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Saturday, February 28, 2026

Now we know where they went

Two re-scheduled Tomaquag Museum that were snowed out

 


News from the Charlestown Democratic Town Committee

 

C-Town Dems News

February 2026

Meet your 2026 candidates!

Wednesday, March 4, 6:00 PM
CDTC Meeting

with
AG candidate Kim Ahern
LG candidate Sue AnderBois

 

Join the Charlestown Democratic Town Committee for conversation with Kim Ahern and Sue AnderBois

 

Meeting will be held at the Charlestown Police station
6 PM

 

We'll be hosting other candidates for statewide races on future dates, so subscribe and follow our socials below.

About Kim: A trusted prosecutor for nine years, Kim served as a Special Assistant Attorney General under three Rhode Island attorneys general. She fought to uphold the law, prosecuting over 1,000 cases in what is now known as the Special Victims Unit, as well as environmental crimes to protect Rhode Islanders’ air and water. She served as the Attorney General’s representative on the Rhode Island Commission on Prejudice and Bias and worked closely with the office’s Civil Division.

 

Kim went on to serve as a senior counselor to Rhode Island’s last two governors. Kim was a trusted advisor on a range of policy and legal matters, including juvenile justice reform, reentry support, and housing.

 

When COVID hit Rhode Island, Kim helped lead the state’s response, including efforts to provide food, housing, and other supports to the state’s most vulnerable populations.

 

Most recently, Governor McKee appointed Kim as the first-ever Chairperson of the Rhode Island Cannabis Control Commission. From 2023 to 2025, Kim successfully built a new, independent state agency, balancing economic opportunity with public health safeguards. She oversaw the regulation, licensing, and enforcement of adult-use and medical cannabis in a way that was safe, transparent, and equitable.

About Sue: Currently Deputy Majority Whip of the Providence City Council, where she is also chair of the Special Committee on the Environment and Resiliency & also the North Main Street Task Force. She is a member of the Finance Committee, HOPE Committee, a Commissioner of the Providence Parks, and Vice Chair of the City Property Committee. 

 

Sue's career has largely focused on energy policy and local food systems. She most recently was the Northeast Director of Climate and Energy for The Nature Conservancy, and prior to that was Rhode Island's first "food czar" in the Raimondo Administration, where she wrote and implemented RI's first food strategy Relish Rhody. She has served on many boards and commissions, including as a current appointee on the RI Energy Efficiency Council. She previously served as Chair of the Providence Sustainability Commission, was a founding board member of the Local Return, and was a board member of Farm Fresh RI, Green Energy Consumers Alliance, Southside Community Land Trust, and the RI Food Policy Council.

 

She lives in Providence with her husband Scott and their dog Captain Ruggles and cats Zeni and Wasabi.  She has a BA from Dartmouth College and an MBA from Yale University.

Call for Volunteers

Your Charlestown Democratic Town Committee needs you! We are looking for active participants who want to help support Democratic candidates and causes. If interested, send a note to info@charlestowndemocrats.org. Please consider joining us!

 **In America, we don’t do kings.**

 For those looking to keep abreast of local and state resistance efforts, we recommend South County Resistance and Indivisible RI to find out what’s going on and to join some like-minded neighbors.​

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The Charlestown Democratic Town Committee manages the affairs of the Democratic Party in the town of Charlestown, RI subject to RI Election Law, State Party rules and its own bylaws. We meet the first Wednesday of every month at 6:00 PM at the Charlestown Police Station. Any Charlestown registered Democrat is welcome to attend.

End debacles like Roger Williams and Our Lady of Fatima Hospitals

Kathy Fogarty and Linda Ujifusa introduce bills to pushback on private equity hospital take-overs

For more on this study, CLICK HERE.
Sen. Linda Ujifusa and Rep. Kathleen A. Fogarty have filed two companion bills to protect Rhode Island’s health care system from abuses associated with private equity ownership and the corporate practice of medicine (CPOM).

The legislation is based on model legislation developed by the National Academy for State Health Policy (NASHP), informed by analyses conducted by researchers at the Center for Advancing Health Policy through Research (CAHPR) at the Brown University School of Public Health. The bills would strengthen transparency, oversight and accountability for corporate actors operating within Rhode Island’s health care system.

The first bill (2026-S 24922026-H 7720) addresses private equity ownership in health care, in which financial firms acquire or exert control over hospitals and medical practices in ways that prioritize short-term financial returns over long-term patient care and workforce stability. National research has linked private equity ownership to hospital closures, reduced access to care, and deteriorating working conditions for health care staff. 

Bobby Junior goes full quack on autism treatments

FDA makes its warnings about bogus autism cures disappear

A page recently pulled from the Food and Drug
Administration’s website gave examples of “false claims”
about treatments for autism and its symptoms.
 Internet Archive
The warning on the government website was stark. Some products and remedies claiming to treat or cure autism are being marketed deceptively and can be harmful. 

Among them: chelating agents, hyperbaric oxygen therapies, chlorine dioxide and raw camel milk. 

Now that advisory is gone.

The Food and Drug Administration pulled the page down late last year. The federal Department of Health and Human Services told ProPublica in a statement that it retired the webpage “during a routine clean up of dated content at the end of 2025,” noting the page had not been updated since 2019. (An archived version of the page is still available online.) 

Some advocates for people with autism don’t understand that decision. “It may be an older page, but those warnings are still necessary,” said Zoe Gross, a director at the Autistic Self Advocacy Network, a nonprofit policy organization run by and for autistic people. “People are still being preyed on by these alternative treatments like chelation and chlorine dioxide. Those can both kill people.” 

Chlorine dioxide is a chemical compound that has been used as an industrial disinfectant, a bleaching agent and an ingredient in mouthwash, though with the warning it shouldn’t be swallowed. A ProPublica story examined Sen. Ron Johnson’s endorsement of a new book by Dr. Pierre Kory, which describes the chemical as a “remarkable molecule” that, when diluted and ingested, “works to treat everything from cancer and malaria to autism and COVID.”

Johnson, a Wisconsin Republican who has amplified anti-scientific claims around COVID-19, supplied a blurb for the cover of the book, “The War on Chlorine Dioxide.” He called it “a gripping tale of corruption and courage that will open eyes and prompt serious questions.”

The lack of clear warning from the government on questionable autism treatments is in line with HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s rejection of conventional science on autism and vaccine safety. Last spring, Kennedy brought into the agency a vaccine critic who’d promoted treating autistic children with the puberty-blocking drug Lupron. And in January, Kennedy recast an advisory panel on autism, appointing people who have championed the use of pressurized chambers to deliver pure oxygen to children, as well as some who support infusions to draw out heavy metals, a process known as chelation.

Kennedy has embraced various unconventional measures in his fight against what he views as a government system corrupted by special interests. In October 2024, shortly before Donald Trump won the presidency again, Kennedy vowed on social media that the FDA’s “war on public health” was about to end. 

ICE covered up murder of US citizen Ruben Ray Martinez in Texas Last March

‘How Many Other Killings Are They Concealing?’ 

Jessica Corbett for Common Dreams

Demands for accountability are mounting after internal records revealed this week that an officer with Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations fatally shot Ruben Ray Martinez, a 23-year-old US citizen, almost a year ago in South Padre Island, Texas.

“While Martinez’s death was reported in local media at the time, the reports did not identify HSI involvement or disclose that a federal agent fired the shots through the driver-side window,” Newsweek reported, citing publicly available information and records obtained by American Oversight through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).

“It shouldn’t take 11 months and a FOIA lawsuit to learn that the government killed someone,” American Oversight said on social media late Friday. Separately, the watchdog noted that “the details sound similar to the death of Renee Good,” a 37-year-old US citizen and mother of three fatally shot by officer Jonathan Ross last month in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Good’s killing, and two Customs and Border Protection agents’ subsequent fatal shooting of 37-year-old US citizen and nurse Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, have fueled outrage over President Donald Trump’s mass deportation agenda, resulting in a congressional funding fight that has partially shut down the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which oversees both agencies.

ICE’s internal report on the Texas shooting states that HSI agents were helping redirect traffic at the site of a major accident early on March 15, 2025. Martinez and his passengers aren’t named, but the document claims that the driver of a blue four-door Ford “failed to follow instructions,” including verbal commands to stop and exit the vehicle.

Instead, the driver “accelerated forward, striking a HSI special agent who wound up on the hood of the vehicle. Upon observing this, HSI group supervisory special agent utilized his government-issued service weapon, discharging multiple rounds at the driver through the open driver’s side window,” according to the ICE report—a version of events that a DHS spokesperson echoed in a Friday statement added to the Newsweek article, which was initially published Wednesday.

The DHS spokesperson also said that the incident remains under investigation by the Texas Department of Public Safety’s Ranger Division, whose press secretary, Sheridan Nolen, confirmed that “this is still an active investigation by the Texas Rangers, and no other information is currently available.”

Charles Stam, a lawyer for the Martinez family, told the New York Times that the 23-year-old was the driver in the ICE report. Stam and another attorney, Alex Stamm, also said in a statement that eyewitness accounts of the scene don’t match the document.

“It is critical that there is a full and fair investigation into why HSI was present at the scene of a traffic collision and why a federal officer shot and killed a US citizen as he was trying to comply with instructions from the local law enforcement officers directing traffic,” the lawyers said.

The Times also reached Martinez’s mother, Rachel Reyes, who said her son worked at an Amazon warehouse in San Antonio and was out to celebrate his birthday. According to her: “He was a good kid. He doesn’t have a criminal history... He never got in trouble. He was never violent.”

Reyes challenged the federal government’s narrative about her son, telling the newspaper: “What they’re saying is different from what they told the family, so that’s adding insult to injury... They are making it sound different. I don’t appreciate their language.”

In a Friday interview with the Texas Tribune, American Oversight executive director Chioma Chukwu also called out the government: “What they’re telling the public is very different than what they’re doing behind closed doors. The only reason why we’re able to make these connections and really call into question the public statements that they’re making to mislead the public is because we’re able to get our hands on these documents... That should deeply concern everyone.”

The revelations this week have generated concern. André Treiber, the Democratic National Committee’s Youth Coordinating Council chair, wrote on social media Friday evening that “ICE murdered a Texan last March and we are only just learning about it now. They are once again offering the excuse that this was done in self-defense, but forgive me if I am extremely skeptical after they’ve been caught lying about that exact same thing multiple times already.”

Federal lawmakers also sounded the alarm on Friday. Congressional Progressive Caucus Chair Greg Casar (D-Texas) declared that “Americans deserve immediate answers and an independent investigation of the shooting.” Another Texas Democrat, Congressman Joaquin Castro, similarly called for “a full investigation,” including into the monthslong “cover-up.”

US Rep. Delia Ramirez (D-Ill.), whose Chicagoland district has also faced a recent ICE invasion, pointed to other deaths tied to the agency, including those of Silverio Villegas Gonzalez, who was shot by ICE in the Chicago suburb of Franklin Park last September; Keith Porter Jr., who was shot by an off-duty agent on New Year’s Eve in Los Angeles, California; and Linda Davis, a special education teacher in Savannah, Georgia, who was killed in a Monday car crash that involved a man fleeing ICE.

“For a whole year, DHS hid that they murdered Ruben, a young man in Texas, after a traffic stop. Just like they did with Silverio, Renee, Keith, Alex, and Linda, they lied and avoided accountability,” said Ramirez, who supports abolishing ICE. “How many more people have to be executed before my colleagues realize that reforms are not enough?”