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- Donald Trump Just Granted 5 Full Pardons. Check Out to Who.
- Jared Kushner owns Baltimore apartments ‘infested’ with rodents, mould and maggots
- Israelis cleared of rape to sue British accuser in Cyprus
- Another tourist injured by bison at a national park; second such incident in a week
- The 89 Issues of Car and Driver with a Corvette on the Cover
- School Shooter Dies in Car Crash, 21 Years After Opening Fire at Arkansas Middle School
- Montana searchers find body of missing Oregon child
- India boosts Hindu pilgrimage to holy cave in conflict-torn Kashmir
- Julian Castro Is ‘Hypercritical’ Of Trump Immigration Policies He Once Praised Under Obama
- Truck Driver Killed in Crash that Derailed Illinois Train
- Police officer accuses McDonald's workers of taking bite out of sandwich then admits he ‘forgot he ate it’
- Trump doubles down on Cummings attacks, shares vulgar comment about Baltimore on Twitter
- Report alleges ethical abuses at UN agency for Palestinians
- He wrote the Christian case against dating. Now he's splitting from his wife and faith.
- The Latest: Police: Shooting survivors ranged from 12 to 69
- Beijing says China stepping up U.S. soy imports, yet to show up in U.S. data
- Europe Is Getting America's Anti-Missile Aegis Ashore System but...
- Executive Director of House Dems’ Campaign Arm Resigns amid Backlash over Lack of Diversity
- 'Stay inside and lock your doors': Tiny Canadian village on lockdown as teenage murder spree suspects spotted scavenging for food
- Trump Pals Pushed Nuke Firm That Wanted to Undercut Protections Against a Saudi Bomb
- IS threat hovers over Syria camp, rattling authorities
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Donald Trump Just Granted 5 Full Pardons. Check Out to Who. Posted: 29 Jul 2019 12:00 PM PDT President Donald Trump granted five full pardons Monday to John Richard Bubala, Roy Wayne McKeever, Rodney Takumi, Michael Tedesco and Chalmer Lee Williams.The president decided each man was worthy of Executive Grants of Clemency after "a careful review of the files" of each individual, according to an official statement from the Office of the Press Secretary.John Richard BubalaBubala pled guilty to improper use of Federal Government in 1990 in an effort to transport automotive equipment from one town to another. Today, he volunteers at a Veterans Affairs Medical Center by teaching classes on the American Flag, and is serving on an honor detail for veteran funerals.Roy Wayne McKeeverMcKeever was arrested in 1989 when he was 19 years old for transporting marijuana from Mexico to Oklahoma and immediately pleaded guilty to one count of using a telephone to facilitate the distribution of a controlled substance. He has spent the last 29 years doing charity work for his community and is an active member of the Sheriffs' Association of Texas.Rodney TakumiTakumi was arrested in 1987 at an illegal gambling parlor during a law-enforcement raid and pleaded no contest. After his arrest, he worked as a tax preparer for several years and now owns a tax preparation franchise within the Navajo Nation. |
Jared Kushner owns Baltimore apartments ‘infested’ with rodents, mould and maggots Posted: 29 Jul 2019 03:18 AM PDT Donald Trump characterised Elijah Cummings' Baltimore-based congressional district as a "rodent infested mess" where "no human" would want to live, in a now-viral tweetstorm on Saturday.His criticism rang with a particular irony in Baltimore County, where the president's son-in-law Jared Kushner owns more than a dozen apartment complexes that have been cited with hundreds of code violations and, critics say, provide sub-standard housing to lower income tenants.In an interview on Saturday, Baltimore County Executive John Olszewski Jr condemned Mr Trump's comments as "an attack on basic decency"."It is certainly ironic that the president's own son-in-law was complicit in contributing to some of the neglect that the president purports to be so concerned about," Mr Olszewski, a Democrat, added.Kushner Companies, which started operating in Maryland in 2013, has owned almost 9,000 rental units across 17 complexes, many of them in Baltimore County, the Baltimore Sun reported earlier this year.The properties generate at least $90m (£72m) in revenue annually. Mr Kushner stepped down as CEO of the company in 2017, when he became a senior White House advisor.A company spokesperson did not address questions on Sunday about whether the group agreed with Mr Trump's characterisation of the area, but wrote: "Kushner Companies is proud to own thousands of apartments in the Baltimore area."In 2017, Baltimore County officials revealed that apartments owned by Kushner Cos were responsible for more than 200 code violations, all accrued in the span of the calendar year.Repairs were made only after the county threatened fines, local officials said, and even after warnings, violations on nine properties were not addressed, resulting in monetary sanctions.In an investigation by the New York Times and Pro Publica published earlier that year, tenants of Kushner Cos properties reported mouse infestations, mould problems and maggots.A private investigator who looked into Mr Kusher's property management company, Westminster Management, described them as "slumlords".Christine Taylor, a spokeswoman for the Kushner Cos, asserted at the time that the group was in compliance with all state and local laws.Then-Baltimore County Executive Kevin Kamenetz said that was "a stretch of truth"."We expect all landlords to comply with the code requirements that protect the health and safety of their tenants, even if the landlord's father-in-law is president of the United States," added Mr Kamenetz, who died in 2018.Shannon Darrow, a programme manager at the tenant advocacy group Fair Housing Action Centre of Maryland, said on Sunday that she was "appalled" by Mr Trump's comments about Mr Cummings's district, which includes about half of Baltimore City, and most of the majority black sections of Baltimore County.She added that she found Mr Trump's attacks ironic given the legacy of Mr Kushner's properties in the district."Basically, [Mr Kushner] has been creating a race to the bottom in terms of poorly maintained properties," she said. "He's been very, very deeply implicated."In the past two years, Kushner Cos and its affiliated entities have been sued multiple times by Baltimore-area residents who allege that the company has charged them excessive fees and used the threat of eviction to pressure them into paying up.From 2013 to 2017, corporate entities associated with Kushner Cos' apartments requested the civil arrest of 105 former tenants – the highest number among all property managers in Maryland during that period, the Baltimore Sun reported."It's been our recent experience that working families have been preyed on at the benefit of Mr Kushner and his company," Mr Olszewski said.A group of tenants recently attempted to file a class-action lawsuit alleging unlawful rental practices by the company. But their request was denied by a Baltimore Circuit Court judge.Washington Post |
Israelis cleared of rape to sue British accuser in Cyprus Posted: 29 Jul 2019 10:47 AM PDT Israeli tourists released from custody in Cyprus after having been cleared of gang rape charges plan to sue the British woman who accused them, their lawyer said Monday. Twelve Israeli youths were arrested on July 12 after a 19-year-old British tourist said she was raped in a hotel in the resort town of Ayia Napa, in southeast Cyprus. Five of the accused were released last Thursday and the other seven on Sunday, as a police source said the Briton was "facing charges of giving a false statement over an imaginary offence". |
Another tourist injured by bison at a national park; second such incident in a week Posted: 29 Jul 2019 12:44 PM PDT |
The 89 Issues of Car and Driver with a Corvette on the Cover Posted: 28 Jul 2019 09:01 AM PDT |
School Shooter Dies in Car Crash, 21 Years After Opening Fire at Arkansas Middle School Posted: 29 Jul 2019 12:33 PM PDT |
Montana searchers find body of missing Oregon child Posted: 29 Jul 2019 05:25 AM PDT The body of a missing Oregon boy whose parents died in an apparent murder-suicide is believed to have been found in a remote area of Montana, police said. Police in Medford, Oregon, said Montana authorities reported finding the body Sunday thought to be that of 2-year-old Aiden Salcido, the son of Daniel Salcido and Hannah Janiak. The family formerly lived in Medford. |
India boosts Hindu pilgrimage to holy cave in conflict-torn Kashmir Posted: 27 Jul 2019 10:34 PM PDT India is hailing a Hindu pilgrimage to a holy cave high in the snow-capped mountains of contested Kashmir as an example of communal harmony, in a region where the Muslim-majority population is overwhelmingly hostile to its rule. India and arch-rival Pakistan have fought two wars over Kashmir, and came close to a third in February after a suicide-bomb attack by Pakistan-based militants on Indian paramilitary police near the pilgrimage route. India's Hindu-nationalist government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi has made "pilgrimage tourism" a focus, spending huge sums on January's Kumbh Mela festival, where more than a hundred million Indians came to bathe in the holy Ganges river. |
Julian Castro Is ‘Hypercritical’ Of Trump Immigration Policies He Once Praised Under Obama Posted: 28 Jul 2019 05:02 PM PDT Democratic presidential candidate Julian Castro, a fervent opponent of the Trump administration's immigration agenda, was called out for his past praise of former President Barack Obama's immigration enforcement policies."I want to ask you about immigration which you have made a part of your campaign focus," said "Face the Nation" host Margaret Brennan Sunday. "When you were mayor of San Antonio, you testified before Congress and you called for increased border security measures and you praised the Obama administration's actions."Brennan then played a clip of Castro speaking before a congressional hearing in February 2013. In the clip, then-San Antonio Mayor Castro is seen lauding the Obama administration's success at removing "dangerous individuals" after beefing up security along the U.S.-Mexico border."In Texas, we know firsthand that this administration has put more boots on the ground along the border than at any other time in our history which has led to unprecedented success in removing dangerous individuals with criminal records," he said during a 2013 House Judiciary committee hearing."Why did you praise that policy then but when the Trump administration adopt similar language and policies you're hypercritical of them?" Brennan asked.Castro, who went on to serve as secretary of Housing and Urban Development under the Obama administration, maintained that his position has not changed, and that he's always been in favor of removing criminal illegal aliens from the U.S."I talked about people who committed serious crimes, dangerous criminals. I haven't changed at all. If there are people who have committed serious felonies in the United States who are immigrants or who come to the border … they should be deported," he said in response. |
Truck Driver Killed in Crash that Derailed Illinois Train Posted: 29 Jul 2019 09:18 AM PDT |
Posted: 29 Jul 2019 06:12 AM PDT A police officer wrongly accused McDonald's workers of taking a bite out of his sandwich after he forgot he did it himself.The officer, known only as "DJ", ordered a McChicken before starting work at Marion County Jail in Indianapolis and put it in a fridge for safekeeping during his shift.When he opened it up seven hours later he discovered the missing chunk and became convinced he had been targeted by the restaurant staff because of his job."I know I didn't eat it," he told the WTHR local TV station. "No one else was around."I said, 'You know what? I am going to the McDonald's to see if they can get that taken care of.'"I just wanted to find out who the person was and they deal with that person in an appropriate way."Managers at the branch on Morris Street checked the schedule to see who was preparing the food when he placed his order but found no evidence to back up the officer's claims.The truth was revealed more than a week later when Marion County Sheriff's Office announced that the mystery biter was its own officer, "DJ"."The investigation has determined that McDonald's restaurant staff in no way tampered with the employee's food," the agency said in a statement on Friday."The employee took a bite out of the sandwich upon starting his shift at the Marion County Jail, then placed it in the refrigerator in a break room."He returned nearly seven hours later having forgotten that he had previously bitten the sandwich."He wrongly concluded that a McDonald's restaurant employee had tampered with his food because he is a law enforcement officer." The officer formally apologised to McDonald's for his error. |
Trump doubles down on Cummings attacks, shares vulgar comment about Baltimore on Twitter Posted: 28 Jul 2019 01:54 PM PDT |
Report alleges ethical abuses at UN agency for Palestinians Posted: 29 Jul 2019 02:49 AM PDT An internal ethics report has alleged mismanagement and abuses of authority at the highest levels of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees even as the organisation faced an unprecedented crisis after US funding cuts. The allegations included in the confidential report by the agency's ethics department are now being scrutinised by UN investigators. The agency -- the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) -- said it is cooperating fully with the investigation and that it cannot comment in detail because the probe is ongoing. |
He wrote the Christian case against dating. Now he's splitting from his wife and faith. Posted: 29 Jul 2019 12:17 PM PDT |
The Latest: Police: Shooting survivors ranged from 12 to 69 Posted: 29 Jul 2019 05:33 PM PDT Authorities say the people shot and wounded by a gunman at a California food festival ranged in age from 12 to 69 years old. Santa Clara County officials say 13 people were taken to hospitals with gunshot wounds after Sunday's attack at the Garlic Festival in Gilroy. Gilroy Police Chief Scot Smithee says it's too early in the investigation to determine if any of the victims were targeted, or if he the shooter fired indiscriminately Sunday at a food festival in the city. |
Beijing says China stepping up U.S. soy imports, yet to show up in U.S. data Posted: 29 Jul 2019 02:32 AM PDT Chinese state media said on Sunday the United States has shipped several million tonnes of soybeans to China since the two countries' leaders met in June, although U.S. government data shows that the volume was much less. The U.S.-China trade war has curbed the export of U.S. crops to China, with soybean sales falling sharply after Beijing slapped tariffs of 25% on American cargoes. U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) data shows that just 1.02 million tonnes of soybeans were shipped to China for the period starting from the G20 meeting June 28 to the week ended July 18, the most recent date for which data is available. |
Europe Is Getting America's Anti-Missile Aegis Ashore System but... Posted: 28 Jul 2019 02:00 AM PDT The Aegis Ashore sites in Romania and Poland are land-based versions of the naval Aegis, each consisting of a powerful SPY-1 radar and twenty-four SM-3 interceptor rockets. Aegis Ashore is aimed at stopping short-, medium- and intermediate-range ballistic missiles. Iran has built an arsenal of ballistic missiles, including intermediate-range ballistic missiles (IRBMs) that could—in theory—be armed with nuclear warheads if Iran develops them.America's missile defense umbrella is supposed to protect Europe from Iranian (and perhaps Russian) ballistic missiles.But vital tests haven't been performed, and there are delays in building missile defense sites in Poland. All of which means that the anti-missile shield over Europe may be leaky.The U.S. Missile Defense Agency has conducted only seven out of eleven planned tests in 2018, or just 64 percent, according to a Government Accountability Office study. At the same time, problems with contractors have delayed construction of an anti-missile system in Poland by eighteen months.(This first appeared in early July to 2019.)Begun by the Obama administration, the U.S. missile defense effort in Europe—the European Phased Adaptive Approach—has three parts. Phase I, completed in 2012, comprises a missile defense radar in Turkey and command center in Germany, supporting U.S. Navy ships equipped with the naval version of the Aegis missile defense system. Phase II was completed in 2016, when an Aegis Ashore site in Romania became operational. The delay has been in phase III, in which an Aegis Ashore site in Poland was supposed to be ready. |
Executive Director of House Dems’ Campaign Arm Resigns amid Backlash over Lack of Diversity Posted: 29 Jul 2019 10:15 AM PDT The executive director of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) resigned Monday after Democratic lawmakers and DCCC staffers lashed out publicly at the organization's leadership over their failure to prioritize racial diversity.Allison Jaslow announced her resignation during an emergency meeting that was held on Monday morning in response to calls from staffers and lawmakers for an "immediate restructuring" of the group's senior leadership, Politico reported.Democratic representatives Vicente Gonzalez and Filemon Vela of Texas specifically called for Jaslow's resignation in a statement provided to Politico on Sunday."The DCCC is now in complete chaos," Gonzalez and Vela said in their statement. "The single most immediate action that Cheri Bustos can take to restore confidence in the organization and to promote diversity is to appoint a qualified person of color, of which there are many, as executive director at once. We find the silence of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus on this issue to be deafening."Politico highlighted a longstanding rift within the DCCC last week, publishing a report that quoted staffers and lawmakers complaining about a lack of racial diversity within the group's leadership, and among the vendors hired by the group.DCCC chairwoman Cheri Bustos was forced to return to Washington on Monday to address lawmakers' and staffers' concerns after an emergency meeting on Friday, which Bustos did not attend, and a conference call on Saturday, proved insufficient.Jaslow reportedly wept while assuming blame for the lack of diversity during the Friday meeting while Bustos responded to the complaints by emphasizing her marriage to a Mexican man and her son's engagement to an African-American woman during the Saturday call. She also agreed to hold mandatory diversity training for Committee staff. |
Posted: 29 Jul 2019 03:53 AM PDT A massive police manhunt has been launched in a remote part of northern Canada for a pair of teenager double murder suspects.The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) has been chasing Kam McLeod, 19, and Bryer Schmegelsky, 18, for weeks since the pair were connected to two separate killings in British Columbia earlier this month.The teenagers have been tracked in a series of stolen cars as they have travelled thousands of miles across Canada, from its Pacific coast in the west all to the way east to rural Manitoba.Police helicopters, a plane, drones, dog units and armed officers have flooded the area around York Landing, a small village in remote northern Manitoba, where a local indigenous neighbourhood watch group had spotted the duo.Officers tweeted residents in York Landing should stay inside and lock all their doors and windows while the heavy police presence searched their community.James Favel from the Bear Clan Patrol, the First Nations group which reported the sighting, said some of his volunteers spotted two young men who matched the description of Mr McLeod and Mr Schmegelsky.The pair immediately stood out in the small, close-knit village while scavenging for food near a dump and ran away as soon as they realised they had been seen, he added.RCMP units had already been searching the nearby town of Gillam and believe the pair have been cornered in this region of rural Manitoba.But the intense police presence was leaving its mark on the locals. "Up here, all the towns and communities, they look like ghost towns," said Wade Taylor, another volunteer with the Bear Clan Patrol."Like, everyone's inside. There's a high level of stress, anxiety and fearfulness because they're being kept in their houses."Some of the people, you can tell by their voice that they're almost at the point of breaking down crying. You could say it's traumatic."The manhunt saga began on 12 July when Mr McLeod and Mr Schmegelsky, childhood friends, left their home in Port Alberni on Vancouver Island and travelled 1,500 miles north to Whitehorse, in the Yukon, to look for work.But on 15 July police discovered the bodies of a young couple near Liard Hot Springs, back in British Columbia and the RCMP has said the teenagers are suspects in the case and wanted for questioning.A few days later a burnt-out truck driven by the pair was discovered, along with the body of Leonard Dyck. Mr McLeod and Mr Schmegelsky have been charged with his murder and chased across Canada by the RCMP ever since.The duo are believed to be armed and the public has been warned not to approach them.The father of Mr Schmegelsky has told reporters he believes his son is on a "suicide mission" and expects him to eventually die in a confrontation with the police. "A normal child doesn't travel across the country killing people," he said. "A child in some very serious pain does." |
Trump Pals Pushed Nuke Firm That Wanted to Undercut Protections Against a Saudi Bomb Posted: 29 Jul 2019 02:00 PM PDT Photo Illustration by The Daily Beast / Photos GettyTwo of President Trump's closest advisers pushed hard for a firm trying to circumvent the safeguards meant to keep Saudi Arabia from building a nuclear weapon. That's one of the many conclusions of a year-long investigation by the House Oversight Committee, which found that Former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn and former inaugural committee chair Tom Barrack worked to enrich themselves and their colleagues in the nuclear energy sector. A centerpiece of the effort: helping American companies land contracts in Saudi Arabia—at least in one case, without the guardrails needed to keep the Saudis from making weapons-grade nuclear fuel.Flynn and Barrack used their relationships with the White House—as well as with officials from Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Russia—to advance their personal interests and the interests of executives at the nuclear firm IP3. The CEO of the firm, Admiral Mike Hewitt, began working with Flynn and Barrack in the fall of 2016 in an attempt to influence the incoming Trump administration's Saudi Arabia policy, according to the House Oversight report. The effort drew in a host of other officials in the Trump administration, including Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner."The Trump Administration has virtually obliterated the lines normally separating government policymaking from corporate and foreign interests," the report states. "Documents show the Administration's willingness to let private parties with close ties to the President wield outsized influence over U.S. policy towards Saudi Arabia."Barrack is currently being scrutinized in New York for his lobbying work and investigators have asked him about his work related to the Saudi nuclear deal, according to a New York Times report from Sunday. Flynn, who left the administration in February 2017, is awaiting sentencing after being indicted by Special Counsel Robert Mueller's office and pleading guilty to charges of lying to the FBI.The committee said in its report that Trump officials and advisers, including Flynn and Barrack, attempted to help fast-track a plan whereby the U.S. and Saudi Arabia would agree to cooperate on nuclear energy and firms like IP3 could clinch contracts to develop Riyadh's reactors. IP3 and other U.S. nuclear energy companies were looking for a way to get the industry back on even ground after years of decline and it saw Saudi Arabia as their way forward. But despite IP3's connections in high places, many in the nuclear sector feared something was amiss. Industry executives with companies like Westinghouse, one of the only companies with the ability to export technology to Saudi, originally threw their support behind IP3, though they worried about the firm's "questionable reputation," calling it the "Theranos of the nuclear industry," according to the communications obtained by the House oversight committee and quoted in the report. Part of the industry's concern over IP3 derived from the firm's campaign to convince the administration to consider signing a nuclear deal with Saudi Arabia that did not require the country to adhere to the so-called "gold standard."The term—first coined in January 2009 when the U.S. signed a deal with the United Arab Emirates—requires a foreign government to commit to forgoing enriching and processing plutonium, which can be used to make fuel for reactors but also nuclear weapons. In his travels across the Middle East with Flynn in 2015, IP3 CEO Hewitt became aware that Saudi Arabia, in its search for tenders to build nuclear reactors, did not want to subscribe to America's "gold standard" policy. The argument from Riyadh was that the country did not want to adhere to the strictest of nuclear safeguards in perpetuity if Iran, its regional foe, would one day be able to build up its nuclear program, according to two senior administration officials who spoke to The Daily Beast.That's when Hewitt and IP3 started looking for a way to convince the Trump administration to sign a deal with Saudi Arabia that allowed Riyadh some wiggle room. "IP3 boasted of 'unique access' to President Trump and senior White House officials, disparaged growing bipartisan congressional efforts to limit the transfer of nuclear technology to Saudi Arabia, and characterized the 'Gold Standard' of prohibiting Saudi Arabia from enriching uranium for weapons as an obstacle to be 'overcome,'" the report said.In April of 2017, Hewitt emailed White House and Department of Energy officials a paper that advocated against requiring Saudi Arabia to agree to the gold standard. "Gold Standard has slowly killed our leverage and cooperating with the U.S. has been diminished," Hewitt wrote in an email in April 2017, according to the report. IP3 wasn't just lobbying the American government in pursuit of a Saudi deal. The company also leaned on Flynn and Barrack to gain access to the halls of power in the Kremlin and in Riyadh. The House oversight report said that in 2015 and 2016 "Flynn informed his business partners about upcoming interactions with officials in Russia and the Middle East —including Russian President Vladimir Putin and Saudi Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman—and offered to use these contacts to further IP3's business." In December of 2016, just days before President Trump's inauguration, IP3 executives traveled Saudi Arabia and used their connections to Flynn to float the idea of U.S. companies transferring technology to the country and to solicit a $120 million investment from then-deputy Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman, known as MBS, in exchange for a 10 percent stake in IP3. At the same time IP3 was using its relationship with Flynn to get ahead, KT McFarland, Flynn's deputy, introduced the firm to Barrack. Going forward IP3 relied heavily on the intervention of Barrack to win over the Trump administration, according to the oversight report. Barrack, for his part, pushed the IP3 plan—while also seeking "powerful positions within the Administration—including Special Envoy to the Middle East and Ambassador to the United Arab Emirates," the report said. In May 2016, before then-candidate Trump had clinched the Republican nomination, Barrack shared a draft of the candidate's first major energy speech to a middleman, businessman Rashid Al-Malik, who then passed it along to Saudi and Emirati officials to "coordinate pro-Gulf language," the report said. Following an exchange with foreign campaign officials, Barrack emailed a draft of the speech to former campaign chairman Paul Manafort, saying "We should partner with our Gulf Allies to draft a comprehensive economic security strategy as well as materially assist in their diversification efforts."Neither Barrack or Al-Malik appeared as registered lobbyists in the Department of Justice's Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) database, the report said.In the days leading up to Trump's inaugural, Barrack and IP3 concocted a convoluted idea—known as the Middle East Marshall Plan—that brought in Russia and Middle Eastern countries to help the U.S. build nuclear power plants in the region. Draft materials for the plan, circulated to multiple different Trump officials, included a decision memo entitled "A Marshall Plan for the Middle East" and had a signature line for "Donald J. Trump," according to the oversight report.In February 2017 Barrack sent a text to Jared Kushner about setting up a meeting so he could brief the president's son-in-law."I think this could be a great arrow in the quiver of your Middle East arrows," Barrack wrote to Kushner. Several months later, on March 14, 2017, according to correspondence obtained by the committee, Barrack and employees of his company Colony NorthStar met with President Trump about the plan. As part of that push, Barrack and IP3 put together an idea to partner with Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund and UAE capital to acquire Westinghouse —a company in the consortium that was, in cooperation with IP3, bidding for a contract in the country. Westinghouse is one of the only nuclear energy companies in the U.S. with the ability to export technology abroad.Barrack briefed members of the administration about the plan, including Kushner, according to the report. On August 2017, Kushner sent an email to an IP3 advisor saying: "'Met them today and am trying to gather the interagency assessment of the importance, impact and national security considerations both domestically and internationally.'"Barrack and IP3 attempted to pull in financial firms Blackstone and Apollo Global Management to help in their attempt to acquire Westinghouse, but the entire effort eventually fell apart. Brookfield Asset Management —a firm that bought the Kushner Company 666 5th Avenue building—eventually acquired the nuclear energy company.The original Middle East Marshall plan, as put forward by Barrack and IP3, eventually fell through and by early 2018, IP3 was also on the outs of the American consortium that had come together to coordinate a bid for Saudi Arabia. Westinghouse terminated its agreement with IP3, telling industry partners that the firm's "actions may create a faulty assumption that IP3 is in charge."Today, IP3 is pursuing a cooperation deal with South Korea in an attempt to find work in the Saudi nuclear industry, as first reported by The Daily Beast. According to the report, IP3 plans on partnering with Korean state-run energy firms. The IP3-Korea plan would potentially allow for Riyadh to bypass entering into a gold standard agreement, raising concerns among officials in the Trump administration that it will have little leverage in ensuring Saudi Arabia adheres to certain nuclear safeguards.It appears the other American consortium has moved forward in their attempts to clinch contracts. The Daily Beast reported that the Trump administration had signed at least seven authorizations that allowed U.S. companies to share information with Saudi Arabia about their plans to help the country develop its nuclear sector. Those authorizations, two of them doled out following the murder of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi, have been held from public view.-30-Over the past year the committee has investigated the Trump administration's relationship to Saudi Arabia and Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman. In particular, committee investigators zeroed in on and the development of a plan for American companies to help Riyadh reduce its dependence on oil and to develop its nuclear sector. The committee released an interim report in February that relied heavily on White House whistleblower testimony. In that report, the committee said IP3 had developed a proposal for Saudi Arabia that was "not a business plan" but rather "a scheme for these generals to make some money." IP3 refutes that claim."IP3 has focused for over three years on the national security importance of being the country of choice for the peaceful, safe and secure development of nuclear power," the firm told The Daily Beast in a previous statement. A Republican rebuttal to the committee's interim report, released last week, said the committee's evidence "does not show that the Trump Administration acted inappropriately in the proposed transfer of nuclear energy technology to Saudi Arabia," according to a statement by Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH). Since February, the oversight committee has obtained more than 60,000 pages of documents. The documents reveal new information about Flynn and Barrack's involvement in the Saudi nuclear plan, according to the committee.Read more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
IS threat hovers over Syria camp, rattling authorities Posted: 29 Jul 2019 06:13 AM PDT AL-HOL CAMP (Syria) (AFP) - Stabbing guards, stoning aid workers and flying the Islamic State group's black flag in plain sight: the wives and children of the 'caliphate' are sticking by the jihadists in a desperate Syrian camp. Months after the defeat of the jihadist proto-state, families of IS fighters are among 70,000 people crammed into the Kurdish-run Al-Hol camp in northeastern Syria. Umm Suhaib, the widowed wife of a jihadist, admits that IS supporters have attacked Kurdish security forces guarding the camp. |
Posted: 29 Jul 2019 09:00 AM PDT |
Vietnam seizes 125 kg of rhino horn worth £6m concealed in plaster shipment Posted: 29 Jul 2019 01:22 AM PDT Fifty-five pieces of rhino horn were found encased inside shipments of plaster at Hanoi international airport, the Vietnamese authorities reported on Sunday, in the latest bust against sophisticated global wildlife traffickers. The Southeast Asian nation is both an end destination and transit point for multibillion-dollar smuggling operations of animal parts, including many endangered species. The 125-kilogram haul was discovered in a suspicious shipment of plaster casts on Thursday but it took half a day to smash the blocks apart, the police told AFP. Images released to the media showed large and small pieces of rhino horns displayed on a table while police used rods to break them free. The blocks had been shipped from United Arab Emirates, in carefully disguised cargo that had that arrived on an Etihad Airways flight, the customs department said in a statement. It was not immediately clear where the shipment had originated from. Rhino horn is especially prized in China and Vietnam, the two top consumer markets, where one kilogram can fetch up to $60,000. That would make the entire haul worth $7,500,000 (£6m). According to TRAFFIC, a campaign group against wildlife trafficking, the last decade has seen an explosion of demand for rhino horns, driving unprecedented levels of poaching that has sent rhino populations into crisis despite a ban on the trade since the 1970s. Only about 29,000 rhinos are now left in the wild, down from half a million at the start of the 20th century, report conservationists. The trade has been fuelled by beliefs that when ground into a powder, the horn can cure cancer, relieve hangovers or enhance male virility. The Vietnamese operation is the latest large-scale wildlife trafficking case in Southeast Asia. Earlier this month, three men caught trying to smuggle rhino horn from Vietnam into China were sentenced to a combined total sentence of 27 years in prison. Meanwhile, Singapore recorded a record bust last week of nearly nine tonnes of elephant ivory and almost 11.9 tonnes of pangolin scales from up to 33,000 pangolins. The contraband was found in three containers disguised as timber and travelling from the Democratic Republic of Congo to Vietnam. |
Venezuela Faces the Loss of Citgo -- and Desperately Needed Dollars Posted: 29 Jul 2019 11:31 AM PDT (Bloomberg) -- Venezuela could lose its largest U.S. asset after a court allowed a Canadian gold miner to seize shares of Citgo Petroleum Corp.'s parent to satisfy an arbitration award.A U.S. appeals court ruled on Monday that Crystallex International Corp. may seize U.S.-based stock of Citgo's parent, which is part of Venezuela's state-owned oil company, to cover a $1.4 billion award over the nationalization of gold fields.Unless reversed on appeal or blocked by the Trump administration, the decision would allow Crystallex to auction the shares to satisfy Venezuela's unpaid debt to the Canadian company. That means the country, in the grip of its worst recession, could lose control of the refiner that processes Venezuelan crude into desperately needed hard currency.It also complicates efforts by interim President Juan Guaido to retain control of Venezuelan assets including Citgo while waging a power struggle with current leader Nicolas Maduro for leadership of the country. Guaido has asked U.S. President Donald Trump to bar creditors from seizing the country's assets.Read More: Venezuela Must Pay $1.4 Billion in PDVH Stock to Crystallex"At this stage, the only action that could stop Venezuela from losing Citgo is either a successful U.S. Supreme Court appeal, which appears unlikely, or a decision by Trump to issue an asset-protection order as Guaido has been requesting," Francisco Rodriguez, chief economist for Torino Capital, said in an interview."The UN can also help," added lawmaker Rafael Guzman, part of the opposition-led National Assembly's finance committee. "We are going to push for all of them."Guaido and Maduro are battling for control of Citgo by naming conflicting board nominees for its owner, Petroleos de Venezuela SA, or PDVSA. A state-court judge in Delaware will decide who has legal right to appoint directors for the state-run oil company, which owns Citgo.Guaido himself didn't immediately return calls for comment on the appeals court's ruling, nor did Jose Ignacio Hernandez, Guaido's special attorney general, who was appointed to oversee litigation worldwide. Officials of Maduro's Information Ministry didn't return calls for comment, either.Read More: Venezuela Told to Give Shares of Citgo Parent to Gold Miner"For too long Venezuela has refused to compensate Crystallex for its illegal seizure of Crystallex's assets," Bob Fung, Crystallex's CEO, said in an emailed statement. He added the court's ruling was a "crucial step in getting Venezuela finally to honor its legal obligations."Venezuela's crisis follows years of Maduro's and ex-leader Hugo Chavez's socialist economic policies and the collapse in the country's all-important oil industry. Venezuelan officials are scrambling to keep their hands on Citgo to rebuild the economy.Guaido, head of the country's National Assembly, and Maduro, who has the support of the Venezuelan Army, have held talks in Oslo, Norway, seeking to resolve the crisis. The latest round of negotiations were scheduled to take place earlier this month in Barbados.Crystallex's gold mining operations near Las Cristinas, Venezuela, were seized without compensation in 2011 when Chavez nationalized the country's gold-mining industry. The company pursued arbitration and won a $1.2 billion award plus interest in 2016.Last year, Venezuela officials handed over $425 million as partial payment of the arbitration award, but the company couldn't cut a deal to satisfy the rest of the debt. So Crystallex pushed ahead with efforts to seize shares of Citgo's parent.Crystallex officials waged a three-year battle to seize shares of PDV Holding Inc., which owns Citgo. PDVSA owns the holding company. A federal judge in Delaware concluded last year that since Venezuela controls PDVSA, shares of Citgo's parent were fair game to be seized for the debt.The Philadelphia-based appeals court upheld the trial judge's finding that PDVSA is Venezuela's alter ego in part because its run by the country's military and all profits flow to the country's coffers.|"It has the potential to be a big blow to Venezuela," Russ Dallen, managing partner of Caracas Capital, said in an interview. "The pool of creditors that can now attack and go after PDVSA is greatly expanded."Crystallex isn't the only company that has sued Venezuela over unpaid debts. Investors have sued over $65 billion in defaulted bonds while rival ConocoPhillips sued Venezuela over seizure of its oil assets in the country. The U.S. oil giant won a $2 billion arbitration award over the nationalized assets. Last year, ConocoPhillips executives got $345 million in cash and commodities in settlement after the U.S. company seized some PDVSA assets in the Caribbean.The case is Crystallex International Corp. v. Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, No. 18-2797, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (Philadelphia).(Adds details throughout.)\--With assistance from Alex Vasquez.To contact the reporters on this story: Jef Feeley in Wilmington, Delaware at jfeeley@bloomberg.net;Bob Van Voris in federal court in Manhattan at rvanvoris@bloomberg.net;Porter Wells in Washington at pwells30@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: David Glovin at dglovin@bloomberg.net, ;Jo-El Meyer at jmeyer154@bloomberg.net, Peter JeffreyFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
Beijing reiterates support for Hong Kong's Lam, police Posted: 28 Jul 2019 06:30 PM PDT BEIJING/HONG KONG (Reuters) - China reiterated on Monday its support for Hong Kong's leader, Carrie Lam, and its police, and called on Hong Kong people to oppose violence following another weekend of clashes between protesters and police in the city. Hong Kong bore the scars on Monday of its eighth straight weekend of violent protests, with hard hats, umbrellas and water bottles littering some central streets. Huge crowds have taken to the streets to protest against a now-suspended extradition bill that would have allowed criminal suspects in Hong Kong to be sent to China to face trial in Communist Party-controlled courts. |
Posted: 29 Jul 2019 06:05 AM PDT |
A Tale of Two Jeffreys: How the Virgin Islands Welcomed a Rich Sex Offender—and Punished a Poor One Posted: 28 Jul 2019 03:01 AM PDT Police HandoutsFrom the Virgin Islands comes a tale of two Jeffreys, and the difference great wealth can make when it comes to sex crimes—until it doesn't. Both Jeffreys were convicted of shameful crimes that required them to register as sex offenders in whatever state or jurisdiction they resided.Jeffrey Epstein pleaded guilty in Florida to engaging a minor in prostitution in a 2007 plea deal only a super-rich guy could have swung. He did 18 months locked up, mostly in a private wing of the Palm Beach County jail, where he only stayed at night, returning each morning to "work release." He then proceeded to prove that a registered sex offender with enough money in the Virgin Islands can just continue to come and go from a private island off the coast of St. Thomas, with an ever-changing entourage of girls who appeared to be barely in their teens. He would announce his periodic return by raising the American flag over the opulent hideaway identified on the maps as Little Saint James Island, but known to locals as "pedophile island."Jeffrey No. 2—Jeffery Cole—was convicted in Ohio of a misdemeanor charge of voyeurism in 2009. He was a schlub of modest means, but his offense was relatively minor (if creepy) and he needed neither wealth nor influence to receive just a suspended sentence of 90 days and two years probation."The underlying conviction, which requires Mr. Cole to register as a sex offender, did not involve a minor, physical violence, or physical touching of any kind," his present attorney, Melanie Turnbull, noted in court. We Found Red Flags All Over Jeffrey Epstein's Jail RecordsOnce he successfully completed probation, Cole moved to Georgia, where he registered as a sex offender. He moved to the Virgin Islands in 2018 and has not been charged with engaging in further voyeurism or any other crimes.The problem for this Jeffrey was that he failed to register promptly in his new home as a sex offender. The U.S. Attorney for the Virgin Islands, Gretchen Shappert, did not miss an opportunity to convey through the media how seriously her office takes such matters."USVI resident indicted for not registering as sex offender," the headline in a local news outlet read.That February 28th article was accompanied by a photo illustration that showed a parked auto with a driver-side front door emblazoned with the words "SEX OFFENDER In This Car." It also pictured a house with a sign out front reading, "SEX OFFENDER LIVES HERE." On April 12, Cole entered into a plea deal where he faces a sentence of no more than a year."St. Thomas Resident Pleaded Guilty to Failing to Register as a Sex Offender," the U.S. Attorney's press release announced. In the meantime, on March 15, the other Jeffrey flew into St. Thomas aboard his private jet. He made his annual check-in at the local sex registry office, a gesture that can now be seen as a kind of mockery, as it's been revealed that he had been seen still bringing young girls to his private island. "Everybody was like, 'Oh, yeah, that's pedophile island,'" remembers a Wall Street numbers cruncher turned pizzeria owner who arrived in the Virgin Islands from New York in 2009.Where were the authorities when it came to this Jeffrey?Epstein's Coney Island Days: From Math Nerd to 'Arrogant' PrickAt least four members of the local legislature accepted significant campaign contributions from Southern Trust Company, Inc., one of a host of business entities Epstein founded in the Virgin Islands. Those companies began with L.S.J, LLC, through which he bought his private island for $7.95 million in 1998. Epstein had hired Cecile de Jongh, wife of former Virgin Islands Gov. John de Jongh, as the office manager for Southern Trust, which was granted income tax breaks of up to 90 percent by the U.S. Virgin Islands Economic Development Authority. The former first lady also managed the Epstein VI Foundation, which supported everything from brain research at Harvard to the girls' volleyball team at St. Croix Central High School in the Virgin Islands.After Epstein was arrested in Florida for a sex crime involving a minor, a Virgin Islands newspaper called The Avis ran an article suggesting that Cecile de Jongh's connections with Epstein might muddy her husband's political prospects. The Avis also noted that the arrest called into question whether the girls' volleyball team should have jerseys bearing the name Epstein.A purported grassroots movement collected 5,000 signatures on a petition accusing The Avis of yellow journalism. Epstein attorney Gerald Lefcourt issued a statement saying, "The grand jury and the prosecutor's office... determined that no serious offense had occurred."Really.Epstein kept partying on Pedophile Island. He is said to have met some resistance when he sought to buy the nearby, larger island of Great St James. The blue-blood Danish family that owned it is said to have been reluctant to sell to someone with Epstein's unsavory reputation. But he appears to have managed to acquire it anyway in 2016 by cloaking the buyer's identity with a company called Great St. Jim LLC. He is said to have paid $18 million.Epstein immediately applied for a permit to erect two 80-foot flag poles, arguing that the 45-foot limit on the books should not apply to his property. No doubt at least one of the poles would be used to fly an American flag and announce for everyone to see when the owner of Pedophile Island was back.But construction of a compound on the bigger island was delayed by environmental concerns that even somebody as well-connected as Epstein could not just circumvent.And there was far greater trouble brewing for Epstein as the result of a determined reporter, Julie Brown of the Miami Herald.Brown revealed and documented the unconscionable plea deal Epstein had been granted. The Manhattan U.S. Attorney launched a new investigation. In reviewing the 2007 Florida case, the FBI noted a court document reporting an incident that when agents served Epstein's personal assistant Lesley Groff with a grand jury subpoena, she excused herself, purportedly to check on her child. She is said by the court document to have used the moment to telephone Epstein, who was headed in his private plane from Palm Beach to Teterboro Airport in New Jersey across the Hudson River from New York. He was in the company of another assistant, Nadia Marcinkova, who has been accused of complicity in his sex trafficking."Mr. Epstein became concerned that the FBI would try to serve his traveling companion, Nadia Marcinkova, with a similar grand jury subpoena," the document reports. "In fact, the agents were preparing to serve Ms. Marcinkova with a target letter when the flight landed in Teterboro. Mr. Epstein then redirected his airplane, making the pilot file a new flight plan to travel to the US Virgin Islands instead."The American flag no doubt again went up over Pedophile Island as the FBI stood thwarted at Teterboro. A dozen years later, the FBI took great care that Epstein received no warning. He flew unsuspecting on July 6 from Paris to Teterboro and a waiting pair of handcuffs. On July 8, Epstein was arraigned in Manhattan federal court on charges of trafficking in underage girls. He was remanded as a flight risk and a danger to the community. He was consigned to the Metropolitan Correctional Center, briefly in general population but within hours assigned to the Special Housing Unit due to threats from inmates who apparently take a dim view of "short eyes," as child molesters are known behind bars.Epstein must have considered the arrest a possibility, for some time ago he commissioned an artist to paint a mural in his Manhattan mansion of him in a prison yard. Neither he nor the artist seem to have foreseen that he would find himself locked up 23 hours a day in an eight-by-eight foot cell infested with cockroaches and rodents. A thickly screened single narrow window faces a brick wall and lets in only enough light to tell night from day. Mold is said to grow on the walls. Water seeps in under the door from a shower to which he has access only once every three days. For two weeks, Epstein's cellmate was an ex-cop named Nicholas Tartaglione, who is accused of a quadruple murder. Tartaglione says the two became "friends," whereby he joined a list that once included two presidents, Donald Trump and Bill Clinton. A realtor who asked not to be identified recently told The Daily Beast that Trump exclaimed at a business gathering at Tavern on the Green some years ago that Epstein was "my best friend."Tartaglione has reportedly told authorities that he saved Epstein from a suicide attempt. But Trump may not be the only liar on Epstein's list of pals. Tartaglione ended up in the Special Housing Unit after he was caught with a cellphone that he insisted had just been given to him by another inmate. Tartaglione then moved to keep the government from inspecting the phone's contents on the grounds it may have privileged communications with his lawyer and with his wife. Never mind it was supposedly not his.Epstein is now said to be on suicide watch. He is 66 and, if convicted, he stands a good chance of dying in prison even if he takes the best possible care of himself. He may have finally landed in a situation where all his money cannot save him from suffering the consequences of his actions.Also behind bars is the other Jeffrey, having been remanded when he entered his guilty plea in April. Cole had been free on his own recognizance since his arraignment, the court having deemed him to be neither a flight risk nor a danger to the community. His attorney petitioned for him to remain at liberty pending sentencing, which is set for August 15. The attorney noted that Cole is a 57-year-old graduate of Ohio State University with a Bachelor of Science degree in landscape architecture, had been steadily employed for more than 30 years and was presently a fleet manager at a car rental company. He would be able to continue working there until his day of reckoning. The judge remanded Cole nonetheless. Cole was shipped off to the Metropolitan Detention Center in Guaynabo, Puerto Rico. His attorney has since filed a motion to expedite matters."The current sentencing date inevitably results in a period of incarceration of four months," the petition noted, adding that Cole was eligible to receive probation and no time at all.As of Saturday, the sentencing was still set for August 15. Cole remains behind bars in Guaynabo. But he will almost certainly be free within the next few months.And you can bet that this Jeffrey would not trade places with the other one for all the money in the worldRead more at The Daily Beast.Get our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. |
Spy Photos of the Volkswagen I.D. Crozz Posted: 29 Jul 2019 10:00 AM PDT |
Egypt, Jordan leaders hold talks over Israeli-Palestinian peace Posted: 29 Jul 2019 08:24 AM PDT Egypt's President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and Jordan's King Abdullah II met on Monday to discuss efforts to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, reaffirming their support for a two-state solution, Sisi's office said. The meeting comes ahead of an expected visit to the region by US President Donald Trump's son-in-law and senior White House advisor Jared Kushner, who is pushing a controversial peace plan rejected by the Palestinians and criticised by Jordan. Kushner's initiative, partially unveiled at a Bahrain conference in June, dangled the prospect of pumping $50 billion-worth of investment into the stagnant Palestinian economy. |
Follow the law, get pulled over: Why a police plan to 'ticket' drivers backfired in Arizona Posted: 29 Jul 2019 03:15 PM PDT |
New York reduces penalties for marijuana possession Posted: 29 Jul 2019 12:00 PM PDT New York's governor signed a bill Monday that softens penalties for possessing small amounts of marijuana and allows for the expungement of some past offenses. The law changes an unlawful possession of marijuana statute into a violation that's similar to a traffic ticket, instead of a criminal charge. The law also requires that records tied to low-level marijuana cases be automatically sealed and creates a process for expungement. |
South African land reform panel recommends seizures without pay in certain circumstances Posted: 28 Jul 2019 05:26 AM PDT |
View Photos of the 2020 Subaru Outback Posted: 29 Jul 2019 06:00 AM PDT |
DHS Chief Praises Supreme Court Decision: ‘Big Victory’ For Border Wall Posted: 29 Jul 2019 05:08 PM PDT Acting Homeland Security Secretary Kevin McAleenan lauded the Supreme Court decision allowing the administration to use military funds to build additional border wall."It was a big victory at the Supreme Court to allow Department of Defense to move forward with that $2.5 billion dollars to really accelerate the progress on the wall, and kind've double what we're doing with the congressionally appropriated funding, which is going well," McAleenan said Sunday on Fox Business."We're up to 54 miles [of new border wall] since we talked — building every day down there on the border. That's already providing significant new operational capability and helping us control high-traffic areas of the border," he continued.McAleenan's comments came two days after the Supreme Court ruled that the Trump administration could reprogram $2.5 billion in Department of Defense funds for border wall construction. Because of the decision, President Donald Trump can move forward with plans to build 100 miles of wall along the U.S.-Mexico border as it continues to fight challenges in the lower courts.The White House in February declared a national emergency for the southern border, a move that allowed the administration to reallocate billions from the military. However, a coalition of environmentalist and progressive groups sued in an attempt to block construction. A 9th Circuit court panel in July sided with a federal judge's decision to block the funds, putting up a roadblock to construction. |
Women taking photos of themselves without headscarves face 10-year prison sentence in Iran Posted: 29 Jul 2019 06:28 AM PDT Iranian women who post photos of themselves online without their headscarves on could face up to 10 years in prison.They face the punishment for posting images or video online, and for sending them to Masih Alinejad, a US-based activist who founded the "White Wednesdays" campaign in Iran to oppose the compulsory hijab.The campaign encourages women to post photos of themselves without headscarves.The semi-official Fars news agency quoted the head of the Tehran Revolutionary Court, Mousa Ghazanfarabadi, saying "those who film themselves or others while removing the hijab and send photos to this woman ... will be sentenced to between one and 10 years in prison."Wearing the Islamic headscarf is mandatory in public for all women in Iran. Those who violate the rule face up to two months in prison and a fine of £20.Scores of women in Iran have been arrested for removing their headscarves as part of the "White Wednesdays" campaign.Last year, an Iranian woman was sentenced to two years in prison and 18 years probation for removing her headscarf in a protest.Shaparak Shajarizadeh said she had been sentenced for "opposing the compulsory hijab" and "waving a white flag of peace in the street". |
Leak shows Samsung’s brand new Galaxy Note 10+ isn’t even as powerful as Apple’s year-old iPhones Posted: 29 Jul 2019 05:21 AM PDT With just over one week to go before Samsung makes its new Galaxy Note 10 and Galaxy Note 10+ official, there's really not much left for the company to surprise us with. Why? It's not that Samsung is predictable, it's that almost every last detail has already leaked at this point. The Note 10 lineup will be Samsung's hottest new smartphone duo ever, featuring a sleek design overhaul with a new all-screen design that has a tiny hole-punch camera centered at the top. In terms of specs, we're looking at impressive devices that feature the brand new Snapdragon 855 Plus processor, up to 12GB of RAM, plenty of storage, new triple-lens cameras, and Android Pie. Needless to say, the Note 10 and Note 10+ will also include Samsung's signature S Pen stylus complete with a few new tricks.We know both phones are going to be expensive. In fact, the Galaxy Note 10+ will be so expensive that pricing is likely the main reason Samsung decided to also make an entry-level version of the phone, just like it did with the Galaxy S10e. We also know that the Galaxy Note 10 and Note 10+ will be released on August 23rd after going up for preorder shortly after Samsung's press conference next week. There really isn't much left to be uncovered, but one more puzzle piece is now in place thanks to a leak uncovered on Monday morning.Twitter user Sudhanshu Ambhore is popping up more and more these days as a source of smartphone leaks. Sometimes he shares exclusive renders of unreleased phones, but we've already seen the Galaxy Note 10 and Galaxy Note 10+ designs about a million times, so on Monday morning, he managed to come up with something different: Geekbench benchmark test scores for the Galaxy Note 10+.With the Galaxy Note 10+'s launch just over a week away and all the phone's specs having already leaked. We knew it was going to be a powerhouse. Now, we have numbers to back up our suspicions. The single-core Geekbench score of 4532 and multi-core score of 10431 are both good enough to place the Galaxy Note 10+ among the highest-scoring Android smartphones we have ever seen. What the scores are not, however, is good enough to beat Apple's latest iPhones.Released nearly a year ago, Apple's iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max are still the most powerful smartphones on the market. In the same Geekbench tests, the iPhone XS Max managed a single-core score of 4798 and a multi-core score of 11216, handily beating Samsung's brand new Galaxy Note 10+. It remains remarkably impressive just how well Apple's iPhones age, and just how much more powerful iPhones are than new Android flagships even a year after they're first released. |
Coalition says strike kills 5 IS jihadists in Syria Posted: 29 Jul 2019 01:00 PM PDT A US-led coalition air strike killed five jihadists in eastern Syria on Monday, a spokesman said, in the first such raid since the collapse of the Islamic State group's "caliphate". "Coalition forces conducted a strike against a Daesh cell near Busayrah", a town in Deir Ezzor province, said coalition spokesman James Rawlinson, using an Arabic acronym for IS. The five jihadists were all Syrian, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor. |
South Carolina deputy shoots homeowner through window, body camera shows Posted: 29 Jul 2019 04:30 PM PDT |
After Mueller hearing, Meyers schools Trump on reporters and truth Posted: 29 Jul 2019 09:52 AM PDT |
Ethiopia plants more than 200 million trees in 1 day Posted: 29 Jul 2019 07:08 AM PDT |
Saudi Arabia to Ban Foreigners From Slew of Hospitality Jobs Posted: 28 Jul 2019 09:22 PM PDT (Bloomberg) -- Saudi Arabia plans to restrict certain hospitality jobs to its own citizens by the end of the year, banning the recruitment of foreign workers for those positions.The decision, announced in a Labor Ministry statement on Friday, will apply to resorts, hotels rated three stars or higher, and hotel apartments rated four stars or higher. Positions that must be filled by Saudis range from front-desk jobs to management. Among the exceptions are drivers, doormen and porters, the ministry said in the statement. Other jobs that will be restricted to nationals include restaurant host and health club supervisor.As Saudi Arabia tries to develop its fledgling tourism industry, it's also tackling citizen unemployment, which hit a high of nearly 13% last year. Hospitality is the latest sector to face stricter "Saudization" policies, which call for replacing the foreigners who dominate many parts of the private sector -- particularly blue collar and service jobs.Officials say such policies are necessary to create jobs for Saudis in a country that's relied heavily on cheaper foreign labor. However, some businesses complain that Saudization increases the cost of hiring and lowers productivity.Read more: Jobs-for-Saudis Plan Tests Retailers Used to Cheap Foreign LaborThe decision will be enforced from an Islamic calendar date likely to correspond with Dec. 29. Many hotels had already begun hiring Saudis to fill front-desk jobs in recent years, part of a gradual cultural shift as Saudis begin to take up jobs that once would have been considered undesirable.To contact the reporter on this story: Vivian Nereim in Riyadh at vnereim@bloomberg.netTo contact the editors responsible for this story: Alaa Shahine at asalha@bloomberg.net, Paul Abelsky, Abigail MosesFor more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com©2019 Bloomberg L.P. |
Almost a War?: Russian and Chinese Planes Violated South Korean Airspace Posted: 28 Jul 2019 01:02 AM PDT Intrusions into East China Sea airspace claimed by both China and Japan are fairly common — even sometimes involving South Korea. What HappenedAn odd set of confrontations unfolded July 23 around the Korean Peninsula involving South Korea, Russia, China and Japan. According to an official South Korean account of the events, early on July 23, two Chinese H-6 bombers entered South Korea's Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ) near Ieodo, a submerged rock claimed by both South Korea and China in the Yellow Sea. They later entered the ADIZ once again at Ulleung island off South Korea's east coast in the Sea of Japan before being joined by Russian TU-50 bombers and re-entering the ADIZ for a third time. After this, a Russian A-50 early warning aircraft and two Tu-95 bombers entered the ADIZ around Dokdo Island — a maritime space that Japan also claims as the Takeshima Islands — before the A-50 passed into South Korean-claimed airspace, leaving it and then reentering it again. South Korea scrambled jets to respond to both alleged entries by the A-50, firing both warning shots and flares. |
Santino William Legan: What we know about Gilroy Garlic Festival suspect Posted: 29 Jul 2019 02:50 PM PDT |
Posted: 29 Jul 2019 01:43 PM PDT Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell has angrily hit out at critics who accused of him ignoring threats to US elections from Russia, claiming the "unhinged smears" amounted to "modern-day McCarthyism".Last week, Mr McConnell, a leading Republican ally of the president, blocked two measures designed to strengthen election security.He claimed the bills, proposed by Democrats, were being tabled for the party's political benefits. But a number of people accused of ignoring the threat of repeated Russian interference, with some even labelling him "Moscow Mitch".On Monday, Mr McConnell rejected the criticism in a speech on the floor of the Senate."I was called unpatriotic, un-American and essentially treasonous by a couple of left-wing pundits on the basis of bold-faced lies," he said."I was accused of aiding and abetting the very man I've singled out as an adversary and opposed for nearly 20 years -Vladimir Putin."He said his critics, among them the MSNBC television channel and some journalists at the Washington Post, were guilty of smears. "Welcome to modern-day McCarthyism," he said.The bills Mr McConnell blocked had been proposed by Democrats Chuck Schumer and Richard Blumenthal.They called for them to be passed by unanimous consent; under the rules governing the upper chamber of Congress, any one senator can try to pass a bill, but equally any one senator can object. One of the bills would require the use of paper ballots, while the other would require candidates, campaigns or family members to notify the FBI about any assistance of offers from foreign governments. "Clearly this request is not a serious effort to make a law. Clearly something so partisan that it only received one single solitary Republican vote in the House is not going to travel through the Senate by unanimous consent," Mr McConnell said.Democrats were furious by his remarks, coming as they did, a day after former social counsel Robert Mueller had testified about alleged Russian interference in the 2016 election, and said the threat had not gone away. "They're doing it as we sit here," he said. "These pundits are lying, lying when they dismiss the work that has been done," Mr McConnell said on Monday. "They're lying when they insist I have personally blocked actions which, in fact, I have championed and the Senate has passed. They are lying when they suggest that either party is against defending our democracy."Joe Scarborough, an MSNBC broadcaster, who had been critical to the Senate Republican leader, responded to Mr McConnell's remarks on Twitter. "MoscowMitch threatened those who tried to warn Americans against Russia's interference in American democracy. MoscowMitch keeps blocking legislation to stop what Trump's intel chiefs call Russia's subverting of American democracy," he wrote. "MoscowMitch is harming Kentucky and America." |
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