Celebrity
Donald Trump Indicted; The 1st Ex-President Charged With A Felony.
NEW YORK — Donald Trump has been indicted by a Manhattan grand jury, according to his lawyers, making him the first former U.S. president to face criminal charges and jeopardizing his quest to retake the White House next year.
The accusations revolve around payments made during the 2016 presidential campaign to silence allegations of extramarital sexual encounters. They are a remarkable development following years of inquiry into Trump’s business, political, and personal dealings.
The indictment places a local district attorney’s office at the center of a national presidential campaign, ushering in criminal proceedings in a city where the ex-president has lived for decades. The charges, which come at a time of deep political divisions, are likely to strengthen rather than reshape the opposing views of those who see accountability as long overdue and those who, like Donald Trump, believe the Republican is being targeted for political reasons by a Democratic prosecutor.
Donald Trump, who has consistently denied any wrongdoing and slammed the probe, called the indictment “political persecution” and predicted it would hurt Democrats in 2024. Defense attorneys Susan Necheles and Joseph Tacopina said in a statement confirming the charges that Trump “did not commit any crime.” We will fiercely defend ourselves in court against this political prosecution.”
Donald Trump, has consistently denied any wrongdoing and slammed the probe.
The case revolves around well-documented allegations from 2016 when Trump’s celebrity past collided with his political aspirations. Prosecutors investigated payments made to porn actress Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal, whom he feared would go public with allegations of extramarital sexual encounters with him.
According to someone familiar with the issue, which was not authorized to discuss a matter that remained under seal, Trump was expected to surrender to authorities next week, though the details were still being worked out.
Following news reports that criminal charges were expected to be filed within weeks, Trump campaign officials looked surprised by the indictment’s timing. On Thursday, the former president was at his Florida estate, Mar-a-Lago, where he had taped an interview with a conservative commentator earlier in the day.
The indictment offers yet another never-before-seen spectacle for a man whose presidency was defined by one obliterated norm after another. It will necessitate a former president and current presidential candidate fighting for his freedom and political future while also fending off potentially more dangerous legal threats, such as investigations into his and his allies’ attempts to undo the 2020 election and the hoarding of hundreds of classified documents.
Until recently, New York was regarded as an unlikely candidate to be the first to prosecute Trump, who is still the subject of long-running investigations in Atlanta and Washington, which could result in charges. Unlike those investigations, the Manhattan case involves Donald Trump’s behavior before he became president and is unrelated to the widely publicized attempts to overturn a presidential election.
The indictment sets the stage for an unprecedented scene — a former president having his fingerprints and mug shot taken, then facing arraignment and possibly a criminal trial — as he seeks to reassert control of the Republican Party and stave off a slew of one-time allies who are seeking or are likely to oppose him for the presidential nomination. His booking is anticipated to be carefully choreographed for security purposes and to avoid crowds inside or outside the courthouse.
The indictment sets the stage for an unprecedented scene.
The Manhattan district attorney, Alvin Bragg, is embracing an unusual case that had previously been examined by two sets of prosecutors, both of whom refused to take the politically risky step of seeking Trump’s indictment.
In the weeks building up to the indictment, Donald Trump, who is seeking to reassert Republican Party control and. railed on social media about the investigation and urged supporters to demonstrate on his behalf, causing increased security around the Manhattan criminal courthouse.
The hush-money investigation seemed doomed until it was revealed in early March that Bragg had invited Donald Trump to testify before a grand jury, indicating prosecutors were near charging Trump.
Trump’s lawyers rejected the offer, but a lawyer close to the former president testified briefly to undermine the credibility of Trump’s former lawyer and fixer, Michael Cohen.
Cohen paid Daniels $130,000 late in the 2016 presidential campaign to keep her quiet about what she claims was a sexual encounter with Trump a decade earlier after they met at a celebrity golf event.
Trump’s business, the Trump Organization, reimbursed Cohen, who was also rewarded with bonuses and extra payments logged internally as legal costs. Cohen claimed that the business paid him $420,000 over several months.
Earlier that year, Cohen arranged for the supermarket tabloid the National Enquirer publisher to pay Playboy model Karen McDougal $150,000 to put a stop to her tale about a Trump affair, a journalistically dubious practice known as “catch-and-kill.”
The payments to the women were meant to buy secrecy, but they almost instantly backfired when details of the arrangements were leaked to the news media.
In 2018, federal prosecutors in New York charged Cohen with violating federal campaign finance rules, claiming that the payments amounted to impermissible assistance to Donald Trump’s presidential campaign. Cohen pleaded guilty to the charges and unrelated tax evasion offenses and was sentenced to federal prison.
Donald Trump was named in court documents as knowing the arrangements.
Donald Trump was named in court documents as knowing the arrangements, but U.S. prosecutors declined to charge him then. The Justice Department has long held that prosecuting a sitting president in federal court is unconstitutional.
Cyrus Vance Jr., Bragg’s predecessor as district attorney, took over the probe in 2019. While the investigation originally focused on the hush money payments, Vance’s prosecutors expanded their investigation to examine Donald Trump’s business dealings and tax strategies.
Vance eventually charged the Trump Organization and its chief financial officer with tax evasion concerning some of the company’s senior executives receiving fringe benefits.
The hush money case became known as the “zombie case” within the D.A.’s office, with investigators returning to it regularly but never filing charges.
Bragg had a distinct perspective. Following the Trump Organization’s conviction on tax fraud charges in December, he brought new eyes to the well-worn case, appointing veteran white-collar prosecutor Matthew Colangelo to supervise the investigation and convening a new grand jury.
Cohen became a crucial witness, meeting with prosecutors nearly twice daily, handing over emails, recordings, and other evidence, and testifying in front of the grand jury.
Donald Trump has long referred to the Manhattan probe as “the greatest witch hunt in history,” He has slammed Bragg as a racist against white people.
The criminal charges in New York are the latest salvo in a deep schism between Donald Trump and his hometown — a reckoning for a once-favored son who grew wealthy and famous building skyscrapers, rubbing shoulders with celebrities, and gracing the pages of the city’s gossip press.
Donald Trump, who famously said in 2016 that he “could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody” and “wouldn’t lose voters,” now faces a threat to his liberty or, at the very least, his reputation in a borough where more than 75% of voters — many of them potential jurors — voted against him.
SOURCE – (AP)
News
OHER: Judge Says She Is Ending Conservatorship Between Former NFL Player Michael Oher And Memphis Couple
MEMPHIS, Tennessee — A Tennessee judge announced on Friday that she is terminating a conservatorship agreement between former NFL player Michael Oher and a Memphis couple who fostered him during high school.
Kathleen Gomes, the Shelby County Probate Court judge, has announced that she is terminating the 2004 agreement allowing Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy to control Oher’s finances. Oher inked the contract at 18 while living with the couple and being recruited by colleges as a high school football star.
Judge Says She Is Ending Conservatorship Between Former NFL Player Michael Oher And Memphis Couple
Gomes stated that she would not be dropping the case. He has requested that the Tuohys provide a financial accounting of any money that may have come to them as a result of the agreement, alleging that they used his name, image, and visage to enrich themselves and misled him into believing that the agreement would result in the Tuohys adopting him.
Gomes expressed dismay that such an agreement had ever been reached. She stated that in her 43-year tenure, she had never witnessed a conservatorship agreement with a non-disabled individual.
“I cannot believe it got done,” she exclaimed.
Oher and Tuohys listened but did not speak during a video conference call.
SOURCE – (AP)
Entertainment
Russell Brand Lashes Out At ‘Legacy Media’ For Trying To Silence Him
Russell Brand attacks established media outlets as he confronts multiple sexual assault allegations and an ongoing police investigation in the United Kingdom.
Brand, 48, took to Rumble, a free-speech alternative to YouTube, to inform his 1.6 million followers that the allegations against him are part of a “legacy media” and “establishment narratives” campaign to suppress him. How do I know that the global media assault against free speech is in full swing? Brand said in his 20-minute video, “Guess!”
“Today, of course, we’re discussing the events of the past week, but in particular the collusion between big tech and the government and what appears to be a concerted effort by legacy media, the state, and big tech to silence independent media voices.”
The Forgetting The Sarah Marshall star stated that there is a concerted effort by the “Trusted News Initiative,” a collection of well-established global news organizations, to “cooperate with one another and corroborate one another to shut down what they believe to be their true enemy: independent media voices.”
Brand also implied that the allegations were part of a plan to discredit him due to his skepticism regarding the COVID-19 vaccine and his criticism of the mainstream media and “big tech sites.”
Russell Brand attacks established media outlets as he confronts multiple sexual assault allegations and an ongoing police investigation in the United Kingdom.
YouTube announced last week that it was removing the comedian’s ability to monetize his videos due to “serious allegations” against him. Brand noted that, fortunately, Rumble has yet to follow suit.
The British comedian then encouraged viewers to subscribe for $60 per year to gain access to his premium content.
At least four women have made allegations of “non-recent” sexual assault against the actor, which prompted the British police to launch an investigation on Monday, prompting Brand’s latest tirade.
The Sunday Times, The Times of London, and Channel 4’s Dispatches reported that one of the accusers is a 16-year-old. Another accused Brand in 2012 of having assaulted her in Los Angeles. Additionally, one of the women stated that he was physically and emotionally abusive.
Some women cited Brand’s newfound prominence as an online wellness influencer for their decision to speak out.
Detective Superintendent Andy Furphy of the Met’s Specialist Crime Command, who is conducting the investigation, told the Associated Press, “We continue to encourage anyone who believes they may have been a victim of a sexual offence to contact us, no matter how long ago it occurred.”
Russell Brand attacks established media outlets as he confronts multiple sexual assault allegations and an ongoing police investigation in the United Kingdom.
Brand’s previous comedic routines also began to resurface. In one clip from his BBC radio program The Russell Brand Show, he advises a 15-year-old to have a birthday celebration with a sexual theme.
“Assuming you are 16 years old, it is illegal for you to consume alcohol or use illegal drugs,” Brand said.
“Now, you will be legally allowed to have sexual partners,” he continued. Now, I believe the festivities should be themed around legal sex.
In a second viral video posted on X, Brand made a tasteless joke about having intercourse with women regardless of their “age, race, or whether or not they’re awake.”
“That’s the policy I use for women,” Brand said. “Hello, a woman is present. Let’s not get caught up in details such as age, ethnicity, or whether or not they’re awake. Simply get there and give them the greatest night of their lives.”
Before the allegations were made public earlier this month, Brand described the alleged encounters as “consensual” in an Instagram post.
“I have received two extremely disturbing letters, one from a mainstream media TV company and one from a newspaper, containing a laundry list of offensive and aggressive assaults. “Amongst this litany of astonishing, rather baroque attacks are some very serious accusations that I categorically refute,” he stated.
“When I was in the movies, I was extremely promiscuous, as I have written extensively about in my novels. During that period of promiscuity, every single relationship I had was consensual.”
SOURCE – (thesun)
Celebrity
David McCallum, Star Of Hit TV Series ‘The Man From U.N.C.L.E.’ And ‘NCIS,’ Dies At 90
LOS ANGELES — David McCallum, an adolescent heartthrob in the 1960s series “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.” and the eccentric medical examiner in the popular series “NCIS” four decades later, has passed away. He was 90 years old.
CBS said that McCallum died of natural causes surrounded by family at New York Presbyterian Hospital on Monday.
“David was a talented actor and author who many people across the globe adored. CBS said, “He led an extraordinary life, and his legacy will live on through his family and the countless hours of film and television that will never disappear.”
McCallum, who was born in Scotland, had been successful in films such as “A Night to Remember” (about the Titanic), “The Great Escape,” and “The Greatest Story Ever Told” (as Judas). In the mid-1960s, “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.” made the blond actor with the Beatles-inspired haircut a ubiquitous name.
The popularity of the James Bond novels and films spawned a proliferation of secret operatives on both large and small screens. According to Jon Heitland’s “The Man From U.N.C.L.E. Book,” Bond originator Ian Fleming contributed to developing “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.”
CBS said that McCallum died of natural causes surrounded by family at New York Presbyterian Hospital on Monday.
Robert Vaughn portrayed Napoleon Solo, an agent in a covert, high-tech squad of crime fighters whose initials stood for United Network Command for Law and Enforcement. The program debuted in 1964. Despite the Cold War, the agency had international personnel, including McCallum as Solo’s Russian sidekick, Illya Kuryakin.
McCallum recalled that the role was initially relatively minor, adding in a 1998 interview, “I’d never heard of the word’sidekick’ before.”
The show received mixed reviews but eventually gained popularity, especially among teenage females drawn to McCallum’s good looks and enigmatic, intelligent character. By 1965, Illya was Vaughn’s primary partner, and both stars were mobbed during personal appearances.
The series ran until 1968. In 1983, Vaughn and McCallum reunited for the nostalgic television film “The Return of the Man from U.N.C.L.E.,” in which the agents were coaxed out of retirement to save the world again.
McCallum returned to television in 2003 with another series featuring an agency with initials: CBS’s “NCIS.” He portrayed Dr. Donald “Ducky” Mallard, a nerdy pathologist for the Naval Criminal Investigation Service, which investigates offenses involving the Navy or Marines. Mark Harmon portrayed the leader of NCIS.
McCallum stated that he believed Ducky, who wore glasses and a bow tie and had an eye for beautiful women, “looked a little silly, but it was great fun to do.” He also took the position seriously, spending time in the coroner’s office in Los Angeles to learn how autopsies are conducted.
David McCallum, an adolescent heartthrob in the 1960s series “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.” and the eccentric medical examiner in the popular series “NCIS”
Co-star Lauren Holly lamented his passing on X, formerly Twitter: “You were the kindest man. “We appreciate your being you.” The 20th-anniversary marathon of “NCIS” on Monday night will now include an “in memoriam” card in memory of McCallum.
Gradually gaining an audience, the show eventually made the list of top 10 programs. McCallum, who resided in New York, rented a one-bedroom flat in Santa Monica while “NCIS” was filmed.
“He was a scholar and a gentleman who was always gracious, a consummate professional, and never one to turn down a jest. Working with him from day one was a privilege; he never let us down. According to a statement from “NCIS” Executive Producers Steven D. Binder and David North, he was merely a legend.
McCallum’s work on “U.N.C.L.E.” earned him two Emmy nominations, and he received a third nomination for his role as an educator battling alcoholism in the 1969 Hallmark Hall of Fame film “Teacher, Teacher.”
In 1975, he portrayed the title character in a short-lived science fiction series titled “The Invisible Man,” from 1979 to 1982, he portrayed Steel in the British science fiction series “Sapphire and Steel.” Over the years, he has also made guest appearances on numerous television programs, including “Murder, She Wrote” and “Sex and the City.”
He appeared on Broadway in the 1968 comedy “The Flip Side” and in the 1999 revival of “Amadeus” starring Michael Sheen and David Suchet. Additionally, he acted in several off-Broadway productions.
McCallum was a longtime American citizen, telling The Associated Press in 2003, “I have always admired the freedom this country stands for and everything it stands for. And I reside here and enjoy voting here.”
In 1933, David Keith McCallum was born in Glasgow. His father played the violin, and his mother, David, played the cello. When David was 3 years old, the family migrated to London, where David Sr. played with the London Philharmonic and Royal Philharmonic.
David McCallum, an adolescent heartthrob in the 1960s series “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.” and the eccentric medical examiner in the popular series “NCIS”
The young David studied the oboe at the Royal Academy of Music. He determined he wasn’t good enough, so he studied briefly at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art before turning to theatre. In an interview with the Los Angeles Times in 2009, he stated, “I was a small, emaciated blonde with a sunken chest, so there weren’t a whole lot of roles for me.”
After completing his military service, he returned to London and began working in live television and film. In 1957, he appeared in “Robbery Under Arms” alongside Jill Ireland, an emerging Australian actress. The couple tied the knot in the same year.
McCallum was a member of the large ensemble of “The Great Escape” in 1963, and he and his wife became friends with Charles Bronson, who also appeared in the film. Ireland fell in love with Bronson, and she and McCallum divorced in 1967 after their separation. In 1968, she married Bronson.
McCallum stated in 2009, “Everything turned out well because shortly after that I met Katherine Carpenter, a former model, and we’ve been married for 42 years.”
Paul, Jason, and Valentine were McCallum’s three sons from his first marriage, and Peter and Sophie were his son and daughter from his second. Jason overdosed and perished.
“He was a genuine Renaissance man — he was fascinated by science and culture and would turn those passions into knowledge. As an example, according to a statement released by Peter McCallum, he was able to conduct a symphony orchestra and (if necessary) could execute an autopsy based on his decades-long preparation for his role on NCIS.
In 2007, while working on “NCIS,” McCallum told a reporter, “I’ve always felt that the harder I work, the more fortunate I become. I believe in serendipity, but I also believe that dedicating yourself to what you do is the greatest way to succeed in this life.”
SOURCE – (AP)
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