2009 in the United States

2009
in
the United States

Decades:
  • 1980s
  • 1990s
  • 2000s
  • 2010s
  • 2020s
See also:

Events from the year 2009 in the United States.

Incumbents

Federal government

Events

January

January 20: Barack Obama becomes President
January 16: Electronics retailing company Circuit City closed all of its U.S. stores in the wake of a bankruptcy issue, after nearly 60 years in business.

February

February 12: 2009 U.S. penny commemorating 200th anniversary of Lincoln's birth

March

March 7: Kepler space telescope launch
  • March 2 Insurance giant AIG reports nearly $62 billion in losses during the fourth quarter of 2008, and the US government gives it $30 billion more in aid in a new bailout.[22]
  • March 3 Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke says AIG took huge, irresponsible risks.[23]
  • March 7 NASA launches Kepler Mission, a space photometer which searches for planets in the Milky Way that could be similar to Earth and habitable by humans.[24][25]
  • March 9
    • President Obama overturns a Bush-era policy that limited federal funding for embryonic stem cell research, while promising that human cloning will be banned.[26]
    • Exactly 17 months after its all-time high of 14,164 on October 9, 2007, the Dow Jones Industrial Average bottoms out at 6,547 during the late-2000s recession and begins to rise quickly.
  • March 10 Geneva County massacre: Michael McLendon goes on a killing rampage in Geneva County, Alabama, in which he kills his mother and 6 other family members. He then later kills 3 random civilians before committing suicide inside a factory where he used to work.
  • March 13 A report by the Federal Reserve says that U.S. families lost a record 18% of their wealth in 2008.[27]
  • March 15 AIG announces it will pay $450 million in bonuses to top executives despite its central role in the global financial meltdown and despite receiving a $173 billion government bailout. A massive public outcry follows, with Obama calling AIG greedy and reckless.[28][29]
  • March 17 The Seattle Post Intelligencer ends publication, just two weeks after the Rocky Mountain News of Denver, Colorado shuts down.[30]
  • March 18 New Mexico becomes the 15th state to abolish the death penalty.[31]
  • March 21 Four Oakland police officers are killed in a shoot out.[32]
  • March 22 After emitting steam and volcanic ash for weeks, Alaska's Mount Redoubt erupts explosively for the first time in 20 years.[33]
  • March 29 Gunman Robert Stewart enters a nursing home in Carthage, North Carolina, killing 8 people and injuring 2 others before being shot by an off duty police officer. In 2011, Stewart is sentenced to 142 years in prison.

April

  • April The unemployment rate hits 9% for the first time since September 1983; it will not drop below 9% again until late 2011.
  • April 1 Attorney General Eric Holder dismisses the case against former senator Ted Stevens, citing prosecutorial misconduct.
  • April 3
    • The Iowa Supreme Court unanimously agrees that denying same-sex couples the right to marry is unconstitutional. Iowa becomes the third state to allow same-sex marriage, and is the first state in the American midwest to allow such unions.[34][35]
    • A mass shooting occurs in an immigration center in Binghamton, New York. Gunman Jiverly Anteras Wong, a naturalized citizen from Vietnam, shoots and kills 13 people, and injures 4 others, before committing suicide – it is one of the biggest mass shootings in U.S. history perpetrated by a single person.
  • April 4 Officers Eric Kelly, Steven Mayhle and Paul Scullio are killed in a shootout by Richard Poplawski in Pittsburgh. Poplawski is sentenced to death two years later.
  • April 7 Vermont legalizes same-sex marriage after the legislature overrides a veto by the governor.[36]
  • April 8 Somali pirates hijack the Maersk Alabama, an American freighter, then kidnap her captain.
  • April 12 Three Somali pirates are killed in a sniper operation authorized by President Obama, freeing Captain Philips and ending a multi-day standoff between the United States Navy and the pirates.
  • April 18 Roxana Saberi, an Iranian-American journalist, is sentenced by an Iranian court to eight years in prison on charges she allegedly engaged in espionage.[37] She is released the following month, after an appeals court reduces and suspends her sentence.
  • April 24 The World Health Organization calls the reported cases of swine flu in Mexico and the U.S. a "public health emergency of international concern".[38][39]
  • April 27 Air Force One photo op controversy: An Air Force One back-up plane and an F-16 fighter jet fly at approximately 1,000 feet (300 m) over Lower Manhattan, in a photo opportunity organized by the United States Department of Defense. Citizens, who have not been informed of the event, are alarmed due to fears of a repeat of the September 11 attacks.[40]
  • April 28 Senator Arlen Specter (R-PA) switches parties to become a Democrat, giving the Democrats a 59-seat majority in the Senate.[41]

May

Voice of America news headlines for May 5, 2009
Voice of America news headlines for May 6, 2009
Voice of America news headlines for May 14, 2009
Voice of America news headlines for May 20, 2009
Voice of America news headlines for May 27, 2009
  • May 11
  • May 13 A tornado outbreak devastates the north and northeastern Missouri towns of Green City, Novinger, and Kirksville, killing three. Tornadoes are also reported in Oklahoma, Kansas, and Illinois.[44][45][46]
  • May 14 Federal transportation officials reveal that low pay leading to sleep deprivation, and failure to pass flight certification tests were factors leading to the crash of Continental Connection Flight 3407 near Buffalo that killed 50 people.[47]
  • May 19 President Obama announces vehicle emissions and mileage requirements. Under the new federal rules, vehicles will use 30 percent less fuel and emit one third less carbon dioxide by 2016. The changes will add $1,300 to the cost of each new vehicle.[48]
  • May 21 The Senate passes a bill to impose new regulations on the credit card industry, curbing some fees and interest hikes and requiring more transparent disclosure of account terms.[49]
  • May 31 Physician George Tiller, known for giving late-term abortions, is murdered during a Sunday service at his church in Wichita, Kansas.

June

July

July 3: Sarah Palin resigns as Alaska's governor

August

September

September 2: Protesters at a health care reform town hall meeting in West Hartford, Connecticut
  • September 2 The Justice Department announces the largest health care fraud settlement in history, $2.3 billion, involving Pfizer.[67]
  • September 8 President Obama gives a speech to students across America encouraging good study habits and stressing the importance of a good education. The speech had been highly criticized by some conservatives who said they feared the president would be indoctrinating schoolchildren with political propaganda.[68]
  • September 9 President Obama addresses a joint session of Congress on the importance of healthcare reform. Representative Joe Wilson (R-SC) shouts, "You lie!" as Obama says illegal immigrants would not be covered under his healthcare proposal. The heckling received widespread media attention for many days.[69]
  • September 12 The first 9/12 Project protest event is held in Washington, DC, with attendance being estimated from hundreds of thousands to as many as 2 million people.[70] Numerous other tea party protests occurred nationwide as well.[71]
  • September 24
    • President Obama becomes the first US President to preside over the UN Security Council. Also, at the United Nations, Obama outlines stances that his administration will take on climate change,[72] multilateralism, and nuclear proliferation and disarmament.[73][74]
    • RAINN Day, the Rape, Abuse and Incest National Network's annual campaign to stop sexual assault, is held on college campuses.
  • September 24 September 25 The G20 summit takes place in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.[75]
  • September 25 At the G-20 Pittsburgh summit, world leaders announce that the G-20 will assume greater leverage over the global economy, replacing the role of the G8, in an effort to prevent another global financial crisis like the one that started in 2007.[76]
  • September 27 Polish-French film director Roman Polanski is arrested in Switzerland on a United States arrest warrant.[77]
  • September 29 An 8.3-magnitude earthquake triggers a tsunami near the Samoan Islands. Many communities and harbors in Samoa and American Samoa are destroyed, and at least 189 are killed.

October

November

December

Ongoing

Births

Deaths

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

November 26th 2009-Aden Duale

December

See also

References

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