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US

Mark McCloskey, Who Aimed Gun at BLM Protest, Faces Heavy Defeat in Primary

Mark McCloskey, the pro-Trump candidate who gained notoriety after he and his wife pointed guns at Black Lives Matter protesters outside their home, was trounced Tuesday in Missouri’s Republican primary for the Senate.

Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt easily won the race. With most of the results in, he had more votes than his nearest two competitors—US Representative Vicky Hartzler and scandal-ridden former Missouri Governor Eric Greitens—combined.

McCloskey, meanwhile, trailed in fifth place with just 3 percent of the vote.

In November, Schmitt will be opposed by beer heiress Trudy Busch Valentine, who defeated Marine veteran Lucas Kunce and nine others in the Democratic primary.

McCloskey had joined the crowded field of 21 Republicans running for GOP Senator Roy Blunt’s seat after Blunt announced last year that he would not seek a third term.

All the candidates were Donald Trump supporters and 2020 election deniers. But in a final push for votes ahead of Tuesday’s primary, McCloskey touted himself as the only “genuine MAGA” candidate after the former president endorsed “Eric” in the race, despite three candidates in the race having that name.

“Apparently Donald Trump’s endorsed all three of them,” McCloskey said in a video posted on Twitter. “Well, my name is Mark McCloskey, and I can tell you one thing, there’s one genuine MAGA, America first, strong border, law and order, real American patriot in this race, and that’s me.”

Newsweek contacted McCloskey’s campaign for comment about the primary’s results.

Mark McCloskey walks in Kenosha
Mark McCloskey was trailing in fifth place after Missouri’s Republican primary for a US Senate seat on Tuesday. Above, McCloskey and his wife, Patricia, walk near the Kenosha County Courthouse on November 15, 2021, in Kenosha, Wisconsin.
Nathan Howard/Getty Images

McCloskey and his wife, Patricia, gained national attention after they waved guns at protesters near their St. Louis home on June 28, 2020.

McCloskey emerged from his house with an AR-15-style rifle, while his wife waved a semi-automatic pistol, when demonstrators walked on their private street during protests prompted by the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. No shots were fired, and no one was hurt.

The couple were praised by Trump and other conservatives, and they spoke during the opening night speech at the 2020 Republican Convention.

The pair, both lawyers, have said they had felt threatened by the protesters, who were passing their home on their way to demonstrate in front of the mayor’s house nearby. But special prosecutor Richard Callahan said his investigation of him determined the protesters were peaceful.

Both pleaded guilty to misdemeanors for the incident and were found. Missouri’s Republican governor, Mike Parson, pardoned them last year.

In February, the Missouri Supreme Court put the couple on probation but allowed them to continue practicing law for another year. They must also provide 100 hours of free legal service.

Categories
Business

Probe finds Hino Motors falsified emissions data from at least 2003

A new report has revealed a major affiliate of Japan’s Toyota Motor Corp has falsified emissions data on some engines going back almost 20 years.

A company-commissioned probe showed Hino Motors, which manufactures trucks and buses sold around the globe, had reported false data for years on end.

The truck-maker said that an engine data falsification scandal had started as far back as 2003 and not in 2016 as previously admitted.

Representatives at Hino Motors Ltd said the scandal was brought on by an “environment where engineers did not feel able to challenge superiors”.

The announcement comes as a rare criticism of corporate culture in Japan.

The committee was set up by Hino earlier this year after it admitted to falsifying data related to emissions and fuel performance of four engines on its production line.

The findings, led by committee chairman Kazuo Sakakibara, claim employees were not offered “psychological safety” and were “unable to change” due to the company’s past successes.

“The magnitude of their past successes has made them unable to change or look at themselves objectively, and they have been unaware of changes in the external environment and values,” he told a briefing.

“The organization has become an ill-organized one where people are unable to say what they cannot do.”

Hino’s president Satoshi Ogiso, apologized to reporters, claiming the company’s management took its responsibilities and public image seriously.

Mr Ogiso said he received a message from Toyota president Akio Toyoda, who reeled at the scandal, accusing Hino of betrayed the trust of company stakeholders.

Hino has recalled nearly 47,000 vehicles made between April 2017 and March this year, confirming an additional 20,900 would be recalled in the near future.

Japan’s transportation ministry confirmed it would conduct an on-site investigation of the company.

Committee member Makoto Shimamoto said there were “no monitoring functions” on the units in question and admitted controls should have been in place to detect and report issues.

“Misconducts have been passed down within the unit, but there were no monitoring functions in other units, which is a major issue,” he said via Reuters. ”Even if there was no personnel movement within the organisation, these issues should have been found.”

Hino’s share price dropped nearly 10 per cent on Tuesday after the findings were made public.

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Categories
Australia

South Australian man jailed for ordering and paying for sexual abuse of children in the Philippines

The crimes of Ian Ralph Schapel also led to the rescue of 15 young victims and the arrest of five people in the Philippines following an international investigation.

The 68-year-old former public servant was first detained in February 2020 after Australian Border Force officers examined his bags when he arrived in Melbourne on an overseas flight and allegedly found child abuse material on his mobile phone.

Ian Ralph Schapel
Ian Ralph Schapel has been jailed for 16 years. (Supplied)

He was charged over the content which eventually led to the discovery of more than 50,000 images and videos of child abuse material on a range of electronic devices at his Adelaide home.

Further investigations by SA police found he had communicated with people in the Philippines to procure several children, the youngest aged three, who were forced to perform sexually explicit acts on camera that he watched live from his Adelaide home.

In February last year, Schapel admitted to 50 offences, including viewing, remotely instructing and recording the sexual abuse of children on 55 occasions between March 2018 and January 2020.

Ian Ralph Schapel
Schapel, now 68, pleaded guilty to 50 child sexual offenses including paying for children to be abused while he watched over the internet. (Supplied)

As part of the international investigation, Philippine authorities executed search warrants at multiple locations in Bislig, a remote area in the country’s east, in August 2020.

Thirteen children and two young adults were removed from harm and five women were arrested, accused of facilitating the abuse for profit.

The women were aged between 18 and 29 at the time, and some were mothers of the victims. They remain before the courts in the Philippines.

Australian Federal Police Commander Erica Merrin said the case highlighted the force’s commitment to work with partners to protect children around the world.

Australian Federal Police said Ian Schapel's arrest led to the rescue of 15 victims.
Australian Federal Police said Schapel’s arrest led to the rescue of 15 victims. (Australian Federal Police)

“Children are being forced into the most appalling violence and torment on camera by the people who are meant to love and to protect them,” she said.

“This Adelaide man did not just watch children being hurt, he ordered specific abuse to happen and preyed on the economic vulnerability of the people involved.”

Philippine Police Brigadier General Edgar De Mayo Cacayan said close collaboration with the AFP and other international partners should send a strong message to would-be child sex offenders.

“You will not buy and sell the sexual abuse of children in the Philippines,” he said.

“We will not allow it and we will be their guardians. We will find you and you will have to answer for your actions in a court of law.”

In the South Australian District Court on Wednesday, Schapel was jailed for just over 16 years with a non-parole period of 10 years.

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US

Senate passes burn pit legislation to expand veteran health care

The Senate on Tuesday night overwhelmingly approved the PACT Act, a bill to expand health care benefits for veterans who developed illnesses due to their exposure to burn pits during military service. The 86-to-11 vote was received with cheers from the Senate gallery.

The bill now heads to President Biden’s desk, and the White House says he looks forward to signing it. The vote came after Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer announced Tuesday afternoon that he and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell had come to an agreement.

“This is a wonderful moment, especially for all the people who have made this happen who are observing it,” Schumer said after the vote. “Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you.”

Watching the final vote from the Senate gallery Tuesday night, comedian Jon Stewart, a vocal advocate for the bill and veterans, could be seen with tears in his eyes. Stewart has been on Capitol Hill rallying support for the bill and pressing senators to pass it.

“I’m not sure I’ve ever seen a situation where people who have already given so much had to fight so hard to get so little,” he said after the vote. “I hope we learn a lesson.”

Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal had a message for the Department of Veterans Affairs Tuesday night: “I have a message to the VA: You better get it right. You better deliver. These veterans have waited already too long.”

Mr. Biden said after the vote that he looks forward to signing the bill “so that veterans and their families and caregivers impacted by toxic exposures finally get the benefits and comprehensive health care they earned and deserve.”

the law will expand benefits for an estimated 3.5 million veterans exposed to toxic burn pits during the US wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. The bill will remove the burden of proof from veterans seeking care for conditions related to exposure from burn pits by presuming a number of conditions, including several cancers, are related to exposure.

Burn pits are holes in the ground the US military dug near bases in countries that had limited infrastructure where troops would dump trash and burn it to dispose of it.

Congress Veterans Burn Pits
Veterans, military family members and advocates rally outside the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, Aug. 2, 2022, in support of a bill that enhances health care and disability benefits for millions of veterans exposed to the toxic burn pits.

Mariam Zuhaib/AP


The bill initially passed the House and Senate in June, but due to a snag in the language, it had to go back to the House and Senate before it could be sent to President Biden’s desk. The legislation again passed the House but failed to advance beyond a procedural vote in the Senate last week. Twenty-five Republican senators who had voted for the bill in June voted against advancing the bill last week, citing an objection to how the legislation is paid for.

Republican Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania has objected since June to a provision in the legislation language that would move $400 billion in preexisting discretionary veterans spending to make it mandatory spending. A measure that is paid for with mandatory spending generally does not have to be approved each year, as discretionary spending does. Toomey argues that this changed designation frees up funds that could be used on items unrelated to veterans.

Mr. Biden has blamed burn pits for the health problems of his late son, Beau Biden, who died of a brain tumor in 2015. In a 2019 speech to the Service Employees International Union, then-candidate Biden said because of his son’s “exposure to burn pits, in my view , I can’t prove it yet, he came back with stage four glioblastoma.”

— Melissa Quinn contributed to this report.

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Categories
Business

Aussie dumpster diver grabs huge amount of free groceries

A savvy shopper has revealed how she spent only $300 for an entire year on groceries after she began dumpster diving for free food.

Sophie, who used to love in Sydney but is now in Denmark, documents her dumpster dive ‘hauls’ on her Instagram page, which features bench spreads of fresh fruit and veg, packaged meats, cases of drinks and pretty much anything else you could ever want to buy at your local Woolies – all without spending a cent.

“I started dumpster diving myself in Sydney in October 2020 … my sister sent me this video of her dumpster diving in Denmark and I was like, ‘Oh, I wonder if you could dumpster dive in Sydney?’” she told news.com. a podcast I’ve Got News For You.

“I was so amazed at all the things that I could find in the dumpster and that kind of shocked me.”

Sophie is among a growing, albeit quiet, community of people who regularly frequent the industrial bins of supermarkets and grocery stores in order to find food.

While living in Australia, Sophie dumpster dived for a year, meaning she spent a grand total of only $300 for necessities while living off here vast hauls of freebies.

But while Sophie dumpster dives regularly, it’s not because she “has to” for financial reasons, it’s because she “wants to”.

I’ve started to do a lot of research on the environmental part and to see what an impact that all this food has,” she explained.

And especially in Australia … it’s like billions of dollars each year that is just thrown away. It’s a huge problem.”

While the concept of dumpster diving might seem dangerous or even disturbing, the sheer quantity of edible and often pricey food that is thrown out due to use-by dates means there’s a surplus of “free” food sitting in industrial bins.

It’s why Sophie began documenting her dumpster dives on Instagram – both to spread awareness about Australia’s food waste problem and to encourage others to join in.

Supermarkets throwing away billions in edible food

According to Food Bank Australia, 7.6 million tonnes of food is lost or wasted every year, 70 per cent of which is still fit for consumption.

Despite the existence of charities and not-for-profits dedicated to redistributing close-expiry or damaged but edible goods, use-by dates and manufacturing defects continue to be the biggest causes of waste.

“I remember I found 12 chilli sauces one day because one of the (glass bottles) had broken in that package – so they just threw everything out instead of taking out the broken one and just selling the rest. But they threw everything out,” Sophie said.

“One day I came home with 11kg of gum. And I calculated that if one person were to have one piece of gum each day, it will last for almost 10 years.”

How much does it save?

Here’s exactly what Sophie hauled in to prepare for a house party in October last year:

*Prices are calculated to current advertised prices from where items were sourced. Where certain products could not be sourced, their Woolworths equivalent was used.

8 x Tomatoes: $1.31 (each) $10.48

4 x Avocados: $1.60 (each) $6.40

1 x Aussie Sprouts pea shoots: $3.20

3 x Yellow capsicum: $3.73 (each) $11.19

3 x White seedless grapes bunches: $15.11 (each) $45.33

1 x White, washed potatoes (2kg) : $5

2 x Community Co Baby Salad Leaf Mix (300g): $5.00 (each) $10

1 x Pitango Organic Minestrone Soup (600g): $6.50

3 x La Famiglia Kitchen Traditional Garlic Bread (400g): $4.50 (each) $13.50

3 x San Marino Sopressa Mild Salami (100g): $7 (each) $21

6 x Latina Fresh Spinach & Ricotta Agnolotti (625g): $9 (each) $54

2 x Primo Duos Mild Twiggy Bites & Cheddar Cheese (50g): $4 (each) $8

6 x Pauls Kids Yoghurt Strawberry: $1.20 (each) $7.20

1 x Your Bakery Croissants 3 or 4 pack: $2.50

1 x Woolworths Mini Banana Muffin 8 Pack: $3.75

1 x Tip Top English Muffins Original 6 Pack: $5.30

1 x Coles Bagels Plain 4 Pack (360g): $2.50

2 x Burgen Wholemeal & Seeds Bread: $5.20 (each) $10.40

1 x Abbott’s Bakery Farmhouse Wholemeal Sandwich Slice Bread Loaf (750g): $4

3 x Bundaberg Ginger Beer (375ml): $2.90 (each) $8.70

3 x Coca-cola Classic Soft Drink Bottle (385ml): $3.75 (each) $11.25

1 x Daily Juice Pulp Free Orange Juice (2L): $5.30

Total value: $248

How to dumpster dive: rules and safety

Sophie said that over her almost two years dumpster diving, she has learned the vital importance of maintaining good health and hygiene practices.

And there are other rules and practices that the community of dumpster divers adheres to.

Established dumpster diver ‘Big B’ explained to I’ve Got News For You that prospective divers must adhere to ‘the code’:

1.Safety first

Dumpster diving is more than rocking up to an industrial bin and finding a prize item at the edge. Most likely you’ll be cutting open bin bags and sifting through actual rubbish.

“Be prepared to have the necessary tools, gloves to be safe – always be safe – and use tools that are going to make the job easier for you,” Big B said.

To ensure what you’re eating isn’t going to make you sick, generally don’t keep products where the packaging is broken or damaged.

When it comes to meats and dairy, always smell-check and be wary of any potential contamination issues. With fresh fruit and vegetables, if it looks good, smells good and you’ve washed it thoroughly, you should be OK.

Sophie said in order to make sure your fresh food nabbed from a dumpster is as fresh as possible, make sure to rifle through bins during the evening straight after stores throw away their produce. In Denmark, however, fresh produce from the previous day is thrown away in the morning.

2. First in, first served

It comes to no surprise that making sure you have mutual respect for other divers will only promote a safer diving experience.

“If you come across someone on the dumpster already, let them be. Say hello and just carry on to the next one,” Big B said.

“If you’re asked to move on, just move on, don’t cause any problems.”

3. Leave the bins tidier than when you arrived

Nobody likes a slob – even more so when your bins look like a possum got to them.

But Big B also said that cleanliness while dumpster diving is more than just a respectful gesture – it also helps to prevent stores from deliberately sabotaging edible produce.

“If you want to continue going into these dumpsters without any issues, or (without stores) locking the bins or destroying them other merchandise, you have to leave it cleaner than how you found it,” he said.

Once bins are locked by stores, or relocated to private property, it becomes illegal to dumpster dive. Ensuring that stores leave their bins publicly accessible allows dumpster divers to continue their practice safely and legally.

Sophie noted how, before she left Australia, her local grocery store started to “cut the packaging” and “smash the fruit” before throwing it in the bin.

4. Don’t be greedy

Once you get the hang of dumpster diving, it can be tempting to stash away kilos of food found in a single haul.

But with so many products found close to or at expiration, hauling more food than you can consume or share can do more harm and pose more health and safety risks than just leaving it behind, Big B said.

“If you know you can share it, then share it. Otherwise, you’re only changing the geography of the rubbish, if you’re not using it or doing anything with it,” he added.

“I share almost 95 per cent of what I find – my donation pile is greater than my ‘keep for myself’ pile.”

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Categories
US

Vladimir Putin’s rumored girlfriend Alina Kabaeva hit with new round of US sanctions

A new round of US sanctions targeting Russian elites includes a woman named in news reports as Vladimir Putin’s longtime romantic partner.

The Treasury Department said Tuesday that the government has frozen the visa of Alina Kabayeva, an Olympic gymnast in her youth and former member of the state Duma, and imposed other property restrictions. The department said she is also head of a Russian national media company that promotes Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Russia Kabaeva
In this November 4, 2004 file photo, Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks with gymnast Alina Kabaeva at a Kremlin banquet in Moscow, Russia.

ITAR-TASS/AP


Critics of the Kremlin and imprisoned Russian rights campaigner Alexey Navalny have been calling for sanctions against Kabaeva, saying her news outlet took the lead in portraying Western commentary on the invasion as a disinformation campaign.

The UK sanctioned Kabaeva in May and the EU imposed travel and asset restrictions on her in June.

Rumors have circulated for years about Kabaeva’s personal relationship with the Russian leader. Russian tabloids have dubbed her “Russia’s First Mistress” and even the “Secret First Lady.”

In 2008, Russian newspaper Moskovsky Korrespondent reported that Putin had plans to divorce his longtime wife, Lyudmila, to be with Kabaeva. The paper was shut down two days later. But five years later, Putin announced that he and Lyudmila had separated.

President Vladimir Putin Receives World Leaders to Sochi
Russian retired rhythmic gymnast and politician Alina Kabaeva attends a reception at on February 8, 2014 in Sochi, Russia.

Sasha Mordovets/Getty Images


Also named in the Treasury’s latest sanctions package is Andrey Grigoryevich Guryev, an oligarch who owns the Witanhurst estate, a 25-bedroom mansion that is the second-largest estate in London after Buckingham Palace.

His $120 million yacht, the Alfa Nero, was also identified as blocked property. Also sanctioned was his son Andrey Andreevich Guryev and his son’s Russian investment firm Dzhi AI Invest OOO.

Viktor Filippovich Rashnikov, one of Russia’s largest taxpayers, and two subsidiaries of his MMK, which is among the world’s largest steel producers, also were slapped with sanctions, AFP reported.

“As innocent people suffer from Russia’s illegal war of aggression, Putin’s allies have enriched themselves and funded opulent lifestyles,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in a statement.

“Together with our allies, the United States will also continue to choke off revenue and equipment underpinning Russia’s unprovoked war in Ukraine.”

The State Department also imposed additional visa restrictions and other sanctions.

In April, the US imposed sanctions on Putin’s adult daughters Katerina Vladimirovna Tikhonova and Maria Vladimirovna Vorontsova.

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Categories
Entertainment

What to watch this August, from the much anticipated The Bear to Game of Thrones prequel House of the Dragon

I know I say this every month but MY GOD there is some hot streaming content coming out in the next few weeks.

Here’s what to watch in August.

The Bear (Disney+, August 31)

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It feels like everyone’s been talking about The Bear lately.

The original comedy tells the story of a chef who worked in fine dining before returning home to Chicago to turn around the sandwich shop his late brother owned.

It’s the kind of simple premise that could have led to a forgettable TV show.

But the ensemble cast (led by Jeremy Allen White), paired with shots of sharp, impressively fast knives, vegetables mid-sauté, and a raucous soundtrack collide to create a realistic depiction of the chaos, tension and desperation that come with working in a restaurant kitchen that collectively knows it could be more successful than it is.

The Bear is often intense. But it’s also hilarious and it may also bring tears to your eyes for the best reasons.

For fans of: Sweetbitter, Ugly Delicious, Chef’s Table, Shameless

House of the Dragon (Binge and Foxtel, August 22)

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Dragons! Matt Smith with bleached eyebrows! The vague but still somehow powerful warning that war is afoot in the Game of Thrones universe!

Set about 200 years before the original series, this prequel follows the Targaryen family as their rule of Westeros is threatened by the question of who will succeed King Viserys: his brother, Daemon, or his daughter, Rhaenyra?

Still not sold? So many people will be bingeing this series that you may as well watch it so you can keep up with the office water-cooler chat if nothing else.

For fans of: Game of Thrones (obviously), Lord of the Rings, Harry Potter, The Tudors, Shadow and Bone

Summer Love (ABC iview, August 31)

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The eight episodes of Summer Love have only one thing in common: they’re set in the same holiday house by a beach.

Over the course of a summer, that poor house sees it all. Visitors include old friends who realize they maybe shouldn’t be friends anymore, surprise instant parents, an aspiring rapper and his surgeon girlfriend grappling with his abandonment issues, and two strangers who end up being forced to stay together after a double booking.

Prepare to evil-laugh and feel glorious amounts of cringe over this anthology (which stars Miranda Tapsell I must also add — as if you needed any more reason to watch!!).

For fans of: The Letdown, PEN15, Please Like Me

Selling the OC (Netflix, August 24)

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The streaming gods have blessed us with another real estate reality show to hate-watch off the back of Selling Sunset’s success.

Chrishell and Christine aren’t in this version, but it does offer just as many swanky houses only the 0.1 per cent could afford, just as many realtors teetering around in heels and bodycon dresses, and just as much drama.

And that’s the most important part really, isn’t it?

For fans of: Selling Sunset, Selling Tampa, any of the Real Housewives series, Yummy Mummies

Here Out West, (ABC iview, August 14)

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Here Out West is a film featuring eight interconnected stories (written by eight new writers!) set in the ever-changing melting pot that is Western Sydney.

It’s a heartwarming — and at times, heartbreaking — depiction of family, identity, love and hope.

I have a feeling you won’t regret watching it.

For fans of: The Family Law, Ali’s Wedding, The Heights

A League of Their Own (Amazon Prime, August 12)

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Sometimes you just want to curl up and watch something that makes you feel good, and A League of Their Own is that vibe exactly.

The series follows a group of women (made up of familiar faces including Chanté Adams, Abi Jacobsen and D’Arcy Carden) as they form an All-American Girls Professional Baseball League and try to provide themselves as ball players at a time when the US is going through immense social transformation during WWII.

If this all sounds familiar, it could be because A League Of Their Own is based on a true story. Oh, and that real-life story was made into a movie by the same name back in 1992 (which this series was adapted from).

For fans of: Hidden Figures, The Marvelous Mrs Maisel, Hacks, Ted Lasso

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Categories
US

911 call reveals NC pilot Charley Hew Crooks jumped from plane

A 911 call released Tuesday revealed that the co-pilot who mysteriously vanished mid-air in North Carolina had “jumped” out of the aircraft.

Two Federal Aviation Administration employees could be heard saying that Charles Hew Crooks’ co-pilot reported that he leaped out of the damaged plane before it made an emergency landing at Raleigh Durham International Airport on Friday, WRAL reported.

“This is from Raleigh Airport,” an FAA air traffic controller said on the recording. “We have a pilot who was inbound to the field. His co-pilot jumped out of the aircraft. He made impact to the ground and here are the coordinates.”

The 23-year-old’s body was later discovered in the backyard of a home in Fuquay-Varina, North Carolina, about 30 miles south of the airport.

The body of Charles Hew Crooks, 23, was discovered on July 29 in the backyard of a home in Fuquay-Varina, North Carolina, about 30 miles south of Raleigh Durham International Airport, where the plane made an emergency landing after losing its right wheel .
The body of Charles Hew Crooks, 23, was discovered on July 29 in the backyard of a home in Fuquay-Varina, North Carolina, about 30 miles south of Raleigh Durham International Airport, where the plane made an emergency landing after losing its right wheel .

In the 13-minute call, an FAA employee said Crooks’ co-pilot had reported he “jumped out without the parachute, so he might have impact to the ground.”

“I am sure the pilot is going to be shaken up,” one FAA employee said. “I have no idea. He literally just said, ‘My pilot just jumped out.’”

The recording captured the FAA employees frantically trying to figure out what happened to Crooks.

“I guess at this point in time, all we can do is recovery,” an FAA controller told a dispatcher. “I don’t know. I don’t know. This is the craziest thing ever.”

Wake County Emergency Management officials told WRAL the initial 911 call was received at 2:30 pm Friday. The aircraft, a CASA 212-200, made an emergency landing about 18 minutes later, WRAL reported.

The National Transportation Safety Board has taken over the ongoing investigation.  Preliminary information indicates the aircraft sustained substantial damage to its landing gear and fuselage, prompting the pilot to ask to make an emergency landing.
The National Transportation Safety Board has taken over the ongoing investigation. Preliminary information indicates the aircraft sustained substantial damage to its landing gear and fuselage, prompting the pilot to ask to make an emergency landing.
WRAL

“Once the aircraft had landed, it was reconfirmed based on a report the pilot said the person in the aircraft had exited the aircraft prior to landing,” Wake County Emergency Management Chief of Operations Darshan Patel told the station.

Crooks’ co-pilot, whose identity hasn’t been released, was taken to a hospital for minor injuries during the landing. He was discharged later that day.

Crooks’ father, Hew Crooks, previously told WRAL he had no idea what happened during his son’s final moments.

“We can’t process it right now,” he said. “I don’t know.”

Devin Lynch, a friend of Crooks, said the incident doesn’t match what he knew about the late pilot.

“I’ve known Charles for three years,” Lynch told WRAL. “He was a pilot from the day I met him. I’ve flown with him a few times, and I can tell you firsthand what kind of pilot he was. He followed every rule to the letter.”

Lynch said he’d like to hear what the cockpit voice recorders picked up at the time.

“I would be interested in hearing the CVR recording because I’d like to hear what was going on in the cockpit that wasn’t being communicated to air traffic control,” Lynch said.

The National Transportation Safety Board has taken over the ongoing investigation. Preliminary information indicates the aircraft sustained substantial damage to its landing gear and fuselage, prompting the pilot to ask to make an emergency landing.

The pilots were flying at the time for Rampart Aviation, which has not responded to inquiries on the nature of the flight, WRAL reported.

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Categories
Entertainment

Sunrise host Nat Barr wows fans with transformation: ‘Stunning’

Sunrise host Nat Barr has given fans a behind-the-scenes look at what goes into getting her ready to present the breakfast show.

Sunrise posted a video on its Instagram account, showing Nat in her natural state with bed hair and a face devoid of makeup.

She then hits the camera before revealing her stunning early-morning transformation after having her hair and makeup done.

Nat also shows off her outfit for the breakfast program – cream pants and a powder blue blouse.

Nat Barr with no makeup on (left) and her dolled up (right).

Nat Barr shared a video of her transformation for Sunrise. Source: Instagram

“If only it was this quick! We loved this look from yesterday,” Sunrise captioned the video on Wednesday.

Fans were stunned by the host’s before and after video, with many saying the host was “stunning”.

“So stylish,” one said.

“Just like magic,” another commented.

“You look fantastic,” a third said.

“Beautiful before and after,” someone else claimed.

RELATED:

Nat often stuns fans with her gorgeous Sunrise looks, with one outfit she wore in February gaining extra attention.

She wore a sleeveless black Carla Zampatti frock with a high, slightly cowled neckline and an oversized faux leather belt.

After posting a photo of herself in the outfit to Instagram, Nat was inundated with compliments from fans and viewers who couldn’t get enough of the look.

“Wow I love this outfit!! I think it’s the best so far,” one person said.

“I need this outfit in my life,” another commented.

Others describe the dress as “classy and beautiful” and “absolutely stunning”.

In June she attended the Tour de cure annual black-tie Snow Ball, wearing a gold sleeveless top and a long black skirt.

Nat was recently missing from the Sunrise desk after coming down with Covid, and when she returned last week she said her lingering illness made her feel like she “had a couple of wines”.

Although she wasn’t back to her usual self, she did let her colleagues know that she wasn’t contagious and had the all-clear from her doctor to return.

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Or if you have a story idea, email us at [email protected].

Categories
Australia

Mark McGowan v Clive Palmer trial judgment finds both guilty of defamation

Premier Mark McGowan and billionaire Clive Palmer have been found to have defamed each other during their vicious war of words in 2020 — but the harm done was minor, according to the Federal Court — as they were the damages awarded.

Delivering his judgment today, Justice Michael Lee said the defenses of both sides to allegations of defamation had failed — and the back-and-forth barbs had been defamatory.

But because the Federal Court judge found that both were involved in political argument — as nasty as it was — finding “real or material” damage was almost impossible.

He declined to award claimed aggravated damages to Mr Palmer, and said he could not find he suffered any real damage from Mr McGowan’s comments.

He assessed the damage to Mr Palmer’s reputation warranted an award of $5,000.

And Justice Lee then pointed to Mr McGowan’s landslide election victory as to the fact his reputation was not damaged by Mr Palmer — and might actually have been enhanced.

However, he said Mr Palmer’s comments warranted an award of $20,000 to the Premier.

In summing up the case, Justice Lee said arguments that neither side was involved in political posturing was “unpersuasive and superficial”.

He said amid the feud, the pair had both taken the opportunities to advance their political stance — particularly Mr McGowan, who he said “had a bully pulpit”.

And he concluded the “game had not been worth the candle” — taking up valuable resources from the court and the WA taxpayer.

The defamation case between the Premier and the billionaire stemmed from public barbs traded more than two years ago, as the pandemic was still spreading — and with Mr Palmer’s $30 billion claim against WA not yet public.

In press conferences of varying ferocity, Mr McGowan labeled the mining magnate the “enemy of the state” and “the enemy of Australia.”

In response, Mr Palmer allegedly implied Mr McGowan lied to West Australians about the pandemic — and was willing to accept bribes from Chinese interests.

That prompted both Mr Palmer to sue, and Mr McGowan to sue right back – with both men called to personally give evidence, which at times bordered on the bizarre.

During the sometimes florid and emotional testimony, both Mr McGowan and his Queensland adversary made striking claims about how the other’s words had impacted.

The Premier linked the verbal Mr Palmer’s attacks on him to the threats of physical attack from others, which he said left him fearing for the safety of his wife and children.

He promotes these ideas. He encourages all these people to weaponise themselves physically against my family.

“He is the sort of person who gets a band of people out there who believe this stuff. A band of followers he acquires who get wound up and outraged,” Mr McGowan said.

“He promotes these ideas. He encourages all these people to weaponise themselves physically against my family.”

And Mr Palmer went as far as claiming he believed Mr McGowan had granted himself a James Bond-style “license to kill” – and might use it to murder the mining magnate and get away with it.

That clause, he claimed, was his reading of the so-called ‘Palmer Act’ – the extraordinary piece of legislation drafted and passed in haste to kill off Mr Palmer’s mega-bucks royalties claim from the Balmoral South iron ore project in the Pilbara region .

“I then thought about James Bond movies… how would you license someone to kill? I didn’t know what the limits might be,” Mr Palmer told the court.

PALMER MCGOWAN CASE
Camera IconWA Premier Mark McGowan. Credit: News Corp Australia

“I reached a view that that’s what I thought it enabled them to do if they wanted to at an extreme level… that was a level of concern.

“To my mind, that meant that they could make offenses under the criminal code and not be held liable for them.”

Embedded within the case — and teased out by the lawyers — were communications between Mr McGowan and state attorney general John Quigley, which revealed the level of enmity within the WA government towards Palmer.

In them, Mr Palmer was referred to as fat, as a liar, as a turd and as “the worst Australian who is not in jail.”

Mr Quigley texted that he was working on a “poison pill for the fat man”.

And the 73-year old attorney general even referenced his own love life, asking Mr McGowan: “Are you glad me single again?.”

“Not making love in sweet hours before dawn – instead worrying how to defeat Clive,” Mr Quigley admitted.

That opened him up to being called as a witness — which opened another can of worms. Because Mr Quigley’s performance on the witness stand prompted accusations that he lied on oath, and he had to admit making glaring errors in his evidence of him.

“I gave inaccurate evidence to the court,” Mr Quigley said. “I am embarrassed about them (the answers). What I said was wrong.

Justice Lee summed up his thoughts on Mr Quigley’s courtroom performance abruptly: “Not dishonest — but all over the shop”.

Western Australia's Attorney General John Quigley leaves the Federal Court of Australia in Sydney, Friday, April 8, 2022. Businessman Clive Palmer is suing West Australian Premier Mark McGowan claiming public comments, including labeling him the "enemy of West Australia", made in July 2020 had damaged the Queensland businessman's reputation.  (AAP Image/Dean Lewins) NO ARCHIVING
Camera IconJohn Quigley. Credit: DEAN LEWINS/AAPIMAGE

In his summary to the case on Tuesday, Justice Lee cited a quote from British politician Enoch Powell, saying politicians complaining about the press was like a “ship’s captain complaining about the sea”.

And he said the war of words between Mr McGowan and Mr Palmer was the “hurly burly” of two politicians arguing about political issues — predominantly the WA response to the Covid 19 pandemic, and the state response to Mr Palmer’s claim of $30 billion in damages.

Justice Lee also commented that the legislation which blocked that claim proceeded with the “speed of summer lightning”.

He described Mr Palmer’s evidence that he feared for his life at the hands of the WA government was “fantastic” — and “so unbelievable” that it undermined his other evidence.

“Not safe to place any particular reliance on it,” Justice Lee said.

And on Mr McGowan, Justice Lee said he was largely an “impressive witness” — but sometimes fell into the “muscle memory” of non-responsive answers.

And of Mr Quigley, Justice Lee said his evidence was both “confused and confusing”.

“Being a confused witness is quite different from being a dishonest one,” Justice Lee said. “Mr Quigley was not a reliable historian of events.”

Arguments about costs of the case, and who will pay them, will be made later this month.

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