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    fox-news/us/us-regions/southeast/kentucky

    Baby formula shortage: Kentucky family reveals their ‘stressful’ drama

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    It’s a nightmarish thought for parents — not being able to feed your baby.

    But that’s exactly what’s top of mind right now for scores of families across the U.S.

    Baby formula is currently in tight supply — and as a result, parents and caregivers who are trying to find formula for their little ones are taking to social media to share their worries, concerns and ideas.

    “We moved to Kentucky to raise a family. Never did I think I would have a problem finding food for my baby in America.” 

    Russell Bleck, a husband and father in Lexington, Kentucky, of two kids — daughter Aurora, age 3, and baby son Asher, just 6 weeks old — said he is increasingly nervous about the baby formula shortage.

    He said he finds it “very stressful” and a “real problem for real people.”

    “We first noticed the formula shortage in February,” Bleck, 33, told Fox News Digital via an email exchange on Friday morning.

    The Bleck family of Lexington, Kentucky. Dad Russell Bleck (right) talked to Fox News Digital about his desperate search for baby formula for the family’s newborn son. His wife, Bre, is at left; daughter Aurora is at center. (The Bleck Family )

    “However, it didn’t impact us until a couple of weeks ago,” he said. 

    “I saw a friend of ours make a Facebook post [about] not being able to find her brand. She recently had a double mastectomy, so milk production wasn’t an option,” he said.

    Bleck detailed his struggle in finding formula for his small baby. 

    “They were completely out of every brand of formula. I couldn’t even switch brands.” 

    “We were on our last can, so I ran up to the store at 11 p.m. right before they closed. They were completely out of every brand of formula. I couldn’t even switch brands.” 

    He added, “The panic of possibly not being able to feed my baby was intense.”

    This gorgeous baby is a member of the Bleck family in Lexington, Kentucky. (Bleck Family )

    Bleck said that as a dad, he “never even thought” about a scarcity of baby formula. Nonetheless, he is right now desperate for solutions.

    “I jumped into gear and spent all night online,” he said. “After ordering from 5 different places, only one order was fulfilled for one can. The rest were either canceled or delayed — even today,” he said, meaning on Friday, May 6, 2022. 

    “These are real problems for real people.” 

    Bleck said little Asher uses Enfamil Gentlease, but at this point the family is “open to anything.”

    The Bleck family’s two young children are pictured here — daughter Aurora and baby son Asher.  (The Bleck Family )

    Bleck said that so far, he and his wife have been able to use social media and parent groups to find the brand they use. 

    “If that doesn’t work,” he said, “we have had friends or family swing by the baby section in other states. We send them money via Venmo or Cashapp — and they ship it to us.”

    “This is really stressful,” said dad Russell Bleck to Fox News Digital. “Never did I think I would have a problem finding food for my baby in America.” (The Bleck Family )

    He continued, “This is really stressful. My wife and I are survivors of the mass shooting in Las Vegas [in the fall of 2017]. We moved to Kentucky to raise a family,” he added. 

    “Never did I think I would have a problem finding food for my baby in America.” 

    Bleck also said he is frustrated by the mainstream media’s coverage of this shortage. 

    BABY FORMULA SHORTAGE SPARKING PANIC AMONG PARENTS

    “It would be nice if the MSM would get back to covering what is impacting people’s lives,” he said. 

    “For the first time in my lifetime, I am seeing everyone from all walks of life hurt.” 

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    “It doesn’t matter who you are,” he added. “You are feeling this economy.”

    Paula Deen’s amazing mint julep recipe for Kentucky Derby Day

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    The Kentucky Derby — held every first Saturday of May — takes place on May 7, 2022, this year. 

    Many have called it the most exciting two minutes in sports. It’s the first leg of the American Triple Crown — followed by the Preakness Stakes (held on Saturday, May 21, 2022, this year), then the Belmont Stakes (on June 11, 2022).

    Millions of people who can’t experience it in person will be watching — with many also looking to sip a mint julep in honor of the event (or maybe just because).

    “During Derby Week, Louisville is the capital of the world,” John Steinbeck wrote years ago.

    Celebrity chef and cookbook author Paula Deen offers up a mint julep recipe that’s worth checking out.

    “The Kentucky Derby, whatever it is — a race, an emotion, a turbulence, an explosion — is one of the most beautiful and violent and satisfying things I have ever experienced.”

    KENTUCKY DERBY TRAVEL GUIDE: WHERE TO STAY, EAT AND TRAVEL IN LOUISVILLE

    It’s also an event that millions of people watch every year — from their homes or their local watering holes — with many looking to sip a mint julep in honor of the event (or maybe just because!).

    Chef Paula Deen is all set for the Kentucky Derby on May 7, 2022.  (Kelli Boyd)

    Fox News Digital reached out to Paula Deen, who has her own thirst-quenching mint julep recipe — and who graciously agreed to share it with readers.

    “Put on your best hat, turn on your television and sit back with this fabulous mint julep — and you’ll think you are there!”

    Deen told Fox News Digital, “If you can’t go to the Kentucky Derby, just bring the derby home to you!”

    “Put on your best hat,” she added, “turn on your television and sit back with this fabulous mint julep — and you’ll think you are there!”

    Chef Paula Deen discusses her cookbook, “At The Southern Table with Paula Deen” at Build Studio on Sept. 22, 2017, in New York City.   (Slaven Vlasic/Getty Images)

    So now, without further ado, here is Paula Deen’s recipe for mint julep in honor of Derby Day. 

    Ingredients

    crushed ice

    1 cup water

    1 cup sugar

    1 bunch mint

    bourbon

    (Prep time: 3 minutes; cook time: 3 minutes; servings: 3)

    This gorgeous and refreshing mint julep is ready to be consumed!

    Instructions

    1. In a small saucepot, add sugar and water; stir.

    2. Let simmer or until sugar dissolves. 

    3. Steep mint in the simple syrup. 

    4. Strain the mint from the syrup. Let cool.

    5. Fill a julep glass with crushed ice. 

    6. Pour a few tablespoons of the mint simple syrup over the ice, then fill the glass with bourbon. 

    7. Garnish with mint.

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    Enjoy!

    Kentucky Derby 2022: What to know about first leg of horse racing’s Triple Crown

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    The Kentucky Derby is the first leg of horse racing’s Triple Crown and it will take place Saturday evening at Churchill Downs in Louisville.

    The year’s derby will be one of the more interesting ones in recent memory since legendary trainer Bob Baffert will not be allowed at the track as he’s serving a 90-day suspension. The ban was given to him by Kentucky racing officials after last year’s winner Medina Spirit failed a post-race drug test.

    Not only will Baffert miss this year’s and next year’s race, he will be out of the entire Triple Crown series.

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

    Horse trainer Bob Baffert leaves federal court, July 12, 2021, in Brooklyn. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

    Baffert trained 34 horses for the Derby since his first appearance in 1996. He’s put together six victories, three second-place and three third-place finishes. It’s only the sixth time he won’t have a horse in the field.

    However, two of Baffert’s formerly owned horses are set to compete.

    Tim Yakteen, a former assistant under Baffert who’s run his own stable for more than two decades, is overseeing Messier and Taiba. Yakteen has no immediate ties to Baffert and the other horse owners agreed to the transfer of Baffert’s horses to others. Baffert isn’t allowed to have contact with Yakteen.

    Read below for the Kentucky Derby odds and field for the race a day before things get going.

    KENTUCKY DERBY LEADS OFF TRIPLE CROWN WITHOUT BOB BAFFERT

    –

    Who is racing and what are the odds?

    1). Mo Donegal (Irad Ortiz Jr.), 10-1

    2). Happy Jack (Rafael Bejarano), 30-1

    3). Epicenter (Joel Rosario), 7-2

    4). Summer Is Tomorrow (Mickael Barzalona), 30-1

    5). Smile Happy (Corey Lanerie), 20-1

    6). Messier (John Velazquez), 8-1

    Messier stands in his stall in the barn of his trainer, Tim Yakteen, at Santa Anita Park on April 25, 2022, in Arcadia, California. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis)

    7). Crown Pride (Christophe Lemaire), 20-1

    8). Charge It (Luis Saez), 20-1

    9). Tiz The Bomb (Brian Hernandez Jr.), 30-1

    10). Zandon (Flavien Prat), 3-1

    11). Pioneer of Medina (Joe Bravo), 30-1

    12). Taiba (Mike Smith), 12-1

    13). Simplification (Jose Ortiz), 20-1

    14). Barber Road (Rey Gutierrez), 30-1

    15). White Abarrio (Tyler Gaffalione), 10-1

    16). Cyberknife (Florent Geroux), 20-1

    17). Classic Causeway (Julien Leparoux), 30-1

    18). Tawny Port (Ricardo Santana Jr.), 30-1

    19). Zozos (Manny Franco), 20-1

    20). Ethreal Road (Luis Contreras) 30-1

    21). Rich Strike (Sonny Leon), 30-1

    22). Rattle N Roll (James Graham), 30-1

    KENTUCKY DERBY TRAVEL GUIDE FOR A LOUISVILLE GETAWAY

    Who are the favorites?

    John Velazquez rides Medina Spirit across the finish line to win the 147th running of the Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs in Louisville, May 1, 2021. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson, File)

    Epicenter, whose jockey is Joel Rosario, is a 7-2 favorite to win the race. Steven M. Asmussen is the trainer for the colt. Asmussen is one of the all-time winners in North America but has yet to win the Derby. Messier won the Twinspires.com Louisiana Derby in March, the Risen Star S. presented by Lamarque Ford in February, and the Gun Runner States in December.

    Messier, whose jockey is John R. Velazquez, is one of Baffert’s old horses. Messier finished first in the Robert B. Lewis Stakes in February. Velazquez won the Derby in 2011, 2017 and 2020. Messier is an 8-1 shot to win the Derby. Velazquez rode Medina Spirit to victory last year before the title was stripped.

    Zandon, whose jockey is Flavien Prat, is entering the Derby as a 3-1 shot. The colt picked up a win last month at the Toyota Blue Grass Stakes. His trainer Chad Brown only has a win in the Preakness in 2017 when it comes to the Triple Crown. Prat won the Derby in 2019 while riding Bill Mott’s Country House.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    How to watch?

    Where: Churchill Downs, Louisville, Kentucky

    When: May 7, 2022

    Projected Post time: 6:57 p.m. ET

    TV: NBC/NBCSports.com

    Purse: $3 million

    Kentucky Derby travel guide for a Louisville getaway

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    The 148th Kentucky Derby is on Saturday, May 7. 

    Held annually at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Kentucky, there’s much to see and do in this captivating city at the crossroads of the South and the Midwest. 

    If you’re heading to town for Derby Day, the spring Kentucky Derby Festival or eyeing a trip to River City in the near future, there are a few things to check out while in town.

    GARDENING 101: 7 EASY FLOWERS TO PLANT THIS SPRING, PLUS THE TOOLS YOU’LL NEED

    And one note for travelers during Derby season: It’s not just race day that has all the excitement. The month-long celebration leading up to the Kentucky Derby (the Kentucky Derby Festival) has an entire lineup of amazing events like the Pegasus Parade, Thunder Over Louisville fireworks show and the Great Steamboat Race.

    Be sure to call venues or check the website for availability if you’ll be in town for the big day.

    The 148th Kentucky Derby is on Saturday, May 7. Held annually at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Kentucky, there’s much to see and do in this captivating city at the crossroads of the South and the Midwest.  (Louisville Tourism)

    Restaurants

    For a smaller city, Louisville is brimming with many types of restaurants from buzzy Cuban haunts to classic barbecue joints.

    Against The Grain Brewery & Smokehouse

    For great grub at Slugger Field, head to this upbeat eatery with plenty of TVs and stellar BBQ. Craft beer fans will love the sizable brew list. Whatever you do, don’t miss the mac and beer cheese.

    J. Graham’s Café or the Lobby Bar at The Brown Hotel

    Don’t skip town without ordering one of the city’s famed Hot Brown sandwiches. One spot to order one is at The Brown Hotel. A Derby City staple invented at this hotel in 1926, this sandwich consists of roasted turkey breast, toast points, Mornay sauce, Pecorino-Romano cheese, bacon and tomato. 

    Wagner’s Pharmacy

    Located across the street from Churchill Downs, this beloved greasy spoon has been doling out breakfast and lunch since 1922. P.S. You may very well run into a horse trainer or jockey during your time here.

    ‘GOLDEN GIRLS’ FAN CONVENTION DEBUTS IN CHICAGO: ‘BEST FANS IN THE WORLD’

    La Bodeguita 

    This swanky Cuban restaurant in the buzzing NuLu neighborhood will teleport you to Havana with heaping platters of hits like tostones, arroz con pollo (chicken and yellow rice) and salmon marinated in guava. Sister restaurant Guacamole just recently opened down the street.

    Hip Hop Sweet Shop

    Got a sweet tooth? This bakery has delectable cookies, hot chocolates and milkshakes. Be sure to try the bangin’ banana pudding and “foxxy” brownies in Oreo, plain or turtle flavors. 

    Spirits

    Kentucky is known for its bourbon heritage. Here are three picks for where to raise a glass. If you really love your bourbon, check out the Urban Bourbon Trail, where each restaurant on the trail carries at least 60 varieties of bourbons. You check in at least six locations to win a prize.


    Angel’s Envy 

    Enjoy a distillery tour in the center of Louisville’s Bourbon District at this beloved distiller. Don’t miss the gift shop to take home some spirits and presents for the folks back at home. 

     

    Angel’s Envy  (Louisville Tourism)


    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

    North of Bourbon

    Opened in 2021 in Louisville’s historic Germantown neighborhood, this bourbon bar is a hat tip to the link between New Orleans and Louisville. If you want to chase your drink with some stellar fare, grab a bourbon-barrel shaped booth and feast on Louisiana and Mississippi cuisine.  

    Black Jockeys Lounge

    Grab dinner or drinks at this spot that pays homage to the Black jockeys who have dominated the Kentucky Derby. It’s located on historic South 4th Street, so walk off those wings and “first call” bleu cheese coleslaw with a postprandial stroll. 

    Wild Swann

    “For the thirsty and the curious” this establishment is tucked into The Grady Hotel, one of Louisville’s recently repurposed buildings from 1883. In its former life, the building was occupied by J.B. Wilder – the owner of an apothecary and bourbon distillery located in the building’s basement, where diners and drinkers can now indulge in delectable cocktails and Southern fare. 

    The Mocktail Project 

    If you’re not much of a drinker but still want to partake in the festivities around town, check out this local initiative for alcohol-free fun.

    WOMAN VISITS DISNEY WORLD EVERY MONTH, DONATES PLASMA TO COVER COSTS: ‘I CAN HELP SOMEBODY’

    Culture and Attractions

    Kentucky Derby Museum

    Come for the races, stay for the history and tradition. Tour this unique venue brimming with mementos from the most famous of horse races. You can also pair your ticket with a tour of Churchill Downs. 

    The Kentucky Derby Museum (Louisville Tourism)

    Old Louisville Walking Tour

    Talented tour guides will walk you through Old Louisville with its wonderfully preserved homes and more than a few friendly ghosts. Fun fact: the neighborhood is home to the largest contiguous collection of Victorian-era mansions in the country and history buffs are in for a veritable treat as you learn about the region’s storied past.

    Hermitage Farm 

    Located about a half-hour away from downtown Louisville in Goshen, Kentucky, this working thoroughbred farm has horse tours, a locally-sourced and seasonally-focused restaurant (Barn8) and bourbon tastings with retired horses at Barn6.

    TRF (Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation) at Chestnut Hall

    Head to East Louisville for a tour around the historic farmstead, where you’ll see many gorgeous horses. It’s about 30 minutes from downtown Louisville, but you’ll feel eons away from city life. 

    Louisville Mega Cavern 

    If you’re an adrenaline junkie, try underground zip lining at this 100-acre former man-made mine turned tourist attraction beneath a portion of the Louisville Zoo. The world’s only fully underground zip line course is a 2.5-hour expedition that you won’t soon forget, taking you through a portion of the cavern’s 17 miles of underground passageways via six zip lines and two challenge bridges.

    Where to stay

    Hotel Distil

    This Autograph Collection hotel is walking distance to Big Four Bridge, a six-span former railroad truss turned bicycle and pedestrian bridge that crosses the Ohio River, connecting Louisville to Jeffersonville, Indiana, and an adjacent waterfront park.There’s also Slugger Field, the Muhammad Ali Center and much more. Located on Whiskey Row, the hotel pays homage to the repeal of Prohibition in 1933 with a free bourbon cocktail for guests at 19:33 military time every evening, and also offers great dining and drinking on-site.

    The Brown Hotel

    This luxury property first opened in 1923 and has been hosting Derby Day attendees since. The gold-and-black Muhammad Ali Suite complete with a four-poster king bed and marble Jacuzzi tub is the perfect splurge for a special occasion.

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    The Galt House Hotel

    The city’s only riverfront hotel property is the official host hotel of Churchill Downs and the Kentucky Derby. Mosey up to the bar at Jockey Silks for a celebratory drink to start your stay and then relax in rooms with river or city views.

    The Holy Goat

    Post up in an 1843 church reimagined as four individual spaces. There’s also an outdoor courtyard for you to catch your breath between events. You can book each suite individually or combined to house up to 16.

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    Louisville CBP officers find marijuana hidden in Lucky Charms cereal box

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    U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers in Louisville, Kentucky, seized four pounds of marijuana last week that was hidden inside a box of Lucky Charms cereal, authorities said Monday. 

    A CBP drug dog named “Kary” alerted officials last Thursday to a shipment of cereal heading from Louisville to a private residence in Great Britain. When officers opened the box to take a closer look, they saw that the cereal contained more than hearts, clovers, stars, and red balloon marshmallow pieces. 

    They contained vacuum-sealed bags of marijuana, CBP officials said in a news release. 

    BUSINESS GROUPS, FAITH LEADERS TEAM UP TO PUSH CONGRESS TO PASS BIPARTISAN IMMIGRATION REFORMS

    U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers in Louisville seized four pounds of marijuana last week that was hidden inside a box of Lucky Charms cereal (U.S. Customs and Border Protection)

    “Drug Smugglers will go to any lengths to ship their narcotics in and out of the U.S.,” the release stated. “Officers have found drugs hidden in car parts, religious paintings, tombstones, clothing…the list is endless.”

    CBP conducts inspection operations on both arriving and departing international cargo. While marijuana is legal in many U.S. states, the sale, possession, production, and distribution of the drug remain illegal under federal law.

    Mailing a shipment of marijuana overseas is also illegal, authorities said.

    STATE OF THE UNION: BIDEN CALLS TO SECURE BORDER AMID HISTORIC CRISIS

    “Our officers are very familiar with the many ways smugglers try to evade inspection,” said Thomas Mahn, Port Director-Louisville. 

    “Officers learn to think creatively about where things might be hidden because drugs can be anywhere – inside books, auto parts, spools of ribbon, crepe makers, study binders, food, statues, photo frames – if there is space inside an item it could contain something illegal,” Mahn added.

    LaFonda D. Sutton-Burke, the director of field operations in Chicago said the seizure last week illustrated CBP’s ability to detect and “intercept illicit narcotics at mailing facilities.”

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    “The vigilance and expertise of the officers involved, along with the diligence of our canine partners, is commendable.” Sutton-Burke said, according to the release. 

    Soros donated $250,000 to fiscal sponsor of Louisville group who bailed out attempted murderer

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    The legal fund responsible for bailing out a Black Lives Matter activist charged with attempted murder in Louisville has financial ties to liberal billionaire George Soros, who has donated hundreds of millions of dollars to Democratic causes.

    The Louisville Community Bail Fund, which is a “fiscally sponsored project” of the Alliance for Global Justice (AFGJ), bailed out Quintez Brown, 21, after he was arrested and charged for the attempted murder of Jewish Democratic mayoral candidate Craig Greenberg last Monday. Brown was released two days later after the fund posted the required $100,000 to bail him out, where he will be kept on house arrest.

    The Alliance for Global Justice, a liberal advocacy group that has received scrutiny for aiding Palestinian terrorism and supporting the anti-Semitic Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement, received $250,000 in 2020 from the Foundation to Promote Open Society (FPOS), a grantmaking arm of Soros’s Open Society Foundations (OSF), according to the group’s 990 tax forms. The $250,000 contribution was designated to “catalyze Black communities into the global movement for climate justice.” 

    LOUISVILLE ACTIVIST ARRESTED FOR ATTEMPTED MURDER OF MAYORAL CANDIDATE PUSHED SOCIALISM, GUN CONTROL

    Billionaire investor George Soros speaks to the audience at the Schumpeter Award in Vienna, Austria June 21, 2019.  (REUTERS/Lisi Niesner/File Photo)

    The Foundation to Promote Open Society, which has received hundreds of millions of dollars from Soros, also donated over $3.5 million to groups at the Tides Center in 2020 and millions of dollars in previous years, according to its most recent 990 tax form released. The Tides Center, a California-based nonprofit incubator that previously housed the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation, donated over $737,000 to the Louisville Community Bail Fund in 2020.

    Greenberg, whose sweater was grazed by one of the bullets fired by Brown, slammed the Louisville Community Bail Fund last Thursday in a statement, saying, “Our criminal justice system is clearly broken. It is nearly impossible to believe that someone can attempt murder on Monday and walk out of jail on Wednesday.”

    The Louisville Community Bail Fund was co-founded in 2017 by Chanelle Helm, a Black Lives Matter-Louisville activist who supports abolishing police and has repeatedly praised and defended convicted cop killer Assata Shakur. In recent days, she has used her Facebook page to defend the Louisville Community Bail Fund bailing out Quintez Brown by re-posting the official statement from Black Lives Matter-Louisville, which called Brown a “brilliant and bright leader” who just “needs direct mental health support.” In another Facebook post, Helm appears to be talking about Brown while railing against prisons, saying they “do not ‘rehabilitate’” and “If you are advocating for someone to go to jail or prison, it isn’t because you hope they can come out a change[d] person.”

    “Reminding yaw that the same people mad are the same people that harassed Quintez as he wrote about his experiences as a young Black youth. He’s 21,” Helm said in another Facebook post last week. “He’s been an organizer since he was 16. Taking on JCPS and LMPD. I’m really talking about the people calling him an assassin.” 

    One of the replies to that Facebook post said Brown is the “victim of a covert psychological operation often run on activists and aspiring public officials in our community” and tied it to the “Havana Syndrome,” prompting Helm to like it with a heart.

    Quintez Brown, 21, is charged with attempted murder and four counts of wanton endangerment.  (Louisville Department of Corrections)

    QUINTEZ BROWN: BLM LOUISVILLE DEFENDS POSTING BAIL FOR ALLEGED WOULD-BE MAYORAL ASSASSIN

    The Daily Caller reported last year that the Tides Center donated nearly $6 million between 23 bail funds in 2020, including the Minnesota Freedom Fund (MFF), which received backlash last summer after they bailed out an alleged domestic abuser who would later be charged with second-degree murder about three weeks later after he shot another driver dead during a road rage altercation. Vice President Kamala Harris promoted the bail fund during the summer of 2020, urging her Twitter followers to “chip in” money. 

    A FOX 9 report from 2020 showed that among the people helped by MFF – which received donations from multiple Joe Biden campaign staffers as it saw a $35 million fundraising windfall in the weeks after George Floyd’s death – were Darnika Floyd, who was charged with second-degree murder after allegedly stabbing a friend to death, and Christopher Boswell, who was facing charges of sexual assault and kidnapping. The group put up $100,000 on behalf of Floyd and $350,000 on behalf of Boswell.

    George Soros, billionaire and founder of Soros Fund Management LLC, pauses while speaking at an event on day three of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, on Thursday, Jan. 23, 2020. World leaders, influential executives, bankers and policy makers attend the 50th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos from Jan. 21 – 24.  (Simon Dawson/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    “Bail funds are seeking radical change,” Tides wrote in a July 2020 Facebook post. “We must end the two-tiered bail system of those who can afford to pay, and those who cannot. Philanthropy can greatly aid in achieving this crucial goal.”

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Fox News Digital reached out to the Alliance for Global Justice’s “Fiscal sponsorship coordinator” about whether she supports the bail fund’s decision or whether they would sever their sponsorship, but Elane Spivak-Rodriguez did not respond to a media inquiry. 

    Tides Center and Foundation to Promote Open Society also did not respond to media inquiries.

    Fox News’ Joe Schoffstall and Tyler Olson contributed to this report.

    Soros donated $250,000 to fiscal sponsor of Louisville group who bailed out attempted murderer

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    The legal fund responsible for bailing out a Black Lives Matter activist charged with attempted murder in Louisville has financial ties to liberal billionaire George Soros, who has donated hundreds of millions of dollars to Democratic causes.

    The Louisville Community Bail Fund, which is a “fiscally sponsored project” of the Alliance for Global Justice (AFGJ), bailed out Quintez Brown, 21, after he was arrested and charged for the attempted murder of Jewish Democratic mayoral candidate Craig Greenberg last Monday. Brown was released two days later after the fund posted the required $100,000 to bail him out, where he will be kept on house arrest.

    The Alliance for Global Justice, a liberal advocacy group that has received scrutiny for aiding Palestinian terrorism and supporting the anti-Semitic Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement, received $250,000 in 2020 from the Foundation to Promote Open Society (FPOS), a grantmaking arm of Soros’s Open Society Foundations (OSF), according to the group’s 990 tax forms. The $250,000 contribution was designated to “catalyze Black communities into the global movement for climate justice.” 

    LOUISVILLE ACTIVIST ARRESTED FOR ATTEMPTED MURDER OF MAYORAL CANDIDATE PUSHED SOCIALISM, GUN CONTROL

    Billionaire investor George Soros speaks to the audience at the Schumpeter Award in Vienna, Austria June 21, 2019.  (REUTERS/Lisi Niesner/File Photo)

    The Foundation to Promote Open Society, which has received hundreds of millions of dollars from Soros, also donated over $3.5 million to groups at the Tides Center in 2020 and millions of dollars in previous years, according to its most recent 990 tax form released. The Tides Center, a California-based nonprofit incubator that previously housed the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation, donated over $737,000 to the Louisville Community Bail Fund in 2020.

    Greenberg, whose sweater was grazed by one of the bullets fired by Brown, slammed the Louisville Community Bail Fund last Thursday in a statement, saying, “Our criminal justice system is clearly broken. It is nearly impossible to believe that someone can attempt murder on Monday and walk out of jail on Wednesday.”

    The Louisville Community Bail Fund was co-founded in 2017 by Chanelle Helm, a Black Lives Matter-Louisville activist who supports abolishing police and has repeatedly praised and defended convicted cop killer Assata Shakur. In recent days, she has used her Facebook page to defend the Louisville Community Bail Fund bailing out Quintez Brown by re-posting the official statement from Black Lives Matter-Louisville, which called Brown a “brilliant and bright leader” who just “needs direct mental health support.” In another Facebook post, Helm appears to be talking about Brown while railing against prisons, saying they “do not ‘rehabilitate’” and “If you are advocating for someone to go to jail or prison, it isn’t because you hope they can come out a change[d] person.”

    “Reminding yaw that the same people mad are the same people that harassed Quintez as he wrote about his experiences as a young Black youth. He’s 21,” Helm said in another Facebook post last week. “He’s been an organizer since he was 16. Taking on JCPS and LMPD. I’m really talking about the people calling him an assassin.” 

    One of the replies to that Facebook post said Brown is the “victim of a covert psychological operation often run on activists and aspiring public officials in our community” and tied it to the “Havana Syndrome,” prompting Helm to like it with a heart.

    Quintez Brown, 21, is charged with attempted murder and four counts of wanton endangerment.  (Louisville Department of Corrections)

    QUINTEZ BROWN: BLM LOUISVILLE DEFENDS POSTING BAIL FOR ALLEGED WOULD-BE MAYORAL ASSASSIN

    The Daily Caller reported last year that the Tides Center donated nearly $6 million between 23 bail funds in 2020, including the Minnesota Freedom Fund (MFF), which received backlash last summer after they bailed out an alleged domestic abuser who would later be charged with second-degree murder about three weeks later after he shot another driver dead during a road rage altercation. Vice President Kamala Harris promoted the bail fund during the summer of 2020, urging her Twitter followers to “chip in” money. 

    A FOX 9 report from 2020 showed that among the people helped by MFF – which received donations from multiple Joe Biden campaign staffers as it saw a $35 million fundraising windfall in the weeks after George Floyd’s death – were Darnika Floyd, who was charged with second-degree murder after allegedly stabbing a friend to death, and Christopher Boswell, who was facing charges of sexual assault and kidnapping. The group put up $100,000 on behalf of Floyd and $350,000 on behalf of Boswell.

    George Soros, billionaire and founder of Soros Fund Management LLC, pauses while speaking at an event on day three of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, on Thursday, Jan. 23, 2020. World leaders, influential executives, bankers and policy makers attend the 50th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos from Jan. 21 – 24.  (Simon Dawson/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    “Bail funds are seeking radical change,” Tides wrote in a July 2020 Facebook post. “We must end the two-tiered bail system of those who can afford to pay, and those who cannot. Philanthropy can greatly aid in achieving this crucial goal.”

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Fox News Digital reached out to the Alliance for Global Justice’s “Fiscal sponsorship coordinator” about whether she supports the bail fund’s decision or whether they would sever their sponsorship, but Elane Spivak-Rodriguez did not respond to a media inquiry. 

    Tides Center and Foundation to Promote Open Society also did not respond to media inquiries.

    Fox News’ Joe Schoffstall and Tyler Olson contributed to this report.

    Soros donated $250,000 to fiscal sponsor of Louisville group who bailed out attempted murderer

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    The legal fund responsible for bailing out a Black Lives Matter activist charged with attempted murder in Louisville has financial ties to liberal billionaire George Soros, who has donated hundreds of millions of dollars to Democratic causes.

    The Louisville Community Bail Fund, which is a “fiscally sponsored project” of the Alliance for Global Justice (AFGJ), bailed out Quintez Brown, 21, after he was arrested and charged for the attempted murder of Jewish Democratic mayoral candidate Craig Greenberg last Monday. Brown was released two days later after the fund posted the required $100,000 to bail him out, where he will be kept on house arrest.

    The Alliance for Global Justice, a liberal advocacy group that has received scrutiny for aiding Palestinian terrorism and supporting the anti-Semitic Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement, received $250,000 in 2020 from the Foundation to Promote Open Society (FPOS), a grantmaking arm of Soros’s Open Society Foundations (OSF), according to the group’s 990 tax forms. The $250,000 contribution was designated to “catalyze Black communities into the global movement for climate justice.” 

    LOUISVILLE ACTIVIST ARRESTED FOR ATTEMPTED MURDER OF MAYORAL CANDIDATE PUSHED SOCIALISM, GUN CONTROL

    Billionaire investor George Soros speaks to the audience at the Schumpeter Award in Vienna, Austria June 21, 2019.  (REUTERS/Lisi Niesner/File Photo)

    The Foundation to Promote Open Society, which has received hundreds of millions of dollars from Soros, also donated over $3.5 million to groups at the Tides Center in 2020 and millions of dollars in previous years, according to its most recent 990 tax form released. The Tides Center, a California-based nonprofit incubator that previously housed the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation, donated over $737,000 to the Louisville Community Bail Fund in 2020.

    Greenberg, whose sweater was grazed by one of the bullets fired by Brown, slammed the Louisville Community Bail Fund last Thursday in a statement, saying, “Our criminal justice system is clearly broken. It is nearly impossible to believe that someone can attempt murder on Monday and walk out of jail on Wednesday.”

    The Louisville Community Bail Fund was co-founded in 2017 by Chanelle Helm, a Black Lives Matter-Louisville activist who supports abolishing police and has repeatedly praised and defended convicted cop killer Assata Shakur. In recent days, she has used her Facebook page to defend the Louisville Community Bail Fund bailing out Quintez Brown by re-posting the official statement from Black Lives Matter-Louisville, which called Brown a “brilliant and bright leader” who just “needs direct mental health support.” In another Facebook post, Helm appears to be talking about Brown while railing against prisons, saying they “do not ‘rehabilitate’” and “If you are advocating for someone to go to jail or prison, it isn’t because you hope they can come out a change[d] person.”

    “Reminding yaw that the same people mad are the same people that harassed Quintez as he wrote about his experiences as a young Black youth. He’s 21,” Helm said in another Facebook post last week. “He’s been an organizer since he was 16. Taking on JCPS and LMPD. I’m really talking about the people calling him an assassin.” 

    One of the replies to that Facebook post said Brown is the “victim of a covert psychological operation often run on activists and aspiring public officials in our community” and tied it to the “Havana Syndrome,” prompting Helm to like it with a heart.

    Quintez Brown, 21, is charged with attempted murder and four counts of wanton endangerment.  (Louisville Department of Corrections)

    QUINTEZ BROWN: BLM LOUISVILLE DEFENDS POSTING BAIL FOR ALLEGED WOULD-BE MAYORAL ASSASSIN

    The Daily Caller reported last year that the Tides Center donated nearly $6 million between 23 bail funds in 2020, including the Minnesota Freedom Fund (MFF), which received backlash last summer after they bailed out an alleged domestic abuser who would later be charged with second-degree murder about three weeks later after he shot another driver dead during a road rage altercation. Vice President Kamala Harris promoted the bail fund during the summer of 2020, urging her Twitter followers to “chip in” money. 

    A FOX 9 report from 2020 showed that among the people helped by MFF – which received donations from multiple Joe Biden campaign staffers as it saw a $35 million fundraising windfall in the weeks after George Floyd’s death – were Darnika Floyd, who was charged with second-degree murder after allegedly stabbing a friend to death, and Christopher Boswell, who was facing charges of sexual assault and kidnapping. The group put up $100,000 on behalf of Floyd and $350,000 on behalf of Boswell.

    George Soros, billionaire and founder of Soros Fund Management LLC, pauses while speaking at an event on day three of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, on Thursday, Jan. 23, 2020. World leaders, influential executives, bankers and policy makers attend the 50th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos from Jan. 21 – 24.  (Simon Dawson/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    “Bail funds are seeking radical change,” Tides wrote in a July 2020 Facebook post. “We must end the two-tiered bail system of those who can afford to pay, and those who cannot. Philanthropy can greatly aid in achieving this crucial goal.”

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Fox News Digital reached out to the Alliance for Global Justice’s “Fiscal sponsorship coordinator” about whether she supports the bail fund’s decision or whether they would sever their sponsorship, but Elane Spivak-Rodriguez did not respond to a media inquiry. 

    Tides Center and Foundation to Promote Open Society also did not respond to media inquiries.

    Fox News’ Joe Schoffstall and Tyler Olson contributed to this report.

    Soros donated $250,000 to fiscal sponsor of Louisville group who bailed out attempted murderer

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    The legal fund responsible for bailing out a Black Lives Matter activist charged with attempted murder in Louisville has financial ties to liberal billionaire George Soros, who has donated hundreds of millions of dollars to Democratic causes.

    The Louisville Community Bail Fund, which is a “fiscally sponsored project” of the Alliance for Global Justice (AFGJ), bailed out Quintez Brown, 21, after he was arrested and charged for the attempted murder of Jewish Democratic mayoral candidate Craig Greenberg last Monday. Brown was released two days later after the fund posted the required $100,000 to bail him out, where he will be kept on house arrest.

    The Alliance for Global Justice, a liberal advocacy group that has received scrutiny for aiding Palestinian terrorism and supporting the anti-Semitic Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement, received $250,000 in 2020 from the Foundation to Promote Open Society (FPOS), a grantmaking arm of Soros’s Open Society Foundations (OSF), according to the group’s 990 tax forms. The $250,000 contribution was designated to “catalyze Black communities into the global movement for climate justice.” 

    LOUISVILLE ACTIVIST ARRESTED FOR ATTEMPTED MURDER OF MAYORAL CANDIDATE PUSHED SOCIALISM, GUN CONTROL

    Billionaire investor George Soros speaks to the audience at the Schumpeter Award in Vienna, Austria June 21, 2019.  (REUTERS/Lisi Niesner/File Photo)

    The Foundation to Promote Open Society, which has received hundreds of millions of dollars from Soros, also donated over $3.5 million to groups at the Tides Center in 2020 and millions of dollars in previous years, according to its most recent 990 tax form released. The Tides Center, a California-based nonprofit incubator that previously housed the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation, donated over $737,000 to the Louisville Community Bail Fund in 2020.

    Greenberg, whose sweater was grazed by one of the bullets fired by Brown, slammed the Louisville Community Bail Fund last Thursday in a statement, saying, “Our criminal justice system is clearly broken. It is nearly impossible to believe that someone can attempt murder on Monday and walk out of jail on Wednesday.”

    The Louisville Community Bail Fund was co-founded in 2017 by Chanelle Helm, a Black Lives Matter-Louisville activist who supports abolishing police and has repeatedly praised and defended convicted cop killer Assata Shakur. In recent days, she has used her Facebook page to defend the Louisville Community Bail Fund bailing out Quintez Brown by re-posting the official statement from Black Lives Matter-Louisville, which called Brown a “brilliant and bright leader” who just “needs direct mental health support.” In another Facebook post, Helm appears to be talking about Brown while railing against prisons, saying they “do not ‘rehabilitate’” and “If you are advocating for someone to go to jail or prison, it isn’t because you hope they can come out a change[d] person.”

    “Reminding yaw that the same people mad are the same people that harassed Quintez as he wrote about his experiences as a young Black youth. He’s 21,” Helm said in another Facebook post last week. “He’s been an organizer since he was 16. Taking on JCPS and LMPD. I’m really talking about the people calling him an assassin.” 

    One of the replies to that Facebook post said Brown is the “victim of a covert psychological operation often run on activists and aspiring public officials in our community” and tied it to the “Havana Syndrome,” prompting Helm to like it with a heart.

    Quintez Brown, 21, is charged with attempted murder and four counts of wanton endangerment.  (Louisville Department of Corrections)

    QUINTEZ BROWN: BLM LOUISVILLE DEFENDS POSTING BAIL FOR ALLEGED WOULD-BE MAYORAL ASSASSIN

    The Daily Caller reported last year that the Tides Center donated nearly $6 million between 23 bail funds in 2020, including the Minnesota Freedom Fund (MFF), which received backlash last summer after they bailed out an alleged domestic abuser who would later be charged with second-degree murder about three weeks later after he shot another driver dead during a road rage altercation. Vice President Kamala Harris promoted the bail fund during the summer of 2020, urging her Twitter followers to “chip in” money. 

    A FOX 9 report from 2020 showed that among the people helped by MFF – which received donations from multiple Joe Biden campaign staffers as it saw a $35 million fundraising windfall in the weeks after George Floyd’s death – were Darnika Floyd, who was charged with second-degree murder after allegedly stabbing a friend to death, and Christopher Boswell, who was facing charges of sexual assault and kidnapping. The group put up $100,000 on behalf of Floyd and $350,000 on behalf of Boswell.

    George Soros, billionaire and founder of Soros Fund Management LLC, pauses while speaking at an event on day three of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, on Thursday, Jan. 23, 2020. World leaders, influential executives, bankers and policy makers attend the 50th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos from Jan. 21 – 24.  (Simon Dawson/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    “Bail funds are seeking radical change,” Tides wrote in a July 2020 Facebook post. “We must end the two-tiered bail system of those who can afford to pay, and those who cannot. Philanthropy can greatly aid in achieving this crucial goal.”

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Fox News Digital reached out to the Alliance for Global Justice’s “Fiscal sponsorship coordinator” about whether she supports the bail fund’s decision or whether they would sever their sponsorship, but Elane Spivak-Rodriguez did not respond to a media inquiry. 

    Tides Center and Foundation to Promote Open Society also did not respond to media inquiries.

    Fox News’ Joe Schoffstall and Tyler Olson contributed to this report.

    Soros donated $250,000 to fiscal sponsor of Louisville group who bailed out attempted murderer

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    The legal fund responsible for bailing out a Black Lives Matter activist charged with attempted murder in Louisville has financial ties to liberal billionaire George Soros, who has donated hundreds of millions of dollars to Democratic causes.

    The Louisville Community Bail Fund, which is a “fiscally sponsored project” of the Alliance for Global Justice (AFGJ), bailed out Quintez Brown, 21, after he was arrested and charged for the attempted murder of Jewish Democratic mayoral candidate Craig Greenberg last Monday. Brown was released two days later after the fund posted the required $100,000 to bail him out, where he will be kept on house arrest.

    The Alliance for Global Justice, a liberal advocacy group that has received scrutiny for aiding Palestinian terrorism and supporting the anti-Semitic Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement, received $250,000 in 2020 from the Foundation to Promote Open Society (FPOS), a grantmaking arm of Soros’s Open Society Foundations (OSF), according to the group’s 990 tax forms. The $250,000 contribution was designated to “catalyze Black communities into the global movement for climate justice.” 

    LOUISVILLE ACTIVIST ARRESTED FOR ATTEMPTED MURDER OF MAYORAL CANDIDATE PUSHED SOCIALISM, GUN CONTROL

    Billionaire investor George Soros speaks to the audience at the Schumpeter Award in Vienna, Austria June 21, 2019.  (REUTERS/Lisi Niesner/File Photo)

    The Foundation to Promote Open Society, which has received hundreds of millions of dollars from Soros, also donated over $3.5 million to groups at the Tides Center in 2020 and millions of dollars in previous years, according to its most recent 990 tax form released. The Tides Center, a California-based nonprofit incubator that previously housed the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation, donated over $737,000 to the Louisville Community Bail Fund in 2020.

    Greenberg, whose sweater was grazed by one of the bullets fired by Brown, slammed the Louisville Community Bail Fund last Thursday in a statement, saying, “Our criminal justice system is clearly broken. It is nearly impossible to believe that someone can attempt murder on Monday and walk out of jail on Wednesday.”

    The Louisville Community Bail Fund was co-founded in 2017 by Chanelle Helm, a Black Lives Matter-Louisville activist who supports abolishing police and has repeatedly praised and defended convicted cop killer Assata Shakur. In recent days, she has used her Facebook page to defend the Louisville Community Bail Fund bailing out Quintez Brown by re-posting the official statement from Black Lives Matter-Louisville, which called Brown a “brilliant and bright leader” who just “needs direct mental health support.” In another Facebook post, Helm appears to be talking about Brown while railing against prisons, saying they “do not ‘rehabilitate’” and “If you are advocating for someone to go to jail or prison, it isn’t because you hope they can come out a change[d] person.”

    “Reminding yaw that the same people mad are the same people that harassed Quintez as he wrote about his experiences as a young Black youth. He’s 21,” Helm said in another Facebook post last week. “He’s been an organizer since he was 16. Taking on JCPS and LMPD. I’m really talking about the people calling him an assassin.” 

    One of the replies to that Facebook post said Brown is the “victim of a covert psychological operation often run on activists and aspiring public officials in our community” and tied it to the “Havana Syndrome,” prompting Helm to like it with a heart.

    Quintez Brown, 21, is charged with attempted murder and four counts of wanton endangerment.  (Louisville Department of Corrections)

    QUINTEZ BROWN: BLM LOUISVILLE DEFENDS POSTING BAIL FOR ALLEGED WOULD-BE MAYORAL ASSASSIN

    The Daily Caller reported last year that the Tides Center donated nearly $6 million between 23 bail funds in 2020, including the Minnesota Freedom Fund (MFF), which received backlash last summer after they bailed out an alleged domestic abuser who would later be charged with second-degree murder about three weeks later after he shot another driver dead during a road rage altercation. Vice President Kamala Harris promoted the bail fund during the summer of 2020, urging her Twitter followers to “chip in” money. 

    A FOX 9 report from 2020 showed that among the people helped by MFF – which received donations from multiple Joe Biden campaign staffers as it saw a $35 million fundraising windfall in the weeks after George Floyd’s death – were Darnika Floyd, who was charged with second-degree murder after allegedly stabbing a friend to death, and Christopher Boswell, who was facing charges of sexual assault and kidnapping. The group put up $100,000 on behalf of Floyd and $350,000 on behalf of Boswell.

    George Soros, billionaire and founder of Soros Fund Management LLC, pauses while speaking at an event on day three of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, on Thursday, Jan. 23, 2020. World leaders, influential executives, bankers and policy makers attend the 50th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos from Jan. 21 – 24.  (Simon Dawson/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    “Bail funds are seeking radical change,” Tides wrote in a July 2020 Facebook post. “We must end the two-tiered bail system of those who can afford to pay, and those who cannot. Philanthropy can greatly aid in achieving this crucial goal.”

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Fox News Digital reached out to the Alliance for Global Justice’s “Fiscal sponsorship coordinator” about whether she supports the bail fund’s decision or whether they would sever their sponsorship, but Elane Spivak-Rodriguez did not respond to a media inquiry. Tides Center also did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

    “Tides provides fiscal sponsorship and other support for organizations that do not have 501c3 status,” OSF spokesman Jonathan Kaplan said in an emailed statement to Fox News Digital. “OSF funding to Tides is NOT related to the Louisville Bail Fund.”

    Editor’s Note: This report erroneously said the Foundation to Promote Open Society did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment over the weekend and has been updated with a statement from their spokesperson.

    Fox News’ Joe Schoffstall and Tyler Olson contributed to this report.

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