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President Donald Trump kicked off his reelection campaign in Florida with a grievance-filled rally that attacked the press, the political establishment and Robert Mueller’s special counsel investigation into Russian election interference. (June 18)
AP, AP

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly accused special counsel Robert Mueller of conducting a “witch hunt” against him, ratcheted up his attacks on Wednesday, alleging without evidence that Mueller had committed a crime by having “terminated” texts between FBI officials who privately derided him. 

During an interview with Fox Business Network, Trump claimed the public had not seen some communications between former FBI employees Peter Strzok and Lisa Page “because Mueller terminated them illegally. He terminated the emails, he terminated all the stuff between Strzok and Page.” 

“And that’s illegal,” he said. “That’s a crime.” 

But a December report from the Justice Department’s Office of the Inspector General on the recovery of texts messages from Strzok and Page’s devices did not determine that any crime had been committed, nor did it mention that Mueller was in any way involved in the loss of any exchanges between them. 

More: Robert Mueller to testify publicly before Congress next month

Strzok and Page both worked on the FBI’s investigation into Russian efforts to interfere in the 2016 election, and joined Mueller’s staff after he was appointed as special counsel in 2017. Page left after her 45-day temporary assignment ended, while Strzok was removed when Mueller was informed that the FBI agent and Page had exchanged texts hostile to Trump and in support of his 2016 opponent Hillary Clinton. Some of the messages described Trump as an “idiot” and “loathsome.” 

The inspector general was unable to review any communications between Strzok and Page on the iPhones they were assigned during their time working for the special counsel’s office because the phones were returned to their factory settings when they were returned, which was done as a matter of routine. 

Texts between Strzok and Page between Dec. 15, 2017 and May 17, 2017, were lost because of a glitch in the FBI’s data collection system, but the inspector general was able to recover about 10,000 texts from each their devices. The report said there was no evidence that Strzok and Page had “attempted to circumvent the FBI’s text message collection capabilities. 

Trump accusation of illegal activity came the day after it was announced that Mueller will give public testimony before a congressional committee on July 17 about his report into Russia’s “sweeping and systemic” campaign to influence the outcome of the 2016 election. 

“Presidential Harassment!” Trump tweeted Tuesday in response to the news of Mueller’s testimony. 

“It never ends,” Trump lamented on Monday, repeating his previously expressed belief that “Mueller that obviously was not a Trump fan” and that he had hired “18 people that hated Donald Trump” to help conduct the investigation. 

Trump, who admitted last week he had not read the full report, repeated his mantra that Mueller report found no “collusion” and “no obstruction whatsoever.” 

Although Mueller’s report “identified numerous links between the Russian government and the Trump Campaign,” it “did not establish that members of the Trump Campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities.”

Mueller did not bring charges against the president, but – far from finding “no obstruction whatsoever” – his report outlined several potential instances of potential obstruction and said, “while this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him.” 

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/06/26/trump-accuses-mueller-crime-without-evidence/1572003001/

Robert Durst has been placed on a ventilator after contracting COVID-19, his lawyer said Saturday.

Durst, 78, was sentenced to life in prison without parole Thursday for murdering his close friend, Susan Berman, inside her Benedict Canyon home in 2000. The real estate heir was in “very bad condition” during the sentencing hearing, according to his lead defense attorney, Dick DeGuerin.

“He was having difficulty breathing and he was having difficulty communicating,” DeGuerin said in an email to The Times. “He looked worse than I’ve ever seen him and I was very worried about him.”

DeGuerin confirmed that Durst had been hospitalized and placed on a ventilator. Durst has been held in a wing of USC Medical Center under the watch of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department throughout the trial, but it was not immediately clear if he was still in that facility or when or where he became infected with the coronavirus.

Robert Durst, 78, will spend the rest of his life in a California prison for the fatal shooting of his longtime confidante, Susan Berman, in 2000.

Calls and emails to the Sheriff’s Department, a court spokeswoman and the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office were not immediately returned on Saturday. Dozens of people packed into an eighth-floor courtroom at the Airport Courthouse for Durst’s sentencing earlier this week and it was not immediately clear if anyone else associated with the proceedings had contracted the virus.

Durst’s health was an issue throughout the trial. He was not in court the day jurors convicted him of Berman’s murder last month because he had been exposed to someone who tested positive for COVID-19. He was also briefly hospitalized in June after suffering an undisclosed medical incident.

The 78-year-old spent the majority of the trial seated in a wheelchair. In court filings, Durst’s attorneys repeatedly sought a mistrial, claiming Durst was too sick to testify in his own defense.

A physician at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center who examined Durst previously testified that he was “profoundly malnourished” and at risk of “sudden death” from elevated levels of potassium, and said Durst had suffered a “mini stroke” during a 2019 court hearing.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Mark Windham slapped down each motion, dismissing the doctor’s testimony as “activism.” Durst ultimately spent 15 days on the witness stand at trial, often engaging in tense exchanges with Deputy Dist. Atty. John Lewin on cross-examination.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2021-10-16/robert-durst-on-a-ventilator-after-contracting-covid-19

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A Lockheed Martin-made F-35 fighter jet for Turkey arrived on Wednesday at a military training facility in Arizona, an Air Force official said on Thursday, amid a dispute over Ankara’s planned purchase of a Russian missile defense system.

Earlier this week, Reuters reported that the United States halted delivery of equipment related to the stealth F-35 fighter aircraft to Turkey because of concern the NATO ally’s planned purchase of the Russian system would compromise the security of the jet, the most advanced U.S. fighter aircraft.

A second jet is scheduled to arrive at Luke Air Force Base on Friday, the Air Force official said. Two Turkish F-35 jets are already at the base.

Pentagon spokesman Charlie Summers told reporters on Thursday: “The training (for pilots) will continue at Luke Air Force Base.”

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan has refused to back down from Ankara’s planned purchase of a Russian S-400 missile defense system.

The United States and other NATO allies that own F-35s fear the radar on the system will learn how to spot and track the jet, making it less able to evade Russian weapons.

In an attempt to persuade Turkey to drop its plans to buy the S-400, the United States offered the pricier American-made Patriot anti-missile system in a discounted deal that expired at the end of March. Turkey has shown interest in the Patriot system, but not at the expense of abandoning the S-400.

Turkey has engaged with U.S. negotiators in recent days about buying the Patriot system, a person familiar with the matter said on condition of anonymity. The system is made by Raytheon Co.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Wednesday that Turkey had proposed to the United States that they form a working group to determine that Russian S-400 missile defense systems do not pose a threat to U.S. or NATO military equipment.

On Thursday, the Pentagon said it was not considering a technical working group and that it was not necessary at this stage.

Reporting by Mike Stone; Additional reporting by Idrees Ali in Washington; Editing by Phil Berlowitz and Peter Cooney

Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-turkey-f35-arizona/turkish-f-35-delivered-to-training-base-in-arizona-official-says-idUSKCN1RG242

Democratic presidential candidate Beto O’Rourke said Sunday that he believes President Donald Trump has committed crimes when he was asked about House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s recent comment that she would prefer to see Trump “in prison” than “see him impeached.”

“He did,” O’Rourke, a former House member from Texas, told ABC’s “This Week” when asked about Pelosi’s remark and whether he thought Trump had committed crimes that could be prosecuted. “I think that’s clear from what we have learned from [special counsel Robert Mueller’s] report, but I think those crimes might extend beyond what we’ve seen in the Mueller report.”

Presented with Pelosi’s comment on “Fox News Sunday,” another Democrat, Rep. David Cicilline of Rhode Island, said Mueller’s more than 400-page report on Russian interference in the 2016 election and whether Trump sought to obstruct the probe presented “specific things” Trump did that were “criminal acts.”

“Look, I don’t have any difficulty with those words,” Cicilline said of Pelosi’s comment. “I think what is really at stake here is the responsibility of the [House] Judiciary Committee to conduct oversight, to demonstrate to the American people that no one is above the law.”

Cicilline, who sits on the committee, said the panel will “get to the truth.”

Last week, Politico, citing multiple Democratic sources familiar with the matter, reported that Pelosi told top Democrats in a private meeting that she would prefer to see Trump “in prison,” as opposed to impeached, clashing with House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., over whether to open an impeachment inquiry — an idea Pelosi said she is still not open to.

A congressional aide who was in the room confirmed Pelosi’s remark to NBC News, saying she said, “I don’t want to see him impeached, I want to see him in prison.” Pelosi said they should not proceed with impeachment because Democrats would be better off having Trump lose in 2020 and then be prosecuted, according to the aide, who added that Pelosi’s remarks was “consistent with her position that he needs to be removed electorally in 2020.”

After the Politico story broke, Pelosi spokeswoman Ashley Etienne told NBC News the speaker and the committee chairmen she met with “had a productive meeting about the state of play with the Mueller report.”

“They agreed to keep all options on the table and continue to move forward with an aggressive hearing and legislative strategy, as early as next week, to address the president’s corruption and abuses of power uncovered in the report,” Etienne said.

In response to Pelosi’s reported remarks, Trump called the speaker a “disgrace,” a “nasty” person, and a “disaster” during an interview with Fox News host Laura Ingraham.

On Sunday, Cicilline pointed to instances detailed in the Mueller report where Trump “directed Don McGahn to fire the special counsel and then to prepare false documents to deny that he was told to do that” and “directed an outside person, Corey Lewandowski, to direct the attorney general to limit the special counsel’s investigation and a number of other instances of obstruction of justice that are detailed in this report.”

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/responding-pelosi-s-prison-remark-democrats-say-trump-committed-crimes-n1015546

Cristina Kirchner fue entrevistada por el canal de noticias ruso RT durante su visita oficial a Rusia. Según anticipó ese medio de comunicación en su cuenta de la red social Twitter, la Presidenta, que se reunió hoy con su par Vladimir Putin , le concedió un reportaje al periodista Ignacio Jubilla, corresponsal de la señal rusa en la Argentina.

Hasta el momento, el canal RT solo dio a conocer algunos fragmentos de la entrevista a la primera mandataria. En el marco de ese reportaje, la Presidenta manifestó que no tiene “favoritos” de cara a las elecciones de octubre y evitó especificar cuál será el rol que ocupe en la política argentina tras cumplirse su mandato.

“Favoritos tenían los reyes, no, eso la monarquía. Eso no es democracia”, remató Cristina.

Consultada sobre las elecciones de octubre y su último período como presidenta, Cristina dijo: “Voy a cumplir ocho años de presidente y tengo 62. La mayor parte de mi vida no fui presidenta. No es un cargo más, institucionalmente al que mas se puede aspirar…pero podes ser presidente y no pasar a la historia o pasar a la historia como cualquier cosa”.

“Alianza estratégica”

“La relación ruso-argentina sigue desarrollándose”, sostuvo la jefa del Estado tras sellar acuerdos comerciales con el Kremlin.

Y defendió la “alianza estratégica” con Rusia: “Nadie puede reclamar el monopolio de amistad. Podemos tener relaciones con cualquier país”, indicó, según consignó RT en su sitio web.

“Si voy a ser presidenta de Disneyland, todos me van a querer. Pero gobernar la República Argentina es otra cosa”, agregó.

Cristina Kirchner durante el diálogo con la TV Pública. Foto: Captura de pantalla / C5N

Cristina también brindó una entrevista a medios argentinos oficiales en el lugar y argumentó sobre su visita a Rusia: “En términos políticos significa que es necesario mirar para todas partes en el mundo. Que hay más protagonistas. Hay que mirar hacia todas partes, no plantear la lógica binaria de amigo-enemigo. Lo importante es encontrar que las conveniencias sean mutuas”, sostuvo.

El encuentro con Putin

La mandataria se reunió esta mañana con su par ruso en el Gran Palacio del Kremlin, en Moscú. Tras el encuentro, Cristina Kirchner y Putin anunciaron la firma de un convenio preliminar entre Nucleoeléctrica Argentina SA (NA-SA) y Rosatom Overseas para la construcción de una central nuclear en nuestro país.

En el documento estamparon sus firmas el ministro de Planificación a Federal, Julio De Vido , y el presidente de la empresa nuclear rusa Rosatom, Sergei Kirienko.

Además, anunciaron la firma de acuerdos comerciales que incluyen un memorándum de entendimiento entre YPF y el gigante Gazprom..

Source Article from http://www.lanacion.com.ar/1786902-cristina-kirchner-le-dio-una-entrevista-al-canal-de-noticias-ruso-rt

La expresidenta Cristina Fernández de Kirchner utilizó su cuenta de Twitter para expresar su rechazo a los nuevos allanamientos dispuestos por el juez federal Claudio Bonadio en el marco de la causa Los Sauces.

“Debo ser la única ciudadana en la historia judicial argentina que es investigada por dos jueces federales de Comodoro Py en forma simultánea sobre una misma causa: Los Sauces S.A.. Antes el ensañamiento de Bonadio era Hotesur S.A, hasta. que lo apartaron de la causa”, escribió Cristina. Y recordó que el juez Julián Ercolini había ordenado una pericia integral sobre Los Sauces S.A. desde el año 2008 hasta hoy. “Es muy probable que como Bonadío allanó hoy las oficinas donde hay documentación de la sociedad, sustrayéndola, no se pueda hacer la pericia que el otro Juez ordenó”, mencionó.

Agregó que “también allanaron departamentos, propiedad de Los Sauces S.A., que están alquilados a terceros” y que “a uno de los inquilinos, que no estaba en Río Gallegos, le rompieron la puerta a patadas”. “Hacía tiempo, décadas diría, que no se veía un abuso de poder y persecución política semejante”, afirmó CFK, quien cuestionó que medios como el portal Infobae o el canal de noticias TN supieran de antemano de los operativos. ¿Transmitirán en vivo y en directo los allanamientos, arrasando los códigos vigentes y los más elementales derechos y garantías de que la Constitución Nacional reconoce a cualquier ciudadano?, se preguntó.

“Esta no es la primera, ni tampoco será la única causa que inventarán, ni la última ‘excursión de pesca’, lo vienen haciendo desde el año 2003 a la fecha”, continuó la exmandataria y afirmó que tanto ella como el expresidentes Néstor Kirchner fueron los jefes de Estado más “denunciados e investigados”. “Como nunca tuvimos cuentas en negro en el exterior o bienes no declarados en el extranjero sustrayéndolos del fisco argentino, siempre han inventado sobre las Declaraciones Juradas”, completó Cristina.

Añadió que ella y Néstor no están “en los Panamá Papers ni en ningún otro escándalo internacional” y cuestionó: “¿Alguien sabe si al Presidente y su familia –todos involucrados en Panamá Papers- le allanaron casas, empresas o sus oficinas? ¿O la de alguno de sus funcionarios involucrados que lo acompañan desde el inicio de su gestión en el gobierno de la ciudad?”.

“¿Creerán que de esta manera lograrán disciplinar a la dirigencia política, sindical o social opositora?”, prosiguió CFK para luego afirmar: “Tal vez podrán con algunos, o tal vez con todos. Conmigo no. No cuenten con ello. Podrán hacer mil allanamientos más. Podrán televisarlos, podrán meterme presa, su claro objetivo. Lo que nunca van a poder tapar son las consecuencias de un plan económico que sólo distribuye pobreza para los trabajadores, las clases medias y los pequeños y medianos empresarios”.

Source Article from http://www.pagina12.com.ar/diario/ultimas/20-303062-2016-06-30.html

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Viernes, 16 de Enero 2015  |  11:36 am






Esto es guerra: Quin de las Soifer ingresar al reality?

Michelle Soifer | Fuente: Privada | Facebook oficial


Productora de ´Esto es Guerra´ aseguró que una Soifer será parte de la nueva temporada del reality y los fanáticos están a la expectativa.






Cathy Sáenz, productora de ‘Esto es Guerra’, confirmó que una Soifer será parte del programa y sembró la duda entre los seguidores de las hermanas.

Sáenz no confirmó si se trataba de Michelle o de una de sus dos hermanas, Kimberly o Chris, por lo que la expectativa de saber de quién se trata continúa.

Este lunes 19 de enero iniciará la temporada de verano del reality y los seguidores ansían por saber los nombres de los nuevos ‘guerreros’.

Como se recuerda Chris, una de las hermanas de Michelle, fue parte de la temporada pasada de ‘Esto es Guerra’.








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Source Article from http://www.rpp.com.pe/2015-01-16-esto-es-guerra–cual-de-las-soifer-ingresara-al-reality-noticia_760294.html


La caída de los precios del petróleo ha exacerbado la devaluación del bolívar en el mercado paralelo o negro.

El dólar del mercado negro en Venezuela sobrepasó la barrera de los 400 bolívares por unidad, más de 60 veces el precio de la tasa oficial más baja.

La falta de acceso a divisas dentro del sistema de control de cambios adoptado por el gobierno y la alta demanda para reponer inventarios dentro de la industria nacional son algunos de los factores que dan los economistas como causa del violento ascenso de la cotización en el llamado mercado paralelo.

En todo caso, el presidente Nicolás Maduro afirma que se trata de una “guerra económica” cuyo reflejo más importante es la escasez.

A través del sistema de control cambiario con tres tasas oficiales diferentes, el Estado es el rector oficial del dólar en Venezuela y el único autorizado para otorgar esas divisas.

La tasa oficial más baja de las tres existentes se ubica en 6,3 y es asignada para alimentos básicos y medicinas.

Desde que se implantó el sistema hace 12 años, ha habido un mercado negro de dólares en el país.


El presidente Maduro asegura que el dólar paralelo es un mecanismo de lo que él llama “guerra económica”.

Reservas

Sin embargo, la caída de las reservas internacionales de Venezuela como consecuencia del descenso abrupto de los precios internacionales del petróleo, ha hecho que existan restricciones en el presupuesto nacional, que depende casi exclusivamente de la venta de crudo.

Esto ejerce presiones sobre la demanda de divisas y por consiguiente se dispara el dólar negro.

La página Dolar Today, que según el oficialismo es parte de este plan conspirativo, es el mayor referente del dólar paralelo en el país y basa su tasa en operaciones realizadas en la ciudad colombiana de Cúcuta, en la frontera de Venezuela.

Lea también: En busca del “dólar libre” en Venezuela

Source Article from http://www.bbc.co.uk/mundo/noticias/2015/05/150521_venezuela_dolar_negro_400_ao

A legislative counsel member of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) warned Friday that the suspension of President Donald Trump‘s social media accounts wielded “unchecked power,” by Twitter and Facebook.

Kate Ruane, a senior legislative counsel at the ACLU said in a statement that the decision to suspend Trump from social media could set a precedent for big tech companies to silence less privileged voices.

“For months, President Trump has been using social media platforms to seed doubt about the results of the election and to undermine the will of voters. We understand the desire to permanently suspend him now, but it should concern everyone when companies like Facebook and Twitter wield the unchecked power to remove people from platforms that have become indispensable for the speech of billions – especially when political realities make those decisions easier,” the statement read.

“President Trump can turn his press team or Fox News to communicate with the public, but others – like many Black, Brown, and LGTBQ activists who have been censored by social media companies – will not have that luxury. It is our hope that these companies will apply their rules transparently to everyone.

The ACLU warned Friday that permanently banning Trump from social media wields “unchecked power” by big tech companies. Here, the suspended Twitter account of U.S. President Donald Trump appears on an iPhone screen on January 08, 2021 in San Anselmo, California.
Getty

The ACLU isn’t the only voice in the legal community citing concern over the move to suspend Trump.

“I want a wide range of ideas, even those I loathe, to be heard, and I think Twitter especially holds a concerning degree of power over public discourse,” Gregory P. Magarian, a law professor at Washington University in St. Louis told The New York Times.

On Friday, Twitter announced that Trump would be permanently suspended from its platform “due to the risk of further incitement of violence.”

The social media site placed a temporary ban on Trump’s account Wednesday after a mob of his supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol, leaving five people dead—including a police officer—and many more injured.

After he regained access to his account, Trump wrote a tweet in which he called his supporters “American patriots,” who will have “a GIANT VOICE long into the future.” In a separate message, he said that he would not be attending President-elect Joe Biden‘s inauguration.

In response, Twitter said: “After close review of recent Tweets from the @realDonaldTrump account and the context around them — specifically how they are being received and interpreted on and off Twitter — we have permanently suspended the account due to the risk of further incitement of violence.”

Facebook has also suspended Trump from using its platform until at least the end of his presidential term.

“We believe the risks of allowing the President to continue to use our service during this period are simply too great,” Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said in a statement on Thursday.

“Therefore, we are extending the block we have placed on his Facebook and Instagram accounts indefinitely and for at least the next two weeks until the peaceful transition of power is complete.”

On Friday, Trump condemned the tech companies for silencing him and said he will “look at the possibilities of building out our own platform in the near future.”

Newsweek reached out the ACLU for additional comment, but did not hear back in time for publication.

Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/aclu-counsel-warns-unchecked-power-twitter-facebook-after-trump-suspension-1560248


Hebe de Bonafini fue procesada por el delito de administración fraudulenta en perjuicio de la administración pública durante el proyecto Sueños Compartidos, que funcionó entre 2006 y 2011.

Cuando ningún medio desconfiaba de la causa, NOTICIAS se animó a lanzar en 2008 la primera tapa dedicada a las Madres, en referencia a la relación que tenían con el kirchnerismo. Titulada “El peligroso uso de los derechos humanos”, describió cómo los Kirchner exponían a Madres y Abuelas en pleno conflicto con el campo y se esbozó la primera denuncia por manejos autoritarios y cheques sin fondo.  A partir de 2011, la imagen de la  titular de Madres se volvería repetitiva, e incluso se le dedicarían tres tapas consecutivas.

La segunda aparición de Hebe en una tapa fue el 4 de junio de 2011, donde se empezaban a descifrar los “Códigos de familia”: el pacto de silencio entre Bonafini-Schoklender. El origen carcelario de una compleja relación filial, económica y política y cómo una mujer que representaba un emblema nacional sobreprotegía a dos hermanos acusados de parricidio. NOTICIAS habló por primera vez de la increíble red de negocios de Sergio Schoklender, su esposa y las Madres.

En el siguiente número, se presentó la investigación que intentaba dilucidar porqué Bonafini entregó a los Schoklender. En la nota central, “Sabía todo”, se enumeran al menos 13 denuncias y advertencias que ella había recibido sobre los manejos oscuros de su “hijo” Sergio y se dieron los detalles reveladores de una ruptura tardía. También se hizo foco en las sospechas de Estela de Carlotto y la interna entre las dos organizaciones de derechos humanos. No pasó mucho tiempo antes de que NOTICIAS volviera a enfocar su edición en la titular de Madres de Plaza de Mayo. “Sálvese quien pueda” fue la cuarta tapa que tuvo en la mira a Bonafini, detallando “el peor golpe al Modelo K“: la cadena de complicaciones para blindar a Hebe y cubrir al gobierno.

El 23 de julio, la Fundación Madres ocupó nuevamente el centro de la escena, esta vez debido a que los obreros que trabajaron en  Sueños Compartidos comenzaron a hacer reclamos públicos frente a despidos y censura gremial.

NOTICIAS accedió los balances de 2008 y 2009 que presentó la propia Fundación de Madres ante la Inspección General de Justicia (IGJ) y descubrió la millonaria evasión de aportes que cajoneó la AFIP. Otra nota principal de la revista, publicada el 20 de Agosto.

En septiembre, en una entrevista exclusiva, Schoklender contó su propia versión de los hechos: las cuentas de Hebe en el exterior, cómo Fundación Madres financió la campaña de Amado Boudou, las coimas en la obra pública y los viajes de los funcionarios K en sus aviones. El 2011 no podría terminar de otra manera: el 17 de diciembre NOTICIAS publicó un anticipo del polémico libro de Sergio Shoklender, en el que contó la historia oculta de Hebe.

Más de seis años después, Hebe de Bonafini vuelve a ser tapa de NOTICIAS.

 

 

 

 

 




Source Article from http://noticias.perfil.com/2017/05/23/la-corrupcion-de-bonafini-y-schoklender-en-8-tapas-de-noticias/

An associate to President TrumpDonald John TrumpGiuliani associate prepared to testify Nunes aides scrapped Ukraine trip to avoid alerting Schiff Democrats pledge sharp turn in US ties with Saudi Arabia Schumer praises former Navy chief after ouster MORE‘s lawyer Rudy GiulianiRudy GiulianiGiuliani associate prepared to testify Nunes aides scrapped Ukraine trip to avoid alerting Schiff House Intelligence has video, audio recordings from Giuliani associate at center of Ukraine probe: report Nunes threatens to take CNN, Daily Beast to court over story about meeting with Ukrainian prosecutor MORE is prepared to testify that aides to Rep. Devin NunesDevin Gerald NunesGiuliani associate prepared to testify Nunes aides scrapped Ukraine trip to avoid alerting Schiff House Intelligence has video, audio recordings from Giuliani associate at center of Ukraine probe: report Nunes challenger says campaign raised nearly 0K after start of public impeachment hearings MORE (R-Calif.) dropped a planned trip to Ukraine to obtain dirt on former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenGiuliani associate prepared to testify Nunes aides scrapped Ukraine trip to avoid alerting Schiff Democrats pledge sharp turn in US ties with Saudi Arabia House Intelligence has video, audio recordings from Giuliani associate at center of Ukraine probe: report MORE (D) in order to avoid alerting House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam SchiffAdam Bennett SchiffGiuliani associate prepared to testify Nunes aides scrapped Ukraine trip to avoid alerting Schiff House Intelligence has video, audio recordings from Giuliani associate at center of Ukraine probe: report Ocasio-Cortez fires back after Trump brands her a ‘Do Nothing Democrat’ MORE (D-Calif.).

CNBC reported Sunday that Lev Parnas plans to tell committee members that aides to the ranking member planned to meet with two Ukrainian prosecutors in an effort to obtain evidence to aid Trump’s reelection bid, but abandoned the efforts once they realized that Schiff’s staff would be alerted to the trip.

The offices of Nunes, ranking member on the House Intelligence panel, and Schiff did not immediately return requests for comment from The Hill on Sunday evening. Parnas’s planned testimony, if accurate, would implicate Nunes’s staff in the president and Giuliani’s efforts to push Ukrainian officials to open politically charged investigations into Biden, a top contender for the 2020 Democratic Party nomination.

Democrats on the House Intelligence Committee have argued that the president’s efforts were a clear example of Trump attempting to solicit foreign interference in a U.S. election, while also allegedly tying up military aid to the country over the issue.

Joseph Bondy, Parnas’s attorney, told CNBC that he hopes the committee will allow his client to testify. Parnas and a fellow Giuliani associate were recently arrested at Dulles International Airport and charged with campaign finance violations.

His client, Bondy told CNBC, wishes to provide “truthful and important information that is in furtherance of justice.”

“We have great faith that, in the end, the proper choice will be made as to when and whether to hear Mr. Parnas,” he added.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/house/471862-giuliani-associate-prepared-to-testify-nunes-aides-scrapped-ukraine-trip-to

The World Bank executive board announced it has approved $1.49 billion in additional funding for Ukraine which will be used to pay for the wages of government and social workers.

The new funds are part of a larger support package of over $4 billion, up from the earlier estimate $3 billion, the World Bank said in a statement. Of the expanded package, $2 billion has been disbursed.

The latest funding was supported by financing guarantees from the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Lithuania, and Latvia, as well as parallel financing from Italy, expected future guarantees, including from Denmark, and contributions from a new Multi-donor Trust Fund, the World Bank said.

The U.S. last month also committed $40 billion to Ukraine, while the Group of Seven’s financial leaders agreed on $9.5 billion in new aid.

The World Bank added that it is working to support ordinary Ukrainians in areas such as access to health services, education, social protection, water supply, energy and roads.

“Maintaining these core services, and the ability of the government to deliver them, is essential to preventing further deterioration in living conditions and poverty in Ukraine beyond the suffering inflicted on the population because of the war,” said World Bank country director for Eastern Europe, Arup Banerji.

“In addition, keeping government capabilities functioning will be the bedrock of any recovery and reconstruction going forward.”

— Chelsea Ong

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2022/06/07/russia-ukraine-live-updates.html

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Latest on Southern California’s strongest earthquake in 20 years (all times local):

9:30 a.m.

A fire official says there were no fatalities or major injuries in Ridgecrest after the 7.1 magnitudes earthquake on Friday night.

Kern County Fire Chief David Witt also said Saturday there were no major building collapses but some structures could be weakened from the back-to-back quakes.

Friday’s quake occurred a day after a magnitude 6.4 quake hit in the same area of the Mojave Desert about 150 miles from Los Angeles.

Witt says there were some power outages and minor gas and water leaks in Ridgecrest, but no known damage outside the area.

He urged residents to get supplies ready in case another quake hits.

___

9 a.m.

Gov. Gavin Newsom has declared a state of emergency for a section of Southern California that saw significant damage after Friday night’s magnitude 7.1 earthquake.

The declaration provides immediate state assistance to San Bernardino County, citing conditions of “extreme peril to the safety of persons and property” in the county due to the earthquake.

State highway officials shut a 30-mile section of State Route 178 between Ridgecrest — the area hit by two major temblors as many days — and the town of Trona southwest of Death Valley.

Photos posted on Twitter by the state highway department shows numerous cracks in the road.

A spokesman for the governor’s Office of Emergency Services says crews were still assessing damages to water lines, gas lines and other infrastructure Saturday.

___

12:15 a.m.

Small communities in the Mojave Desert are reeling from a magnitude 7.1 earthquake — the second major temblor in as many days to rock Southern California.

Authorities say Friday night’s shaker was centered near the town of Ridgecrest — the same area where a 6.4-magnitude quake hit on Independence Day.

Mark Ghillarducci, director of the California Office of Emergency Services, says there are “significant reports of structure fires, mostly as a result of gas leaks or gas line breaks throughout the city.”

He also says there’s a report of a building collapse in tiny Trona. He says there could be even more serious damage to the region that won’t be known until first light on Saturday.

The quake at 8:19 p.m. was felt as far north as Sacramento and even in Las Vegas. It’s been followed by a series of sizeable aftershocks.

___

10:30 p.m.

Authorities say a magnitude 7.1 earthquake that jolted California has caused injuries, sparked fires, shut roads and shaken ball games and theme parks.

However, authorities say there are no deaths or major building damage reported from the quake, which struck at 8:19 p.m. Friday.

It was centered about 150 miles from Los Angeles in the Mojave Desert near the town of Ridgecrest, which was still recovering from a 6.4-magnitude preshock that hit the region on Thursday.

There were reports of trailers burning at a mobile home, and State Route 178 in Kern County was closed by a rockslide and roadway damage.

But Kern County Fire Chief David Witt says it appears no buildings collapsed. He also says there have been a lot of ambulance calls but no reported fatalities.

___

9:50 p.m.

An earthquake rattled Dodger Stadium in the fourth inning of the team’s game against the San Diego Padres.

The quake on Friday night happened when Dodgers second baseman Enriquè Hernàndez was batting. It didn’t appear to affect him or Padres pitcher Eric Lauer.

However, it was obvious to viewers of the SportsNet LA broadcast when the TV picture bounced up and down.

The quake registered an initial magnitude of 6.9 to 7.1, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

There was no announcement by the stadium’s public address announcer.

Some fans in the upper deck appeared to leave their seats and move to a concourse at the top of the stadium.

The press box lurched for about 20 seconds.

The quake occurred a day after a magnitude 6.4 quake hit in the Mojave Desert about 150 miles from Los Angeles.

___

9:40 p.m.

Authorities are now reporting injuries and damage from a big earthquake that was felt throughout Southern California and into Las Vegas and even Mexico.

The quake that hit at 8:19 p.m. was given a preliminary magnitude of 6.9 to 7.1, but the measurements were being calculated.

It followed Thursday’s 6.4-mangitude quake that at the time was the largest Southern California quake in 20 years. Both were centered near Ridgecrest in the Mojave Desert.

Kern County fire officials reported “multiple injuries and multiple fires” without providing details. San Bernardino County firefighters reported cracked buildings and a minor injury.

___

8:30 p.m.

An earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 6.9 has jolted Southern California, but there are no immediate reports of damage or injuries.

The U.S. Geological Survey says the quake hit at 8:19 p.m. Friday and was centered 11 miles from Ridgecrest, where a magnitude 6.4 quake struck on Thursday. The agency initially said the earthquake had a magnitude of 7.1.

The quake was felt downtown as a rolling motion that seemed to last at least a half-minute. It was felt as far away as Las Vegas, and the USGS says it also was felt in Mexico.

If the preliminary magnitude is correct, it would be the largest Southern California quake in 20 years.

___

4 p.m.

Seismologists say there have been 1,700 aftershocks in the wake of the strongest earthquake to hit Southern California in 20 years but the chances of another large temblor are diminishing.

A magnitude 5.4 quake at 4:07 a.m. Friday is so far the strongest aftershock of Thursday’s 6.4 quake, which struck in the Mojave Desert near the town of Ridgecrest.

Zachary Ross of the California Institute of Technology says the number of aftershocks might be slightly higher than average. He also says a quake of that size could continue producing aftershocks for years.

The quake caused some damage to buildings and roads in and around Ridgecrest.

However, seismologists say it’s unlikely the quake will affect any fault lines away from the immediate area, such as the mighty San Andreas.

___

1:20 p.m.

The city of Los Angeles is planning to reduce the threshold for public notifications by its earthquake early warning app, but officials say it was in the works before Southern California’s big earthquake Thursday.

The ShakeAlert LA app was designed to notify users of magnitudes of 5.0 or greater and when a separate intensity scale predicts potentially damaging shaking.

Robert de Groot of the U.S. Geological Survey says lowering the magnitude to 4.5 was already being worked on and had been discussed with LA as recently as a day before Thursday’s magnitude 6.4 quake centered in the Mojave Desert.

The shaking intensity levels predicted for LA were below damaging levels, so an alert was not triggered.

Mayor’s office spokeswoman Andrea Garcia also says the lower magnitude threshold has been in the planning stages and an update to the system is expected this month.

___

7:05 a.m.

A vigorous aftershock sequence is following the strongest earthquake to hit Southern California in 20 years.

A magnitude 5.4 quake at 4:07 a.m. Friday is so far the strongest aftershock of Thursday’s magnitude 6.4 jolt, and was felt widely.

Seismologists had said there was an 80% probability of an aftershock of that strength.

Thursday’s big quake struck in the Mojave Desert, about 150 miles (240 kilometers) northeast of Los Angeles, near the town of Ridgecrest, which suffered damage to buildings and roads.

___

9 p.m.

The strongest earthquake in 20 years shook a large swath of Southern California and parts of Nevada on the July 4th holiday, rattling nerves and causing injuries and damage in a town near the epicenter, followed by a swarm of ongoing aftershocks.

The 6.4 magnitude quake struck at 10:33 a.m. Thursday in the Mojave Desert, about 150 miles (240 kilometers) northeast of Los Angeles, near the town of Ridgecrest, California.

Kern County Fire Chief David Witt says multiple injuries and two house fires were reported in the town of 28,000. Emergency crews were also dealing with small vegetation fires, gas leaks and reports of cracked roads.

Witt says 15 patients were evacuated from the Ridgecrest Regional Hospital as a precaution and out of concern for aftershocks.

Source Article from https://www.cbs17.com/news/the-latest-6-9-earthquake-felt-in-southern-california/

Rudy GiulianiRudy GiulianiGiuliani pens op-ed slamming ‘unprecedented’ impeachment inquiry Giuliani associate Lev Parnas discussed Ukraine with Trump at private dinner: report Democrats face make-or-break moment on impeachment MORE, President TrumpDonald John TrumpLindsey Graham vows to not watch ‘un-American’ Trump impeachment hearings Televised impeachment begins: Are Democrats ready for their close-up? Trump goes on tweeting offensive ahead of public impeachment hearing MORE’s personal attorney, penned an op-ed published Tuesday slamming the House’s “unprecedented” impeachment investigation.

The op-ed, which comes a day before the House holds its first public hearings in the inquiry, claims Trump’s interactions with Ukraine were “innocent” and that House Democrats are unfairly targeting his client.

“The manner in which [Rep. Adam SchiffAdam Bennett SchiffGiuliani pens op-ed slamming ‘unprecedented’ impeachment inquiry Jim Jordan: Latest allegation of ignoring sexual misconduct is ‘ridiculous’ Democrats face make-or-break moment on impeachment MORE] and Speaker Nancy PelosiNancy PelosiGiuliani pens op-ed slamming ‘unprecedented’ impeachment inquiry Brindisi, Lamb recommended for Armed Services, Transportation Committees Overnight Health Care: Top health official defends contract payments to Trump allies | Vaping advocates confident Trump will turn from flavor ban | Sanders gets endorsement from nurses union MORE are conducting this impeachment investigation is unprecedented, constitutionally questionable, and an affront to American fair play,” Giuliani wrote of the two California Democrats in The Wall Street Journal.

“In an ideal America, politicians would be held to the same standard regardless of party, and this inquiry would be over. But the left’s inability to accept the results of the 2016 election and fear of Mr. Trump’s policy agenda have driven the Democrats into a frenzy,” he added.

At the heart of the House’s impeachment investigation is a July phone call between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in which Trump repeatedly lobbied his counterpart to investigate former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenLindsey Graham vows to not watch ‘un-American’ Trump impeachment hearings Trump goes on tweeting offensive ahead of public impeachment hearing University of Florida student government president faces impeachment over Trump Jr. appearance MORE, a chief political rival, on ungrounded corruption allegations. While the call has been the focus of bipartisan scrutiny on Capitol Hill, Giuliani maintained the president did nothing wrong.

“The conversation my client, President Donald J. Trump, had with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on July 25 was innocent. During a congratulatory call, the newly elected Mr. Zelensky brought up the need to ‘drain the swamp’ in his country. Rooting out corruption was one of Mr. Zelensky’s campaign pledges, and Mr. Trump asked him to investigate allegations of corruption at the highest levels of both governments. It was a matter of serious mutual concern,” he wrote. 

“Moreover, Mr. Trump requested that Ukraine root out corruption; he didn’t demand it. His words were cordial, agreeable and free of any element of threat or coercion. Mr. Trump offered nothing in return to Ukraine for cleaning up corruption,” Giuliani continued.

The op-ed comes a day before the House begins hearing public testimony in its inquiry into Trump. William Taylor, the top U.S. diplomat to Ukraine, and George Kent, a top State Department official, are set to testify Wednesday, while former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch is expected to testify Friday.

House Democrats launched their impeachment probe in September over concerns that Trump leveraged $400 million in military aid to Ukraine to pressure Kyiv to publicly launch an inquiry into Biden and 2016 election meddling. Several witnesses have testified privately that they were uncomfortable with Trump’s request and that they believed there was a quid pro quo surrounding the president’s dealings with Ukraine.

Source Article from https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/470199-giuliani-pens-op-ed-slamming-unprecedented-impeachment-inquiry

COLUMBIA — University of South of Carolina President Bob Caslen resigned May 12 amid a plagiarism scandal that capped two rocky years as leader of the state’s largest college.

Former USC President Harris Pastides has been named the interim president and will take over May 14.

Trustees Miles Loadholt and Eddie Floyd said the board took a vote via phone to discuss appointing Pastides, who retired in 2019 after 11 years in office, if Caslen left. Board chairman Dorn Smith said he sent an email to trustees announcing Caslen’s departure and Pastides’ return.

That means USC violated state open records laws requiring public notice of meetings ahead of time, another sign of problems for a board scrutinized after the presidential search that ended with Caslen’s controversial hiring.

Caslen, a retired three-star general and West Point superintendent, admitted to plagiarizing lines from the Navy SEAL who was in charge of the mission to take out terrorist leader Osama bin Laden during commencement addresses last weekend. He also called the school “the University of California.”

The missteps were met with calls for his removal online and in messages to trustees.

It was the latest in a series of stumbles for a leader who had trouble with the social nuisances of a job that requires wooing donors, lawmakers and students. Caslen’s end was a far cry from 2019 when he was seen as a president who could help tighten the school’s checkbook and win work with his military contacts.

“Turns out he was probably not the right fit to run USC,” said Floyd, the longest-serving trustee on the USC board. 

Caslen, 67, offered to resign over the weekend, but it was rejected by Smith. Despite that assurance and a call of support from Gov. Henry McMaster, backing for the president continued to erode over the past days. Word began to spread that trustees were preparing to start exit talks. 

Smith said Caslen called unexpectedly at 5:30 p.m. May 12 to say he was resigning.

“He just thought it was time to go, and I think that he was concerned about the support of the faculty and the students and everybody else,” Smith said. “We’re disappointed with the way things worked out.

“I think Bob Caslen did a great job at a lot of things that he won’t get credit for,” Smith added. “I think he handled the COVID crisis fabulously. And it’s just unfortunate that there were some missteps that were well publicized.”

Caslen said in a statement that he knew he had lost trust among the university community.   

“Trust is the most important ingredient of effective leadership, and when it is lost, it is nearly impossible to lead,” Caslen said in an email to students and staff. “I believe that is the case right now between the University of South Carolina and its president. Therefore, I have submitted my resignation to the Board of Trustees this evening, May 12, and they have accepted it. This resignation is effective May 13, 2021.

“I am sorry to those I have let down. I understand the responsibilities and higher standards of senior level leadership. When those are not met, trust is lost. And when trust is lost, one is unable to lead.”

Smith said USC’s next president will be more like Pastides, a former public health school dean and research vice president who was known for connecting well with the campus community and politicians.

“I want a academician that is charismatic, that will lead a capital campaign and that also has a business sense,” Smith said.

Lou Kennedy, one of USC’s major donors, said she hopes the school can find a president who reflects the state’s diversity: “Now is the time for the Carolina community, and that includes the board, to stand up and be counted.”

USC did not have a woman among the finalists when the president’s job was last open. 

USC Provost Bill Tate, who was a finalist to become school’s president in 2019 and was considered a successor to Caslen, will become the first Black president at Louisiana State University in July. 

Caslen was never able to shake how he got the $650,000-a-year job in 2019.

He was a favored candidate by key leaders on the board and the search committee. His name was added to the list of presidential semifinalists by the search committee chairman, trustee Hugh Mobley, according to Marco Valtorta, a USC computer science professor who served on the search panel. Mobley said at the time the he did nothing wrong and declined further comment.

Calsen’s ascension scared away potential successors to Pastides, leaving him as the only finalist to have led a college. But groups of students, faculty and alumni were upset Caslen lacked the research background and doctorate of other major university leaders. He also put off some by rambling during forums, leading to misunderstandings about what he was saying.

The board did not pick any of the four presidential finalists at first, but McMaster lobbied trustees to hire Caslen and a new vote was taken. Caslen won the job with an 11-9 vote after a contentious board meeting as protesters chanted outside.

The governor’s involvement caught the attention of USC’s accreditors who investigated the political meddling but did not sanction the school. The board was asked to makeover its rules to avoid potential conflicts and operate more professionally.

Caslen started off well by boosting pay for faculty for the first time in more than a decade and freezing tuition. He hired the school’s first Black provost, Tate, and brought in his chief of staff from West Point, Mark Bieger, who helped improve relationships on and off campus.

Caslen got USC through the pandemic, first closing campus last spring and reopening in the fall.

But he had some missteps, notably in revealing USC spoke to Florida State about buying out the contract of its football coach as the Gamecocks coach struggled and he was unable to make big changes after several high-profile sexual harassment complaints.

Then USC mega-donor Darla Moore said she was cutting ties with the school this year after her alma mater neglected to note the passing of her mother this year. Caslen also had a reputation of not engaging smoothly with university community. 

The plagiarism incident was too much to rescue his tenure.

The USC chapter of the American Association of University Professors wrote in a letter to the board May 12 that Caslen’s commencement speech violated the school’s code of ethics that emphasizes practicing personal and academic integrity, and his earlier resignation offer was “an appropriate acknowledgement of the transgression.”

“Unfortunately he had enemies out there that continued to attack him savagely him from day one,” Smith said. “And I think it just wore down on him and his wife as it would wear down on anybody.”

The brouhaha over Caslen’s plagiarism has angered some lawmakers, who question the board’s direction.

“I think it was the honorable thing to do,” state Sen. Dick Harpootlian, D-Columbia, said of Caslen’s resignation. “But it doesn’t resolve the questions surrounding the Board of Trustees.”

Harpootlian introduced a bill May 12 to reduce the size of the board from 20 trustees to 11, which would giving the state’s largest college the state’s smallest college board. The bill also would remove all the current trustees.

A similar bill was introduced after the problematic search that led to Caslen’s hiring in 2019.



Source Article from https://www.postandcourier.com/columbia/news/usc-president-caslen-resigns-as-plagiarism-scandal-ends-rocky-tenure-not-the-right-fit/article_a85b2462-b370-11eb-bd5c-23e890c747ea.html

La revista peruana “Somos” informó, en su reciente edición, que decidió no contar más como columnista de la publicación sabatina a Tomás Borda Noriega, conocido como el Dr. TV.

 

PUEDES VER: Tomás Borda, el Dr. TV, es acusado de plagio

 

Como se recuerda, una investigación de Utero.pe dio cuenta que Borda copió información de diversas páginas webs, para dar sus respuestas en la columna “Consultorio médico”, de la mencionada revista, donde atendía preguntas de sus seguidores sobre salud.

 

“Ante la denuncia que daba cuenta de que algunas de las respuestas dadas por el Dr. Tomás Borda (personaje de América TV) en la página del consultorio médico que tenía en la revista Somos eran extractos idénticos a los contenidos en diversas páginas web, se procedió a pedir su versión”, inicia el comunicado de Somos.

 

El médico aseguró que su error fue no corroborar la información que le hicieron llegar sus colaboradores. “Borda afirmó que había encargado la investigación a personal que trabaja para él, y que cometió el error de no verificar la procedencia del material que este le entregaba para su posterior publicación”, es la versión del especialista.

 

“No podemos justificar ningún tipo de plagio de los colaboradores (…) Somos se disculpa con sus lectores”, finaliza el comunicado.

 

Cabe recordar que recientemente se descubrió que el cardenal Juan Luis Cipriani también copiaba textos e ideas de autoridades de la igleasia católica para elaborar sus columnas que publicaba en El Comercio.

Source Article from http://larepublica.pe/espectaculos/702976-revista-somos-separa-al-dr-tv-de-la-revista-somos-por-plagio