikes have since followed. At least two of the three operations were carried out on vessels that originated from Venezuela, riling some Caribbean leaders.

Speaking at the United Nations General Assembly in late September, Caribbean leaders referred to the region as a zone of peace.

Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley appealed for dialogue to avoid a war between the U.S. and Venezuela. The prime minister of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Ralph Gonsalves, described the foreign militarization of the waters near Venezuela as “exceedingly troubling.”

Fishing in fear has become the new reality, said Shyam Hajarie, who has been a fisherman for more than 40 years. The Cedros native, like others, depends on his daily catches to support his family. He’s unsure if the military buildup in the Caribbean would soon affect fish prices at the market.

“Just praying that everything works out with this situation with Venezuela and the U.S.,” he said. “That they make peace and not war.”