Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/696762
Owners would be re- quired to report lost or sto- len guns to law enforce- ment. And the measure would reverse part of a 2014 voter-approved initia- tive by making it a felony to steal any gun, no matter its value. Newsom, a Democrat, is running for governor in 2018 on a platform that in- cludes gun control and le- galizing recreational mar- ijuana. "Enough massacres, death, tears, and hate — it's time to take action and save lives," Newsom said in a statement Thursday. He said his proposal will give voters "the opportunity to keep guns and ammo out of the hands of violent, dangerous, hateful people. America has too many guns and too much hate. The re- sult is the massacre in Or- lando, and dozens of other gun deaths every single day." Opponents have said the proposed restrictions would do little to stop gun deaths while making criminals of many law-abiding gun own- ers. "Californians believe in more civil liberties, not fewer freedoms," Chuck Michel, co-chairman of The Coalition for Civil Lib- erties, said in a statement. "Gavin Newsom's political maneuver will be defeated because it does nothing to stop the next ISIS-inspired attack." A Field Poll in January found 80 percent of Cali- fornians supporting back- ground checks for buying ammunition and 58 per- cent favoring outlawing the possession of large-ca- pacity magazines. Newsom and Democratic lawmakers who control the state Legislature have been competing to pass gun con- trol measures this year, though some of their pro- posals differ. Some Demo- crats fear Newsom's initia- tive will motivate support- ers of gun-owners' rights in the November election. Guns FROMPAGE1 and ask for an amount less thantheyhadinpreviousat- tempts. Goodwin said while the vote would change article four, there was no intention of doing away with the right for people to vote for super- visor compensation. Supervisor Bob Williams said he favored the first, sec- ondandsixthoptionstotake back to his voters. Supervi- sor Burt Bundy said it was important to simplify the increase, while Supervisor SteveChamblinsaiditwould be better to keep the salary closer to the median income of a Tehama County family. Each supervisor will meet with people in their district and ask about either a one- time$500or$1,000amonth increase every other year over a three-, four- or five- year period. Pay FROM PAGE 1 RICHPEDRONCELLI—THEASSOCIATEDPRESSFILE California Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks at the Californians for Safety and Justice conference in Sacramento. By Michael Biesecker The Associated Press WASHINGTON Former Secretary Hillary Clinton failed to turn over a copy of a key message involv- ing problems caused by her use of a private home- brew email server, the State Department con- firmed Thursday. The dis- closure makes it unclear what other work-related emails may have been de- leted by the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee. The email was included within messages ex- changed Nov. 13, 2010, be- tween Clinton and one of her closest aides, Deputy Chief of Staff Huma Abe- din. At the time, emails sent from Clinton's Black- Berry device and routed through her private clin- tonemail.com server in the basement of her New York home were being blocked by the State Department's spam filter. A suggested remedy was for Clinton to obtain a state.gov email ac- count. "Let's get separate ad- dress or device but I don't want any risk of the per- sonal being accessible," Clinton responded to Abe- din. Clinton never used a government account that was set up for her, instead continuing to rely on her private server until leav- ing office. The email was not among the tens of thou- sands of emails Clinton turned over to the agency in response to public re- cords lawsuits seeking copies of her official cor- respondence. Abedin pro- vided a copy from her own inbox after the State De- partment asked her to return any work-related emails. That copy of the email was publicly cited last month in a blister- ing audit by the State De- partment's inspector gen- eral that concluded Clinton and her team ignored clear internal guidance that her email setup violated fed- eral standards and could have left sensitive mate- rial vulnerable to hackers. "While this exchange was not part of the ap- proximately 55,000 pages provided to the State De- partment by former Secre- tary Clinton, the exchange was included within the set of documents Ms. Abedin provided the department in response to our March 2015 request," State De- partment spokesman John Kirby told The Associated Press on Thursday. Clinton campaign spokesman Brian Fallon did not immediately re- spond to questions Thurs- day about why Clinton failed to provide it to the State Department last year. Clinton's lawyer, David Kendall, also did not im- mediately respond to a re- quest for comment. The email was among documents released un- der court order Wednes- day to the conservative le- gal advocacy group Judi- cial Watch, which has sued the State Department over access to public records related to the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee's service as the nation's top diplomat be- tween 2009 and 2013. The case is one of about three dozen lawsuits over access to records related to Clin- ton, including one filed by the AP. Before turning over her emails to the department for review and potential public release, Clinton and her lawyers withheld thou- sands of additional emails she said were clearly per- sonal, such as those involv- ing what she described as "planning Chelsea's wed- ding or my mother's fu- neral arrangements, con- dolence notes to friends as well as yoga routines, fam- ily vacations." Clinton has never out- lined in detail what cri- teria she and her lawyers used to determine which emails to release and which to delete, but her 2010 email with Abedin appears clearly work-re- lated under the State De- partment's own criteria for agency records under the U.S. Freedom of Infor- mation Act. Dozens of the emails sent or received by Clinton through her private server were later determined to contain classified material. The FBI has been investi- gating for months whether Clinton's use of the private email server imperiled gov- ernment secrets. Agents re- cently interviewed several of Clinton's top aides, in- cluding Abedin. As part of the probe, Clinton turned over the hard drive from her email server to the FBI. It had been wiped clean, and Clinton has said she did not keep copies of the emails she choose to with- hold. PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE Clinton failed to hand over key email to State Department By Scott Mcfetridge The Associated Press DES MOINES, IOWA One of the six men long identified in an iconic World War II photograph showing the raising of the American flag at Iwo Jima was actu- ally not in the image, the Marine Corps announced Thursday after conducting an investigation prompted by the claims of two ama- teur historians. The Marines formed a re- view panel earlier this year after the two history buffs studied a number of photos shot during two flag-rais- ings atop Mount Suribachi during an intense battle be- tween American and Japa- nese forces in 1945. They claimed the identifications made by the Marines of the six men in the famous photo by Associated Press photographer Joe Rosen- thal included mistakes, and after the review, the Ma- rines Corps agreed. "Our history is impor- tant to us, and we have a responsibility to ensure it's right," Marine Comman- dant Gen. Robert Neller said in a statement. A panel found that Pri- vate First Class Harold Schultz, of Detroit, was in the photo and that Navy Pharmacist's Mate 2nd Class John Bradley wasn't. Bradley had participated in an earlier flag-raising on Mount Suribachi, and his role took on a central role after his son, James Brad- ley, wrote a best-selling book about the flag rais- ers, "Flags of Our Fathers," which was later made into a movie directed by Clint Eastwood. James Bradley declined to comment Thursday when reached by phone. However, he told the AP in May that the Marines' decision to investigate the matter led him to believe his father confused the first and sec- ond raisings of the flag. "My father raised a flag on Iwo Jima," Bradley said. "The Marines told him way after the fact, 'Here's a pic- ture of you raising the flag.' He had a memory of him raising a flag, and the two events came together." Random House, the pub- lisher of "Flags of Our Fa- thers," released a state- ment Thursday noting that James Bradley had al- ready concluded his father wasn't in the famed photo. It said he was working on a new afterward to his book, which will be included with the digital editions soon and with later print edi- tions. The Marines began a re- view after being contacted by researchers working on a Smithsonian Channel doc- umentary spurred by ama- teur historians Eric Krelle, of Omaha, Nebraska, and Stephen Foley, of Wexford, Ireland, whose questions about the photo were first reported by the Omaha World-Herald in 2014. More than 6,500 U.S. ser- vicemen died in the battle at Iwo Jima, a tiny island 660 miles south of Tokyo that was deemed vital to the U.S. war effort because Japanese fighter planes based there were inter- cepting American bomber planes. The invasion be- gan on Feb. 19, 1945, with about 70,000 Marines bat- tling 18,000 Japanese sol- diers for 36 days. Besides those killed, about 20,000 Americans were wounded. Only about 200 Japanese soldiers were captured, with the others killed in the fighting. Krelle and Foley com- pared a number of images shot of an earlier flag-rais- ing and the raising of a sec- ond, larger flag captured by Rosenthal. They found dis- crepancies between what the men were wearing, their weapons and equip- ment that had, prompting Krelle and Foley to argue that some of the Marines had been misidentified and that Bradley participated in the first flag-raising but not the second effort that made for the famous image. The Marines now agree that Schultz, who died in 1995 at age 70, helped raise the flag, along with Harlon Block, Rene Gagnon, Ira Hayes, Franklin Sousley and Michael Strank. Block, Sousley and Strank died at Iwo Jima be- fore the photo was distrib- uted in the U.S. Neller said it's important to set the record straight but that the photo was never about the individu- als shown in the image. "Simply stated, our fight- ing spirit is captured in that frame, and it remains a symbol of the tremen- dous accomplishments of our Corps — what they did together and what they rep- resent remains most impor- tant. That doesn't change," Neller said. Matthew Morgan, a re- tired Marine lieutenant col- onel who helped produce the Smithsonian Channel documentary that will air July 3, said he's thankful people can finally learn of Schultz's role on Mount Suribachi. Schultz, who was wounded at Iwo Jima, moved to Los Angeles and worked for the post office after the war, apparently never mentioning his part in the flag-raising. "The men most worthy of honor are those who don't seek it, and Harold epitomizes that," Morgan said. REVIEW PANEL Man in Iwo Jima flag raising photo misidentified By Erica Werner The Associated Press WASHINGTON Exhausted but exuberant, House Dem- ocrats vowed to fight on for gun control Thursday as they ended their high- drama House floor sit-in with songs, prayers and de- fiant predictions of success. Republicans offered a dose of political reality, deny- ing House Democratic de- mands and holding a Sen- ate vote designed to show a bipartisan gun compromise can't pass. "They're staging protests. They're trying to get on TV. They're sending out fund- raising solicitations," House Speaker Paul Ryan com- plained in an angry denun- ciation of the Democrats' 25- hour occupation of the Cap- itol chamber. "If this is not a political stunt, then why are they trying to raise money off of this, off of a tragedy?" Ryan said the House would not be giving in to Democrats' calls for votes on legislation expanding back- ground checks for gun buy- ers and keeping people on the no-fly list from getting guns in the wake of the Or- lando shooting. And in the Senate, GOP leaders sched- uled a vote on a biparti- san compromise by moder- ate Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, but only to show the "no-fly" legisla- tion does not command the 60 votes needed to pass. A visibly deflated Collins suggested Senate leaders were intentionally draining support from her bill by al- lowing a GOP alternative to also come to a vote. "Let us not miss an op- portunity to get something done," she pleaded on the Senate floor. But Republi- can leaders, unmoved, were ready to move on. "I think we need to be en- gaged in something more constructive that would have actually stopped shoot- ersliketheOrlandoshooter," said the No. 2 Senate Repub- lican, John Cornyn of Texas. Yet while they may have lost the legislative battles at hand, Democrats on both sides of the Capitol were congratulating themselves on a remarkable success in gaining attention for their demands for action to curb the widespread availabil- ity of firearms, first by a 15- hour Senate filibuster last week and then with their extraordinary occupation of the House floor. That latest effort broke up around midday Thurs- day after going through the night, even after Ryan moved up the Fourth of July recess and gaveled a chaotic House out of session in the early morning hours. Dem- ocrats chanted, "Shame! Shame!" and "No bill, no break." On Thursday Democrats streamed onto the steps of the East Front of the Capi- tol, where cheering crowds welcomed them with cries of "We're with you!" under hu- mid skies. Rep. John Lewis of Georgia, the civil rights icon who helped lead the sit-in, urged the crowd not to give up and to vote in the fall elections. "We're going to win," Lewis declared. "The fight is not over. This is just one step." Lewis' voice was firm as he evoked phrases from the civil rights movement, but the 76-year-old also showed his age and the hours of protest as members around him called "Help him up" as he stood on a makeshift podium to speak. For hours on the floor of the House, Lewis had led members in delivering speeches that mixed victory declarations with promises not to back down in their drive to curb firearm vio- lence. Placards with photos of gun victims were prom- inently displayed. As night wore into morning some members rested with pil- lows and blankets, sustain- ing themselves with snacks sent over by allied Demo- crats in the Senate. SIT-IN A er Capitol all-nighter, Dems push on for gun control JOE ROSENTHAL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE U.S. Marines of the 28th Regiment, 5th Division, raise the American flag atop Mt. Suribachi, Iwo Jima, Japan. The email was not among the tens of thousands of emails Clinton turned over to the agency in response to public records lawsuits seeking copies of her official correspondence. MONTELEROYHARRIS August 16, 1952 ~ May 23, 2016 InLovingMemory Monte Leroy Harris was born August 16, 1952 in Corn- ing, CA to Bert and Jacqueline Harris and passed away at home, May 23, 2016 at the age of 63. Monte attended local schools. He had been a truck driver for the last 40 years, the majority of that time haul- ing logs, which he learned from his dad and passed onto his son. Monte enjoyed hunting, fishing, camping, four wheeling and being the camp cook. He was an excellent mechanic and fabricator and loved working on his jeep. He was a loving husband, father, grandfather, uncle and big brother. Monte is survived by his wife, Kelly, son Bert, grandchildren, Trystan and Ryanne, siblings Cindy Purcell, Dale Mason, Vicky Harris, Rocky Harris, Kim Har- ris, Pat Harris, Toni Vigil, and Tad Harris, numerous nie- ces and nephews and a lot of good friends. Monte will be greatly missed by all who knew and loved him. A celebration of life will be held on Saturday, June 25th at 2:00 pm at Woodson Bridge Park. Obituaries FRIDAY, JUNE 24, 2016 REDBLUFFDAILYNEWS.COM | NEWS | 9 A

