story kelly told video disproves

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U(D54G1D)y+&!@!.!=!/ WASHINGTON — Video of a 2015 speech delivered by Repre- sentative Frederica S. Wilson re- vealed Friday that John F. Kelly, the White House chief of staff, mis- represented her remarks when he accused her of bragging about se- curing $20 million for a South Florida F.B.I. building and twist- ing President Barack Obama’s arm. Mr. Kelly, escalating a feud be- tween Mr. Trump and Ms. Wilson, had cast the congresswoman on Thursday as a publicity-seeking opportunist. However, the video, released by The Sun Sentinel, a newspaper in South Florida, showed that during her nine- minute speech, Ms. Wilson never took credit for getting the money for the building, only for helping pass legislation naming the build- ing after two fallen federal agents. She never mentioned pleading with Mr. Obama, and she acknowl- edged the help of several Republi- cans, including John A. Boehner, then the House speaker; Repre- sentatives Mario Diaz-Balart and Carlos Curbelo; and Senator Marco Rubio. Ms. Wilson, in an interview on Friday, called Mr. Kelly a liar and hinted strongly that the alterca- tion, prompted by a call from Pres- ident Trump to the widow of a fall- en black soldier, was racially charged. “The White House itself is full of white supremacists,” she said. “I feel very sorry for him be- cause he feels such a need to lie on me and I’m not even his enemy,” Ms. Wilson said of Mr. Kelly. “I just can’t even imagine why he would fabricate something like that. That is absolutely insane. I’m just flabbergasted because it’s very easy to trace.” While she stopped short of ac- cusing Mr. Kelly, a retired Marine general, of racial animus, she did say that others in the White House are racially biased. “They are making themselves VIDEO DISPROVES STORY KELLY TOLD ABOUT LAWMAKER FEUD GROWS OVER CALL Congresswoman Sees Racial Bias in White House Response By YAMICHE ALCINDOR and MICHAEL D. SHEAR Continued on Page A15 The Pentagon is trying to deter- mine whether American forces in- volved in a deadly ambush in Ni- ger this month diverted from their routine patrol to embark on an un- approved mission, military offi- cials said on Friday. The questions have come up be- cause the American and Nigerien soldiers on the patrol have given conflicting accounts about whether they were simply am- bushed or were attacked after try- ing to chase Islamic insurgents, according to military officials from both countries. The episode has engulfed the White House in crisis and prompted demands from mem- bers of Congress for answers about what the soldiers were do- ing before the attack on Oct. 4. In interviews with both the De- fense Department and The New York Times, Nigerien military of- ficials said that a lightly armed convoy of about 50 Nigerien and American soldiers gave chase to Islamic insurgents on motor- cycles until the men crossed the border into Mali, then returned later to ambush the troops. American service members, by contrast, insisted that they did not chase the insurgents but simply “noticed” them in the vicinity of the village of Tongo Tongo, De- fense Department officials said. It was not until the troops inter- viewed village leaders and were on their way to their base, by the American account, that the insur- gents ambushed the convoy, over- whelming them. The inconsistencies are at the heart of why the Pentagon has not been forthcoming with details about what happened in Niger, ac- cording to American military offi- cials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a continu- ing investigation. Four Americans were killed in the attack, including three Green Berets, as well as four Nigerien soldiers. Two Americans and six Nigeriens were wounded. The contradictions added to the major questions emerging about the attack: Had the soldiers acted beyond their planned mission without first gaining approval? And if they were given permis- sion, who granted it? Accounts Vary On How Attack Began in Niger African Soldiers Tell of Unapproved Mission This article is by Dionne Searcey, Helene Cooper and Eric Schmitt. Continued on Page A14 BARCELONA, Spain — These days, the city of Barcelona wears two hats. And not too comfortably. On the one hand, Barcelona is a global city, a former host of the Olympics, and the home of one of the world’s most famous soccer clubs, F.C. Barcelona. It is a mag- net for more than 10 million vis- itors a year, an example of the ways large cities increasingly in- fluence global politics, economics and culture. On the other hand, Barcelona is the capital of Catalonia, Spain’s restive northeastern region, and the nerve center of a drive for Cat- alan independence that is de- scribed by its opponents as paro- chial, exclusive and nationalist. In that campaign — which the Spanish government now says it will take emergency measures to halt — there is no place in Catalo- nia with more at stake. In Bar- celona, the issue of independence has provoked exceptionally sharp soul-searching and debate over al- legiances and identity, with an in- tensity not seen since Britain voted to leave the European Un- ion. In short, people are worried. First among them is the city’s left- ist mayor, Ada Colau, who, despite expressing support for independ- ence in the past, says she is now not in favor of leaving. “It’s a very pluralistic city and there is a lot of diversity of opinions in Bar- celona,” she said in an interview this week. The city is not exactly compara- ble to London — which favored re- maining in the European Union — since Barcelona is still home to many separatists. “But if you com- pare it with people in the heart of Catalonia,” Ms. Colau said, “it’s not as pro-independence.” Ms. Colau said she was appalled by the violence of the Spanish na- tional police as they tried to block people from voting in the Oct. 1 in- dependence referendum, and she believes in Catalonia’s right to self-determination. But her own attitude to inde- pendence differs from that of the Catalan president, Carles Puigde- mont, a lifelong separatist from Girona, a small city 60 miles northeast of Barcelona. As an economic powerhouse that has welcomed migrants from many other parts of Spain, Bar- celona has a more “cosmopolitan” outlook than the rest of Catalonia, Ms. Colau said. Cities, rather than nation states, “are the future,” she said. “I am a citizen of Barcelona and a munici- palist — and that’s the main rea- son that I am in the city hall not the Catalan regional govern- ment.” The region’s Oct. 1 referendum was a deeply compromised ba- rometer of popular sentiment. Though official figures show that 90 percent of voters supported in- dependence, only about 43 per- cent of the Catalan electorate took part in a vote that was banned by the Spanish courts and which the national government tried to stop by force. Many of those opposed to sepa- ration had little incentive to brave the police violence. Yet a break- down of the results shows that the Global City Is the Center of a Secessionist Feud By PATRICK KINGSLEY Barcelona, Spain, is home to one of the world’s most famous soccer clubs. Signs at the stadium are written primarily in Catalan. EMILIO MORENATTI/ASSOCIATED PRESS Continued on Page A9 Catalan Independence Is Complex Question for Barcelona A federal regulator criticized Wells Fargo for engaging in unfair and deceptive practices and fail- ing to manage risks, and said it had not set aside enough money to pay back the customers it harmed. The confidential report, pre- pared by the Office of the Comp- troller of the Currency and re- viewed by The New York Times, criticizes Wells Fargo for forcing hundreds of thousands of borrow- ers to buy unneeded auto insur- ance when they took out a car loan, as well as its handling of the problems once they were de- tected. The regulators’ report, sent to the bank this week, is preliminary. Still, it represents the latest blow to the reputation of Wells Fargo, America’s third-largest bank and one that was once regarded as be- ing among the best run in the country. The bank is still trying to recover from a scandal in which its employees created millions of credit card and bank accounts that customers had not requested, eventually leading to the ouster of the bank’s chief executive and mil- Pressure Builds On Wells Fargo In Fraud Case By GRETCHEN MORGENSON Continued on Page A16 In a lace-accented white wed- ding gown, Chirlane McCray, the first lady of New York City, made her way up the church aisle and turned to face the crowd. Arrayed before her were not the familiar faces of friends and family, but dozens of other women in similar bridal attire as they prepared to march across Upper Manhattan in solidarity against domestic vio- lence. “There’s nothing like putting on the garb,” she said after the event last month. After nearly one full term, Ms. McCray, the wife of Mayor Bill de Blasio, has fully wrapped herself in the role of political spouse, a job especially steeped with symbol- ism for her. As the African-Ameri- can wife of a white mayor in a mo- ment of renewed racial strife across America, Ms. McCray has emerged as likely the most influ- ential, if not consequential, first lady in the city’s history. She has a full-time staff of five and her own public schedule. She oversees a portfolio of municipal programs, including her signa- ture $850 million mental health initiative, in which other city offi- cials report to her. She controls an independent nonprofit with a $25 million annual budget and still more staff. And she has the may- or’s ear on decisions big and small, sitting in on top-level job in- terviews, policy formulation and senior staff meetings. “Where’s Chirlane?” is a regu- lar refrain heard around City Hall as Mr. de Blasio wonders aloud why she is not in a particular meeting, or where she stands on an issue. In a wide-ranging interview this month at Gracie Mansion, Ms. McCray outlined her ambitious agenda, which is topped by re- imagining mental health services In New York, an Influential First Lady With Plans of Her Own By SHANE GOLDMACHER Chirlane McCray, whom Mayor Bill de Blasio calls “my No. 1 adviser,” at Gracie Mansion. DEMETRIUS FREEMAN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A18 After a series of high-profile po- lice shootings, police departments across the nation turned to body cameras, hoping they would curb abuses. But a rigorous study re- leased Friday shows that they have almost no effect on officer behavior. The 18-month study of more than 2,000 police officers in Wash- ington found that officers equipped with cameras used force and prompted civilian complaints at about the same rate as those who did not have them. Advocates for body cameras — including police officers, lawmak- ers and citizens in high-crime neighborhoods — have long ar- gued that requiring officers to wear the devices would have a “civilizing effect” on both officers and the civilians who encounter them. After the 2014 fatal police shooting of Michael Brown, an un- armed African-American man, in Ferguson, Mo., calls for their use became more widespread. Body Cameras Watch Officers With Little Effect, Study Finds By AMANDA RIPLEY and TIMOTHY WILLIAMS Police departments have been quick to adopt body cameras. JULIO CORTEZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS Continued on Page A11 Hamidreza Pejman has financed an exhibit space, above, that he hopes will lift Iran’s art scene. PAGE A8 INTERNATIONAL A4-9 Anything for His Art in Tehran Japan has one of the worst records for female political representation. Elec- tions Sunday won’t change that. PAGE A4 Women Rarely on Ballot Repeated demonstrations over police actions have prompted businesses to close and concerts to be canceled in the St. Louis region. PAGE A11 NATIONAL A10-16 Protests Disrupt Commerce The agency says it will not accept indi- vidual tax returns that do not meet rules of the Affordable Care Act. PAGE A14 I.R.S. Policing Insurance Rule A forgotten Rodin sculpture of Napo- leon has been identified in the Madison, N.J., borough hall. PAGE A17 NEW YORK A17-19 A Rodin Hiding in Plain Sight A documentary offers never-before- seen footage of her work with chim- panzees in Tanzania in the ’60s. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-8 Jane Goodall, a Life Examined The debut by Joe Mulherin — a.k.a. nothing,nowhere. — is one of 2017’s most promising pop albums. PAGE C1 Blending Emo and Hip-Hop Bob Weinstein scrambles to handle the fallout from his sibling’s scandal. PAGE B1 BUSINESS DAY B1-6 Weinstein’s Brother in Spotlight Ron Lieber writes about an unlikely buddy act in the Senate. PAGE B1 Fighting College Costs’ Opacity The Yankees are pushed to the limit, a World Series berth on the line. PAGE D1 SPORTSSATURDAY D1-6 Astros Force a Game 7 Chris Matthews PAGE A21 EDITORIAL, OP-ED A20-21 THIS WEEKEND Late Edition VOL. CLXVII . . . No. 57,757 © 2017 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2017 Today, sunny, warm, high 75. To- night, times of patchy clouds, mild, low 58. Tomorrow, hazy sunshine through high clouds, warm, high 73. Weather map appears on Page B8. $2.50

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Page 1: STORY KELLY TOLD VIDEO DISPROVES

C M Y K Nxxx,2017-10-21,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

U(D54G1D)y+&!@!.!=!/

WASHINGTON — Video of a2015 speech delivered by Repre-sentative Frederica S. Wilson re-vealed Friday that John F. Kelly,the White House chief of staff, mis-represented her remarks when heaccused her of bragging about se-curing $20 million for a SouthFlorida F.B.I. building and twist-ing President Barack Obama’sarm.

Mr. Kelly, escalating a feud be-tween Mr. Trump and Ms. Wilson,had cast the congresswoman onThursday as a publicity-seekingopportunist. However, the video,released by The Sun Sentinel, anewspaper in South Florida,showed that during her nine-minute speech, Ms. Wilson nevertook credit for getting the moneyfor the building, only for helpingpass legislation naming the build-ing after two fallen federal agents.

She never mentioned pleadingwith Mr. Obama, and she acknowl-edged the help of several Republi-cans, including John A. Boehner,then the House speaker; Repre-sentatives Mario Diaz-Balart andCarlos Curbelo; and SenatorMarco Rubio.

Ms. Wilson, in an interview onFriday, called Mr. Kelly a liar andhinted strongly that the alterca-tion, prompted by a call from Pres-ident Trump to the widow of a fall-en black soldier, was raciallycharged.

“The White House itself is full ofwhite supremacists,” she said.

“I feel very sorry for him be-cause he feels such a need to lie onme and I’m not even his enemy,”Ms. Wilson said of Mr. Kelly. “I justcan’t even imagine why he wouldfabricate something like that.That is absolutely insane. I’m justflabbergasted because it’s veryeasy to trace.”

While she stopped short of ac-cusing Mr. Kelly, a retired Marinegeneral, of racial animus, she didsay that others in the White Houseare racially biased.

“They are making themselves

VIDEO DISPROVESSTORY KELLY TOLDABOUT LAWMAKER

FEUD GROWS OVER CALL

Congresswoman SeesRacial Bias in White

House Response

By YAMICHE ALCINDORand MICHAEL D. SHEAR

Continued on Page A15

The Pentagon is trying to deter-mine whether American forces in-volved in a deadly ambush in Ni-ger this month diverted from theirroutine patrol to embark on an un-approved mission, military offi-cials said on Friday.

The questions have come up be-cause the American and Nigeriensoldiers on the patrol have givenconflicting accounts aboutwhether they were simply am-bushed or were attacked after try-ing to chase Islamic insurgents,according to military officialsfrom both countries.

The episode has engulfed theWhite House in crisis andprompted demands from mem-bers of Congress for answersabout what the soldiers were do-ing before the attack on Oct. 4.

In interviews with both the De-fense Department and The NewYork Times, Nigerien military of-ficials said that a lightly armedconvoy of about 50 Nigerien andAmerican soldiers gave chase toIslamic insurgents on motor-cycles until the men crossed theborder into Mali, then returnedlater to ambush the troops.

American service members, bycontrast, insisted that they did notchase the insurgents but simply“noticed” them in the vicinity ofthe village of Tongo Tongo, De-fense Department officials said. Itwas not until the troops inter-viewed village leaders and wereon their way to their base, by theAmerican account, that the insur-gents ambushed the convoy, over-whelming them.

The inconsistencies are at theheart of why the Pentagon has notbeen forthcoming with detailsabout what happened in Niger, ac-cording to American military offi-cials, who spoke on the conditionof anonymity to discuss a continu-ing investigation. Four Americanswere killed in the attack, includingthree Green Berets, as well as fourNigerien soldiers. Two Americansand six Nigeriens were wounded.

The contradictions added to themajor questions emerging aboutthe attack: Had the soldiers actedbeyond their planned missionwithout first gaining approval?And if they were given permis-sion, who granted it?

Accounts VaryOn How AttackBegan in Niger

African Soldiers Tell ofUnapproved Mission

This article is by Dionne Searcey,Helene Cooper and Eric Schmitt.

Continued on Page A14

BARCELONA, Spain — Thesedays, the city of Barcelona wearstwo hats. And not too comfortably.

On the one hand, Barcelona is aglobal city, a former host of theOlympics, and the home of one ofthe world’s most famous soccerclubs, F.C. Barcelona. It is a mag-net for more than 10 million vis-itors a year, an example of theways large cities increasingly in-fluence global politics, economicsand culture.

On the other hand, Barcelona isthe capital of Catalonia, Spain’srestive northeastern region, andthe nerve center of a drive for Cat-alan independence that is de-scribed by its opponents as paro-chial, exclusive and nationalist.

In that campaign — which theSpanish government now says itwill take emergency measures tohalt — there is no place in Catalo-nia with more at stake. In Bar-celona, the issue of independencehas provoked exceptionally sharpsoul-searching and debate over al-legiances and identity, with an in-tensity not seen since Britainvoted to leave the European Un-ion.

In short, people are worried.First among them is the city’s left-ist mayor, Ada Colau, who, despiteexpressing support for independ-ence in the past, says she is nownot in favor of leaving. “It’s a very

pluralistic city and there is a lot ofdiversity of opinions in Bar-celona,” she said in an interviewthis week.

The city is not exactly compara-ble to London — which favored re-maining in the European Union —since Barcelona is still home tomany separatists. “But if you com-pare it with people in the heart ofCatalonia,” Ms. Colau said, “it’snot as pro-independence.”

Ms. Colau said she was appalledby the violence of the Spanish na-tional police as they tried to blockpeople from voting in the Oct. 1 in-dependence referendum, and shebelieves in Catalonia’s right toself-determination.

But her own attitude to inde-pendence differs from that of theCatalan president, Carles Puigde-mont, a lifelong separatist from

Girona, a small city 60 milesnortheast of Barcelona.

As an economic powerhousethat has welcomed migrants frommany other parts of Spain, Bar-celona has a more “cosmopolitan”outlook than the rest of Catalonia,Ms. Colau said.

Cities, rather than nation states,“are the future,” she said. “I am acitizen of Barcelona and a munici-palist — and that’s the main rea-son that I am in the city hall notthe Catalan regional govern-ment.”

The region’s Oct. 1 referendumwas a deeply compromised ba-rometer of popular sentiment.Though official figures show that90 percent of voters supported in-dependence, only about 43 per-cent of the Catalan electorate tookpart in a vote that was banned bythe Spanish courts and which thenational government tried to stopby force.

Many of those opposed to sepa-ration had little incentive to bravethe police violence. Yet a break-down of the results shows that the

Global City Is the Center of a Secessionist FeudBy PATRICK KINGSLEY

Barcelona, Spain, is home to one of the world’s most famous soccer clubs. Signs at the stadium are written primarily in Catalan.EMILIO MORENATTI/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Continued on Page A9

Catalan IndependenceIs Complex Question

for Barcelona

A federal regulator criticizedWells Fargo for engaging in unfairand deceptive practices and fail-ing to manage risks, and said ithad not set aside enough money topay back the customers itharmed.

The confidential report, pre-pared by the Office of the Comp-troller of the Currency and re-viewed by The New York Times,criticizes Wells Fargo for forcinghundreds of thousands of borrow-ers to buy unneeded auto insur-ance when they took out a carloan, as well as its handling of theproblems once they were de-tected.

The regulators’ report, sent tothe bank this week, is preliminary.Still, it represents the latest blowto the reputation of Wells Fargo,America’s third-largest bank andone that was once regarded as be-ing among the best run in thecountry. The bank is still trying torecover from a scandal in whichits employees created millions ofcredit card and bank accountsthat customers had not requested,eventually leading to the ouster ofthe bank’s chief executive and mil-

Pressure BuildsOn Wells Fargo

In Fraud Case

By GRETCHEN MORGENSON

Continued on Page A16 In a lace-accented white wed-ding gown, Chirlane McCray, thefirst lady of New York City, madeher way up the church aisle andturned to face the crowd. Arrayedbefore her were not the familiarfaces of friends and family, butdozens of other women in similarbridal attire as they prepared tomarch across Upper Manhattan insolidarity against domestic vio-lence.

“There’s nothing like putting onthe garb,” she said after the eventlast month.

After nearly one full term, Ms.McCray, the wife of Mayor Bill deBlasio, has fully wrapped herselfin the role of political spouse, a jobespecially steeped with symbol-ism for her. As the African-Ameri-can wife of a white mayor in a mo-ment of renewed racial strifeacross America, Ms. McCray hasemerged as likely the most influ-ential, if not consequential, firstlady in the city’s history.

She has a full-time staff of fiveand her own public schedule. Sheoversees a portfolio of municipalprograms, including her signa-ture $850 million mental healthinitiative, in which other city offi-cials report to her. She controls anindependent nonprofit with a $25

million annual budget and stillmore staff. And she has the may-or’s ear on decisions big andsmall, sitting in on top-level job in-terviews, policy formulation andsenior staff meetings.

“Where’s Chirlane?” is a regu-lar refrain heard around City Hallas Mr. de Blasio wonders aloudwhy she is not in a particularmeeting, or where she stands onan issue.

In a wide-ranging interviewthis month at Gracie Mansion, Ms.McCray outlined her ambitiousagenda, which is topped by re-imagining mental health services

In New York, an Influential First Lady With Plans of Her OwnBy SHANE GOLDMACHER

Chirlane McCray, whom Mayor Bill de Blasio calls “my No. 1 adviser,” at Gracie Mansion.DEMETRIUS FREEMAN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A18

After a series of high-profile po-lice shootings, police departmentsacross the nation turned to bodycameras, hoping they would curbabuses. But a rigorous study re-leased Friday shows that theyhave almost no effect on officerbehavior.

The 18-month study of morethan 2,000 police officers in Wash-ington found that officersequipped with cameras used forceand prompted civilian complaintsat about the same rate as thosewho did not have them.

Advocates for body cameras —including police officers, lawmak-ers and citizens in high-crimeneighborhoods — have long ar-gued that requiring officers towear the devices would have a“civilizing effect” on both officers

and the civilians who encounterthem. After the 2014 fatal policeshooting of Michael Brown, an un-armed African-American man, inFerguson, Mo., calls for their usebecame more widespread.

Body Cameras Watch OfficersWith Little Effect, Study Finds

By AMANDA RIPLEY and TIMOTHY WILLIAMS

Police departments have beenquick to adopt body cameras.

JULIO CORTEZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Continued on Page A11

Hamidreza Pejman has financed anexhibit space, above, that he hopes willlift Iran’s art scene. PAGE A8

INTERNATIONAL A4-9

Anything for His Art in Tehran

Japan has one of the worst records forfemale political representation. Elec-tions Sunday won’t change that. PAGE A4

Women Rarely on Ballot

Repeated demonstrations over policeactions have prompted businesses toclose and concerts to be canceled in theSt. Louis region. PAGE A11

NATIONAL A10-16

Protests Disrupt Commerce

The agency says it will not accept indi-vidual tax returns that do not meet rulesof the Affordable Care Act. PAGE A14

I.R.S. Policing Insurance Rule

A forgotten Rodin sculpture of Napo-leon has been identified in the Madison,N.J., borough hall. PAGE A17

NEW YORK A17-19

A Rodin Hiding in Plain Sight

A documentary offers never-before-seen footage of her work with chim-panzees in Tanzania in the ’60s. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-8

Jane Goodall, a Life Examined

The debut by Joe Mulherin — a.k.a.nothing,nowhere. — is one of 2017’smost promising pop albums. PAGE C1

Blending Emo and Hip-Hop

Bob Weinstein scrambles to handle thefallout from his sibling’s scandal. PAGE B1

BUSINESS DAY B1-6

Weinstein’s Brother in Spotlight

Ron Lieber writes about an unlikelybuddy act in the Senate. PAGE B1

Fighting College Costs’ Opacity

The Yankees are pushed to the limit, aWorld Series berth on the line. PAGE D1

SPORTSSATURDAY D1-6

Astros Force a Game 7

Chris Matthews PAGE A21

EDITORIAL, OP-ED A20-21

THIS WEEKEND

Late Edition

VOL. CLXVII . . . No. 57,757 © 2017 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2017

Today, sunny, warm, high 75. To-night, times of patchy clouds, mild,low 58. Tomorrow, hazy sunshinethrough high clouds, warm, high 73.Weather map appears on Page B8.

$2.50