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VOL. CLXVIII . . . No. 58,161 © 2018 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 2018 U(D54G1D)y+&!:![!#!{ TRENTON — The debate in the New Jersey Legislature over whether to legalize recreational marijuana is unexpectedly turn- ing into a wrenching discussion about fairness in the criminal jus- tice system and the role of race in hundreds of thousands of drug convictions over the decades. As lawmakers edge closer to approving a marijuana legaliza- tion bill, they are also weighing a groundbreaking companion measure that would clear the criminal records of many people with drug offenses. Ten other states and Washington have de- criminalized recreational mari- juana, but none have gone so far in addressing historic inequities in drug sentencing in tandem with legalization measures. Supporters of the proposal in New Jersey to expunge criminal records say strict drug laws in the state have long unfairly targeted minorities: A black New Jersey resident is three times more likely to be arrested on marijuana-relat- ed offenses than a white resident, a recent study found. As Trenton begins to debate a marijuana bill approved on Mon- day by a joint legislative commit- tee, creating an efficient process for tossing out past convictions has become central to gaining support from lawmakers who rep- resent predominantly African- New Jersey Ties Legalizing Pot To a Debate on Racial Fairness By NICK CORASANITI Medical marijuana at a dispen- sary in Secaucus, N.J. BRYAN ANSELM FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A23 SARAJEVO, Bosnia and Herzegovina — Arijan Kurbasic, the manager of the War Hostel Sarajevo in the Bosnian capital, knows that his idea of hospital- ity is not to ev- eryone’s taste and is ready to relax the house rules a bit. He will, for example, turn down the volume on a sound system that, day and night, fills the place with the din of gunfire and explosions. Getting to sleep can still be a challenge: There are no beds, only thin mattresses on the floor with no pillows or sheets, and heavy, scratchy blankets that create the feeling of sleeping with a dead horse. The décor is hardly soothing — lots of guns and, in one room, a poster screaming “Death” and “The End.” And while other hotels offer luxury suites and sweeping views of Sarajevo’s old town to guests looking for a particularly memorable stay, Mr. Kurbasic offers the ultimate in self-depri- vation — “the bunker,” a window- less dungeon room so hellishly and deliberately uncomfortable that, he said, “it is insane to want to sleep there.” A former Sarajevo tour guide, Mr. Kurbasic, 27, said he had quickly realized that what many tourists really wanted to know about was the glorious city’s agonies during Bosnia’s 1992-95 war. “I decided to give people No Bed, No Breakfast. But the Gunfire Is Divine. By ANDREW HIGGINS The sounds of war are piped into rooms at a Sarajevo hostel. LAURA BOUSHNAK FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A8 SARAJEVO DISPATCH WASHINGTON Furious over being denied a C.I.A. briefing on the killing of a Saudi journalist, senators from both parties spurned the Trump administra- tion on Wednesday with a stinging vote to consider ending American military support for the Saudi- backed war in Yemen. The Senate voted 63 to 37 to bring to the floor a measure to lim- it presidential war powers in Yem- en. It was the strongest signal yet that Republican and Democratic senators alike remain vehemently skeptical of the administration’s insistence that the Saudi crown prince cannot, with certainty, be blamed for the death of the jour- nalist Jamal Khashoggi. While the vote showed wide- spread disapproval of the admin- istration’s stance, it did not neces- sarily indicate that the measure would ultimately be approved. It took place hours after Secre- tary of State Mike Pompeo and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis briefed senators about the Yemen conflict in a classified discussion, which the administration had hoped would convince lawmakers that Saudi Arabia must remain a vital American ally. But many senators had insisted that Gina Haspel, the C.I.A. direc- tor, also be there to answer ques- tions about Mr. Khashoggi’s death. American officials have said the C.I.A., which Mr. Pompeo led until the spring, has concluded that the Saudi crown prince, Mo- hammed bin Salman, ordered the killing in the Saudi Consulate in Is- tanbul last month. ANGRY SENATORS SPURN PRESIDENT ON WAR IN YEMEN A STINGING VOTE ON AID Disapproval of Trump’s Defense of Saudis in Journalist’s Killing This article is by Gardiner Harris, Eric Schmitt, Helene Cooper and Nicholas Fandos. Continued on Page A8 WASHINGTON — Representa- tive Nancy Pelosi overwhelm- ingly won the Democratic nomi- nation on Wednesday to be speaker when the new Congress convenes in January, but the de- fection of 32 Democrats signaled that she could still face a divisive fight to lead the House just as the party assumes control. The result kept alive the threat of a messy intraparty feud and touched off what promises to be an intense period of internal arm- twisting and cajoling by a leader renowned for both. At the same time, it confirmed that despite a drumbeat of calls within her cau- cus for new leadership, most Democrats support returning the 78-year-old Californian, the first woman to be speaker, to the post. In a secret-ballot vote that dramatized rifts among Demo- crats only weeks after midterm election victories handed them the majority, Ms. Pelosi, running unopposed, won support from 203 Democrats. Beyond the 32 no votes, three ballots were left blank. “It’s a big victory,” she exulted as she made her way to the Capitol after the results were announced, brushing aside questions about her detractors and saying she felt “great.” To become speaker, Ms. Pelosi must win 218 votes in a House floor vote on Jan. 3. That gives op- ponents time to recruit a serious challenger, something they have said could occur only once they showed that she lacked the votes to be elected. But the tally also demonstrated the limits of a group of dissidents who want fresh faces at the top of the party. They include newcom- ers who campaigned promising to change Congress, some of whom made explicit pledges not to vote for Ms. Pelosi, who has led House Democrats for more than 15 years. Speaking with reporters as the Win for Pelosi, But Defections Signal a Tussle Democratic Rifts Over House’s Next Leader By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS Representative Nancy Pelosi of California secured the Democratic nomination for House speaker on Wednesday in a 203-to-32 vote. ERIN SCHAFF FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A15 With just two words on Wednes- day, the Federal Reserve’s chair- man sent stocks surging by rais- ing hopes that the central bank might be closer to ending its push to drive up interest rates. The chairman, Jerome H. Pow- ell, said the Fed’s benchmark in- terest rate was “just below” the neutral level, meaning the central bank was close to the point where it would not be tapping on the brakes or pressing on the gas. Only last month, Mr. Powell had said it was “a long way” from neu- tral, leaving investors worried that the rate increases would crimp growth. The small change sent stocks soaring 2.3 percent, erasing the losses from a rocky November. To investors, the new wording meant that the Fed might leave rates closer to their current level, keep- ing in place the steady fuel that low rates have provided to a 10- year-long bull market. Analysts quickly warned that investors were overreacting. There was little evidence in the rest of Mr. Powell’s speech that he intended to signal a change in plans. But the market’s euphoria un- derscored the chairman’s strug- gles to strike the right pitch in an increasingly challenging eco- nomic and political environment, as President Trump attacks the Fed and the country’s growth comes under pressure. The mar- ket has been jittery over concerns that further rate increases could undermine the economy at a time when the prospects for companies and consumers may be softening. The economy has been a picture of health, expanding at a 3.5 per- cent annualized pace during the third quarter. The unemployment rate has fallen to 3.7 percent, its lowest level in almost half a cen- tury. Inflation has picked up this Markets Soar on Two Words From Fed Chairman By BINYAMIN APPELBAUM Continued on Page A13 A Rebound After Powell Hints at a Minimal Change to Rates After three weeks of draws failed to produce a winner, Norway’s Magnus Carlsen retained his world title by beating the American Fabiano Caruana in sudden-death chess. PAGE B8 SPORTSTHURSDAY B8-11 Crowning a Chess King The exiting president of Mexico caused a national furor by bestowing a presti- gious award to Jared Kushner, Presi- dent Trump’s son-in-law. PAGE A4 Kushner Honor Angers Mexico Russia’s seizure of three Ukrainian ships has complicated President Trump’s plan to talk to President Vladi- mir V. Putin of Russia in Buenos Aires this week. News Analysis. PAGE A6 INTERNATIONAL A4-10 High Stakes for Putin Meeting Investigators searched the office of the president of the Catholic Bishops Con- ference for records on a priest accused of indecency with a child. PAGE A17 NATIONAL A12-18 Archdiocese Office Raided Margaret Atwood says “The Testa- ments,” the sequel to be released in September 2019, will explore the paral- lels between her imagined dystopia and our current political climate. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-8 Another ‘Handmaid’s Tale’ The Carpetbagger columnist Kyle Bu- chanan won’t ponder whether the Acad- emy Awards matter. He knows they do — because as a snapshot of Hollywood, they also reflect so much more. PAGE C1 Why the Oscars Are Essential After lunch with President Trump at the White House, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo left with no deal on funding for a new Hudson River train tunnel. PAGE A20 NEW YORK A20-23 No Resolution on Train Tunnel In his final State of the Art column, Farhad Manjoo offers three new max- ims for surviving the next era of tech- nology. PAGE B1 BUSINESS B1-7 Last Words of Advice on Tech Bayard Winthrop, American Giant’s founder, was told the fabric couldn’t be made in the U.S. He disagreed. PAGE D1 THURSDAY STYLES D1-10 American-Made Flannel Gail Collins PAGE A26 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A26-27 WASHINGTON — Escalating his attacks on the special counsel investigation, President Trump said on Wednesday that a presi- dential pardon for his former cam- paign chairman Paul Manafort is “not off the table,” casting him and other subjects of the inquiry as victims of prosecutorial abuse. Although Mr. Trump had not discussed a pardon for Mr. Man- afort, “I wouldn’t take it off the ta- ble,” he said in an Oval Office in- terview with The New York Post. “Why would I take it off the ta- ble?” He said that prosecutors for the special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III, had poorly treated Mr. Man- afort, who was convicted of eight felonies this summer and pleaded guilty to two more. Though Mr. Trump is given to loose promises that go unfulfilled, the suggestion of a pardon was nonetheless remarkable. It came as his rhetorical attacks on Mr. Mueller have grown increasingly provocative the president tweeted on Wednesday that pros- ecutors were “viciously telling witnesses to lie about facts & they will get relief” — and as leading Republican senators again thwarted an effort to protect Mr. Mueller from being fired. The president’s declaration also capped a turn of events for Mr. Manafort, who was a cooperating witness for Mr. Mueller until pros- ecutors declared this week that he had lied to them in breach of his plea agreement. They were said to be frustrated in part because one of his lawyers was updating Mr. Trump’s legal team about the case. By leaving open the possibility of pardoning a former aide whose lawyer was a source of inside in- formation about an investigation into Mr. Trump himself, the presi- dent showed a new willingness to Trump Raises Idea of Pardon For Manafort By SHARON LaFRANIERE and NICHOLAS FANDOS Continued on Page A17 Late Edition Salesforce. #1 CRM. Ranked #1 for CRM Applications based on IDC 2018H1 Revenue Market Share Worldwide. salesforce.com/number1CRM 20.3% 5.4% 7.5% 3.6% 4.1% CRM market includes the following IDC-defined functional markets: Sales Force Productivity and Management, Marketing Campaign Management, Customer Service, Contact Center, and Digital Commerce Applications. © 2018 salesforce.com, inc. All rights reserved. Salesforce.com is a registered trademark of salesforce.com, inc., as are other names and marks. 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018H1 Source: IDC, Worldwide Semiannual Software Tracker, October 2018. BLAMING G.M. Workers facing layoffs don’t fault the president, who said jobs were safe. PAGE B1 Today, sunshine and patchy clouds, breezy, chilly, high 45. Tonight, partly cloudy, cold, low 34. Tomor- row, cloudy, afternoon showers, high 43. Weather map is on Page A22. $3.00

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VOL. CLXVIII . . . No. 58,161 © 2018 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 2018

C M Y K Nxxx,2018-11-29,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

U(D54G1D)y+&!:![!#!{

TRENTON — The debate in theNew Jersey Legislature overwhether to legalize recreationalmarijuana is unexpectedly turn-ing into a wrenching discussionabout fairness in the criminal jus-tice system and the role of race inhundreds of thousands of drugconvictions over the decades.

As lawmakers edge closer toapproving a marijuana legaliza-tion bill, they are also weighing agroundbreaking companionmeasure that would clear thecriminal records of many peoplewith drug offenses. Ten otherstates and Washington have de-criminalized recreational mari-juana, but none have gone so far inaddressing historic inequities indrug sentencing in tandem withlegalization measures.

Supporters of the proposal inNew Jersey to expunge criminalrecords say strict drug laws in thestate have long unfairly targetedminorities: A black New Jerseyresident is three times more likely

to be arrested on marijuana-relat-ed offenses than a white resident,a recent study found.

As Trenton begins to debate amarijuana bill approved on Mon-day by a joint legislative commit-tee, creating an efficient processfor tossing out past convictionshas become central to gainingsupport from lawmakers who rep-resent predominantly African-

New Jersey Ties Legalizing PotTo a Debate on Racial Fairness

By NICK CORASANITI

Medical marijuana at a dispen-sary in Secaucus, N.J.

BRYAN ANSELM FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A23

SARAJEVO, Bosnia andHerzegovina — Arijan Kurbasic,the manager of the War HostelSarajevo in the Bosnian capital,

knows that hisidea of hospital-ity is not to ev-eryone’s taste

and is ready to relax the houserules a bit.

He will, for example, turndown the volume on a soundsystem that, day and night, fillsthe place with the din of gunfireand explosions.

Getting to sleep can still be achallenge: There are no beds,only thin mattresses on the floorwith no pillows or sheets, andheavy, scratchy blankets thatcreate the feeling of sleepingwith a dead horse.

The décor is hardly soothing —lots of guns and, in one room, aposter screaming “Death” and“The End.”

And while other hotels offerluxury suites and sweepingviews of Sarajevo’s old town toguests looking for a particularlymemorable stay, Mr. Kurbasic

offers the ultimate in self-depri-vation — “the bunker,” a window-less dungeon room so hellishlyand deliberately uncomfortablethat, he said, “it is insane to wantto sleep there.”

A former Sarajevo tour guide,

Mr. Kurbasic, 27, said he hadquickly realized that what manytourists really wanted to knowabout was the glorious city’sagonies during Bosnia’s 1992-95war. “I decided to give people

No Bed, No Breakfast. But the Gunfire Is Divine.By ANDREW HIGGINS

The sounds of war are piped into rooms at a Sarajevo hostel.LAURA BOUSHNAK FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A8

SARAJEVODISPATCH

WASHINGTON — Furiousover being denied a C.I.A. briefingon the killing of a Saudi journalist,senators from both partiesspurned the Trump administra-tion on Wednesday with a stingingvote to consider ending Americanmilitary support for the Saudi-backed war in Yemen.

The Senate voted 63 to 37 tobring to the floor a measure to lim-it presidential war powers in Yem-en. It was the strongest signal yetthat Republican and Democraticsenators alike remain vehementlyskeptical of the administration’sinsistence that the Saudi crownprince cannot, with certainty, beblamed for the death of the jour-nalist Jamal Khashoggi.

While the vote showed wide-spread disapproval of the admin-istration’s stance, it did not neces-sarily indicate that the measurewould ultimately be approved.

It took place hours after Secre-tary of State Mike Pompeo andDefense Secretary Jim Mattisbriefed senators about the Yemenconflict in a classified discussion,which the administration hadhoped would convince lawmakersthat Saudi Arabia must remain avital American ally.

But many senators had insistedthat Gina Haspel, the C.I.A. direc-tor, also be there to answer ques-tions about Mr. Khashoggi’sdeath. American officials havesaid the C.I.A., which Mr. Pompeoled until the spring, has concludedthat the Saudi crown prince, Mo-hammed bin Salman, ordered thekilling in the Saudi Consulate in Is-tanbul last month.

ANGRY SENATORSSPURN PRESIDENTON WAR IN YEMEN

A STINGING VOTE ON AID

Disapproval of Trump’sDefense of Saudis in

Journalist’s Killing

This article is by Gardiner Harris,Eric Schmitt, Helene Cooper andNicholas Fandos.

Continued on Page A8

WASHINGTON — Representa-tive Nancy Pelosi overwhelm-ingly won the Democratic nomi-nation on Wednesday to bespeaker when the new Congressconvenes in January, but the de-fection of 32 Democrats signaledthat she could still face a divisivefight to lead the House just as theparty assumes control.

The result kept alive the threatof a messy intraparty feud andtouched off what promises to bean intense period of internal arm-twisting and cajoling by a leaderrenowned for both. At the sametime, it confirmed that despite adrumbeat of calls within her cau-cus for new leadership, mostDemocrats support returning the78-year-old Californian, the firstwoman to be speaker, to the post.

In a secret-ballot vote thatdramatized rifts among Demo-crats only weeks after midtermelection victories handed themthe majority, Ms. Pelosi, runningunopposed, won support from 203Democrats. Beyond the 32 novotes, three ballots were leftblank.

“It’s a big victory,” she exultedas she made her way to the Capitolafter the results were announced,brushing aside questions abouther detractors and saying she felt“great.”

To become speaker, Ms. Pelosimust win 218 votes in a Housefloor vote on Jan. 3. That gives op-ponents time to recruit a seriouschallenger, something they havesaid could occur only once theyshowed that she lacked the votesto be elected.

But the tally also demonstratedthe limits of a group of dissidentswho want fresh faces at the top ofthe party. They include newcom-ers who campaigned promising tochange Congress, some of whommade explicit pledges not to votefor Ms. Pelosi, who has led HouseDemocrats for more than 15 years.

Speaking with reporters as the

Win for Pelosi,But Defections Signal a Tussle

Democratic Rifts OverHouse’s Next Leader

By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS

Representative Nancy Pelosi of California secured the Democratic nomination for House speaker on Wednesday in a 203-to-32 vote.ERIN SCHAFF FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A15

With just two words on Wednes-day, the Federal Reserve’s chair-man sent stocks surging by rais-ing hopes that the central bankmight be closer to ending its pushto drive up interest rates.

The chairman, Jerome H. Pow-ell, said the Fed’s benchmark in-terest rate was “just below” theneutral level, meaning the centralbank was close to the point whereit would not be tapping on thebrakes or pressing on the gas.Only last month, Mr. Powell hadsaid it was “a long way” from neu-tral, leaving investors worriedthat the rate increases wouldcrimp growth.

The small change sent stockssoaring 2.3 percent, erasing thelosses from a rocky November. To

investors, the new wording meantthat the Fed might leave ratescloser to their current level, keep-ing in place the steady fuel thatlow rates have provided to a 10-year-long bull market.

Analysts quickly warned thatinvestors were overreacting.There was little evidence in therest of Mr. Powell’s speech that heintended to signal a change inplans.

But the market’s euphoria un-derscored the chairman’s strug-gles to strike the right pitch in an

increasingly challenging eco-nomic and political environment,as President Trump attacks theFed and the country’s growthcomes under pressure. The mar-ket has been jittery over concernsthat further rate increases couldundermine the economy at a timewhen the prospects for companiesand consumers may be softening.

The economy has been a pictureof health, expanding at a 3.5 per-cent annualized pace during thethird quarter. The unemploymentrate has fallen to 3.7 percent, itslowest level in almost half a cen-tury. Inflation has picked up this

Markets Soar on Two Words From Fed ChairmanBy BINYAMIN APPELBAUM

Continued on Page A13

A Rebound After PowellHints at a Minimal

Change to Rates

After three weeks of draws failed toproduce a winner, Norway’s MagnusCarlsen retained his world title bybeating the American Fabiano Caruanain sudden-death chess. PAGE B8

SPORTSTHURSDAY B8-11

Crowning a Chess King

The exiting president of Mexico causeda national furor by bestowing a presti-gious award to Jared Kushner, Presi-dent Trump’s son-in-law. PAGE A4

Kushner Honor Angers Mexico

Russia’s seizure of three Ukrainianships has complicated PresidentTrump’s plan to talk to President Vladi-mir V. Putin of Russia in Buenos Airesthis week. News Analysis. PAGE A6

INTERNATIONAL A4-10

High Stakes for Putin Meeting

Investigators searched the office of thepresident of the Catholic Bishops Con-ference for records on a priest accusedof indecency with a child. PAGE A17

NATIONAL A12-18

Archdiocese Office Raided

Margaret Atwood says “The Testa-ments,” the sequel to be released inSeptember 2019, will explore the paral-lels between her imagined dystopia andour current political climate. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-8

Another ‘Handmaid’s Tale’

The Carpetbagger columnist Kyle Bu-chanan won’t ponder whether the Acad-emy Awards matter. He knows they do— because as a snapshot of Hollywood,they also reflect so much more. PAGE C1

Why the Oscars Are Essential

After lunch with President Trump at theWhite House, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomoleft with no deal on funding for a newHudson River train tunnel. PAGE A20

NEW YORK A20-23

No Resolution on Train Tunnel

In his final State of the Art column,Farhad Manjoo offers three new max-ims for surviving the next era of tech-nology. PAGE B1

BUSINESS B1-7

Last Words of Advice on Tech

Bayard Winthrop, American Giant’sfounder, was told the fabric couldn’t bemade in the U.S. He disagreed. PAGE D1

THURSDAY STYLES D1-10

American-Made Flannel

Gail Collins PAGE A26

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A26-27

WASHINGTON — Escalatinghis attacks on the special counselinvestigation, President Trumpsaid on Wednesday that a presi-dential pardon for his former cam-paign chairman Paul Manafort is“not off the table,” casting him andother subjects of the inquiry asvictims of prosecutorial abuse.

Although Mr. Trump had notdiscussed a pardon for Mr. Man-afort, “I wouldn’t take it off the ta-ble,” he said in an Oval Office in-terview with The New York Post.“Why would I take it off the ta-ble?”

He said that prosecutors for thespecial counsel, Robert S. MuellerIII, had poorly treated Mr. Man-afort, who was convicted of eightfelonies this summer and pleadedguilty to two more.

Though Mr. Trump is given toloose promises that go unfulfilled,the suggestion of a pardon wasnonetheless remarkable. It cameas his rhetorical attacks on Mr.Mueller have grown increasinglyprovocative — the presidenttweeted on Wednesday that pros-ecutors were “viciously tellingwitnesses to lie about facts & theywill get relief” — and as leadingRepublican senators againthwarted an effort to protect Mr.Mueller from being fired.

The president’s declaration alsocapped a turn of events for Mr.Manafort, who was a cooperatingwitness for Mr. Mueller until pros-ecutors declared this week that hehad lied to them in breach of hisplea agreement. They were said tobe frustrated in part because oneof his lawyers was updating Mr.Trump’s legal team about thecase.

By leaving open the possibilityof pardoning a former aide whoselawyer was a source of inside in-formation about an investigationinto Mr. Trump himself, the presi-dent showed a new willingness to

Trump RaisesIdea of Pardon

For ManafortBy SHARON LaFRANIEREand NICHOLAS FANDOS

Continued on Page A17

Late Edition

Salesforce.

#1CRM.Ranked #1 for CRMApplications based onIDC 2018H1 RevenueMarket ShareWorldwide.

salesforce.com/number1CRM

20.3%

5.4%

7.5%

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CRMmarket includesthefollowingIDC-definedfunctionalmarkets:SalesForceProductivityandManagement,MarketingCampaignManagement,CustomerService,ContactCenter,andDigitalCommerceApplications.©2018salesforce.com,inc.Allrightsreserved.Salesforce.comisaregisteredtrademarkofsalesforce.com, inc.,asareothernamesandmarks.

2014 2015 2016 2017 2018H1

Source: IDC, Worldwide SemiannualSoftware Tracker, October 2018.

BLAMING G.M. Workers facinglayoffs don’t fault the president,who said jobs were safe. PAGE B1

Today, sunshine and patchy clouds,breezy, chilly, high 45. Tonight,partly cloudy, cold, low 34. Tomor-row, cloudy, afternoon showers, high43. Weather map is on Page A22.

$3.00