Categories
Sports

Horse racing news 2022: Japanese jockey Taiki Yanagida dies following tragic fall in New Zealand

Japanese jockey Taiki Yanagida has died in Waikato Hospital from injuries suffered in a horse racing fall at Cambridge last week.

The 28-year-old had his mother Kayano and one of his two sisters Chiaki by his side when he died, the NZ Herald reports. They had rushed from Japan last Thursday to be with Taiki, who suffered brain and spinal cord damage in the accident.

He was placed in an induced coma straight after the accident and never regained consciousness.

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If he had, the damage to his spinal cord was so severe it was highly unlikely he would have walked again.

Yanagida was riding maiden horse Te Atatu Pash in the last race of the Cambridge synthetic track meeting last Wednesday when his mount was checked and fell.

Yanagida’s riding helmet came off in the fall and he was partially rolled on by his own mount but was also galloped on by a following horse, who in the split-second incident could not have avoided him and struck him heavily in the back.

The accident stunned racing industry participants, particularly the very close-knit ranks of professional jockeys, with Yanagida the first jockey to die in a race fall in New Zealand since Rebecca Black at Gore in December, 2016.

Yanagida, known to almost everyone in the racing industry as Tiger, was born and raised in Japan and didn’t start riding until he was 18, firstly in Australia before moving to New Zealand.

He recently told racing publication race form his mother had initially been against him becoming a jockey.

“I wanted to try and become a jockey but my Mum didn’t agree, she said I must go to university first,” Taiki said in June.

“I completed one year at university before I said I was going to Australia to train to be a jockey.”

Yanagida then spoke of his mother’s fears for him in his chosen career, fears that have so tragically become reality.

“Now my mother is happy for me, she knows I am doing what I always wanted to, but she still worries about me and is always going to the temple to pray for my luck and safety,” he said just two months ago.

Yanagida moved to New Zealand and developed his craft working for top Matamata trainers Andrew Scott and Lance O’Sullivan, the latter one of New Zealand’s all-time champion jockeys.

O’Sullivan said the news was heartbreaking for those who knew Yanagida but will be felt throughout the racing industry not only in New Zealand and Japan but beyond.

“He was a good young man, very dedicated to his career,” O’Sullivan said.

“He had to be because he was quite tall for a jockey so he had to work hard to keep his weight under control but that became his other passion, being a fitness fanatic so he could keep being a jockey.

“He wasn’t a natural jockey when he first came to us but worked so hard he got better and better.

“It is a very sad day for everybody who knew him and the racing industry.”

One of Yanagida’s closest friends was fellow Japanese apprentice jockey Yuto Kumagai, who Yanagida’s had helped mentor since Kumagai arrived in New Zealand.

“He was a very special friend and he told me a few weeks ago he wanted to help me become the leading apprentice this season,” said Kumagai.

“He loved riding and worked so hard to stay fit so he could be better at it. I always wanted to improve.

“It is very, very sad. I am very sad.”

Yanagida was a single man with no children who O’Sullivan says was unfailingly polite.

“These days it is rare for an apprentice to stay with the same trainers right through their apprenticeship because it is so easy once they start riding winners to go somewhere where they don’t have to do the stable work, just ride trackwork and in races .

“But Taiki stayed with us all the way through. He wanted to work hard and do the right thing. That is what sort of young man he was.”

Yanagida’s racing manager Ted McLachlan had been with him and his family at the hospital every day and was devastated by his death.

“He was such a wonderful young man it really is a tragedy and so hard to watch what his mother and sister here have had to go through,” said McLachlan.

“This will really hurt the other people in the industry because Taiki was so popular.”

Yanagida had his personal best season last racing term, riding 42 winners including three black type successes, which are at racing highest levels.

He sacrificed his goal of winning 50 races for the season to fly home to Japan for the first time in four years to see his family for a month in June, only returning to New Zealand mid-July.

Yanagida rode 162 winners in his New Zealand career and while those numbers are testament to his work ethic those who met and worked alongside Yanagida will not remember him for his racetrack victories.

They will remember a polite, happy, dedicated young man who was willing to leave his home country to chase his dream of becoming a jockey.

Taiki achieved his dream and that can never be taken away from him.

This article originally appeared on the NZ Herald and was reproduced with permission

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Categories
Australia

Bureau of Meterology rejects suggestions it was unprepared for Northern Rivers NSW flood event

Australia’s national weather agency has issued a staunch defense of its handling of deadly flooding in New South Wales earlier this year, after a parliamentary report found it did not comprehend the scale of the threat.

Five people died in the first flood event in the Northern Rivers on February 28, with evacuation orders for towns such as Lismore issued through the night as flood waters tore through the region.

A NSW parliamentary committee found the Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) was not prepared, that information used to make decisions was “incorrect and out of date”, and recommended it review its data processes.

The bureau declined to be interviewed by the ABC but in a statement a spokesperson said the agency “strongly refutes” the committee’s findings.

The statement outlined how the BOM warned governments, including national cabinet, and the community in 2021 of a likely La Niña event and above-average flooding risk across Australia’s north and east.

Specifically in relation to flooding in northern NSW, it said it told the State Emergency Service (SES) five days before the first event of “the potential for life-threatening flash-flooding over the NSW north coast” and that it issued flood watches and warnings “many days in advance”.

“The bureau also explicitly identified the risk for intense localized rain events, life threatening flash flooding and the potential for rapid river rises,” it said.

Aerial photo of Lismore in flood in 2017
The Northern Rivers flood event was the region’s worst on record.(ABC North Coast: Ruby Cornish)

The statement also addressed the report findings that some agencies treated it “as a nine-to-five business operation”, arguing it was instead a “365 days a year, 24/7 operation”.

The bureau said that for this event, a specialized meteorologist and a hydrologist were embedded with the SES at the Wollongong headquarters, and that the bureau supplied area-specific briefings to agencies.

It also noted that engagement with the parliamentary committee had been “limited”, and that a separate independent flood inquiry, which has handed its report to the government but was not yet public, was much more proactive with asking for information.

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Probe finds lead emergency agencies failed in flood response(Bruce MacKenzie)

‘more of the same’

Kyogle Shire Council general manager Graham Kennett said the report was missing recommendations to improve telecommunications, which were crucial for monitoring levels to make decisions.

“If we know what’s going on in this catchment and in that catchment, then we have warning times and we can predict flood levels to a degree of accuracy that is good enough to make informed decisions about when people need to leave,” he said.

“It takes 45 minutes to an hour for the data to get online and in some cases that is too long for a decision-making process.”

In Lismore, a group of residents said the 37 recommendations did not go far enough, and wanted locals to be given the power to make decisions in future flood events

The parliamentary committee slammed the response of the SES during the flood crisis, accusing it of “issuing out of date, inaccurate and confusing messages”.

It has recommended that a restructure of the SES be conducted to harness local knowledge and increase the number of salaried staff and volunteers.

Man and woman sit at a long table in front of microphones
Beth Trevan (left) believes the recommendations do not afford local people enough autonomy.(ABC North Coast: Bruce MacKenzie)

Lismore Citizens Flood Review group coordinator Beth Trevan said while the inquiry findings mirrored the group’s submission, the recommendations were “disappointing” as they appeared to be “more of the same”.

Ms Trevan wants local people on the ground to have the power to make decisions.

“In the past we’ve had long term local people, who had been here for 30 or 40 years and were in senior positions at a regional level … and the knowledge of the entire area and the knowledge of all the agencies and the people who ran them was at their fingertips,” she said.

“By the time it gets transferred from here to Sydney and they have a chat with the bureau, the time is wasted, and we don’t have time.”

Catherine Cusack wearing a gray jacket and sitting in a park.
Catherine Cusack left parliament in protest of her party’s handling of the flood crisis.(abcnews)

Catherine Cusack represented the Liberal Party on the parliamentary committee, but no longer sits in parliament after letting her membership lapse in protest at her party’s handling of the crisis.

She fell short of backing the notion that local people should be making decisions but said they should be “more front and centre”.

“Of all the data that flows into them, there’s just no capacity for locals to say ‘I don’t know what it is in your gauges … but all I can tell you is the water is meters high up here in an unprecedented way’ ,” she said.

The SES said it is reviewing the report and will provide a response to parliament.

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Categories
US

Muhammad Syed arrested in Albuquerque, New Mexico Muslim killings

Albuquerque Police Chief Harold Medina says they’ve found the vehicle and arrested its prime suspect in recent Muslim killings. Police and FBI agents have arrested 51-year-old Muhammad Syed. Police consider Syed to be the primary suspect in the recent killings. Police say as they prepared to search Syed’s home, Syed drove from the home in the Volkswagen Jetta they were searching for. Once police detained Syed, they searched his home and his vehicle, finding evidence that tied Syed to the recent murders. Detectives found evidence that shows Syed knew the victims and that a conflict may have lead to the shootings. Syed is being charged in the July 26, 2022 murder of Aftab Hussein and the Aug. 1, 2022 murder of Muhammad Afzaal Hussain. Police say they found bullet casings at both scenes that connected the two shootings. The gun that was used in both shootings was found during the search of Syed’s home. Police will work with the Bernalillo County District Attorney’s Office on possible charges in the August 5, 2022 murder of Naeem Hussain and the Nov. 7, 2021 murder of Mohammad Zaher Ahmadi. What we know about each case Police believe three recent murders and a murder that happened on Nov. 7, 2021, could be potentially connected. Albuquerque police say the first homicide happened on Nov. 7, 2021. In that incident, Mohammad Ahmadi was killed outside of a business he and his brother ran at 1401 San Mateo Blvd. Ahmadi was from Afghanistan. Police are working to determine if this murder is connected to three other murders that happened in the city. Albuquerque police say the second homicide happened on July 26 in southeast Albuquerque. Police identified the victim as 41-year-old Aftab Hussein. Hussein was from Pakistan.The third homicide happened on Aug. 1. Police say Muhammed Afzaal Hussain was killed in southeast Albuquerque.RELATED: Albuquerque homicides on pace with last year’s recordThe fourth homicide happened on Aug. 5. Police say they responded to reports of a shooting on Truman Street and Grand Avenue in northeast Albuquerque. When police arrived, they found Naeem Hussain dead at the scene. Police say the victim was Muslim and was a native of South Asia. Police are still not calling this a hate crime, nor are they calling the suspect a serial killer. If you have any information on the incident, call Crime Stoppers at 505-843 -STOP or the FBI at 1-800-CALL-FBI. The Albuquerque Police Department has also created a portal for the public to submit any video or photo evidence related to the case. Click here to access the portal. Who are the victims? Police have named three of the four victims who were killed. Mohammad Ahmadi was killed on Nov. 7, 2021. Aftab Hussein was killed on July 26, 2022. Muhammed Afzaal Hussain was killed on Aug. 1. Naeem Hussain was fourth person killed on Aug 5.Muhammed Hussain was the Planning and Land Use Director for the city of Española.

Albuquerque Police Chief Harold Medina says they’ve found the vehicle and arrested its prime suspect in recent Muslim killings.

Police and FBI agents have arrested 51-year-old Muhammad Syed. Police consider Syed to be the primary suspect in the recent killings.

Police say as they prepared to search Syed’s home, Syed drove from the home in the Volkswagen Jetta they were searching for. Once police detained Syed, they searched his home and his vehicle, finding evidence that tied Syed to the recent murders.

Detectives found evidence that shows Syed knew the victims and that a conflict may have lead to the shootings.

Syed is being charged in the July 26, 2022 murder of Aftab Hussein and the Aug. 1, 2022 murder of Muhammad Afzaal Hussain.

Police say they found bullet casings at both scenes that connected the two shootings. The gun that was used in both shootings was found during the search of Syed’s home.

Police will work with the Bernalillo County District Attorney’s Office on possible charges in the August 5, 2022 murder of Naeem Hussain and the Nov. 7, 2021 murder of Mohammad Zaher Ahmadi.

What we know about each case

Police believe three recent murders and a murder that happened on Nov. 7, 2021, could be potentially connected.

Albuquerque police say the first homicide happened on Nov. 7, 2021. In that incident, Mohammad Ahmadi was killed outside of a business he and his brother ran at 1401 San Mateo Blvd. Ahmadi was from Afghanistan. Police are working to determine if this murder is connected to three other murders that happened in the city.

Albuquerque police say the second homicide happened on July 26 in southeast Albuquerque. Police identified the victim as 41-year-old Aftab Hussein. Hussein was from Pakistan.

The third homicide happened on Aug. 1. Police say Muhammed Afzaal Hussain was killed in southeast Albuquerque.

RELATED: Albuquerque homicides on pace with last year’s record

The fourth homicide happened on Aug. 5. Police say they responded to reports of a shooting on Truman Street and Grand Avenue in northeast Albuquerque. When police arrived, they found Naeem Hussain dead at the scene. Police say the victim was Muslim and was a native of South Asia.

Police are still not calling this a hate crime, nor are they calling the suspect a serial killer.

If you have any information about the incident, call Crime Stoppers at 505-843-STOP or the FBI at 1-800-CALL-FBI.

The Albuquerque Police Department has also created a portal for the public to submit any video or photo evidence related to the case. Click here to access the portal.

Who are the victims?

Police have named three of the four victims who were killed.

  • Mohammad Ahmadi was killed on Nov. 7, 2021.
  • Aftab Hussein was killed on July 26, 2022.
  • Muhammed Afzaal Hussain was killed on Aug. 1.
  • Naeem Hussain was fourth person killed on Aug 5.

Muhammed Hussain was the Planning and Land Use Director for the city of Española.

Categories
Technology

Take-Two Says GTA 6 Will ‘Set Creative Benchmarks For The Series, Our Industry, And For All Entertainment’

Take-Two CEO Strauss Zelnick didn’t have a huge amount to say about the still-untitled GTA 6 during the company’s recent earnings, but that didn’t keep him from using some pretty strong language to describe it.

“With the development of the next entry in the Grand Theft Auto series well underway, the Rockstar Games team is determined to once again set creative benchmarks for the series, our industry, and for all entertainment, just as the label has done with every one of their frontline releases,” reads a quote from Zelnick in the company’s latest financial results report. That’s quite a statement and surely gives the game, whatever form it takes, a lot to live up to.

Zelnick, of course, is known for issuing big, bold claims. It’s not that I don’t believe him when he says this, either — quite the contrary, we’re still seeing the continued, runaway success of GTA Online today, a decade after launch. So there’s certainly precedent for puffing one’s chest. But still … what a thing to claim.

This statement marks the second time this year that Rockstar has confirmed active development on its follow-up to the staggeringly popular Grand Theft Auto V. There are still no official details on GTA 6 just yet. However, a report did go around late last month regarding improved working conditions on the project and that the game would feature a Latin woman in the lead role.

Take-Two’s latest earnings report indicates that GTA V has sold almost 170 million units worldwide. That’s another five million sales since its last earnings report in May. Additionally, Take-Two says that its GTA+ subscription service has “seen consistent growth since launch.” It also confirmed that players on PS5 and Xbox Series X spend more than those on older hardware.

Categories
Entertainment

Melbourne radio host shares hateful letter she received from angry listener: ‘It’s the snail-mailers too!’

Australian radio host Dee Dee Dunleavy was left floored after receiving a hateful letter in the mail about her afternoon show.

Melbourne 3AW Afternoons host Dunleavy shared a photo of the cruel letter on Twitterwhich had been sent a week earlier about a now-finished radio competition.

The competition involved listeners calling in with a secret “codeword” or “password” which was said on-air in order to win cash prizes.

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And one particularly disgruntled listener seemed to think Dunleavy didn’t share the password enough times.

“Silly DD,” the expletive-ridden letter began. “What a stupid b—making people wait 2 ½ hours for the ‘password’ for the competition.”

“I had phone calls to make, work to do. You’re a bloody idiot. An ugly woman.”

The letter appeared to have been posted on the 28th of July, when the competition was still running.

But it appears it only made its way to Dunleavy this week, leaving her perplexed and offended.

“Seems it’s not just the ‘every child wins a prize’ generation that can’t hack not being a winner… it’s the snail-mailers too!” Dunleavy wrote, sharing the letter to Twitter.

Dunleavy’s followers were shocked by the hate mail and shared outraged comments on the social media site.

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“Imagine being mad about the timing of something and then complaining via snail mail,” one follower wrote.

“And posting it two weeks after the competition finished,” Dunleavy replied.

“But she had time to write a letter, and post it!” another incredulous follower said.

One follower even mused about the type of radio listener who would feel compelled to write such a letter.

“I’m thinking a pensioner (someone young wouldn’t write a letter, they would get on social media) and I’m being potentially controversial here but judging by the hand-writing – female,” he said.

Dunleavy responded: “Oooh. I was getting a male vibe.”

It’s not the first time the veteran journalist has been the victim of trolling, both online and via snail mail.

Dunleavy has been open about hateful messages she gets from commenters in the past.

In 2013, she wrote a message on Twitter about why trolls target people online.

“A troll is someone who wants you to feel, for a few seconds, as miserable as they do their entire existence,” she wrote.

9Honey has reached out to Dunleavy for a comment.

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Categories
Sports

AFL 2022 news: Wayne Carey on Anthony Stevens stoush, North Melbourne reunion, cheating scandal

AFL legend Wayne Carey has broken his silence on the reported verbal stoush he had with former teammate Anthony Stevens during North Melbourne’s premiership reunion.

More than 20 years after Carey’s cheating scandal with Stevens’ then-wife forced him out of the Kangaroos, SEN journalist Sam Edmund reported the pair clashed at a gathering of former North players on Saturday night.

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According to Edmund, there was an “ugly altercation” between Carey and Stevens at North Melbourne’s 1996 premiership gathering at the Railway Hotel in Yarraville.

“It’s a pretty sad sequel,” Edmund said on SEN’s Dwayne’s World.

“Witnesses said, Dwayne, that Carey went at Stevens, accusing him of talking behind his back, telling people not to bother trying to catch up with him but then being fine in-person.

“Witnesses said Carey went at Stevens, accusing him of talking behind his back and telling people he couldn’t be contacted and to not bother trying to catch up with him, but then being fine in-person.”

On Wednesday, Carey broke his silence on the reports and explained what really went down on Saturday night.

“The first story said came to blows and that’s factually incorrect. There were no blows,” Carey said on Triple M.

“There was a firm conversation – altercation I think is even too firm to say that occurred.

“I wanted to have a conversation about Stevo, I was worried about him. I said ‘I’m worried about you’ and he obviously took a little bit of umbrage to say I was worried about him.

“I said I’m worried about, I want him to look after himself like people want me to look after myself.

“To say that it was a massive altercation and it came to blows and then we left there and everyone was upset with everyone and it was a big thing is totally incorrect – that’s the disappointing thing about it.

“It wasn’t a story and still isn’t a story.

“I hope I’ve just cleared up that once again this has been blown into something it wasn’t.

“I’m not sure why it should always be talked about – it doesn’t make sense.

“(Sam’s) let himself down with this.

“You know what Sam? We all have bad days. You’ve had a shocker.”

Carey admitted it was well known he and Stevens “aren’t best mates”, but felt Edmund only reported half the story on Monday.

“What he did leave out was at the end of the night or the evening or late afternoon or whatever it was, Stevo and I actually had a couple of beers together and left together,” he said.

“We were standing out the front both waiting for our respective Ubers to leave the particular venue. I have left that out.

“It sounds like we’ve had this massive blow up and an altercation and as he said we came to blows which was clearly factually incorrect.”

Stevens didn’t appear on Sunday when the North Melbourne premiership players held a motorcade celebration for fans. Carey doesn’t believe that decision had anything to do with the conversation the two had.

“I don’t know whether Stevo was upset the next day or not, and that’s why he didn’t come to the motorcade,” Carey said.

“What I do know about that, and my understanding and I’ve spoken to Arch (Glenn Archer) and I’ve spoken to Kingy (David King) and I’ve spoken to heaps of other players that are close with Stevo and some of those players I’m close with and Stevo wasn’t well.

“He’d had a reasonable night. It would be fair to say. We all had a reasonable day. Stevo maybe bigger than others so he didn’t attend the Sunday.

“If there was a big issue and this big thing happened and it had upset all these ex-teammates of mine and everyone else, on Sunday I sat there with Darren Crocker, I sat there with Danielle Laidley, sat with Glenn Archer, sat there with Sholly (Craig Sholl), all and some of them really mutual friends of both of ours – if I’d upset the apple cart or they were really disappointed with what occurred that day then that next day would not be happening.”

Carey admitted the report didn’t frustrate him, he felt more for the families every time the scandal, since 2002, gets brought up.

“This is what really hurts every single time. So when dills like Sam overexaggerate something that’s happened, who affects it,” he said.

“What he doesn’t realize is it affects Stevo’s daughters, my daughters – not my son because he’s really young. It affects family members and everyone else. That’s what these types of things do.

“Who cares if Stevo and I had a firm conversation together? How is that an actual story?”

Read related topics:melbourne

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Categories
Australia

Perth punk bank Body Horrors reports alleged assault by Mojo’s Bar staff member at Freo.Social

Popular Fremantle venue Mojo’s Bar has come under scrutiny in the music community after a Perth band member claimed they were attacked “aggressively” by one of their staff members at Freo.Social at the weekend.

Punk band Body Horrors will allege their lead singer Eden was in the green room on Sunday with a senior Mojo’s staff member when they were verbally abused and shoved by the woman in front of another band member just before midnight.

The band described the alleged incident, which followed their set at the venue on Parry Street, as “childish” and “unprofessional” on their social media page on Tuesday.

“(She) started antagonizing us, clearly intoxicated, aggressively yelling in our faces,” the band’s Instagram story read.

Body Horrors described the alleged incident as “childish” and “unprofessional” on their social media page on Tuesday.
Camera IconBody Horrors described the alleged incident as “childish” and “unprofessional” on their social media page on Tuesday. Credit: Instagram/Instagram

“Realizing there was no reasoning with someone in such a state, Eden and I tried to leave, twice.

“(She) then physically assaulted them by shoving them against the wall/door before opening the door to leave herself.”

On Tuesday Freo.Social confirmed it was investigating the incident.

“This investigation includes discussions with all parties involved, any witnesses, and reviewing the venue’s CCTV footage,” the venue wrote in a Facebook post.

“We are taking this incident very seriously, and the investigation is ongoing.”

The post claimed no contact had been made with venue management by those making the allegations as of Tuesday evening, and they remained steadfast in their “commitment to creating a safe and supportive space”.

Another local band, Lauren and the Good Fights, has thrown their support behind the Body Horrors band, urging other artists to boycott Freo. Social and Mojo’s Bar.

A WA Police spokeswoman has confirmed a complaint was made, and police will be making further inquiries into the incident.

Freo. Social and the Body Horrors band have been contacted for comment.

Read the full exclusive story at The West Australian

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Categories
US

Arbery killers Travis, Gregory McMichael and Willian Bryan get federal sentence

Comment

The three men already convicted and sentenced to life in prison for killing Ahmaud Arbery were given decades more behind bars Monday for federal hate-crime violations — and told they must serve their time in state prison, which they contend will be far more dangerous for them .

Travis McMichael; his father, Gregory McMichael; and their neighbor William “Roddie” Bryan appeared in back-to-back hearings in US District Court in Brunswick, Ga., asking a judge to send them to a federal penitentiary.

Amy Lee Copeland, the attorney for Travis McMichael, 36, said he has received hundreds of threats and faced “an effective backdoor death penalty” if sent to Georgia state prison — a system that Copeland noted is under federal investigation for alleged violent and deplorable conditions.

But Arbery’s family vehemently opposed allowing his killers to choose where they would be incarcerated, noting that the young Black man who was gunned down while jogging in February 2020 will never be able to make choices about his life again.

“How can you ask for mercy? You didn’t give my boy no mercy,” Marcus Arbery said as he asked US District Judge Lisa Godbey Wood to hand down the “stiffest penalty that the court allows.”

A federal judge on Aug. 8 sentenced both Travis and Greg McMichael to an additional life sentence for federal hate-crime violations in the 2020 killing. (Video: First Coast News/WJXX via AP)

The pursuit and killing of Ahmaud Arbery, 25, became part of the impassioned debate over racial injustice spurred by the police killings of George Floyd in Minneapolis and Breonna Taylor in Louisville that same year. President Biden’s Justice Department has pursued federal civil rights charges in all three cases, convicting the officers involved in Floyd’s killing in December and February, and charging officers involved in the raid that led to Taylor’s death last week.

“Hate crimes have no place in our country,” Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a statement after Monday’s sentencing. “Protecting civil rights and combatting white supremacist violence was a founding purpose of the Justice Department, and one that we will continue to pursue with the urgency it demands.”

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The McMichaels and Bryan, all of whom are White, received life sentences on state murder charges following their November 2021 convictions, with no possibility of parole for the McMichaels. Their federal trial, earlier this year, presented evidence about past racist and offensive statements by each of the defendants.

They were convicted of attempted kidnapping and violently interfering with Arbery’s right to use a public street because he was Black. The McMichaels were also convicted of a federal weapons violation.

On Monday, Godbey Wood sentenced Travis McMichael to an additional life sentence, plus 10 years for the weapons charge, and Gregory McMichael, 66, to an additional life sentence, plus seven years for the weapons charge; both men were also sentenced to 20 years for attempted kidnapping, to be served concurrent to the life sentence.

Bryan, 52, who was convicted of all but the weapons violation, was handed a 35-year federal sentence.

Godbey Wood said the state sentence takes precedence since it was imposed first. That means the McMichaels will probably spend the rest of their lives in state prison, and Bryan — who was given the possibility of parole with his state-level life sentence — will probably be incarcerated for decades. All three men have two weeks to appeal.

Bryan’s attorney urged the judge to give him a lesser sentence, noting that while Gregory McMichael told his son to pursue Arbery, and Travis McMichael did so and pulled the trigger, Bryan joined but did not initiate the chase and was not armed.

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Bryan’s decision to pursue Arbery after seeing the chase underway was a “snap judgment” decision rather than one motivated by racism against a Black man, said the attorney, J. Pete Theodocion.

Godbey Wood said that while she didn’t hand Bryan the maximum possible sentence, 35 years was no slap on the wrist.

“By the time you serve your federal sentence, you will be close to 90 years old,” she told Bryan. “But again, Mr. Arbery never got a chance to be 26.”

Arbery, an avid jogger, was out for a run when the McMichaels and Bryan chased him in pickup trucks and then killed him in Satilla Shores, a neighborhood just outside of Brunswick, Ga., on Feb. 23, 2020.

The case drew little national attention until video of the shooting was released that May. Arbery’s family expressed fears early on that the case was being covered up and would be forgotten; 74 days passed before anyone was criminally charged.

How a shaky cell phone video changed the course of Arbery’s murder trial

The delay was partly because the case wound its way through four different state prosecutors. Two recused themselves because they had previously worked with Gregory McMichael, a former Glynn County police officer.

The first of those two, former Glynn County district attorney Jackie Johnson, was eventually charged with using her position to delay the arrests of Arbery’s killers. The second, Waycross District Attorney George E. Barnhill, declined to bring charges in Arbery’s death before his recusal of him.

The Post’s Hannah Knowles recaps the trial of Travis McMichael, Greg McMichael and William “Roddy” Bryan, who were convicted in the murder of Ahmaud Arbery. (Video: Joshua Carroll, Allie Caren/The Washington Post)

After the trio were convicted and sentenced in state court, federal prosecutors offered a plea deal to the McMichaels in hopes of avoiding the expense and uncertainty of a federal civil rights trial.

Under the terms of the deal, the father and son, who had both denied in their state murder trial that race was a factor in their actions, would have to admit under oath that they killed Arbery because he was Black. In exchange, they would serve 30 years in federal — not state — prison.

But the deal fell apart at the last minute, after Arbery’s family strongly rejected the idea of ​​letting the young man’s killers choose where they would do their time.

“Granting these men their preferred conditions of confinement will defeat me,” Arbery’s mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones, said in court in January. “It gives them one last chance to spit in my face after murdering my son.”

In court filings before Monday’s sentencing, Gregory McMichael raised safety concerns similar to his son’s in seeking to serve his time in a federal facility; such facilities also tend to have better amenities, including health care.

Speaking to Arbery’s family Monday, he said: “I’m sure that my words mean very little to you, but I want to assure you I never wanted any of this to happen. There was no malice in my heart and my son’s heart that day.”

Gregory McMichael apologized in court to his son, saying he should have “never put him in that situation” of shooting Arbery, and to his wife, thanking her for standing by him. “You are a better wife than I deserve,” he said.

Travis McMichael declined to speak during his sentencing hearing. In seeking an order that he serve his sentence in federal prison, Copeland, his lawyer for him, said she understood “the rich irony… of expressing that my client will face vigilante justice himself.”

When it was his turn to speak, Bryan apologized to the Arbery family.

“I’m glad to finally have the chance to say to Mr. Arbery’s family and friends how sorry I am for what happened to him on that day. I never intended any harm to him, and I never would have played any role if I knew then what I know now,” Bryan said.

Arbery’s family also addressed the court, tearfully recalling their tremendous loss and pleading with the judge to show the defendants no mercy.

“If they had left him alone that day, they would have been fine. But they tortured him, ”Kimberly Arbery, Ahmaud’s aunt, said of her slain nephew de ella. “Give these people what they deserve.”

Another aunt, Ruby Arbery, said Gregory McMichael failed his son by participating in the chasing and killing of Arbery.

“Seems like a generational curse: like father, like son,” she said. “I don’t want them to have an easy life, because we will never have an easy life again. If they could bring Ahmaud back, they could have an easy life. But they chose to take a life, so they don’t deserve an easy life.”

Categories
Business

A Virgin Airlines passenger sparks debate for breaking ‘unspoken’ rule

A woman flying from Sydney to Melbourne has triggered debate online, after she shared her awkward middle-seat experience where another passenger sitting on the aisle of her row took more than their fair share of space.

In a photo posted to Reddit, the woman on the aisle seat is seen crossing her leg into the middle passenger’s section, with her foot tucked under the middle seat in the row before them.

According to the post’s caption, the woman on the aisle also allegedly removed the middle passenger’s arm from the armrest.

“She’s in the isolated seat. She pushed my arm off the armrest and plopped her feet in my space. The middle seat already sucks enough,” the caption read.

The post has acquired more than 550 comments, causing a stir online over plane etiquette and who has the right to the space.

One thread that received a lot of attention was a Reddit user’s explanation of who has the right to what part of the seat in a three-seat row.

“Window gets an armrest and a wall. Middle gets two armrests. Aisle gets an armrest and a little bit of extra leg. We’re not animals! We live in a society!” they commented.

“This is the way. The few times I’ve flown, I just naturally surrendered the arm rest for the middle seat,” one reply read.

“The armrests in the middle belong to the middle. This is global unspoken plane etiquette,” a third said.

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Others responded to the post with ways they would have handled the situation, including repeatedly going to the bathroom, stretching their legs over the aisle passengers and calling a flight attendant.

“Simple. Ask this person to respect your space. If she does not want to, ask to be moved to another seat because your neighbor is not respecting your space, ”one user commented.

“That’s where you rub your leg against hers and when she looks at you appalled, you can say, ‘Oh sorry. Was I invading your personal space?’” said another.

But not all commenters felt sympathetic towards the middle-seat passenger, seeing the post as her making a “big deal” out of an easy-to-solve situation.

“Can’t we just communicate anymore? Instead of acting all passive aggressive, kindly ask her to move her foot from her. Problem solved in 5 seconds without making a big deal of it. Never understood these posts,” one person responded.

“Just politely ask them to mind their space. Why take a picture and just continue to sit uncomfortably,” replied another.

Plane etiquette has become a hot topic as flights return to their pre-Covid capacities, with mask wearing, sanitization and social distancing where possible joining the list of already-existing unspoken plane rules.

While masks are no longer required in airport terminals, they are still mandatory on most flights and are only permitted to be removed if a passenger is eating or drinking.

For those who forget their mask, most airlines offer travel packs that include a mask and sanitization wipe which can be collected prior to boarding.

As for plane etiquette that existed prior to Covid-19, passengers are reminded not to kick the seat in front of them, wear headphones if listening to music or on-flight entertainment and to leave their shoes on.

“Take showers, brush your teeth, leave the perfume off, don’t eat stinky food (caesar salad and tuna fish I’m talking to you!), and bring headphones. Trust me,” a US flight attendant said in a popular Facebook group.

“These things sound basic, but (if not implemented) add to stress on crowded plans.”

Read related topics:MelbourneSydney

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Categories
Technology

Do You, a Rich Dweeb, Wish to Purchase This $AU12 Million ‘Car Man’ NFT?

Are you in possession of $US8,458,650.00 ($AU12,338,523) — or, put another, more insufferable way, 5,000 Ethereum coins — and desperate to blow it all on a piece of clipart that’s both unsettling and aesthetically janky? My rich dweeb, do I have the item for you: The Car Man Logo Art NFT, available for you to buy right now on OpenSea.

Despite the fact that we’ve been talking about these things for what feels like forever, I’m still not entirely sure what an NFT is, or why someone would spend the equivalent of two Bugatti Chiron Pur Sports to acquire one. Especially one like this, which seems to portray… a guy, suffering an extreme case of Trumpet Mouth, who is also, impressionistically, a Volkswagen?

The auto industry has been trying its hand at NFTs for a bit now, with seemingly little success. Chevy offered an NFT that came with a free Corvette Z06 (the very first one built, in fact), and nobody bid on it. Nissan Canada did a similar thing with a GT-R NFT and a real GT-R, and at least someone bought that. Alfa Romeo tried what sounded like a semi-useful application, harnessing NFTs and the blockchain to keep track of the service records on the new Tonale SUV, a complexification of something dealers already do a fine job handling. As we know, NFT transactions require a ton of electricity (and thus, often generate a ton of pollution). At least one automotive NFT involved a Lamborghini … which was summarily blown to pieces and sold as digital tokens.

I came across Car Man Logo Art NFT via this article about the most expensive car-themed NFTs ever sold. And our purple-ish wheeled dude up there is set to fetch a pretty penny. He was born into this digital world on February 12, 2022, and perhaps unsurprisingly, he has found no bidders thus far.

How might you use your Car Man Logo Art NFT? Allow his current owner, Morabira Logo Designs NFT Collection, to explain:

Car Man Logo Art NFT for sale. Carmen logo. Modern, simple and unique ready made car man cartoon character logo. This symbol is suitable for car dealer, advertising, marketing, campaign, vehicles rental and personal collections. The design conveys fun, happy, joy, cheers, funny, entertaining, excitement and passion. The mark itself will look nice as social media avatar and website or mobile icon. Vector or scalable file of the logo is provided in PDF format. Every purchase is not eligible for a refund.

The listing on OpenSea says Car Man Logo Art NFT will remain for sale until September 16. Definitely don’t try to save yourself $US8.5 ($AU12.22) million by simply taking a screenshot. Doing so would mean you wouldn’t have access to the unexplained “unlockable content” you’ll get with purchase of Car Man Logo Art NFT!

Or, you could just open an ancient copy of Microsoft Word and find some vaguely automotive rights-free clipart. Your call, my rich dweeb.