Trump, Maine and public health
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Maine is joining with 22 other states to sue President Donald Trump's administration after it moved last week to cut more than $11 billion in public health funding allocated in response to the COVID-...
From NEWS CENTER Maine
New Jersey joined a coalition of states Tuesday suing the Trump administration to stop its plan to cut more than $11 billion in funding for public health initiatives, including $350 million to New Jer...
From USA Today
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Three troopers acted “reasonably” when they fatally shot a man on a bridge that connects New Hampshire and Maine last summer, Maine Attorney General’s Aaron Frey has ruled.
The troopers who shot Weston reasonably believed he was posing an imminent threat of serious bodily injury or death when they shot him.
Trent Weston, of New Hampshire, was shot by police during an early morning standoff in late August, after killing his wife and son, officials said at the time.
The Maine Attorney General's Office has determined that officers involved in a standoff last summer on the Piscataqua River Bridge were justified when they shot and killed an armed New Hampshire man.
Alexander Treshinsky, 35, of Kittery, Maine, is accused of sending the victim a series of threatening, vulgar, racist and xenophobic messages.
Attorney General Aaron Frey is advising Mainers to delete sensitive information and have DNA samples destroyed.
The Maine and New Hampshire state police officers who shot a man on the Piscataqua River Bridge in August were justified in using deadly force, Maine Attorney General Aaron Frey
Maine Attorney General Aaron Frey has joined several multistate lawsuits against the Trump administration related to immigration, privacy rights and federal funding.