Categories
Australia

Blue Mountains teenage rapist called a ‘monster’, court hears

The victim of a teenage snuff at a house party west of sydney has called her attacker a monster who deserves to be behind bars.

The young woman, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, read out an emotional victim impact statement at a sentence hearing in Parramatta Children’s Court on Wednesday in the presence of her rapist.

“I hate you for what you did to me. You don’t deserve to be happy after the cruelty you’ve shown me,” she said.

Katoomba High School in the Blue Mountains
The victim and the accused studied at Katoomba High School in the Blue Mountains. (9News)

“I’ve struggled every day since. So have my parents, my little sister, my friends and loved ones, and you continue to live your life without repercussions.”

The man, who also cannot be named, studied with the victim at Katoomba High School in the Blue Mountains.

He was found guilty of six counts of sexual intercourse without consent and one count of choking.

The rape occurred at a house party on a mattress in the premises’ living room, the magistrate heard.

The victim said she hoped her assaulter’s family could live with the “reality of the monster” he was.

She told the court the rape had destroyed her life, leaving her “ashamed and irreversibly damaged” while giving her nightmares, psychological issues and low self-esteem.

“I don’t know who I’ve become. I used to be so sure of what I was going to do with my life and now I’m so very lost,” she said.

“Now all I can do is pray that this magistrate decides to put you behind bars where you deserve to be.”

The accused’s solicitor Brian Walker said a suspended control order was appropriate for the sexual assault.

“In my submission, it falls to the lower end of objective seriousness for offending of this kind,” he said.

There was initial consent, and the incident was opportunistic, occurring in an open area around people, he told the court.

The lawyer argued his client had not planned anything or lured the victim into an isolated spot.

The young man was now a person of good character and had a low probability of reoffending, being in a good job and a stable relationship, Walker said.

However, the court heard the man had consistently denied the allegations of rape and had not shown any contrition or remorse for his actions.

The magistrate will hand down her sentence on August 25.

Categories
US

Live Updates: Trump to Be Questioned in New York Investigation

Former President Donald J. Trump’s legal jeopardy appeared to intensify significantly on Monday with the stunning revelation that federal agents armed with a warrant had searched his Mar-a-Lago club and home in Palm Beach, Fla.

It was not immediately clear what investigators might have seized, but the search took place after federal agents visited the Palm Beach estate in the spring to discuss materials Mr. Trump took with him improperly when he left the White House, including numerous pages of classified documents .

The mere fact that the federal authorities had taken the remarkable step of searching the private residence of a former US president was a reminder of just how much legal scrutiny Mr. Trump is under as he considers running for president again in 2024.

He and his family have criticized the various investigations swirling around him as partisan or vindictive, and they have denied wrongdoing.

Federal prosecutors investigating attempts to reverse Mr. Trump’s loss in the 2020 election have asked witnesses directly about his involvement in those efforts. In Georgia, a criminal inquiry is focused on his push for him to have the election results altered there.

More immediately, Mr. Trump is scheduled to be deposed on Wednesday by lawyers from the New York State attorney general’s office as part of a long-running civil inquiry into whether he and his family’s real estate business fraudulently inflated the value of his hotels, golf courses and other assets to obtain favorable loans.

The status of other investigations into the former president is harder to fathom, although one — a criminal inquiry by the Manhattan district attorney’s office — appeared to lose steam in the spring. (A matter that had receded into the background re-emerged on Tuesday, when a federal appeals court ruled that the House could gain access to Mr. Trump’s tax returns.)

Here is where the notable inquiries involving Mr. Trump stand.

New York State Civil Inquiry

Mr. Trump fought for months to avoid the high-stakes deposition he is scheduled to sit for on Wednesday, which could shape the outcome of the civil inquiry by New York’s attorney general, Letitia James, into him and his family business, the Trump Organization . (The deposition was to have been in July; it was delayed after the death of his first wife, Ivana.)

Ms. James’s investigation, which is in its final stages, is focused on whether financial statements in which Mr. Trump valued his assets reflected a pattern of fraud, or were simply examples of his penchant for exaggeration.

Ms. James said in a court filing this year that the Trump Organization’s business practices were “fraudulent or misleading,” but that her office needed to question Mr. Trump and two of his adult children, Ivanka and Donald Jr., to determine who was responsible for the conduct.

The two sat for depositions recently after the judge overseeing the case ordered them to do so. Their brother Eric was interviewed in 2020 as part of the inquiry and repeatedly invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, according to a court filing.

The former president’s deposition follows a protracted legal battle that resulted in a state judge ruling in April that Mr. Trump was in contempt of court. That ruling came after Ms. James filed a motion asking that Mr. Trump be compelled to produce documents sought in eight previous requests.

His lawyers said they had searched for, and could not find, any documents the attorney general did not already have. The judge nonetheless fined Mr. Trump $10,000 a day until he filed affidavits describing the search. The contempt order was lifted in May after he paid a $110,000 fine and submitted the affidavits.

The same month, a federal judge dismissed a lawsuit filed by Mr. Trump that sought to halt Ms. James’s inquiry because, the former president’s lawyers argued, she had violated his rights, and her inquiry was politically motivated.

Because Ms. James’s investigation is civil, she can sue Mr. Trump but she cannot file criminal charges. She could also opt to pursue settlement negotiations in hopes of obtaining a swifter financial payout rather than file a lawsuit that would undoubtedly take years to resolve.

If Ms. James were to sue and prevail at trial, a judge could impose steep financial penalties on Mr. Trump and restrict his business operations in New York.

Mr. Trump’s lawyers would most likely argue in any such suit that valuing real estate is a subjective process, and that his company simply estimated the value of the properties in question, without intending to artificially inflate them.

Manhattan Criminal Case

Despite its civil nature, Ms. James’s inquiry and Mr. Trump’s deposition still carry the potential for criminal charges. That’s because the Manhattan district attorney’s investigation was also focused on the valuations of Mr. Trump’s properties before it appeared to flag in the spring. It could gain new life depending on Mr. Trump’s performance of him on Wednesday.

Alvin Bragg, the district attorney, said in April that the inquiry, which began under his predecessor, Cyrus R. Vance Jr., was continuing but he did not offer a clear sense of its direction.

Mr. Bragg’s comments came after two prosecutors who had been leading the investigation left. One of them, Mark F. Pomerantz, said in a resignation letter published by The New York Times that he believed the office had enough evidence to charge Mr. Trump with “numerous” felonies. Mr. Pomerantz criticized Mr. Bragg for not pursuing an indictment in the case.

In his April remarks on the matter, Mr. Bragg said new witnesses had been questioned and additional documents had been reviewed, although he declined to provide details. Later in April, The Times reported that at least three witnesses considered central to the case had not heard from Mr. Bragg’s office for several months or had not been asked to testify.

The investigation has yielded criminal charges against the Trump Organization and its chief financial officer, Allen H. Weisselberg.

Last July, before Mr. Vance’s tenure ended, the district attorney’s office charged the company with running a 15-year scheme to help its executives evade taxes by compensating them with fringe benefits that were hidden from authorities. Mr. Weisselberg was charged with avoiding taxes on $1.7 million in perks that should have been reported as income.

The case has been tentatively scheduled to go to trial later this year.

Georgia Criminal Inquiry

Mr. Trump is also under scrutiny in Georgia, where Fani T. Willis, the Fulton County district attorney, is investigating whether the former president and others criminally interfered with the 2020 presidential election.

Mr. Trump and associates had numerous interactions with Georgia officials after the election, including a call in which he urged the secretary of state, Brad Raffensperger, to “find 11,780 votes,” the number he would have needed to overcome President Biden’s lead in the state.

It is the only known criminal inquiry that focuses directly on Mr. Trump’s efforts to overturn the election results. In January, Fulton County’s top judge approved Ms. Willis’s request for a special grand jury in the matter.

On Tuesday, a different judge in Fulton County said Rudolph W. Giuliani, a lawyer for Mr. Trump and a central figure in the Georgia inquiry, needed to travel there to appear before the grand jury. Mr. Giuliani, who had two coronary heart stents implanted last month, had prosecutors told he was not healthy enough to fly to Georgia.

But the judge, Robert CI McBurney, tentatively ordered him to show up to deliver in-person testimony on Aug. 17. (Judge McBurney said he might reconsider the date if Mr. Giuliani’s doctor produced an adequate medical excuse.)

“Mr. Giuliani is not cleared for air travel, AIR,” Judge McBurney said. “John Madden drove all over the country in his big bus, from stadium to stadium. So one thing we need to explore is whether Mr. Giuliani could get here without jeopardizing his recovery and his health. On a train, on a bus or Uber, or whatever it would be,” he said, adding, “New York is not close to Atlanta, but it’s not traveling from Fairbanks.”

Judge McBurney also said on Tuesday that prosecutors should let Mr. Giuliani, 78, know whether he is a target of the criminal investigation. Ms. Willis’s office has already told at least 17 people that they are targets.

Westchester County Criminal Investigation

In Westchester County, Miriam E. Rocah, the district attorney, appears to be focused at least in part on whether the Trump Organization misled local officials about the value of a golf course to reduce its taxes. She has subpoenaed the company for records on the matter.

Washington DC Lawsuit

In January 2020, Karl Racine, the attorney general for the District of Columbia, sued Mr. Trump’s inaugural committee, saying he had overpaid his own family business by more than $1 million or space at the Trump International Hotel during the January 2017 inaugural.

The lawsuit, which names the inaugural committee, the hotel, and the Trump Organization as defendants, is scheduled to go to trial in September, after a judge ordered that it could move forward.

Mr. Racine’s office has subpoenaed a range of parties, including Melania Trump, the former first lady, and has questioned Ivanka Trump, Eric Trump and Thomas J. Barrack Jr., who chaired the inaugural committee.

Jan. 6 Inquiry

A House committee investigating the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol — aided by more than a dozen former federal prosecutors — is examining the role Mr. Trump and his allies may have played in his efforts to hold onto power after his electoral defeat in November 2020 .

While the committee itself does not have the power to bring criminal charges, it could refer the matter to Attorney General Merrick B. Garland, to prosecute them through the Justice Department.

Jonah E. Bromwich, Rebecca Davis O’Brien, Michael Rothfield and Ashley Wong contributed reporting.

Categories
Business

A2 Milk’s US baby formula entry on ice as FDA delays decision

“However, these issues might be able to be resolved through FDA’s routine infant formula submission process. Given the nature of the infant formula supply challenges and the need to quickly address the shortage the FDA is deferring consideration of these specific requests at this time and prioritizing others for review.”

A2 Milk’s shares sank as much as 9 per cent early on Wednesday but ended the day 35¢, or 6.8 per cent, lower to $4.76 each.

Chief executive David Bortolussi was hoping to follow smaller rivals Bubs Australia and Bellamy’s Organic. Both those companies got permission to sell infant formula under the US government’s Operation Fly Formula.

Mr Bortolussi was unavailable for further comment on the FDA decision. It is not clear whether the company plans to keep pursuing this path to import tins via the agency’s routine infant formula submission process.

A2 Milk lodged its application with the FDA under an “enforcement discretion” policy in May. A2 Milk historically focused on the China market for its a2 Platinum formula and does not sell any tins in the US market, but does sell its fresh milk products.

The formula shortage occurred when a major US factory was shut down due to a contamination scare. This plant is now open again, but stock remains tight.

An FDA spokesman said earlier that it continued to work around the clock to address current supply challenges, including reviewing a number of requests as quickly as possible from other manufacturers seeking to import.

“This includes a review of information pertaining to nutritional adequacy and safety, including microbiological testing, labelling, and additional information about facility production and inspection history. The FDA will continue to use this information to consider on a case-by-case basis opportunities to exercise enforcement discretion.”

On August 5, Nestlé Health Science from the Netherlands was the last company to gain approval from the FDA to sell 37,500 cans (about 495,000 8-ounce bottles) of its hypoallergenic formula made for those babies with cow’s milk protein allergy or multiple food allergies. The product is expected to be available this month.

Wilson Advisory analyst James Ferrier said this was a disappointing outcome for a2 Milk given a possible short-term earnings bump and an opportunity to build brand awareness in the US.

He warned it also created some uncertainty for those players delivering tins now but seeking more permanent access beyond November 14, the proposed end date for such imports.

Mr Ferrier did not change any forecasts since he did not assume any sales contribution under the FDA’s temporary policy.

Categories
Entertainment

Mindy Kaling addresses speculation that BJ Novak is the father of her children

mindy kaling has finally addressed the endless speculation about the paternity of her two children.

Fans have long peddled rumors Kaling’s office Cost BJ Novak is the father of her daughter Katherine, four, and one-year-old son Spencer.

The 43-year-old has never confirmed the biological father and has consistently said Novak – who she briefly dated in 2007 – is simply the godparent to her toddlers.

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BJ Novak and Mindy Kaling at the Oscars
Mindy Kaling and BJ Novak dated in 2007 and have remained friends ever since. (twitter)

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In an interview with MarieClaire, Kaling admitted she isn’t fazed by the constant questions about her children’s paternity.

“It doesn’t bother me,” Kaling told the magazine about the speculation long-time friend and former co-star Novak is her baby daddy.

“He’s the godparent to both my kids– and they have such a great relationship – and so far [the rumours haven’t] affected my happiness at all, it hasn’t affected my kids or BJ… If that’s what is going to be titillating to people, I’ll take it.”

Elsewhere in the interview, Kaling said she is proud of breaking the stigma of a single woman having children on her own.

“Culture largely says, ‘We don’t want to hear about you. Your entire deal bums everyone out.’ If you’re 42-year-old [single] woman with kids, it makes people sad… I’m like, ‘There is hope for us’,” she continued.

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“There could be great stories about women, like me, finding love, finding happiness… I can’t imagine anyone besides me would write it, so I have to find the time to do that.”

Kaling has explained in the past about why she has chosen to keep the identity of her kids’ father a secret

In an interview with New York Times after her daughter’s birth in 2019, the Mindy Project actress said she will keep it private until her daughter is old enough.

“My feeling is that until I speak to my daughter about that, I’m not going to talk to anyone else about it,” she said.

“I’m the only parent my kids have,” she added. “I think I err on the side of super cautious so that there’s less things that they can potentially be mad at me about down the line.”

Kaling with her son Spencer. (instagram)

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Kaling also prefers to keep her children anonymous on social media, only sharing photos of the back of their heads on Instagram.

She is, however, happy to share about how Novak plays a fatherly role in her son and daughter’s lives.

kaling awning good morning america in 2020 that the actor is “so much more like family now than a platonic friend”.

Novak was also part of Kaling’s “pandemic pod” during the COVID-19 lockdown. “He’s great with kids,” she said at the time, “and so it’s been really nice to have his energy in the house.”

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fiona falkiner

Fiona Falkiner welcomes baby boy with fiancée Hayley Willis

Categories
Sports

All Blacks back row desperate for a shake-up

Smith All Blacks
All Blacks head coach Ian Foster was adamant following his team’s latest defeat that they’re making strides in the right direction. (Photo by Joe Allison/Getty Images)

“We made some shifts defensively and in the last quarter, we were starting to open things up. We started to snatch at a couple of balls which is frustrating but we’ve got to take that experience and take it into Ellis Park, walk in there and give it a crack.”

Foster finished by adding, “Sit back and absorb the lessons, trust a little bit and relax… At the end of day, you don’t get the change you want by making dramatic changes and putting too much pressure on players.”

So, no dramatic changes, keep trusting the coaches and players, things are more or less going to plan and the team is evolving. It is fair to say that the head coach’s attitude has struck the wrong chord among Kiwi rugby supporters.

Ian Foster is not the man to lead a revolution. As the anointed successor to Sir Graham Henry and Sir Steve Hansen, he can be a force for continuity, the coach to tweak the systems handed down to him. There will be no dramatic changes in either strategy or personnel while he is at the helm, and improvement will be measured in small increments.

But with most of the rugby public in New Zealand having grown up in a golden age of 80 to 90 per cent success, the expectations are far, far greater. The cards are falling out on the side of revolution rather than evolution – at least at international level, at least for the All Blacks. Some more fundamental change is needed for New Zealand rugby to kick on – new ideas, fresh thinking, radicalism, not conservatism.

Sam Cane was a worthy successor to Sir Richie McCaw, and there can be no higher praise than that.

The choice of captain is subject to the same-sea-change. Sam Cane has been groomed for the role of skipper for a number of years, but an unfortunate series of injuries at the wrong stage of his career has thrown a big spanner into the works.

At his peak, Cane was one of the very best number 7’s around, anywhere in the world: powerful, dynamic, a real fireplug. He was a threat on-ball at the defensive breakdown, and he cleaned out attacking rucks with conclusive power. His defensive work-rate from him was immense and his hitting power at the tackle was game-changing. Sam Cane was a worthy successor to Sir Richie McCaw, and there can be no higher praise than that.

He came back from a broken neck suffered in a match against the Springboks in 2018, an injury described by the player himself as ‘a couple of millimetres away from never playing again’, in time to play a part in New Zealand’s World Cup campaign one year later. In 2021 he suffered a serious chest injury which cost another six months, another major operation and knocked him out of the Rugby Championship.

There are only so many hits a fighter can take before entropy sets in, and the recent signs suggest that Sam Cane may have reached that point. In the July series against Ireland, he came off second best to Josh van der Flier by a distance. The Leinster man had more carries (26 to Cane’s 14) with the significant outcomes – tackle busts and break assists – three to one in van der Flier’s favour. On defence, the Irish flanker completed 62 of 63 tackle attempts with three turnovers. Compare that to Sam Cane’s figures: 41 of 43 tackles completed, with only one turnover won.

The writing was on the wall, and it was confirmed by events at Mbombela stadium in the first round of the Rugby Championship. Cane’s on-ball production has declined steadily. He won one turnover on the ground in three matches against Ireland; he conceded one penalty for ‘no release’ in eight on-ball attempts versus the Springboks, without anything to show on the positive side of the ledger:

The synergy between Ardie Savea and Sam Cane in the back row is not obvious. Ardie won lineout ball from the front against Ireland and the Boks (9 takes in total), Cane picked up one throw over the back. Ardie is the main forward ball-carrier, with 124 meters on 32 carries in two-and-a-half matches against the Irish, and 16 significant outcomes, compared to 27 meters and none for Cane. Savea also has more pilfers on the ground than the Chiefs man over the four matches (three for Ardie, one for Sam).

Although Sam Cane has made more tackles (51 to 38 by Savea) it is not enough to disturb the impression that Ardie is doing the work of at least one and a half men. Take a look at this early sequence inside the All Blacks 22 in Mbombela:

Over the seven phases that this South African attack lasts, both Cane and Savea make one tackle a piece, and have one shot each at the ball on the deck. But when the All Blacks regroup after each phase in defence, it is Ardie who is playing as the wider of the two back-rowers. Where Sam Cane sits in at first defender out from the ruck on five occasions, Ardie Savea gets further out, to second defender on four:

When the Boks finally shift the ball wide, there is only New Zealand back-rower in the picture, and it is Ardie Savea:

If your number 8 is going to defend closest to the backs, it does raise a question about the construction of your back-row: what is the role of your number 7 in this picture?

With Sam Cane running for 27 meters against the Irish and one meter at the Mbombela stadium, defenses are tending to write him off as a runner and flood through on to the man outside him:

In this type of situation, the All Blacks may do better to move Ardie to number 7, or bring in an openside flanker who is a genuine threat to fix the defense by running the ball, like Dalton Papalii of the Blues, or Ethan Blackadder of the Crusaders.

It was surprising just how many of the scenarios at the Mbombela resolved into one-on-one contests between Sam Cane and Springboks strongman Malcolm Marx. Cane brought back memories of his very best work from him with one hit on the South African hooker:

That turnover was outweighed by three occasions where the New Zealand captain was unable to prevent Marx from the pilfering ball from the All Blacks’ breakdown:

The last instance is especially brutal: Cane has the angle to remove Marx from the equation, but the Bokke rake is just too powerful and the New Zealand skipper just bounces off him in contact.

Ian Foster is still busy insisting on the evolution of his team, but the way in which events are unfolding in two key areas – the combination in midfield and in the back-row – suggests that a revolution in thinking is needed. The mix at numbers 6, 7 and 8 is not right, and probably never will be as long as both Ardie Savea and Sam Cane are seen as essential elements of it.

Savea is currently the best player in Aotearoa, so the focus will inevitably fall on Sam Cane’s position as captain and incumbent number 7. If Savea stays at 8, New Zealand would not benefit from a bigger body who offers more at the lineout lineout and on the carry? If he shifts to 7, it creates room for another specialist like Hoskins Sotutu of the Blues, or Marino Mikaele-Tu’u of the Highlanders. Either option offers better balance than what the All Blacks have now.

It is time for protests in the street and fists pumping the air – Live the Revolution!

Categories
Australia

Massive traditional shortage puts more pressure on Australian construction industry

Australia is in the midst of its biggest tradition shortage in decades, with prices and demand adding further pressure to the construction industry.

The worker shortage is at the worst level since the industry records started, with the most acute scarcities in bricklaying, carpentry and roofing.

Not only is there a worker shortage but there is also a lack of building supplies.

Construction renovation work site
Australia is facing a building frenzy but there is a lack of traditions, (9News)

Despite this, Australia is facing a building frenzy with more than 100,000 homes under construction.

This is 80 per cent higher than pre-pandemic levels.

“The combination of all the factors we’ve seen over the past couple of years has resulted in the single biggest home building and renovations boom that we have ever seen,” Housing Industry Association (HIA) economist Tom Devitt said.

However, it has created a unique opportunity for people to enter the industry.

Tim Norrington, 23, is considered a “mature aged” carpentry apprentice after making the switch from being a musician and retail worker.

“It’s just brought so much stability to my life since I started,” Norrington said.

Tim Norrington, 23, is considered a "mature aged" carpentry apprentice after making the switch from being a musician and retail worker.
Tim Norrington made the switch to an apprenticeship during the pandemic. (9News)

More than 100,000 apprentices are currently in construction trades, up by around 25 per cent compared to pre-COVID-19 levels.

“The demand for skilled trades has been phenomenal over the last 12 months,” Geordan Murray, executive director of industry policy at HIA, said.

“Given the strong demand for construction trades, it’s presented some really strong opportunities for people.”

Tradies working at a construction site
Thousands of apprentices are in the process of training up for trades. (9News)

The construction industry may also be looking forward to positive news as the June quarter saw an easing in shipping container, oil and timber prices.

“2024 and 2025 is when we expect this pipeline to work its way down, in terms of prices and of availability, things should ease by then as well,” Devitt said.

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Categories
US

Donald Trump to be deposed by NY attorney general on Wednesday

It is unclear whether Trump will answer questions or assert his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination during the behind-closed-doors testimony.

Trump said in a post on Truth Social early Wednesday morning that he would be “seeing” James “for a continuation of the greatest Witch Hunt in US history! My great company, and myself, are being attacked from all sides. Banana Republic!”

Some Trump advisers have advocated that the former President answer questions since he previously testified about his financial statements under oath, while others have warned him against providing any answers because of the potential legal jeopardy he may face, people familiar with the matter tell CNN. The Manhattan district attorney has a separate ongoing criminal investigation into the Trump Organization.

Another consideration that has been discussed, the people familiar say, is the political implications of not answering questions as Trump is widely expected to announce that he will run for president in 2024. While campaigning in 2016, Trump suggested not answering questions was a sign of guilt. At a campaign stop in Iowa in 2016, Trump said, “If you’re innocent, why are you taking the Fifth Amendment?”

A lawyer for Trump declined to comment. A representative for the attorney general’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Trump’s testimony comes near the end of a long running New York state investigation into whether the Trump Organization misled lenders, insurers, and tax authorities by providing them misleading financial statements.

In January, James’ office said it found “significant” evidence indicating the Trump Organization used false or misleading asset valuations in its financial statements to obtain loans, insurance and tax benefits. The attorney general’s civil investigation is nearing the end and a decision on an enforcement action may come soon.

The former President and the Trump Organization have previously denied any wrongdoing and called the civil investigation by James, a Democrat, politically motivated. Both James and Trump have traded public barbs.

The showdown follows Trump’s failed attempt to block subpoenas for depositions from him and his children, Donald Trump Jr. and Ivanka Trump.

Ivanka Trump’s deposition took place last week and Trump Jr. had his deposition in late July, people familiar with the matter said.

Trump Jr., who runs the Trump Organization with his brother Eric Trump, and Ivanka Trump did not assert their Fifth Amendment rights and answered the state’s questions, the people said. It is not clear what they were specifically asked or what they said. Their decision breaks with Eric Trump and former Trump Organization Chief Financial Officer Allen Weisselberg, who both asserted their Fifth Amendment rights more than 500 times when deposed in 2020.

Trump has testified under oath in civil lawsuits over the past decades and since leaving office he has also been deposed. Last year he provided videotaped testimony for a lawsuit involving an assault outside of Trump Tower. The case is set to go to trial in the fall. Trump has denied any wrongdoing.

Questions about Trump’s net worth

Trump has been questioned about the accuracy of his net worth and financial statements in previous lawsuits, something some advisers say is one reason why he should answer questions in the current investigation.

In a 2007 deposition in a defamation lawsuit, Trump once said he calculated his net worth, to a degree, on his “feelings,” and that he put the “best spin” on some of the assets. “I think everybody” exaggerates about the value of their properties, he testified, adding: “Who wouldn’t?”

Did I inflate values? “Not beyond reason,” Trump said.

In the past Trump has tried to push responsibility for his valuation decisions onto Weisselberg, while at the same time, documents and depositions appear to show that, even as Trump claimed that he left those valuation decisions to others, he was also deeply involved in running his business.

Trump said in the 2007 deposition that the only person he dealt with in preparing the statements of financial condition was Weisselberg.

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“I would give my opinion,” Trump said in the deposition. “We’ll talk about it,” he said, adding that “ultimately” and “predominately” it was Weisselberg who came up with the final values, which Trump said he viewed as “conservative.”

When questioned specifically about swings in values ​​from one year to the next Trump had ready explanations.

During the deposition, Trump was questioned about the family compound in Westchester County, New York, called Seven Springs, where its value nearly doubled in one year from $80 million in 2005 to $150 million in 2006.

“The property was valued very low, in my opinion, then and it became very — it just has gone up,” Trump said.

He was asked if he had any basis for that view, other than his own opinion.

“I don’t believe so, no,” he said.

In addition to Weisselberg, two others involved in the preparation of the financial statements, Jeff McConney, the Trump Organization’s controller, and Donald Bender, the real estate firm’s external accountant, have both been interviewed by the attorney general’s office and Manhattan district attorney.

Trump’s lawyers are likely to argue that the financial statements were not audited so anyone relying on them would be on notice. The financial statements reviewed by CNN show they have numerous disclosures indicating that they did not conform with generally accepted accounting principles. In addition, none of the lenders lost money on the transactions, which could make it harder to allege that they were defrauded or misled.

The appraisals underlying the property values ​​were in many cases provided by Trump’s longtime appraiser Cushman & Wakefield, which is also under investigation. Cushman, who broke ties with Trump after the Capitol riot on January 6, 2021, has denied any wrongdoing and stands by his work.

Legal risks to Trump

The depositions pose significant legal risks to the Trumps.

If Trump is sued by James and the case goes to trial, the jury can draw an “adverse inference” against him for not answering questions, which could result in a higher judgment against him if he’s found liable. If he answers questions, it could open the door to potential civil and criminal liability.

Rudy Giuliani ordered to appear in front of Georgia grand jury investigating 2020 election aftermath next week

The criminal investigation, led by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, has slowed down but not stopped. Earlier this year, Bragg would not authorize prosecutors to present evidence before a state grand jury after raising concerns about the strength of the case, CNN has reported. A special grand jury hearing evidence in the case expired in April, but a new one could be settled in the future.

Bragg told CNN in an interview in April: “Anytime you have a parallel civil, criminal investigation, if there’s testimony in that proceeding, obviously we will look at it.”

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Categories
Business

Hyundai Ioniq 6 electric car first drive

Like a stone worn smooth by the sand and sea, the Hyundai Ioniq 6 is shaped by its environment.

Promising to exceed the claimed range of any sub-$100,000 electric car, the Ioniq’s distinctive silhouette helps it slide through the air with minimal resistance – and onto shortlists for electric car customers.

The arching silhouette of its roofline helps the Ioniq claim aerodynamic efficiency that is not only the best in its class, but among the best of any car on sale. Only the lowest-drag version of Mercedes’ EQS electric car can claim to be slipperier.

Drag coefficient data is rarely the subject of bar-room bragging.

But people will boast about an electric car with more than 600 kilometers of range, particularly one that does not rely on an enormous battery to do so.

The Ioniq 6 offers the same 77.4kWh battery and choice of rear-wheel-drive or all-wheel-drive electric propulsion as the hatchback-shaped Ioniq 5.

While the boxy Ioniq 5 offers 481 kilometers of range, Hyundai expects the aerodynamic Ioniq 6 to claim 610 kilometers of range using the same test format.

It also expects the new car to be a sell-out success in Australia when it arrives next year.

While we don’t know exactly how much the car will cost, it’s likely to be a similar proposition to the Ioniq 5. That car is offered locally in relatively limited numbers priced from $69,900 plus on-road costs, suggesting the Ioniq 6 should start from less than $80,000 on the road. Range-topping versions will be closer to $90,000 drive-away.

We sampled the Ioniq 6 in camouflaged pre-production form at Hyundai’s Namyang proving ground in Seoul.

The banana-shaped roof is no less arresting in the metal, particularly when surrounded by conventional-shaped hatchbacks and SUVs at the Korean giant’s proving ground.

It’s much more familiar on the inside, where Hyundai’s design team has stayed in safer territory.

Though crude prototype plastics make it impossible to assess the quality of its interior, time in the back seat reveals that its slightly shorter wheelbase and dramatically swept roof result in less rear passenger room than the Ioniq 5.

Twin 12-inch screens curve across the dashboard in front of you, a familiar and effective if less-than-revolutionary combination for Hyundai fans. The brand took a note from Tesla’s book by keeping physical buttons to a minimum but dedicated climate controls are a victory for common sense.

Powered by twin electric motors with 239kW and 605Nm of combined power, the all-wheel-drive Ioniq 6 feels like it can match a claimed 0-100km/h time of 5.1 seconds.

Effortlessly brisk and near-silent when accelerating, the Ioniq 6 has no problem getting its power to the ground.

Special Pirelli tires developed for the new model trade ultimate cornering grip for reduced rolling resistance necessary to maximize its long-range potential.

We didn’t have the opportunity to assess the car’s cornering characteristics but a short drive on public roads showed that the Ioniq 5 is a refined machine, with a quiet motor, smoothly managed energy harvesting and well-controlled road noise.

We can’t say whether that slippery body reduces wind roar – low-speed running in a canvas-clad prototype isn’t the right test environment – ​​but can confirm the digital mirrors work well, even if your eyes need an extra moment to re -focus.

Accurate steering and well-modulated brakes work in its favour, and we suspect slightly tauter suspension than the comfort-focused Ioniq 5 delivers improved cornering control.

A full verdict will have to wait until we’ve had a chance to assess the car on local roads but early indications are that the Ioniq 6 backs up its intriguing looks with clever technology, giving electric car customers an impressive new option.

HYUNDAI IONIQ 6

PRICE About $90,000 drive away

ENGINE Twin electric, 239kW and 605Nm

RANGE About 600 kilometers

0-100km/h 5.1 seconds

FAST CHARGERS

Hyundai has built a high-performance Ioniq 6 pitched at enthusiasts. Powered by the same 430kW/740Nm motors found in Kia’s EV6 GT, the machine promises three-second 0-100km/h sprints, along with sideways fun made possible by clever torque vectoring. The Ioniq 5 is first in line to receive Hyundai’s go-fast “N” treatment, but we wouldn’t’ be surprised to see the sedan get special attention, too.

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Categories
Entertainment

The heartbreaking voicemail Olivia Newton-John’s daughter Chloe Lattanzi left Richard Wilkins

Richard Wilkins has played the heartbreaking message Olivia Newton-John’s daughter Chloe Lattanzi left him following the death of her mother at age 73.

The actress and singer died peacefully at her home in Southern California on Monday morning, surrounded by family and friends. Her husband John Easterling announced her death on her Facebook page.

‘Chloe Lattanzi, Olivia’s daughter, sent me a beautiful message earlier today, which I played and raised again,’ Richard revealed on Wednesday’s episode of the Today show, as he held back tears.

This is the heartbreaking message Olivia Newton-John's daughter Chloe Lattanzi left Today's entertainment editor Richard Wilkins (pictured) following the death of her mother aged 73

This is the heartbreaking message Olivia Newton-John’s daughter Chloe Lattanzi left Today’s entertainment editor Richard Wilkins (pictured) following the death of her mother aged 73

‘And I said to her, “I would never do it without your permission. Would you like me to share your beautiful message with her many friends and fans on-air?”

‘And she said, “Yes, please. Tell them how much their love is helping me cope. I want to be a link for them. Give light, give thanks, gratitude. I’m holding you in my heart.”‘

‘Hi Richard, this is Chloe, I just saw your beautiful tribute to my mummy,’ the message read.

‘I just wanted to hold you. I saw how much you loved her and I just want you to know she’s free now and out of pain and all her family is here together.

The actress and singer died peacefully at her home in Southern California on Monday morning, surrounded by family and friends.  Her husband John Easterling announced her death on her Facebook page.  Pictured with his daughter Chloe

The actress and singer died peacefully at her home in Southern California on Monday morning, surrounded by family and friends. Her husband John Easterling announced her death on her Facebook page. Pictured with his daughter Chloe

‘She’s making the sun shine and the dogs are running around and smiling and the horses are galloping

‘I just want you to know that she’s free from pain now and she fought so hard and I was with her every step of the way

‘I just felt your love, mummy and I both care about you, care about you so much.

Chloe ended the message with: ‘I love you my friend, thank you for doing that.’

Just months before Olivia's death, Chloe, 36, vowed to stand by her mother 'always and forever' while sharing a gallery of pictures of the pair together on Facebook

Just months before Olivia’s death, Chloe, 36, vowed to stand by her mother ‘always and forever’ while sharing a gallery of pictures of the pair together on Facebook

It comes just days after Wilkins, 68, burst into tears as his last interview with Olivia was aired.

Today host Karl Stefanovic left his seat on the panel to comfort his colleague as he wiped away tears.

‘I didn’t want to do this,’ Wilkins wept.

Richard Wilkins broke down on the Today show on Tuesday as he spoke about the death of his long-time friend and Australian icon Olivia Newton-John

Richard Wilkins broke down on the Today show on Tuesday as he spoke about the death of his long-time friend and Australian icon Olivia Newton-John

The actress and singer (pictured with long-time friend Richard Wilkins) died at her home in Southern California on Monday morning

The actress and singer (pictured with long-time friend Richard Wilkins) died at her home in Southern California on Monday morning

‘It’s alright,’ Stefanovic said while hugging the presenter. ‘This woman was extraordinary.’

Wilkins was close to tears earlier in the show when he first delivered the heartbreaking news about Olivia’s death.

‘Dickie, I’m so sorry for your loss,’ Stefanovic said.

Host Karl Stefanovic left his seat on the panel to comfort his colleague who wiped his eyes

Host Karl Stefanovic left his seat on the panel to comfort his colleague who wiped his eyes

'I was just sort of numb,' Wilkins said to Karl and Ally.  'I didn't really know what to think'

‘I was just sort of numb,’ Wilkins said to Karl and Ally. ‘I didn’t really know what to think’

‘It’s our loss,’ Wilkins replied. ‘The world has lost a beautiful human being today.’

He then went on to reveal the devastating early morning phone call he received of the news.

‘I was just sort of numb,’ he told Stefanovic and co-host Allison Langdon.

‘You know, all the dates and facts and figures and things just disappear and I just felt completely, just completely numb. I didn’t really know what to think.’

Olivia Newton-John, shown in one of her last public appearances in 2019. The actress died on Monday aged 73.

She is shown, right, in her most iconic role in Grease in 1978

Olivia Newton-John, left, in one of her last public appearances in 2019. The actress died on Monday aged 73. She is shown, right, in her most iconic role in Grease in 1978

Speaking on Nova’s Fitzy and Wippa on Tuesday morning, Wilkins discussed his first ever encounter with the Grease star.

‘I think I was hosting a sort of a meet and greet thing she must have been promoting a record or something,’ he recalled.

‘And that was I think the first time I met her and we just got on like a house on fire at this thing.’

Wilkins said he’d been a fan of Olivia for his whole life and that he’d never heard a bad word about her.

‘She was never flashy. She she was never a show off. You never see her on the social pages. She would just she just was so dignified,’ he added.

‘And such a classy, ​​beautiful, gorgeous, wonderful lady and a great mum to (daughter) Chloe (Lattanzi).’

Olivia’s husband broke the news of the star’s death in a heartbreak Facebook post on Monday morning, following her brave and extraordinarily public decades-long battle with cancer.

Olivia Newton-John and John Travolta in the iconic 1978 movie Grease that catapulted her career.  He was among the first to pay tribute to her on Monday

Olivia Newton-John and John Travolta in the iconic 1978 movie Grease that catapulted her career. He was among the first to pay tribute to her on Monday

‘Dame Olivia Newton-John (73) passed away peacefully at her Ranch in Southern California this morning, surrounded by family and friends,’ Mr Easterling wrote.

‘We ask that everyone please respect the family’s privacy during this very difficult time.

‘Olivia has been a symbol of triumphs and hope for over 30 years sharing her journey with breast cancer.

‘Her healing inspiration and pioneering experience with plant medicine continues with the Olivia Newton-John Foundation Fund, dedicated to researching plant medicine and cancer.’

Newton-John and John Travolta at the 40th Anniversary of Grease in 2018

Olivia Newton-John and John Travolta, This Christmas, their 2012 Christmas album

Newton-John and John Travolta at the 40th Anniversary of Grease in 2018 (left) and (right) promoting their 2012 Christmas album

The actress famously beat breast cancer twice but was diagnosed again in 2017.

She spent the last few years at home, campaigning for animal rights and raising money for her charity.

In a haunting interview with The Guardian in 2020, she said of the disease: ‘It’s been a part of my life for so long.

‘I felt something was wrong. It’s concerning when it comes back, but I thought ‘I’ll get through it again’.

Olivia Newton-John with her daughter Chloe Lattanzi, when Chloe was a child

Olivia Newton-John with her daughter Chloe Lattanzi

Olivia Newton-John with her daughter Chloe Lattanzi, left, and right, when Chloe was a child. She suffered several miscarriages before giving birth to Chloe in 1986

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Categories
Sports

Former South African umpire Koertzen dies after crash

Former South African cricket umpire Rudi Koertzen, famed for his slow arm raise to give batters out, has died following a car crash aged 73.

Cricket South Africa announced Koertzen’s death in a statement overnight, confirming the renowned umpire had succumbed to injuries following a car accident on Tuesday morning.

Koertzen, one of cricket’s most respected umpires, stood in 108 tests, a record 209 one-day internationals and 14 T20s over an 18-year career.

His first Test was during South Africa’s return to international cricket at home in 1992, after a 22-year ban because of apartheid.

Rudi Koertzen was known for his slow arm raise to give batters out // Getty
Rudi Koertzen was known for his slow arm raise to give batters out // Getty

He retired in July 2010, with his last match as Test between Pakistan and Australia at Headingley.

Koertzen singled out standing in the opening match of the 1999 ODI World Cup between England and Sri Lanka as his fondest memory.

He was famous for his unique method of giving a batter out, where he’d slowly raise his left arm with his finger pointing at the batter. It became known as the ‘slow finger of death’.

Ricky Ponting congratulates Koertzen after officiating his final match in 2010 // Getty
Ricky Ponting congratulates Koertzen after officiating his final match in 2010 // Getty

“The passing of this titan is a sad loss for the game,” said Cricket South Africa chief executive Pholetsi Moseki.

I have paid tribute to Koertzen’s “selfless dedication and commitment”.

South Africa’s Algoa FM radio station reported that Koertzen and three other people were killed in a head-on collision near the town of Riversdale in the Western Cape province.

Koertzen was returning to his home in the Eastern Cape province after playing in a golf tournament when the crash happened, the station said.