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US

FBI searched Trump’s home seeking classified presidential records – sources | donald trump

Federal investigators searched Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida on Monday bearing a warrant that broadly sought presidential and classified records that the justice department believed the former president unlawfully retained, according to two sources familiar with the matter.

The criminal nature of the search warrant executed by FBI agents, as described by the sources, suggested the investigation surrounding Trump is firmly a criminal probe that comes with potentially far-reaching political and legal ramifications for the former president.

And the extraordinary search, the sources said, came after the justice department grew concerned – as a result of discussions with Trump’s lawyers in recent weeks – that presidential and classified materials were being unlawfully and improperly kept at the Mar-a-Lago resort.

The unprecedented raid of a former president’s home by FBI agents was the culmination of an extended battle between Trump and his open contempt for the Presidential Records Act of 1978 requiring the preservation of official documents, and officials charged with enforcing that law.

Trump supporters gather after FBI searches his Mar-a-Lago home – video

For years, Trump has ignored the statute. But the criminal investigation into how he took dozens of boxes of presidential and classified records in apparent violation of that statute when he left the White House last year signals potential legal jeopardy for him for the first time.

The statute governing the wilful and unlawful removal or destruction of presidential records, though rarely enforced, carries significant penalties including: fines, imprisonment and, most notably, disqualification from holding current or future office.

But the justice department may take no further action now that it has secured what sources said were around 10 boxes’ worth of documents in addition to 15 boxes recovered from Mar-a-Lago earlier this year – but what it does next was not immediately clear .

The FBI obtained a warrant for the search, meaning it showed there may be evidence of a crime at the location, which in this case would be the very presence of sensitive government documents that the justice department concluded should be held at the National Archives.

The improper handling of classified materials raised the additional prospect that the FBI might have sufficient basis to open a counterintelligence investigation, amid concerns that the records could have been accessed by individuals not authorized to view secret documents.

On his social media app, Trump on Tuesday denounced the search as a “coordinated attack” that included congressional and federal investigations into his role in the Capitol attack, and state-level probes in Georgia and New York as he weighs running for a second term .

The search warrant appeared to be approved by Florida federal magistrate judge Bruce Reinhart. The attachment to the warrant, describing the “property to be seized”, broadly referred to classified documents and materials responsive to the Presidential Records Act, one of the sources said.

The operation would have likely required approval from the highest echelons of the justice department, former officials and FBI agents said, including attorney general Merrick Garland, and the Trump-appointed FBI director Christipher Wray. An agency spokesperson declined to comment.

One of Trump’s lawyers, Christina Bobb, later said the warrant sought “presidential records.” Trump has not released his copy of the warrant.

In executing the search warrant on Monday, teams of FBI agents wearing nondescript clothes fanned out across the entirety of the Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida, the sources said. Trump was not there at the time of the raid and learned about it while he was in New York.

The agents searched through storage areas in the basement of the property, the sources said, before moving to Trump’s office on the second floor of the main house, where a safecracking team opened a hotel-style safe, though that contained no records responsive to the warrant.

Later, the FBI agents searched the residence of Trump and his wife, Melania, and navigated through the pocket-door that separates their separate rooms, one of the sources said.

The FBI agents believed the records they were seeking were at Trump’s residence, the sources said, in part through the justice department’s talks with Trump’s lawyers – led by former assistant US attorney Evan Corcoran – about the retrieval of official records from the property.

In early June, the sources said, four justice department officials, including the chief of counterintelligence and export control Jay Bratt, went down to Mar-a-Lago to ask about what materials Trump removed from the White House, and met with Corcoran and Bobb .

The officials asked to see where the White House records were being kept. They were shown the storage facility in the basement where the boxes had been placed, and after looking around for some time, during which Trump dropped by to say hello, the officials left.

Corcoran and Bobb continued to be in touch with the justice department in the weeks afterwards, and complied with a June 8, 2022 letter that asked the basement storage area to be secured with a lock, the sources said.

The justice department is understood, at some point since the investigation was opened in April this year, to have asked for the return of classified materials. Trump’s lawyers are understood to have agreed, and indicated they would go through the boxes to comply with the request.

But that otherwise cordial channel of communication appears to have somehow gone awry – prompting the justice department to take the aggressive step of seeking a warrant to seize documents – though a person close to Trump disputed this assessment and called it an incomplete account.

The exact inventory of what the FBI removed was still not clear late on Tuesday. Corcoran was in possession of the search return ‘receipt’ but appears to have not divulged its contents even to some associates.

A spokesperson for Trump did not respond to multiple requests for comment. Corcoran declined to comment.

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Technology

Samsung goes Pro with new Galaxy Buds2 Pro earbuds

Following up its new Galaxy Z Fold4 and Z Flip4 foldable phones, Samsung announced new top of the line earbuds at the UnPacked 2022 event in New York. The Galaxy Buds2 Pros feature high-fidelity sound, a more compact design and stylish color options.

Audiophiles will be thrilled with the Buds2 Pro’s 24-bit Hi-Fi audio support. This brings the ability to play higher-resolution music files, such as tracks using Samsung’s seamless codec (SSC HiFi). The net result is more dynamic, detailed playback and a greater range of sound.

Also new is spatial surround sound support along with Dolby 360-degree audio tracking for a theater like experience.

Next, the Buds2 Pro get a more powerful Active Noise Canceling system, to help eliminate outside noise. We’ll test out how this works in our upcoming GadgetGuy review.

The Buds2’s canal-type design has new aerodynamic features, including a vent hole, nozzle grill and mic array to help improve airflow. The wind shield is now 2 times larger than the previous Galaxy Buds Pros to cut down on wind noise.

The earbuds are smaller too, dropping 15 percent of their volume compared to the previous ones. The Buds2’s new shape also prevents rotation in your ear and should be more comfortable to wear for long periods.

A new Auto Switch feature provides a seamless transition from your music, game or movie back to your phone to answer a call. And thanks to Easy Pair, for the first time ever the Buds2 Pro will seamlessly connect to compatible Samsung TVs.

There are three colors to choose from including Samsung’s signature Bora Purple, along with White and Graphite.

The Galaxy Buds2 Pro costs $A349. Pre-orders begin on 11th August, with on-sale kicking off 2nd September.

Check out our video for more:

Samsung Galaxy Buds2 Pro – Specifications

colors Graphite, Bora Purple, White
ANC -33dB
environment Ambient – ​​Latency 0.2ms
Amplify – Up to +25dB
sound 360 Audio 24bit HiFi
Intelligence Voice Detect
Battery Capacity – 61/500mAh Play time – 5/18Hr (ANC On) (Buds/total) – 8/29Hr (ANC Off) Talk time – 3.5/14Hr (ANC On) (Buds/Toal)- 4/15Hr (ANC Off )
speaker 2-way(10mm Woofer + 5.3mm Tweeter)
Call Quality 3 Mics (All High SNR Mics) + VPU + DNN + Personalized Beamforming
connectivity Auto Switching / BT 5.3 (LE Audio ready
water resistant IPX7

(Source: Samsung)

Samsung’s new foldable phones

Samsung’s new smart watches

More earbud news and reviews on GadgetGuy

Valens Quinn attended the Samsung UnPacked event in New York as a guest of Samsung Australia.

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Australia

Mother and son found dead in Brisbane home: The latest.

Warning: This post contains graphic details which may be distressing for some readers.

Jifeng ‘Eileen’ Liu was believed to be in a relationship with her partner “for some months” before police were called to her Brisbane home this week.

The 47-year-old and her 20-year-old son Wenhao Du were found dead on the second floor of their Stretton home, after police were called to the property around 9:40am on Monday.

Eileen’s 49-year-old partner, Weifeng Huang, is also believed to live at the property. I have raised the alarm by calling triple zero.

After arriving at the home, Huang unlocked the front door for police officers who were confronted by “large amounts of blood” on the staircase of the property.

“The scene was confronting, it has been described as a frenzied attack on the two deceased persons,” said Brisbane Region Detective Superintendent Andrew Massingham.

He confirmed the mother and son were found at the top of the stairs “in a bedroom on the right-hand side” and were dressed in “night attire”.

Watch: Brisbane Region Detective Superintendent Andrew Massingham addresses media. Post continues below.

Police also located two “bladed” weapons at the scene.

“I can also confirm that the [alleged] weapons that were located yesterday that were described as two bladed weapons are in fact a long-handled kitchen knife and a meat cleaver,” Massingham told reporters.

Huang was treated for injuries and taken to a hospital in Brisbane where he underwent surgery.

He has since been charged with two counts of murder and remains under police guard.

On Tuesday, he attended a court hearing from his hospital bed via telephone, where he was unable to apply for bail and his matter was adjourned until September.

Jifeng ‘Eileen’ Liu. Image: Facebook.

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US

Hawaii man, 75, accused of stabbing California teen 59 times in 1982

A 75-year-old Hawaii man was accused Tuesday of the brutal rape and murder of a California teenager, four decades after her body was found by a cinder block wall in Silicon Valley, authorities said.

Gary Ramirez was linked to the 1982 killing of Karen Stitt, 15, after a Sunnyvale police detective was alerted to the killer’s possible identity last year, according to court documents filed in Santa Clara County.

Ramirez, who grew up in the Fresno area and served in the Air Force, was arrested Aug. 2 in Maui and is expected to be extradited on charges of murder, kidnap and rape, the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office said in a news release .

Karen Stitt, 15, of Palo Alto, around 1982.
Karen Stitt, 15, of Palo Alto, around 1982.Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office

A trucker found Stitt’s body on the morning of Sept. 3, 1982, at the base of a cinder block wall, according to a statement of facts included in the court documents.

An autopsy revealed that she’d been stabbed 59 times, the document says. Sunnyvale Police Detective Matt Hutchinson, who wrote the statement of facts, said the teen had also been raped.

Stitt’s boyfriend, who had been with her the night before she was killed, was initially believed to be a suspect, the district attorney’s office said.

They’d met on the night Sept. 2 at a 7-Eleven in Sunnyvale, where the boyfriend lived, and spent a few hours together before Stitt went to a bus stop for a ride home to Palo Alto, according to the statement of facts.

Her naked body was found 100 yards from the bus stop, the document says.

The boyfriend was ruled out as a suspect after a DNA analysis found that sperm collected from Stitt’s body and male blood found at the crime scene didn’t match a sample provided by the boyfriend.

No other suspect was identified, and the case remained cold until 2021, two years after Hutchinson teamed up with a genetic genealogist, The Associated Press reported.

The researcher found that a son of a woman named Rose Aguilera Ramirez may have killed Stitt, the statement of facts says.

Hutchinson found that the woman’s family lived in the Fresno area and that she had four sons, according to the document. The detective ruled out two of the brothers as possible suspects using law enforcement and public records databases, the document says.

When details for one of the two remaining brothers could not be verified, Hutchinson found a child of Gary Ramirez and obtained DNA, according to the statement of facts.

The county crime lab compared the DNA sample from the crime scene and found “very strong statistical support” that they were a match, the statement says.

It wasn’t immediately clear whether Ramirez, who was arrested at his home in Makawao, has a lawyer to speak on his behalf.

One of his brothers, Rudy Ramirez, told the San Jose Mercury-News that he’d never seen his brother get violent or angry.

“He wouldn’t hurt a fly,” he told the newspaper.

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Technology

Splatoon 3 Has Three Hosts, Including A Big Manta Ray Named Big Man

Today, in a ploddingly paced live stream, Nintendo revealed tons of details about Splatoon 3. Over the course of 30 minutes, Nintendo detailed the maps, modes, and menu minutes coming to the forthcoming multiplayer shooter. Yeah, yeah, yeah, that’s cool and all. I’m just here for the new hosts: a trio called Deep Cut.

First announced last year, Splatoon 3 is the latest in Nintendo’s colourful, happy-go-lucky antithesis to the dour multiplayer shooters that dominate the market like Call of Dutyand and Halo. (I say “happy-go-lucky,” but it’s really a facade for a fictional canon set amid apocalyptic environmental catastrophe.) Rather than bullets, you shoot paint. Most gameplay revolves less around kill counts and more around coating as much of the map with your team’s color as possible.

splatoon games have historically featured a duo of enigmatic “hosts,” in-game personas who keep you appraised of the goings-on in the game — the maps currently in rotation, for instance, or, because capitalism, any DLC Nintendo has planned.

Splatoon 3, in keeping with the numeral of its title, will feature three hosts: a trio made up of two squidlings — Shiver and Frye — and a big manta ray named, um, Big Man. They comprise the in-game band Deep Cut. They blast their news from the TV studio in Splatsville, Splatoon 3‘s hub city. But in a series first, Nintendo said in a press release you’ll be able to catch their announcements “on the go while exploring.”

Deep Cut is also serving as the mascots for Splatfest, a returning mini-event from previous games. It’s broken into multiple segments. First, there’s a poll: in the case of Splatoon 3‘s inaugural Splatfest, rock, paper, or scissors? You’re assigned to the team for whichever one you vote for. You then face off in three-team competitive modes. Splatoon 3‘s first Splatfest will be available before launch; a free demo will be downloadable starting on August 18, with the actual event running from 12:00 pm ET to 12:00 am ET on August 27.

Splatoon 3‘s full release is due September 9 for the Nintendo Switch.

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Australia

Rabia Siddique’s husband, WA doctor Anthony Jenner Bell, charged with domestic violence

A magistrate in Fremantle has lifted a suppression order, allowing the reporting of a domestic violence charge against a prominent WA doctor accused of assaulting his wife, human rights lawyer Rabia Siddique.

St John of God doctor Anthony Jenner Bell has pleaded not guilty to the aggravated assault of Ms Siddique in Mount Pleasant.

An interim suppression order was in place until this morning, when Magistrate Adam Hills-Wright lifted it.

The court heard Dr Bell had sought the suppression order to prevent his identity from being reported.

Magistrate Hills-Wright said Dr Bell had stated in an affidavit that the complaint against him was made in the context of a separation.

Dr Bell also stated that reporters had contacted St John of God asking whether his position was under question.

He said his employer was supporting him, but if the matter got into the media, it could lead to him being stood down and he may not be able to see some patients.

Not in interests of justice: magistrate

Magistrate Hills-Wright said Dr Bell was presumed to be innocent.

He said publicity increased the community’s understanding of how the justice system worked, and for a suppression order to be made, the court had to be satisfied there were exceptional circumstances.

While widespread publicity could cause “significant embarrassment”, the court process applied “equally for all”, he said.

Magistrate Hills-Wright said the court was being asked to weigh the potential wider ramifications for patients and institutions.

He told the court suppression was not in the interests of justice.

Dr Bell is scheduled to appear in Perth Magistrates Court next month for a trial allocation date.

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US

Trump testimony in New York investigation: Live updates

NEW YORK (AP) — Donald Trump invoked the Fifth Amendment and wouldn’t answer questions under oath in the New York attorney general’s long-running civil investigation into his business dealings, the former president said in a statement Wednesday.

Trump arrived at state Attorney General Letitia James’ offices in a motorcade shortly before 9 am, before announcing more than an hour later that he “declined to answer the questions under the rights and privileges afforded to every citizen under the United States Constitution.”

“I once asked, ‘If you’re innocent, why are you taking the Fifth Amendment?’ Now I know the answer to that question,” the statement said. “When your family, your company, and all the people in your orbit have become the targets of an unfounded politically motivated Witch Hunt supported by lawyers, prosecutors and the Fake News Media, you have no choice.”

As vociferous as Trump has been in defending himself in written statements and on the rally stage, legal experts say the same strategy could have backfired in a deposition setting because anything he says could potentially be used in the parallel criminal investigation pursued by the Manhattan district attorney .

Messages seeking comment were left with James’ office.

Wednesday’s events unfolded as a flurry of legal activity surrounds the former president — just days before, FBI agents searched his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida as part of an unrelated federal probe into whether he took classified records when he left the White House.

The civil investigation, led by state Attorney General Letitia James, involves allegations that Trump’s company, the Trump Organization, misstated the value of prized assets like golf courses and skyscrapers, misleading lenders and tax authorities.

“My great company, and myself, are being from all sides,” Trump wrote beforehand on Truth Social, the social media platform he founded. “Banana Republic!”

In May, James’ office said that it was nearing the end of its probe and that investigators had amassed substantial evidence that could support legal action against Trump, his company or both. The Republican’s deposition — a legal term for sworn testimony that’s not given in court — was one of the few remaining missing pieces, the attorney general’s office said.

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Former President Donald Trump will be questioned under oath Wednesday in the New York attorney general’s long-running civil investigation into his dealings as a real estate mogul, he confirmed in a post on his Truth Social account.

Two of Trump’s adult children, Donald Jr. and Ivanka, testified in recent days, two people familiar with the matter said. The people were not authorized to speak publicly and did so on condition of anonymity. It’s unclear whether they invoked the Fifth Amendment during their depositions. When their brother Eric Trump sat for a deposition in the same investigation in 2020, he invoked the Fifth more than 500 times, according to court papers.

The three Trumps’ testimony had initially been planned for last month but was delayed after the July 14 death of the former president’s ex-wife, Ivana Trump, the mother of Ivanka, Donald Jr. and Eric.

On Friday, the Trump Organization and its longtime finance chief, Allen Weisselberg, will be in court seeking dismissal of tax fraud charges brought against them last year in the Manhattan district attorney’s parallel criminal probe—spurred by evidence uncovered by James’ office. Weisselberg and the company have pleaded not guilty.

James, a Democrat, has said in court filings that her office has uncovered “significant” evidence that Trump’s company “used fraudulent or misleading asset valuations to obtain a host of economic benefits, including loans, insurance coverage, and tax deductions.”

James alleges the Trump Organization exaggerated the value of its holdings to impress lenders or misstated what land was worth to slash its tax burden, pointing to annual financial statements given to banks to secure favorable loan terms and to financial magazines to justify Trump’s place among the world’s billionaires.

The company even exaggerated the size of Trump’s Manhattan penthouse, saying it was nearly three times its actual size — a difference in value of about $200 million, James’ office said.

Trump has denied the allegations, contending that seeking the best valuations is a common practice in the real estate industry. He says James ‘investigation is politically motivated and that her office de ella is “doing everything within their corrupt discretion to interfere with my business relationships, and with the political process.” He’s also accused James, who is Black, of racism in pursuing the investigation.

“THERE IS NOT MARRIED!” Trump said in a February statement, after Manhattan Judge Arthur Engoron ruled that James’ office had “the clear right” to question Trump and other principals in his company.

Once her investigation wraps up, James could decide to bring a lawsuit and seek financial penalties against Trump or his company, or even a ban on them being involved in certain types of businesses.

Meanwhile, the Manhattan district attorney’s office has long pursued its parallel criminal investigation. No former president has even been charged with a crime.

In fighting to block the subpoenas, lawyers for the Trumps argued New York authorities were using the civil investigation to obtain information for the criminal probe and that the depositions were a ploy to avoid calling them before a criminal grand jury, where state law requires they be given immunity.

That criminal probe had appeared to be progressing toward a possible criminal indictment of Trump himself, but slowed down after a new district attorney, Alvin Bragg, took office in January: A grand jury that had been hearing evidence disbanded. The top prosecutor who had been handling the probe resigned after Bragg raised questions internally about the viability of the case.

Bragg has said his investigation is continuing, which could be behind Trump’s decision to decline to answer questions from James’ investigators during the deposition in a Manhattan office tower that has doubled as the headquarters of the fictional conglomerate Waystar Royco — run by a character partly inspired by Trump — on HBO’s “Succession.”

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Balsamo and Sisak reported from Washington. Associated Press journalist Jill Colvin in New York contributed to this report.

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On Twitter, follow Michael Balsamo at twitter.com/mikebalsamo1 and Michael Sisak at twitter.com/mikesisak

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More on Donald Trump-related investigations: https://apnews.com/hub/donald-trump

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Categories
Technology

VR Design, Co-Op Stealth And Budgie Smugglers

Recently I seized the opportunity to swoop down and snatch up an interview with Gotham Knights Game Director, Geoff Ellenor. We spoke about the past, present and future of caped crusading.

Gotham Knights launches on October 25th for PS5, Xbox Series X|S and PC. The cheapest price is currently $79 from Amazon with free delivery.

First off, great choice with The Court of Owls as your Big Bad. It’s such a compelling idea to have a society so secretive they’ve stayed off the Bat Radar. Also, to task a disparate quartet of sidekicks with taking them down. Has that been a fun situation to craft?

Geoff Ellenor (Game Director): Absolutely it’s been fun since the very beginning. We were excited about the type of Gotham we wanted to make and started bringing all these cool ideas together. The Court of Owls as this sort of insidious “old wealth” seeking to control and corrupt was one of the points that we got excited by really early, and we’ve been rolling with that since the first two months of the project.

I’ve heard that a fourth skill tree called Knighthood eventually opens up for each character. interesting name. Does that mean that one of these playable heroes – or perhaps all of them – hopes to inherit the mantle of Gotham’s number 1 protector? Or are you trying to maintain an equality of importance for them all?

GE: One of the design decisions we made early on is that you can choose to play any of the four heroes — the four knights — and answer the challenge that we started the game with, creatively. [The question here is] what is it like to have to go out there and do Batman’s job if he’s gone?

The Knighthood skill tree kind of represents a mid-game stage where you’ve accomplished a certain amount of challenges and achieved a certain amount of competence and you can now start to take on the role of being a true protector of the city. We took a certain amount of the skills (and those sort of big capabilities of each hero) and put them in this tree, behind the Knighthood Challenges to give the player a sense of earning that power level, where you begin to really step into Batman’s shoes.

Gotham Knights

Has it been exciting to create your own fresh history for this universe? And how long a grapple line/leash have you had with DC?

GE: We’ve had a very very long leash to do what we wanted with this project, which is exciting. We started off very, very early with the idea that we were gonna make a Gotham City game and we knew right away, from just the different people that we had on the team and the skills that we had in the studio, that we were interested in. in making a game you could play with your friends.

Quickly, we started looking at this group of sidekicks that have trained under Batman that are all quite capable people but still less than Batman. Then, imagine what it would be like for them to have to protect Gotham on their own. All of our design spins out of that decision. We wanted everybody to have a certain degree of bat skills – everybody can ride the bat cycle, can grapple, is agile and can drop on an enemy and effectively take them out in silence. But that’s the moment where it starts to branch out and everybody grows into being a Gotham Knight in their own way.

The most recent GK news is the inclusion of Mr. Freeze and his pairing up with the hacking/safecracker goons called The Regulators. That’s an interesting pairing…

GE: The Regulator gang sort of spun out of one of our early creative exercises. When we started comparing them against the different villains, “Mr. Freeze + The Regulators” seemed to be an early synergy. Freeze is someone who has a very close relationship with tech – he’s a bit of a tragic figure, he’s dangerous and he uses technology in a very specific way to become more powerful and to exact his revenge from him and to express his anger at the world .

Gotham Knights Mr Freeze

WB Montreal already has a great history with the character. I remember the Cold, Cold Heart DLC in Batman: Arkham Origins being a great piece of content…

GE: Yeah, that’s a long way back. There’s not even that many people [in studio] who actually [worked on Origins] still here. I think one or two of our core designers and our core animation staff worked on it. Ours was a really different take on Mr. Freez, particularly in the sense of who Freeze is. How he moves. How he fights. We’re pretty excited for you guys to see this one.

Also, it’s been revealed that you guys are using VR in your art pipeline. This is the first instance I’ve heard of such a thing. Can you expand a little on that?

GE: We got so blasé about it so quick, but I remember the day when we were all still working in the studio and I walked around the corner and there’s a 3D artist from the team sitting there with his goggles on and doing this kind of thing . I go to look around his shoulder of him and see if you can see something on the screen, and yeah — he’s making weapons [in the VR space]. That method just became such a fast pipeline for us. I mean, when we’re making new gameplay, new characters and new enemy factions and bringing in a whole new tech pipeline to build it, that’s real exciting.

I’ve seen footage where two of your demoers are being ‘spatial respectful’ of one another as they kick the snot out of goons. That said, how does GK manage a more chaotic duo — because it must be harder for the individual player to build meter and manage foes if their pal is ‘stealing hits’, yeah?

GE: So far as mediating the chaos goes, we think the design of the game works well with it. We have sort of an action-adventure brawler game with RPG elements and we’ve built our core combat around those constraints so that it works well when you play by yourself. But it works well on the network and with a buddy as well.

Gotham Knights Batgirl

Also, how does the animation system handle player on player collisions and more importantly maintaining that pleasing flow of combat. Are we phasing through one another? Is there a quick animated moment where player A nimbly tumbles over player B?

GE: We don’t actually phase through each other. There’s also no friendly fire in punching and kicking, so we don’t create the situation where you accidentally knock down your buddy as you’re trying to perform moves. We do have cooperative grab strikes as well, to allow the player to have a conscious moment where it’s like “hey, take this one” and pass that enemy to your friend. [Generally speaking,] our mechanics do kind of favor playing on each other’s wing. And all of our story missions are kind of designed in a gameplay space that fits well with one to two players.

Just along that line of “potentially too many chefs in the kitchen,” how do you handle detective moments in co-op? Obviously some players are more intuitive than others when it comes to puzzling…

GE: You’re able to play a puzzle together at the same time at least for the type of, like, investigative puzzles. So if it’s the type of gameplay where you can walk around the room, obviously you can do that together at whatever speed you want. But yeah, if your buddy finds a clue, it completes your thing so you don’t have to also find the same ones.

[Other times] you’re sort of working in this close detective investigative interaction, and in those states when you play together you’re both seeing the same stuff. The first person to solve the puzzle advances the story, but there’s also little ways of sort of implied communication. For example: if your buddy selects a clue, you know it, so you’re like “oh they think that’s interesting.”

Gotham Knights Skins

The Arkham series’ skin game was amazing, and judging from the 28 odd suits I’ve seen in GK you guys are on point already. That said, I’m not seeing any cel-shaded offering, a precedent that was set with Arkham City’s ‘Batman Animated’ skin…

GE: We’re offering a variety of visual styles, but they all kind of fit within the art style of Gotham Knights. For a bunch of reasons, some of them are stylistic, some are technical, but we really wanted to offer a ton of expression and always have you looking good. We have that kind of consistent high visual standard throughout the game.

[History-wise] there was enough for like four more games in terms of all of the different rad suits that these characters have worn over the years. Our character team has been amazing in bringing their own interpretation of some of the classics, plus a mix of crazy new stuff that nobody’s ever seen before.

Speaking of classics, Arkham Knight was a good sport in that it provided an ‘Adam West’ era skin. Would you consider a ‘Burt Ward’ Robin, rocking authentic 1960s budgie smugglers?

GE: [Laughs] We have not gone that way. I can confirm that here. But I think fans will be pretty happy with what’s there!

As we touched upon earlier, the last WB Montreal “bat title” was Arkham Origins. One common note about that game was that its sandbox was impressively large but also barren in places. Have you taken that historical feedback on board?

GE: Well, I mean, I am here really talking about the game we’re actually making this year. So Gotham Knights is not a reaction to past games. Or not a “oh, that other game got this feedback, so we should worry about it.” That said, Gotham City in Gotham Knights is a pretty dense city in terms of what’s happening. There’s always crime. The facts are always up to stuff every night. And the density of side activities and stuff to do is pretty high. So I think people will find there’s a lot of different dark corners to seek stuff to do in our city.

Gotham Knights

In combat it seems you’ve done away with the old combo timer and earnable, two-button finisher system. It appears your new focus is now on building a power bar to unleash hard-hitting abilities. I’m seeing very little penalty, combo-wise, for being hit – getting interrupted. Why did you choose to go this way?

GE: We decided that player’s mana, essentially, shouldn’t have a momentum penalty for taking hits, because you’re already losing health — you already have to worry about it. The player’s ability to gradually build momentum and use it counter was important because there are what we call ‘key unlock mechanics’ in the fight. There are enemies that do armored attacks or have a heavy shield, and it can really slow down the fight if the player can’t frequently use those powerful abilities in those cases. There’s kind of like a key and lock relationship between enemies providing a certain type of problem, and you have an ability that provides a solution. So you want to be able to use it frequently, or it becomes repetitive.

One of the things I loved about the Arkham series was battle damage across the entirety of the game. By the end, you looked like you’ve been through some shit. Does that feature here?

GE: No, we’re not. In some of those games — if my memory is correct — you are playing one very, very long night. In Gotham Knights, we have a sort of a daytime loop where you go back to The Belfry and have storytelling moments with the rest of the bat family.

Gotham Knights Robin

How does stealth work in co-op. If somebody blazes in, are you both insta-identified and locked into fisticuffs?

GE: If the enemies are aware of one of you, they’re aware of one of you. Obviously, enemies become more agitated when they’re alerted, so they can spot [that second] player more easily. They’ll have a larger vision capability and their animations change because they’re in combat, but they’re not immediately aware of anyone else until they actually have shared knowledge of the second player.

So from what little has been shown, it seems you’ve wall right back on the “hunt from the rafters” Predator gameplay. I’ve yet to see multiple goons get taken off the board by being punched out and turned into pinatas. Are we going to have the option, later in the proceedings, to disperse back upwards after an initial “swoop down strike”?

GE: Yeah, absolutely. That’s really kind of dependent on the environment that you’re in. Like with any video game, the level design dictates certain opportunities you have including the ability to return to the ceiling.

Geoff, thanks for your time.


Gotham Knights launches on October 25th for PS5, Xbox Series X|S and PC. The cheapest price is currently $79 from Amazon with free delivery.

Categories
Sports

Kookaburras’ seventh-straight Commonwealth Games gold medal in men’s hockey solidifies their status as the best ever

After winning a seventh-straight gold medal in the men’s hockey at the Commonwealth Games, it must be asked: are the Kookaburras the greatest team to ever perform on this stage?

Put nationalism and individual events to the side for a moment. For sheer excellence and dominance sustained over the history of the Commonwealth Games, it’s hard to argue that any other team across any sport, comes close.

In Birmingham, the Kookas’ juggernaut rolled on with a thumping 7-0 win over India in the gold medal match.

A men's hockey team wearing yellow and green pose with medals after a final game
The Kookaburras stand triumphant with their gold medals.(Getty Images: Elsa)

It all started in Kuala Lumpur 1998, when hockey was brought into the Games. There, the Kookaburras dropped a pool stage match to South Africa.

It remains the only game they’ve ever lost.

That’s a total of 41 out of 42 matches won over 24 years, scoring 33 goals and conceding two in the seven gold medal deciders.

“It’s a great team dynasty, really proud of the history that we have,” co-captain Aran Zalewski said.

“Every team that comes is a different team, new venue, new players, a lot of first time Commonwealth Games guys here, second time Commonwealth Games guys, so we know that we have to come out and perform, and we pride ourselves on performing well here.”

But the Kookas are more than just a series of impressive stats.

With such a crowded sporting scene in Australia, we sometimes don’t appreciate the full spectrum of talent we have across a whole range of sports, including hockey, which only tends to attract mainstream attention at the Olympics or Commonwealth Games.

But it’s time we actually sit back and fully appreciate what the Kookaburras have brought to men’s hockey, and Australian sport, over the last two decades – and the path this current generation is forging.

“We really just enjoy being on tour and spending time together, and I think that’s the best thing about this team,” Zalewski said.

“Good harmony, and we all want to challenge each other. It’s not all roses, we have to get the best out of each other and raise the tension at times.

“And we do that, and we’ve got a level of respect and trust and value that allows us to do that.”

Near flawless final caps off seventh heaven

The casual observer could look at the 7-0 score line in the final and think it was an easy romp.

But India is one of the best teams in the world – having won bronze at last year’s Tokyo Olympics – while the Kookas memorably claimed silver in a penalty shootout heartbreaker.

The reality is the Australians didn’t let India get into any flow, stifling them from the opening whistle in a masterful performance. It was an emphatic statement after they were nearly knocked out in the semis by England.

The crowning moment was the second goal – perfection for purists, as the Kookaburras whizzed out of danger on the edge of their circle, with six players involved in beautiful interplay, finished off by a Nathan Ephraums tap in.

An Australian player celebrates scoring a goal in a hockey match
The Aussies responded to their slim semi-final win over England by putting five past India in the opening two quarters.(Getty Images: Elsa)

The defense was just as entertaining to watch as the goal fest. When caught in their quarter, which wasn’t often, they played patiently, backing their skills to slip through a crowd of Indian players, and getting out of trouble.

Even while leading 5-0 and the game already won, Matt Dawson thrust himself in the line of fire to block an Indian shot.

It was characteristic of every player’s effort in the decider: they play hard, they play every ball, and they play to win every single moment, no matter the score.

Ockenden wins his fourth gold medal

It may sometimes seem unfair to single out individuals after any performance in a team sport, but when it comes to the Kookaburras for the past 16 years co-captain Eddie Ockenden has been at the center of it all.

He now joins former skipper Mark Knowles with four Commonwealth Games golds.

Eddie Ockenden holds a hockey stick over his shoulders and looks to the side in a set up portrait photo.
Ockenden made his international debut for the Kookaburras in 2006.(AAP: Brendon Thorne)

“I’m really proud to have that, and it’s really good part of our history but it’s our team now, it’s our time,” Ockenden said.

“I’m just incredibly proud to have played with some of the guys I played with across all those four and just incredible friends, great teammates, great players.”

Zalewski says Ockenden is a much-loved member of the team.

“The best thing about Eddie we can draw on so many experiences. And just having someone that’s so calm under pressure, such a humble guy and just such a good fella, really.”

In Birmingham, he remained a bedrock in defence, the cool head needed in all situations, and at these Games he was not only a leader of the Kookas, but the unofficial captain of the entire Australian team, as the opening ceremony flag-bearer.

Australia's flag-bearers, Eddie Ockenden and Rachael Grinham, stand proudly waving flags in front of St Bartholomew's Church
Ockenden (right) was Australia’s flag-bearer alongside Rachael Grinham at the Birmingham Opening Ceremony.(ABC News: West Matteussen)

He’s not comfortable with the spotlight remaining solely on him though, preferring to praise the players who have come in, particularly in the wake of major changes following the Rio 2016 Olympics where they finished sixth.

“The way we didn’t stagnate or drop even when we had new guys, we really improved surprisingly quickly and got to that amazing level, and I even think Tokyo last year, that was just the start.”

Australia’s all-time games record holder continues to rack up the caps: he’s now just a few shy of 400, and at 35, he doesn’t look like stopping any time soon.

“I’m feeling really good and fit, I’m just going to give myself a chance to make the squads and push for the team because it’s really tight for spots and it’s an incredible squad that we’ve got,” he said.

“There’s a lot of guys back in Perth [where the team is based] that could be here today, so it’s a really tight squad and I’ll just keep putting my name forward and doing my best.”

While Comm Games are nice, the Olympics are the ultimate prize for hockey players, and Ockenden hasn’t managed gold on that stage yet.

Paris is only two years away – so will he be there?

“Now you say ‘yeah, I’d like to go’, but it’s a bit more into it than that,” he said.

“It’s hard leaving my family all the time. You have to make sure your body is good, and your form is good, and then I think we’ll just see how it goes.”

And if the Kookaburras can continue building to gold in Paris, with Ockenden at the helm, that could take them from Commonwealth Games legends to Australian sporting immortality.

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Categories
US

The House GOP’s Plan to Troll Biden With Investigations Is a ‘Sh*tshow on Steroids’

Even before federal agents stepped onto the grounds of Mar-a-Lago on Monday, Republicans in Congress were eagerly preparing their plans to investigate President Joe Biden and his administration ahead of an expected takeover of Capitol Hill after November’s elections.

But the FBI raid on Donald Trump’s south Florida estate—reportedly to execute search warrants related to official document preservation—immediately turned investigations from a top priority into the potential main event of a Republican-controlled Congress next year.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA)—the presumptive House speaker if Republicans pull off a takeover from the chamber—did not wait for more details to emerge about the raid before calling for Attorney General Merrick Garland to appear for testimony next year.

“When Republicans take over the House, we will conduct immediate oversight of this department, follow the facts, and leave no stone unturned,” McCarthy said on Monday night. “Attorney General Garland, preserve your documents and clear your calendar.”

The Department of Justice, which is weighing whether to criminally prosecute the former president, was always going to be in the “crosshairs of oversight” for the GOP, said Aaron Cutler, a former House Republican staff attorney who now heads up congressional investigations work for the law firm Hogan Lovells.

But the FBI raid on Monday, and the lack of public knowledge about the extraordinary move, has “really infuriated” the GOP, said Cutler. “It makes Republicans want to dig in even more to the administration,” he said.

That enthusiastic digging isn’t poised to simply stop at the doors of the DOJ. Over the last year, GOP lawmakers in both the House and Senate have publicly outlined dozens of areas where they want to investigate the Biden administration.

Some of those areas are straightforward and could even invite some bipartisan cooperation. Republicans want to dig into the disastrous US withdrawal from Afghanistan last year and the often confusing COVID-19 guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; some Democrats could come on board for those investigations.

But with the GOP mum so far on their legislative agenda, what seems to most excite Republicans right now about a Capitol Hill takeover is something else: investigations primarily designed to hit Biden where it hurts—and damage his political prospects ahead of the 2024 election.

Before Biden even took office, GOP lawmakers began to lay the groundwork for extensive probes into the business dealings of the president’s son, Hunter, and have vowed to investigate another investigation: the one being conducted by the House select committee on Jan. 6th.

Republican rank-and-file members, meanwhile, have publicly called for impeaching Biden, along with Garland and other cabinet secretaries like Homeland Security chief Alejandro Mayorkas.

“What we’re seeing from what they’re saying is nothing about a legislative agenda if they’re in the majority,” said Norman Ornstein, a senior fellow emeritus at the right-leaning American Enterprise Institute think tank. “The whole theme here is retribution against people in the Biden administration, ranging all the way from Merrick Garland to Anthony Fauci.”

Rep. Jared Huffman (D-CA) had another description for the prospect of a GOP exercising majority oversight powers. “It’d be a shitshow on steroids,” he told The Daily Beast.

Gaming out GOP oversight plans is hardly an academic exercise or an entertaining of far-fetched hypotheticals. Given historical trends, redistricting, and Biden’s low approval ratings, Republicans are widely expected to easily capture control of the House; control of the Senate is more of a toss-up.

Republicans need to flip only one chamber, however, to gain access to the committee gavels—and with them, a massive infusion in resources to hire attorneys and investigators—in order to begin creating everyday headaches for the Biden administration.

They could do so on a number of fronts. Investigations into Biden’s family would be the most politically sensitive and the most partisan; a close second would be probes into how Biden and congressional Democrats have themselves probed the abuses of the Trump presidency and Jan. 6.

Beyond that, Republicans are most eager to probe the Afghanistan withdrawal, COVID-19 public health policies, the origins of the virus, and the Department of Homeland Security’s handling of migration at the US-Mexico border.

Among the rank-and-file, there’s serious appetite for using their congressional powers to indulge an investigation into Trump’s obsession—the 2020 election—which leaders have yet to endorse.

The last time Republicans could investigate a Democratic administration, they followed the lead of their base—a move that has only aged more poorly over time. From 2014 to 2016, House Republicans established a committee to investigate the terrorist attack at the US diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, in 2012.

There were legitimate questions to be answered about the government failures that led to the deaths of four Americans in Benghazi. But GOP leaders—McCarthy in particular—ended up admitting the probe existed simply to harm Hillary Clinton, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee in 2016.

Some Republicans acknowledge there’s a risk of going too far again. “I don’t think leadership wants to see Hunter Biden alone on a witness panel getting beaten up for hours on end,” said Cutler. “The Benghazi example, I think folks would understand that’s not really what the American public wants to see.”

Cutler argued McCarthy would “ensure the conference is measured and doesn’t send out subpoenas willy-nilly” if they control the gavels next year. Democrats, in the eyes of many Republicans, went too far in their oversight of the Trump administration.

They outlined dozens of possible investigations before taking the House in 2018; within six months of controlling the chamber, 14 House committees had launched at least 50 probes into the Trump administration, according to NBC News.

Though top Republicans have used their oversight plans primarily as a way to toss out red meat to the GOP base, they have also at least signaled they want to pursue sober, bread-and-butter issues.

Rep. James Comer (R-KY), in line to be the chairman of the House Oversight Committee, promised to POLITICO to bring the panel “back to what its original intent was.”

“We’re going to spend a lot of time in the first three, four months having investigation hearings,” Comer said, “and then we’re going to be very active in the subcommittee process, focused on substantive waste, fraud and abuse type issues.”

Spokespeople for Comer, and Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH)—who’s in line to be chairman of the House Judiciary Committee—did not respond to requests for comment from The Daily Beast on their oversight plans.

It’s fair to say Democrats are not expecting serious-minded oversight next year. Ornstein argued that any suggestion that Democrats’ oversight of the Trump administration—“the most scandal-ridden in the history of the country”—is not remotely comparable to what Republicans are outlining now.

With Republicans seeking to even score and put political points on the board against Biden, Ornstein said even legitimate oversight avenues like Afghanistan or COVID-19 policies could be tainted. “I don’t hold out a lot of hope that we would have legit oversight,” he said.

The White House has reportedly already begun laying the groundwork to respond to a flood of GOP requests and oversight demands, by beefing up staffing at the counsel’s office and talking about restructuring offices to better counter their adversaries on Capitol Hill should they take over.

Congressional Democrats, who are still fighting to keep control of both the House and Senate, are loath to publicly game out how they would approach the role of the minority—and are incorporating the GOP’s chest-thumping on oversight into their case to voters.

Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-NY), chair of the House Oversight Committee, told The Daily Beast that Republicans on the panel “have made it clear they are more interested in promoting former President Trump’s extreme agenda, including spreading election conspiracy theories and launching political attacks on President Biden and members of his family.”

“I’m proud of the Committee’s strong track record this Congress,” Maloney said, “and I believe the American people see that Democrats are working to make their lives better while our colleagues on the other side are focused on scoring political points.”

Huffman argued Democrats “should not spend any time developing a game plan for dealing with them being in the majority.”

“We should be putting all of our efforts into delivering for the American people and making our case to voters as to why these guys are unfit to govern,” Huffman said.

Democrats have happily seized on comments that Republicans have made in response to the raid on Mar-a-Lago—like Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s call to “defund” the FBI—to bolster that case.

Greene’s comments foreshadow a broader problem for McCarthy and his GOP lieutenants as they close in on the House majority: can they remain in the driver’s seat on sensitive investigations, or will they simply be along for the ride?

Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL), a frequent critic of McCarthy, suggested last December that the days of Benghazi would look quaint by comparison to what he and his allies had planned for Biden.

“It’s not going to be the days of Paul Ryan and Trey Gowdy and no real oversight and no real subpoenas,” Gaetz said. “It’s going to be the days of Jim Jordan, Marjorie Taylor Greene, and Dr. Gosar and myself.”

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