Friday, November 22, 2019 l 7B
CONCRETE
Rucker Concrete Leaky basements. Foundation Repair. Basement floor repair. Sub pump system insulation and repair. (779)771-2315
GENERAL MAINTENANCE
ALL PRO CARPENTRY Handy Man - Kitchen - Bath - Windows - Doors - Basements - Decks - Egress Windows - Remodeling - Janesville - WI - Fully Insured (608)758-1938
GENERAL MAINTENANCE
ALL PRO CARPENTRY Handy Man - Kitchen - Bath - Windows - Doors - Basements - Decks - Egress Windows - Remodeling - Janesville - WI - Fully Insured (608)758-1938
PAINTING & WALLPAPER
Painter for HireOver 20 years worth of expe-rience. Quality work done at a reasonable price. Ask for Dave (608)868-3426 or cell (402)689-9217
SNOW REMOVAL
Joe PaniaguaPlowing and salting.
Commercial and Residential. Free Estimates. Senior Discount. (608)751-7736
TOBY’S REMOVAL LLCWe haul anything from
electronics to scrap metal ($20 for TV). Clean-out
available for houses and buildings. Small demo-
lition available. No job too small. Insured.
CALL TOBY 608-208-7464
PUBLISHER’S NOTICEThis newspaper will not know-ingly accept any advertising which has the intent and/or ef-fect of violating any local, state, or national laws and/or ordi-nances which make it illegal to advertise any preference, limita-tion, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handi-cap, age, or national origin with regard to employment. Our readers are hereby in-formed that all positions for employment advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. Read-ers that feel that they have ex-perienced discrimination in re-gards to employment are urged to contact: The State of Wis-consin, Equal Rights Division, Department of Industry, Labor, and Human Relations in Madi-son. 608-266-6860
$$ Buying $$ STEREO EQUIPMENT
60’s, 70’s and 80’s *920-303-1130*
6 Month old Border Collie. Black and white. Born May 1st. Free to good home. (608)289-4173
Female Cat, 2 and a half years old, still has claws, fixed, tabby cat; white, brown, black, and gray. (608)289-9884
Suncast Wood Style Outdoor Screen Enclosure 8 panels, free standing, white. All eight panels with connecting rods are in excellent condition. Each sec-tion is 23 inches wide, and 44 inches tall There are 8 sections, total 14 1/2 feet overall. Sale price: $75. Call 608.290.3169
Apple Watch Series 3 with CELLULAR & GPS! 44 mm band size, Gold with 8 watch bands included. This watch can make phone calls and receive and send texts without having your phone with you! Excellent condition. Comes with charger. Used now with Verizon but pur-chased unlocked. $295. Call 608.290.3169
Where Will You Go?Check out The Gazette’s Sunday Living Section
Citizen Eco-Drive Men’s Watch Great Christmas gift! El-egant Men’s high quality watch. Has Bluetooth, almost new. Original price was $495. Selling for $165. Originally purchased from a Janesville jeweler, as a gift that went unused. Stainless Steel. Black leather band. Call 608.290.3169
FIREWOOD for sale. Mixed hardwood. Full sized pickup load (over a face cord) $125. (608) 931-2351
LAST CHANCE FIREWOOD CLEARANCE for outside burners 20”-60” lengths unsplit hardwoods, your truck or trailer $25-$50 per load, 3 mi. South of
Janesville (608)436-6236
AKC Registered Golden Re-triever Puppies Two males, 9 weeks old, $1,000 For more information call (815)378-8986
Border Collie Pupies 8 weeks old. Have had shots. Dewormed. Ready to go. (608)289-4173
The Gazette NATION/WORLD
BRIEFSCompiled from Gazette wire services
Law requiring tax returns struckLOS ANGELES—President Donald Trump does not
have to disclose his tax returns to appear as a candidate on
California’s primary ballot next spring, the state Supreme
Court ruled unanimously Thursday.
The law, the first of its kind in the nation and aimed
squarely at Trump, violates a specification of the state
constitution calling for an “inclusive open presidential
primary ballot,” the court said.
“Ultimately, it is the voters who must decide whether
the refusal of a ‘recognized candidate throughout the
nation or throughout California for the office of Presi-
dent of the United States’ to make such information avail-
able to the public will have consequences at the ballot
box,” Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye wrote in the 7-0
decision.
Trump has broken with tradition among presidential
candidates by refusing to disclose his financial informa-
tion.
A U.S. judge had temporarily blocked the state law in
response to a different lawsuit, and the high court ruled
quickly because the deadline to file tax returns to get on
the primary ballot is next week.
DOJ to act to resume executionsWASHINGTON—Attorney General William Barr
told The Associated Press on Thursday that he would
take the Trump administration’s bid to restart federal
executions after a 16-year hiatus to the Supreme Court
if necessary.
Barr’s comments came hours after a district court
judge temporarily blocked the administration’s plans
to start executions next month. The administration is
appealing the decision, and Barr said he would take the
case to the high court if Thursday’s ruling stands.
He said the five inmates set to be executed are a small
portion of 62 death row inmates.
“There are people who would say these kinds of delays
are not fair to the victims, so we can move forward with
our first group,” Barr said aboard a government plane to
Montana after he met with local and federal law enforce-
ment officials in Cleveland.
The attorney general unexpectedly announced in
July that the government would resume executions next
month, ending an informal moratorium on federal capital
punishment as the issue receded from the public domain.
Ex-mayor pleads guilty to chargesBALTIMORE—Former Baltimore Mayor Catherine
Pugh pleaded guilty to conspiracy and tax evasion charges
in federal court Thursday, publicly acknowledging wrong-
doing related to her “Healthy Holly” book deals for the
first time since The Baltimore Sun first began exposing
them in March.
The plea came one day after federal prosecutors
alleged in an 11-count indictment that Pugh’s self-pub-
lishing enterprise amounted to little more than a crimi-
nal racket. It comes eight months after the Sun’s revela-
tions and subsequent raids on Pugh’s homes and City Hall
by FBI and IRS agents torpedoed her political career and
forced her from office.
Her acceptance of guilt, though on a narrower set of
charges than her indictment laid out, could likely land
Pugh, 69, in prison. Her sentencing has been scheduled
for Feb. 27.
Standing before U.S. District Judge Deborah K. Chasa-
now in the downtown federal courthouse, Pugh, a Dem-
ocrat, spoke softly as she confirmed she understood the
sweeping allegations against her and the potential for her
to spend years behind bars.
She pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud,
conspiracy to defraud the United States and two counts
of tax evasion.
‘Ghost gun’ used in school shootingLOS ANGELES—The 16-year-old boy who fatally
shot two fellow students and wounded three others last
week at a Southern California high school used an unreg-
istered, untraceable “ghost gun,” Los Angeles County
Sheriff Alex Villanueva said Thursday.
Villanueva told media outlets that Nathaniel Berhow’s
.45 caliber, 1911-model replica semi-automatic pistol was
assembled from gun parts and did not have a serial num-
ber.
Such weapons are a growing problem for law enforce-
ment around the country because the parts are easy to
obtain and the guns take limited expertise to build. In
Southern California, federal authorities say one-third of
all the firearms seized are ghost guns.
California has among the strictest gun laws in the coun-
try, but they are based on traditional firearms that are
made by manufacturers and labeled so ownership can
be traced.
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
President Donald Trump insisted Thursday that the Navy “will NOT be taking away Warfighter and Navy Seal Eddie Galla-gher’s Trident Pin,” insert-ing himself into an ongo-ing legal review of the sail-or’s ability to hold onto the pin that designates him a SEAL.
The Navy on Wednes-day notified Chief Petty Officer Edward Gallagher that he will face a review early next month to deter-mine if he should remain on the elite force.
Gallagher was acquit-ted of a murder charge in the stabbing death of an Islamic State militant captive, but a military jury convicted him of pos-ing with the corpse while in Iraq in 2017. He was then demoted to chief.
His lawyers have accused the Navy of trying to remove the SEAL des-ignation in retaliation for Trump’s decision last week to restore Gallagher’s rank.
Rear Adm. Charlie Brown, a Navy spokes-man, responded Thursday: “The Navy follows the law-ful orders of the President.
We will do so in case of an order to stop the adminis-trative review of SOC Gal-lagher’s professional qual-ification. We are aware of the President’s tweet and we are awaiting further guidance.”
Trump tweeted Thurs-day, “This case was han-dled very badly from the beginning” and he urged those involved to “Get back to business!”
Gallagher filed a com-plaint with the inspector general accusing a rear admiral of insubordina-tion for defying Trump’s actions. Rear Adm. Collin Green is the Naval Special Warfare commander.
“How can Adm. Green credibly preach about pre-serving good order and discipline while publicly flouting the orders of the commander in chief ?” attorney Timothy Parla-tore said.
Two U.S. officials famil-iar with the case but not authorized to speak pub-licly said Wednesday that discussions about conven-ing a review board began after Gallagher’s convic-tion in July. They said the decision was not in reac-tion to Trump’s decision to restore Gallagher’s rank.
Trump says Navy won’t withdraw
SEAL designation