Categories
Australia

Free N95 and KN95 face masks handed out at railway stations, community health centers

New Zealand is already offering free face masks from testing sites, while Transport NSW has given out 2.4 million surgical masks at transport hubs since April this year.

Andrews rejected suggestions that quality masks could have been provided for free sooner.

“We’ve been handing out masks and doing all sorts of partnership work with many, many different groups for a long time, a very long time… This is just about a push to the end of this wave,” he said.

Victoria has passed the peak of the BA.4 and BA.5 wave, with 673 people in hospital on Tuesday and 6380 new infections announced.

Monash Health Professor Rhonda Stuart said N95 masks created a stronger seal around the nose and mouth than a surgical or cloth mask, providing greater protection from spreading or contracting COVID-19. The masks also have better filters.

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“It’s no good having it in your hand and not wearing it properly. It needs to be on your face…covering your nose and mouth, not under your chin,” Stuart said.

“The most important thing is that you try to get a good seal.”

Stuart said surgical masks were still very beneficial, but N95 and KN95 masks were particularly recommended for people with vulnerabilities.

Reusable cloth masks provide the least protection but are still better than no mask at all. People can also “double-mask” by wearing a cloth mask over a surgical mask.

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The more tightly fitting P2 or N95 masks are available at hardware stores, supermarkets and chemists.

Professor Catherine Bennett, an epidemiologist from Deakin University, said it was important to show people how to put on the N95 masks when they receive them.

“I would love to see that because it makes a big difference,” Bennett said. “You can get a great fit and that makes them more protective.”

Bennett said many vulnerable people were still restricting their lives to shield themselves from COVID-19 and providing the quality masks for free could help them feel comfortable to move around more freely. But she stressed they needed to be worn properly.

Professor Karen Price, president of the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners, said the announcement was “just what the doctor ordered”.

“I know that wearing a mask isn’t fun and can be slightly uncomfortable but remember that taking this small step can help drive down COVID-19 numbers across Victoria.”

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Categories
US

Miami’s plan to house homeless on beach island sparks outrage

Miami residents are up in arms over a pilot program to build an encampment for homeless people on a secluded beach that’s just a stone’s throw away from an exclusive island that was once home to Oprah Winfrey, Derek Jeter, and Mel Brooks.

Miami-Dade County’s seventh district sparked anger after it quietly approved a plan to build between 50 and 100 miniature houses in the North Point Park section of Virginia Key Beach.

Residents are upset over the plan for a variety of reasons, according to reports.

Environmentalists believe the encampment will destroy the island’s fragile ecosystem, while recreational enthusiasts think it will hamper their ability to spend time outdoors unhindered, according to The Daily Beast.

Advocates for the homeless are also opposed to the plan because they say there aren’t enough resources or infrastructure on the island in order to facilitate access to transportation, sewage and food.

“You’re taking the chronically homeless, shelter resistant population, bringing them to an isolated area, removing them from everything they know, providing only mobile services and pretty much isolating them on an island two miles from the nearest roadway,” Esther Alonso, the owner of Virginia Key Outdoor Center, told WSVN-TV.

Virginia Key, a largely isolated island, currently houses a magnet public high school as well as a wastewater treatment plant. The nearest grocery store is some six miles away.

Miami-Dade officials have tentatively approved plans to build up to 100 miniature homes on Virginia Key.
Miami-Dade officials have tentatively approved plans to build up to 100 miniature homes on Virginia Key.
Getty Images/iStockphoto

It is also right next door to Key Biscayne and Fisher Island — home to some of the priciest real estate in the country.

Celebrities who have bought real estate in these areas include Argentinian soccer icon Lionel Messi, actor Andy Garcia, pop star Cher, tennis legends Boris Becker and Andre Agassi, “Pretty Woman” star Julia Roberts, and hockey star Pavel “Russian Rocket” Bure.

On Thursday, hundreds of residents expressed their displeasure during a District 7 town hall meeting that was broadcast via Zoom.

In the comments section, county commissioners were inundated with messages denouncing their plan.

“Are the homeless that are going to be housed illegal immigrants or are we first going to house homeless US Citizens?” one resident wrote.

Miami residents are outraged over a plan to build an encampment for homeless people on an isolated beach island.
Miami residents are outraged over a plan to build an encampment for homeless people on an isolated beach island.
WSVN 7 Miami

The commenter added: “if we’re putting tax dollars to not even take care of US citizens then we need to refocus altogether.”

Another commenter said: “Bad, Bad idea. Bunch of dummies.”

“These ‘Tiny homes’ would be for rent on Airbnb in no time,” another town hall attendee fumed.

Virginia Key is just a stone's throw away from Fisher Island, one of the most exclusive residential areas in the country.
Virginia Key is just a stone’s throw away from Fisher Island, one of the most exclusive residential areas in the country.
Getty Images/Eye Em

County officials voted 3-2 to advance the plan, but Ken Russell, a commissioner who is opposed to the so-called “transition zone” in Virginia Key, said that Miami Mayor Francis Suarez has the “ability to veto any actions by the city commission.”

“It’s embarrassing for the city,” Russell told The Daily Beast.

“It perpetuates this reaction from residents like ‘not here, do it over there.’ It’s not only that this is the wrong location for this idea, but it’s the wrong solution.”

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Categories
Business

Former Demon James Strauss takes legal action against teammate Joel Macdonald

Macdonald would later tell Strauss, according to the writ, that he had negotiated with the ASX for the escrow period to be reduced to one year because he was never a director or employee of GetSwift.

Just days before the float in December 2016, Strauss signed an agreement prepared by GetSwift that stopped him from selling the stock for 12 months for “the purpose of complying with chapter nine of the ASX listing rules,” according to the writ.

GetSwift was co-founded by former AFL footballer Joel Macdonald.

GetSwift was co-founded by former AFL footballer Joel Macdonald.Credit:Christopher Pierce

The value of GetSwift shares surged from 20¢ to more than $4 within 12 months of listing, but plummeted when the company became embroiled in a series of scandals over breaches of its disclosure and reporting obligations.

In February 2018, the company announced that fewer than half the contracts it had been spruiking were actually generating revenue.

Statements to the ASX announcing agreements with companies such as Commonwealth Bank, Fantastic Furniture and The Fruit Box also failed to mention that clients were only trialling, or contemplating a trial, on the GetSwift platform.

When Strauss’ shares were eventually released from escrow – almost three months after the agreed date – he was forced to sell them at significantly reduced prices. Had he sold at the peak of the market, the footballer-turned-investor would have made more than $15 million.

He would later learn from correspondence with the ASX that it had never imposed an escrow requirement on his shares, which were only ever subject to a voluntary arrangement, according to court documents.

Macdonald, who according to recent social media posts now lives in Florida, did not respond to phone calls or emails from The Age.

In 2019, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission started legal proceedings against the company and its directors, alleging GetSwift repeatedly misled the market in a series of ASX announcements about client agreements.

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Late last year, the Federal Court found that GetSwift had made misleading statements and breached its disclosure obligations. Macdonald and another director, Bane Hunter, were also found to have failed to meet their obligations as directors.

Justice Michael Lee said the evidence showed “what might be described as a public relations-driven approach to corporate disclosure on behalf of those wielding power within the company”.

Penalties will be determined during a three-day hearing to be held in January next year.

During a case management hearing last month, ASIC’s lawyer told the court it is seeking a $15 million penalty against the company, million-dollar fines against Macdonald and Hunter, and 12-year disqualifications for each of them.

The company is also facing a class action run by Phi Finney McDonald. A conditional settlement agreement was reached in the Federal Court in mid-2021, without any admission of liability by the company or the directors.

The company left the ASX in January last year to relist on Canada’s obscure stock exchange Neo, a move which was opposed by ASIC and then federal Treasurer Josh Frydenberg.

The company’s Australian subsidiary was placed into liquidation last month and the parent company this week filed for bankruptcy in the US.

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Categories
Technology

Google Pixel 6a review: Cutting the right corners

Google has released the latest Pixel phone, but it’s not the one you’re probably thinking of.

While the tech giant will unveil their latest flagship devices later this year, a new affordable Pixel has made its way to our shores.

The Pixel 6a costs less than it’s two bigger siblings, yet retains a lot of what makes a Pixel a great alternative to Apple’s smartphone lineup.

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How do I get it and what will it cost?

Pixel 6a is available in chalk, charcoal and sage for $749.

You can buy from the Google Store, JB HI-FI, Telstra, Optus, Vodafone, Officeworks and Harvey Norman.

Who is it good for?

Google’s Pixel series has always been a popular choice for those who want a phone that is guaranteed to see fast updates to both the operating system (Android) and the security of the device.

Pixel 6a continues on this, and has the advantage of having a few of the bugs ironed out that plagued the older Pixel 6 smartphones since last year.

If you want a great little performing mobile, that comes with Google’s great cameras and smarts – then you’ll be quite happy with your choice.

How does it work?

The Pixel 6a differs a little bit to the $999 Pixel 6.

You won’t get the same high quality, high refresh rate screen that can be found in the Pixel 6 and Pixel 6 Pro. While the 6.1-inch flat display is totally acceptable in daily use, if you’re used to the 90Hz or 120Hz refresh rates that are popping up on other phones, you might miss it.

There’s no zoom camera, and the main camera lens is very old hardware (in terms of technology). In saying that, the photos that you can take using the Pixel 6a put some other phones with newer lenses to shame. Google’s software is unmatched when it comes to computational photography.

While the camera isn’t as versatile as what you’d get out of the Pixel 6 or Pro models, the shots I was able to achieve from this little pocket rocket were nothing short of impressive. Night photos, or when there isn’t much light, were a bit more hit and miss though.

But to keep that price down, some corners needed to be cut. Because that’s basically all you’re going to lose between the next Pixel up.

The Pixel 6a has the same Google Tensor processing chip as the other two more expensive phones in the series, comes with the same software experience, haptic feedback is fantastic, the stereo speakers are loud and clear, and after the last update – connectivity has been greatly improved while using the three major Aussie telcos.

The software is also the same as you’d see in the flagship phones with all the photography features like ‘real tone’ to ensure skin tone in photos is correct, night sight and magic eraser – which removes unwanted objects and people from your shots.

Outside of Google’s photography voodoo, you also get some really helpful features such as Hold For Me and Call Screening. There is also live captioning while you watch video content, and live translate to help with any language barrier that comes your way.

During my two weeks with the Pixel 6a, the battery life was what impressed me – and that’s probably down to a lower refresh rate on the display compared to the Pixel 6 and Pixel 6 Pro. From waking at 5am in the morning with full charge, to end the day at 10pm with 30 per cent left – it’s very reliable.

There has been a lot of noise around the fingerprint sensor allowing non-enrolled fingers to unlock the device. I wasn’t able to replicate this between over 10 people, so I feel this is a non-issue if you’ve seen that reported elsewhere.

What we think

Pixel 6a is a very compelling device for the masses. There will be quite a lot of people out there who don’t care about the highest megapixels on the cameras, or the biggest refresh rate on the display.

While there are a few things that have been downgraded or left out from the latest in Google’s A-series, what has been left in is what’s important here.

It’s at a hugely competitive price for what you are getting – and it ticks all those boxes that most people are looking for in a smartphone. Good display, dependable battery, great cameras, and reliable performance and software experience. Big ticks all round.

You really can’t go wrong with the Pixel 6a if your budget won’t stretch past $800, and there’s nothing that comes close to it in the same price range. But if you can afford the extra money, the Pixel 6 will offer you some additional benefits over the Pixel 6a that you might enjoy – including that flat display.

Our reviews always remain independent of the manufacturer, and the first time they will see the review is at the same time you’re reading it.

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Categories
Entertainment

Japanese fashion designer Issey Miyake, creator of Steve Job’s turtlenecks, dies of cancer aged 84

Tributes have flowed for Japanese fashion designer Issey Miyake after his death due to liver cancer.

The iconic designer died of hepatocellular carcinoma, the most common form of liver cancer, on August 5, according to Kyodo news agency.

He was 84.

No further details were immediately available.

Known for his practicality, Miyake is said to have wanted to become either a dancer or an athlete before reading his sister’s fashion magazines inspired him to change direction — with those original interests believed to be behind the freedom of movement his clothing permits.

Miyake was born in Hiroshima and was seven years old when the atomic bomb was dropped on the city while he was in a classroom. He was reluctant to speak of the event in later life.

A Japanese man in a light suit stands in front of a table topped with pottery
Miyake worked with Givenchy and founded one of the best fashion houses.(Reuters: Kim Kyung Hoon )

In 2009, writing in the New York Times as part of a campaign to get then-US President Barack Obama to visit the city, he said he did not want to be labeled as “the designer who survived” the bomb.

“When I close my eyes, I still see things no one should ever experience,” he wrote, adding that within three years his mother died of radiation exposure.

“I have tried, albeit unsuccessfully, to put them behind me, preferring to think of things that can be created, not destroyed, and that bring beauty and joy.

“I gravitated toward the field of clothing design, partly because it is a creative format that is modern and optimistic.”

After studying graphic design at a Tokyo art university, he learned clothing design in Paris, where he worked with famed fashion designers Guy Laroche and Hubert de Givenchy, before heading to New York.

In 1970 he returned to Tokyo and founded the Miyake Design Studio.

In the late 1980s he developed a new way of pleating by wrapping fabrics between layers of paper and putting them into a heat press, with the garments holding their pleated shape.

Tested for their freedom of movement on dancers, this led to the development of his signature “Pleats, Please” line.

Four models in flowing clothes walk a runway
The Issey Miyake fashion house has become known for its flowing pleat style.(Reuters: Piroschka Van De Wouw)

He then developed more than a dozen fashion lines ranging from his main Issey Miyake for men and women to bags, watches and fragrances before essentially retiring in 1997 to devote himself to research.

In 2016, when asked what he thought were the challenges facing future designers, he indicated to the UK’s Guardian newspaper that people were likely to be consuming less.

“We may have to go through a thinning process. This is important,” he was quoted as saying.

“In Paris, we call the people who make clothing couturiers — they develop new clothing items — but actually the work of designing is to make something that works in real life.”

ABC/Reuters

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Categories
Sports

Court hearing, Patrick Cripps, result, ban upheld, Tim Kelly, how many weeks

Patrick Cripps will miss the final two rounds of the regular season after an unsuccessful appeal at the AFL Tribunal over a rough conduct charge.

Carlton attempted to argue that Cripps’ act – which left Callum Ah Chee concussed – was “not a bump” and was instead a pure contest.

Cripps, giving evidence, insisted his eyes were on the ball at all times, while the AFL argued Cripps had alternatives to how he could’ve contested the ball.

The AFL went as far as to argue Cripps elected to bump.

After a lengthy deliberation period, the Tribunal found the charge should be upheld.

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Meanwhile West Coast star Tim Kelly also fronted the Tribunal, contesting a one-match ban for a dangerous tackle on Adelaide’s Sam Berry, which was assessed as careless conduct with medium impact and high contact.

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Ban likely for Cripps after heavy bump | 02:00

Kelly’s legal representative argued the impact from the tackle should be classified as ‘low’ rather than ‘medium’.

Giving evidence, Kelly said there was little ill feeling from Berry towards him in the aftermath of the tackle, while a medical report showed Berry required no treatment and would not miss any games or training sessions as a result.

Kelly added: “To be brutally honest, it didn’t look like there was much impact at all.”

Ultimately, the Tribunal upheld the charge of medium impact and thus upheld Kelly’s ban.

Speaking after the side’s loss, Carlton coach Michael Voss came to the defense of Cripps’ action.

“I thought it was a good answer,” he said.

“The umpire probably told the story, he didn’t pay a free kick, did he? Clearly he felt the arms were out and it was evenly contested and clearly when you have not a lot of time to adjust in those circumstances, it made for a difficult contest.

“From what I’ve seen, the arms were outstretched and it was a pretty even contest.”

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Categories
Australia

Perrottet refuses to back UK trade commissioner

Sources with knowledge of a discussion between the premier and Transport Minister David Elliott earlier this year confirmed Perrottet described Cartwright, the former boss of lobby group Business NSW, as “a problem”.

Perrottet on Tuesday told parliament Cartwright’s expenses were being examined by newly-minted Trade Minister Alister Henskens.

In a statement on Tuesday evening, Henskens said he had been advised that all approved expenses incurred by Cartwright complied with government policies.

Henskens has taken over the trade portfolio from Stuart Ayres, who was dumped amid concerns over his role in the Barilaro controversy. Ayres, who has denied any wrongdoing, was also replaced as deputy Liberal leader by Treasurer Matt Kean during a party room meeting on Tuesday.

Announcing Kean’s appointment, the premier said his government was building on its track record and “looking to the future”.

“We’ve had a unanimous decision and I think the sense in the party room today was incredibly strong, the entire party room coming together in supporting Matt Kean.”

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Appearing before the parliamentary inquiry probing his appointment to the New York role, Barilaro on Monday said he wished he had never applied, but that none of his senior colleagues ever raised any concerns.

Barilaro informed Perrottet, Kean and Ayres of his intention to apply for the $500,000-a-year role.

Perrottet on Tuesday said hindsight allowed him to see the recruitment for the position was clearly “flawed” and “problematic”, conceding regret for encouraging his former colleague to pursue the opportunity last year.

“If I had my time again, I would have asked him not to,” the premier said on Tuesday. “If everyone knew what they knew now about the process, I mean, the whole situation has been incredibly disappointing for everyone who has been involved.”

Barilaro told the inquiry he first spoke to Perrottet about his plan to apply for the job one month after announcing his intention to resign last year, while he was still an MP. He said the premier responded: “Great.”

Perrottet on Tuesday said it was a passing comment and “not a substantive discussion”, insisting he was not aware of the problems that have since emerged relating to the recruitment.

“I am there to encourage people, and I was not aware of the flaws in this process,” he said.

Barilaro will return for a second day of evidence on Friday, when the committee will introduce evidence relating to his staff member-turned-girlfriend Jennifer Lugsdin, for whom he helped secure a job at Investment NSW.

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Perrottet is awaiting the findings of an independent review of the process, which is being completed by former public service commissioner Graeme Head.

He has also recommended that Governor Margaret Beazley appoint high-profile silk Bruce McClintock, SC, to conduct a legal review into whether Ayres breached the ministerial code of conduct in his involvement with the Barilaro appointment.

The premier said the findings of the McClintock review will be made public once it is completed.

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Categories
US

Rudy Giuliani’s grand jury appearance put on hold amid dispute with Georgia prosecutors

With Rudy Giuliani just days away from his scheduled Tuesday appearance before an Atlanta grand jury, his lawyer asked for a last-minute delay — providing a doctor’s note saying the 78-year-old was not cleared to fly because of a recent “invasive procedure” .”

The email response from the office of Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis was unyielding.

“We do not consent to change the date,” wrote a deputy to Willis, adding: “We will provide alternate transportation including bus or train if your client maintains he is unable to fly.”

The dispute, which burst into view Monday amid contentious legal filings and exchanges over Giuliani’s travel schedule and airline ticket purchases, prompted a judge to delay Giuliani’s Tuesday testimony and schedule a hearing with lawyers for each side.

It marked the latest sign of tension between prosecutors and potential witnesses in Willis’s burgeoning criminal probe of alleged election interference by former president Donald Trump and his allies. Giuliani, Trump’s former lawyer, had already signaled through his legal team that he would cite “attorney-client privilege” and probably refuse to talk about his interactions with Trump.

On Wednesday, a federal judge in Atlanta is slated to consider the claim of Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (RS.C.) that he should not be compelled to testify to the same grand jury about his calls from him to Georgia’s secretary of state after the 2020 election.

Graham, a close Trump ally, has argued that he made the calls in the ordinary course of his work as a senator, and that such duties are protected by the Constitution. Prosecutors have argued in court filings that Graham’s “unusual activity mirrored the Trump campaign’s own efforts to potentially disrupt the Georgia election certification process.”

The legal maneuvering this week comes as Willis’s inquiry has expanded and emerged as a legal threat to the former president and some of his most important allies.

“What seems clear is the Fulton County district attorney’s office is getting closer and closer to the former president’s innermost circle,” said Anthony Kreis, a law professor at Georgia State University. “That alone suggests to me that the investigation is making an important headway.”

Willis launched the probe in the weeks after the Trump campaign and its allies placed calls to Georgia officials seeking to overturn the election results. The case covers some of the matters reviewed by the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection and by the Justice Department inquiry examining efforts to disrupt the peaceful transfer of power. But Willis, 50, has been at the forefront in publicly pursuing a criminal case, in part because she is able to take advantage of state statutes that legal experts say could make a criminal prosecution faster and less cumbersome than a federal case.

She has subpoenaed more than three dozen individuals — including a group of Georgia Republicans she has identified as targets of the criminal probe for their role as purported Trump electors.

Willis has not ruled out calling Trump as a witness, telling an Atlanta television station last week that “we are at least 60 days away before I even have to make that kind of decision.”

Willis declined through her office to respond to requests from The Washington Post for an interview.

Willis’s critics, including Trump, his allies and some involved in the case, have accused her of conducting a politicized inquiry designed to attract national attention while ignoring local problems, such as Atlanta’s soaring crime rates. The former president derided her on his Truth Social platform as a “young, ambitious, Radical Left Democrat ‘Prosecutor’ from Georgia.”

The judge presiding over the inquiry disqualified Willis last month from investigating one of the would-be Trump electors — Republican state Sen. Burt Jones — after Willis hosted a fundraiser for Jones’s opponent in an upcoming lieutenant governor’s race. The judge, Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney, called it a “’What are you thinking?’ moment” and said the “optics are horrific.”

By all indications, the inquiry has been sprawling but intensely focused on whether Trump and his allies violated Georgia laws.

One Georgia Republican who appeared before the grand jury told The Post that prosecutors were seeking to learn about interactions between lawyers for Trump and state-level Republicans on the ground. The witness spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the topic.

Unlike a typical grand jury, the special panel is authorized for one year and will not be asked to vote on an indictment at the conclusion of its work. Instead, the special grand jury of 23 members and three alternates will issue a report to Willis with recommendations on whether to bring charges in the case. The report is not required to be made public, nor is Willis obliged to act on it in any specific time frame.

But prosecutors are attempting to fend off requests to toss their subpoenas or delay testimony.

The postponement request last week by Giuliani’s attorney, Robert Costello, referenced a July procedure in which Giuliani had two stents placed in his coronary arteries.

Prosecutors on Monday indicated they would insist that Giuliani appear in person — filing a legal brief claiming that Giuliani had traveled outside New York since his surgery and saying they had obtained records showing him paying cash for airline tickets for late July to Rome and Zurich.

Costello called the prosecutors’ claims “ludicrous,” adding: “First of all, Giuliani has not flown anywhere since his operation. He has not purchased these tickets and never purchased airline tickets for cash for any reason.”

Costello said he offered prosecutors the opportunity to discuss the situation directly with Giuliani’s physician, but he said they did not do so.

Separately, a Wednesday hearing before US District Judge Leigh Martin May will focus on Graham’s contention that he should not be required to testify about his outreach to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger in the days after the 2020 election. Raffensperger told The Post that Graham had asked whether the secretary of state had the power to toss out all mail ballots in certain counties. He said Graham appeared to be asking him to improperly find a way to set aside legally cast ballots — an allegation that Graham denied.

Graham’s legal team, led by former Trump White House counsel Donald McGahn, says the senator is shielded by constitutional protections that prohibit interference with the work of members of Congress.

“There would be nothing to stop any state or local official from investigating — or ‘intimidating’ under the veneer of investigating — senators or representatives with which they disagree,” Graham’s lawyers said in their court filing.

The phone calls Graham made to Raffensperger’s office, his lawyers say, were part of his official legislative duties to help inform his vote to certify the election for President Biden and to draft election-related legislation.

Willis’s office says Graham questioned Raffensperger and his staff about reexamining certain absentee ballots cast in Georgia “to explore the possibility of a more favorable outcome for former president Donald Trump,” court records show.

It is not clear whether Graham will succeed.

May recently rejected similar arguments from Rep. Jody Hice (R-Ga.), a Trump ally who echoed false claims of widespread election fraud in his failed bid for secretary of state. Hice is scheduled to appear before the grand jury on Aug. 16.

It is also unclear whether Willis’s team will succeed in learning information from the state Republicans who presented themselves as Trump electors.

Willis is examining whether these local Trump supporters were part of a scheme designed by Trump’s team to create slates of fake voters in Georgia and other battleground states, perhaps to give Vice President Mike Pence a reason to declare that the outcome of the election was in doubt. when he was to preside over the congressional counting of the electoral college votes on Jan. 6, 2021.

Lawyers for 11 of the 16 would-be Georgia Trump electors have argued that their clients abided by the law, claiming that they met as a contingency measure before a court had ruled on a challenge to the Georgia vote.

They also complained in court filings about Willis sending letters identifying the purported Trump electors as “targets” of her criminal inquiry. The attorneys described the target letters as a “publicity stunt” that “wrongfully converted [the Trump electors] from witnesses who were cooperating voluntarily and prepared to testify in the grand jury to persecuted targets of it.”

As a result, the lawyers said, they had advised their clients to assert their right not to answer questions.

In contrast, a lawyer representing two of the purported Trump electors in federal probes, Robert N. Driscoll, said his clients cooperated with the House Jan. 6 committee and are responding to Justice Department subpoenas.

Amy Gardner contributed to this report. Brown reported from Atlanta.

Categories
Technology

Sennheiser promises 60 hours of listening with its new Momentum headphones

Sennheiser hasn’t refreshed its over-hear Momentum noise-canceling headphones since 2019, but that changes today. The company has announced the Momentum 4, a new take on its flagship headphones that includes an exterior redesign, new features and a whopping 60 hours of battery life. What’s more, Sennheiser is offering this host of updates for $50 less than the Momentum 3 at its debut.

First, the design Sennheiser had carried through much of the Momentum line since its introduction is gone. The mix of metal and leather with visible cables has been traded for a more simplified, more plastic affair. The new look is decidedly less premium than previous Momentum models. However, what the Momentum 4 may lack in aesthetics is offset by increased comfort. The company notes the new hinge easily adjusts and doesn’t exert too much pressure on your head. Earcups also rotate flat now, which makes storage a bit easier. Another big change is the on-board controls: most of the physical buttons have been replaced with a touch panel on the right side.

Sennheiser Momentum 4

Sennheiser Momentum 4

Inside, Sennheiser says it opted for an “audiophile-inspired acoustic system” that relies on 42mm transducers for the sound. The company explains the setup creates “brilliant dynamics, clarity and musicality,” plus you can use an EQ, presets and a new Sound Personalization feature to further adjust the tuning. Sound Personalization takes into account your personal preferences and adjusts “the listening experience” accordingly.

Of course, these are flagship headphones so active noise cancellation (ANC) is on board. The company says its updated adaptive ANC works to maintain sound quality even in the noisiest of surroundings. Transparency Mode is available as well and there’s a slider control between it and ANC in Sennheiser’s app. In other words, you’re not just left with one or the other, so you can mix in a dash of environmental noise if needed. This model can automatically change sound settings based on your location too, a feature Sennheiser first debuted in March.

Sennheiser also offers a feature called Sidetone, which allows you to adjust how much of your voice comes through during calls. It’s a tool that helps you feel less shouty and it works on top of automatic wind noise suppression for the Momentum 4’s beamforming microphones during voice and video chats.

Sennheiser Momentum 4

Sennheiser Momentum 4

Sennheiser says you can expect up to 60 hours of battery life on a charge, and that’s with ANC turned on. A quick-charge feature gives you six hours of use in 10 minutes. To help you conserve battery, the Momentum 4 is equipped with both automatic pausing and automatic on/off. The company says the headphones will power off when you leave them unattended and turn back on when you pick them up.

The Momentum 4 will be available for preorder in black and white color options on August 9th before shipping on August 23rd. The headphones are priced at $349.95, which is $50 less than the Momentum 3 when it debuted in 2019.

Categories
Sports

Caroline Wilson lashes AFL boss Gillon McLachlan over ‘pathetic’ response to Adelaide Crows camp, Mark Ricciuto under pressure

Veteran columnist Caroline Wilson has lashed AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan’s apology over the Crows’ pre-season camp, calling the league’s response to the “pathetic” saga.

Despite Eddie Betts’ powerful revelations regarding what took place on the 2018 camp in the Gold Coast, the AFL did not issue an apology until Betts called for one during the week.

The AFL boss eventually fronted the cameras to apologize, but did so in a short interview on the Seven Network, rather than a press conference, and Wilson was not impressed.

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“For Gillon McLachlan to take four years … to actually apologize in a stand-up at an airport with Channel Seven in an exclusively arranged interview is frankly quite pathetic,” she told Nine’s Footy Classified.

“Why the AFL did nothing then – I’ve been saying it for two years – still baffles me.”

Wilson also took aim at what she deemed a “cover-up” from a number of senior Crows staffers in the months following the camp, including football director Mark Ricciuto, calling the response “astonishing.”

Ricciuto is the only member from the Crows’ 2018 power structure remaining at the club, with key decision-makers such as chairman Rob Chapman, CEO Andrew Fagan, football boss Brett Burton and head coach Don Pyke all having left the club following the camp.

Ricciuto has come under pressure since Betts’ revelations last week and his response to the indigenous great’s comments, where he said “hopefully Eddie (Betts) is getting over” his experience at the camp.

“My prediction would be that Mark Ricciuto will be here until the end of the year and then serious pressure will come upon him,” Wilson said.

“Not pressure from himself; he’s digging in. It’s just impossible to me (that he survives the saga). He was a staunch defender of Brett Burton, who was his man, who was one of the key instigators of the camp.

“The comments he made last week were so bad from a Crows point of view. He caused a lot of angst within and without the club. My view is he is not going to survive.”

Port Adelaide great Kane Cornes and Essendon legend Matthew Lloyd both suggested it was untenable for anyone associated with the implementation of the camp to remain at Adelaide.

Cornes used examples where Ricciuto had praised the likes of former Adelaide coach Don Pyke and ex-Collingwood president Eddie McGuire for stepping down amid controversies, suggesting he should take his own advice.

AFL great can’t believe Crows saga

“It feels like they need clean air. Mark Ricciuto himself has applauded those that have stood down to give clubs historically that clean air,” Cornes said.

“It’s going to be really difficult for the club to get that clean air while Mark Ricciuto is still there.”

“They can’t in their right mind have said you’ll give information and it’ll be used against you. Whoever heard that and allowed for that to happen must go,” Lloyd added.

The Age’s Sam McClure also blasted the response from a number of key stakeholders following the camp.

“For the AFL, the AFL Players’ Association, and elements of people at Adelaide, to come out and say (they) actually had no idea that this stuff was going on… they either knew about it and they deliberately lied or they I didn’t know. I’m not sure which one’s worse,” he told Footy Classified.

McClure called the criticism of players such as Betts, Josh Jenkins and Bryce Gibbs for only speaking years after the fact a case of “classic victim-blaming”.

“The last people that are responsible for what went on at that camp are the players,” he said.

“It is absolute garbage to think that we could sit here and label any of those players as part of the problem. And yet when people come out and speak the truth, and showed great courage, by the way, we suddenly turn around the responsibility on them.

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“If the AFL Players’ Association wanted to know what was going on at that camp they could’ve asked, because from where we sat it wasn’t that hard to find out.”

A SafeWork SA investigation in 2021 cleared the club of breaching health and safety laws, while an AFL investigation in 2018 determined the Crows had not breached any rules.

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