Bankrupt cryptocurrency lender Celsius Networks allegedly defrauded investors out of billions of dollars


New York
CNN
 — 

The New York attorney general filed a civil lawsuit Thursday against the co-founder of now-bankrupt cryptocurrency lender Celsius Networks for allegedly defrauding hundreds of thousands of investors who deposited billions of dollars into the platform.

The lawsuit against Alex Mashinsky alleges he made false and misleading statements to encourage investors to place billions of dollars in digital assets with Celsius, which filed for bankruptcy court protection last year. Mashinsky resigned soon after.

The lawsuit is the latest action against a high-profile figure in the cryptocurrency industry, which faced a reckoning last year amid volatility in the market. It comes as regulators warn banks and investors about their exposure to the unregulated industry.

New York Attorney General Letitia James is seeking damages, restitution, and disgorgement. In addition, she is seeking to ban Mashinsky from doing business in New York or serving as an officer or director of a company.

“The law is clear that making false and unsubstantiated promises and misleading investors is illegal,” James said in a statement Thursday.

James alleges that Mashinsky touted Celsius as safer than a bank, and said he would generate high returns by making low-risk collateralized loans to established institutions and crypto exchanges, among others.

As Celsius grew larger it had trouble generating enough revenue to pay the high returns and “moved into significantly riskier investments, extending hundreds of millions of dollars in uncollateralized loans, and investing hundreds of millions of dollars in unregulated decentralized finance platforms,” the lawsuit alleges. When faced with losses, the lawsuit alleges, Mashinsky hid them from investors and continued to tout the safety of the platform to recruit new investors.

“Alex Mashinsky denies these allegations. He looks forward to vigorously defending himself in court,” said Benjamin Allee, an attorney for Mashinsky.

James’ office alleges that, among the risky investments Mashinsky made, included $1 billion in loans to Alameda Research, the hedge fund backed by FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried. In extending many of the loans, Celsius accepted FTX’s token, FTT, as collateral. The value of FTT crashed, leaving the collateral on any still outstanding loans worthless. It is not clear how much of the $1 billion debt was still outstanding at the time.

Celsius is facing numerous lawsuits and investigations stemming from its collapse last July.

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Important inflation data and big bank earnings could create volatility for markets in week ahead

US Top News and Analysis 

Major banks kick off the earnings season in the week ahead, but it may be news on inflation that drives markets after hopes for a slowing trend triggered a major stock rally Friday. Stocks closed out the first week of the year with gains, boosted into the green by Friday’s more than 2% jump in major indices. “Next week is all about inflation,” said Michael Arone, chief investment strategist at States Street Global Advisors. “I would expect another volatile week. It’ll be interesting in that each data piece that comes in and suggests we’re moving toward the Fed’s 2% inflation goal will be celebrated, and for data that refutes that, markets will act negatively.” The first major day of the fourth-quarter earnings season is Friday when major banks including JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America report. “What they have to say about earnings will also set the tone in terms of what the earnings season will look like,” Arone said. Federal Reserve officials will also be important to watch in the coming week. Chairman Jerome Powell speaks on central bank independence and at a Riksbank symposium in Stockholm Tuesday at 9 a.m. ET. Other speakers include Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic Monday. On Thursday, Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker, Richmond Fed President Tom Barkin and St. Louis Fed President Bullard all speak at separate events. Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari and Boston Fed President Susan Collins have appearances Friday. Inflation watch Friday’s December employment report showed that wage gains slowed last month to 4.6% on an annual basis, less than the 5% economists expected. That started a rally Friday morning that continued after the ISM nonmanufacturing survey showed a surprise contraction in services sector activity and slower price increases. Both reports encouraged investors to expect the Fed could pause its rate hikes sooner. The most important inflation report in the week ahead is the consumer price index, released Thursday. But Arone said he is also watching the New York Fed’s Survey of Consumer Expectations on Monday for an important glimpse at now consumers see future inflation. Friday’s University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey also measures inflation expectations. Economists expect the consumer price index to be unchanged for December but up 6.5% year-over-year, compared to a 0.1% gain in November and a 7.1% annual pace, according to Dow Jones. Excluding energy and food, the CPI is expected to rise 0.3% or 5.7% on an annual basis, compared to November’s 0.2% and 6%, respectively. “Most of the payback is coming from non-monetary things like energy prices and a reversal of goods prices,” said Michael Gapen, chief U.S. economist at Bank of America. “What we’re left with is where there’s services inflation, which is still too strong.” For instance, Gapen said he expects core goods inflation in the report to decline by a half percentage point, while core services should rise by 0.5%. “The argument would be the payback in goods, that’s a pandemic story,” he said. “When that stuff washes out, where we are is services inflation is running at 6%. Some of that is due to the labor markets, so labor markets are going to cool.” Gapen expects the labor market to slow much more than it has. In December, there was a stronger than expected the 223,000 jobs added even though wage pressures eased. Earnings ahead A group of major financials including Wells Fargo, Citigroup and BlackRock reports results Friday. Analysts generally expect to see earnings expectations come down for many companies, and some see a volatile stock market as a result. “I expect the rate of earnings growth will come down, revenue growth will come down. That’s already reflected and expected,” Arone said. “It’s going to be more about what the corporate executives say about the future, in terms of what they’re seeing. I expect corporate executives to be cautious and to be warning about the environment.” Arone said he doesn’t necessarily see the negative first quarter for stocks that many strategists expect. “I’m in the camp that the economic data, the earnings data and eventually the jobs data are going to worsen. I do think that’s going to happen in the first half,” he said. “However, I actually think markets may react positively to this idea that the most anticipated recession is finally kind of here, and it will slow the Fed down and make them stop and we can move forward. Investors will look ahead to the recovery.” The S & P 500 ended the week the week with a 1.5% gain at 3,895. The index rallied 2.3% Friday, while bond yields fell. Yields move opposite price. The 10-year Treasury yield was at 3.56%. Week ahead calendar Monday Earnings: Commercial Metals, Accolade, PriceSmart, WD-40, Jefferies Financial 11:00 a.m. New York Fed Survey of Consumer Expectations 12:30 p.m. Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic 3:00 p.m. Consumer credit Tuesday 6:00 a.m. NFIB survey 9:00 a.m. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell in Stockholm on central bank independence 10:00 a.m. Wholesale trade Wednesday Earnings: KB Home Thursday Earnings: Infosys , Taiwan Semiconductor 7:30 a.m. Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker 8:30 a.m. Weekly jobless claims 8:30 a.m. CPI 11:30 a.m. St. Louis Fed President James Bullard 12:40 p.m. Richmond Fed President Tom Barkin 2:00 p.m. Federal budget Friday Earnings: JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, Bank of New York Mellon, First Republic Bank, UnitedHealth, BlackRock, Delta Airlines 8:30 a.m. Import prices 10:00 a.m. Consumer sentiment 10:00 a.m. Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari 10:20 a.m. Philadelphia Fed’s Harker 9:00 a.m. Boston Fed President Susan Collins

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McDonald’s plans reorganization, job cuts as it accelerates restaurant openings

US Top News and Analysis 

In this article

MCD

Noam Galai | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

McDonald’s is planning job cuts and a reorganization as the company refocuses its priorities to accelerate restaurant expansion, CEO Chris Kempczinski told employees Friday.

The fast-food giant said the job cuts aren’t a cost-cutting measure but are instead intended to help the company innovate faster and work more efficiently. As part of the reorganization, the company will be deprioritizing and halting certain initiatives, according to a company-wide memo from Kempczinski. It’s unclear what those projects are.

“Today, we’re divided into silos with a center, segments, and markets,” Kempczinski wrote. “This approach is outdated and self-limiting – we are trying to solve the same problems multiple times, aren’t always sharing ideas and can be slow to innovate.”

Currently, McDonald’s organization is divided into three segments: the U.S., international operated markets and international developmental licensed markets. The company operates in 119 markets across the world.

Additionally, McDonald’s said Friday it will speed up its development plans for new restaurants.

“We must accelerate the pace of our restaurant openings to fully capture the increased demand we’ve driven over the past few years,” Kempczinski said in the memo.

McDonald’s hadn’t previously released a forecast for how many new restaurants it plans to build in 2023, but the company said in November that new units would contribute about 1.5% to system-wide sales growth in 2022.

The company has not decided how many new restaurants it will build yet nor how many jobs will be eliminated as part of the reorganization. Kempczinski said that the company will finalize and begin to communicate decisions on the layoffs by April 3.

Kempczinski also announced a handful of internal promotions, effective Feb. 1, to help the company carry out its new strategy. Global Chief Marketing Officer Morgan Flatley will also oversee new business ventures. Skye Anderson will move from McDonald’s U.S. west zone to global business services. Andrew Gregory’s role as global franchising officer will also include leading global development, and Spero Droulias will transition from senior vice president of finance to the company’s chief transformation officer.

Shares of McDonald’s closed up more than 2% on Friday. The company is expected to report its fourth-quarter earnings on Jan. 31.

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Android Auto Gets Updated Look, New Shortcuts And Seekable Media Bar

Carscoops 

Google has arrived at CES to launch a “refreshed” Android Auto as well as announce several other automotive-related developments.

Starting with Android Auto, users will find new features and an updated design that is supposed to make things easier and more personal.  As part of this effort, the company focused on improving access to navigation, media, and communications.

While the changes might not immediately jump out at you, Google says they moved the map closer to the driver to enable them to see where they’re going with a quick glance.  The refresh also includes a new media card as well as a quick launcher that provides access to recently-used apps.

Also: Ford And Google Join Forces, All New Models To Feature Android OS From 2023

Google also responded to requests by adding a seekable progress bar for music and podcasts, so users can easily skip ahead.  Other highlights include new shortcuts for calling favorite contacts and sending message replies as well as smart suggestions from Google Assistant that include “missed call reminders, quick arrival time sharing, and instant access to music or podcasts.”  Google also announced Pixel and Samsung owners will soon be able to make calls using WhatsApp.

Besides the Android Auto updates, Google announced digital key sharing is coming to Samsung phones in the future.  The company also said Xiaomi owners will be able to use and share digital car keys later this year.

Cars with Google built-in are also getting a handful of updates, and a new HD map can be found in the Polestar 3 and Volvo EX90.  It provides “precise road details like lane markers, signs and road barriers to support automakers’ assisted and autonomous driving technology for safer, more hands-free driving on select roadways.”

While Google built-in can already be found in models from GM, Renault, Polestar, and Volvo, the company said we can expect even more brands in the future.  In particular, Ford and Lincoln are jumping on the bandwagon later this year.

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Your Hair Hydration Routine Starts in the Shower—Here’s How Maximize Moisture During Dry-Strands Season

Well+Good 

When your hair is super dry in the winter, it’s easy to want to pile on creams, serums, and oils day after day. But, this can actually lead to product buildup that makes strands drier in the long run. Instead of overdoing it with moisturizing styling products, you need to make the most of your wash-day routine to ensure your hair is soaking in and retaining the ingredient it needs most—water.

“Water is the base for hydration,” says Al Campbell, a Chicago-based hair and extension stylist. “It creates a passageway and is the binder for moisture in supportive treatments and products. Although water hydrates, it evaporates as well so we need moisture support from products to fill the strand and help it retain nourishment.”

Making sure your hair can hold onto water is even more important in the winter, as our environment (inside and out) is constantly sucking the water out of our stands. Below, learn how to have a hydrating wash-day routine from Campbell and other stylists.

4 tips for a hydrating wash-day routine

1. Make sure the water in your shower isn’t too hot

“Hot water can strip the hair of its natural oils, so if you’re washing your hair with hot water in the winter, it can make your hair even drier,” says Quia Querisma, a Dallas-based hairstylist. Instead, keep the water lukewarm.

2. Regularly use a hydrating shampoo, not a co-wash or cleansing conditioner

Your cleansing step needs to adequately wash away debris, oil, dirt, and products without over-stripping your hair. While co-washes and cleansing conditioners are great to use in between shampooing when your hair requires a refresh, you need to use a shampoo to keep it clean.

“Although [cleansing conditioners] are gentle on the hair and help the hair not to tangle when trying to cleanse, they do not get the hair or scalp clean enough,” says Sophia Emmanuel, trichologist, hairstylist, and owner of Crown Worthy Tricology Studio in New York City. “When you use them often, your scalp will be clogged. This can cause a wealth of scalp problems such as dandruff, excessive itching, seborrheic dermatitis, and hair loss.”

Look for hydrating formulas that will cleanse your scalp and strands without stripping them.

Mizani Moisture Fusion Gentle Clarifying Shampoo — $30.00 to $46.00

Cambell, who works with Mizani, recommends this gentle and moisturizing clarifying shampoo for those who tend to use a lot of products. “It targets artificial build-up with its charcoal clarifiers,” he says, which allows it to thoroughly cleanse hair without stripping it of moisture or shine. Lather and rinse this and then repeat with the Moisture Fusion Moisture Rich Shampoo ($30 to $46) for even more moisture.

Pureology Hydrate Sheer Shampoo — $36.00 to $85.00

If you have fine hair and want to get moisture without weighing down your strands, turn to this shampoo from Pureology. “Hydrate Sheer is an option that won’t weigh down low-density hair,” says Querisma, who works with the brand. It’s made with marine ingredients like sea kelp and coconut water to provide lightweight hydration.

Briogeo Superfoods Matcha + Apple Replenishing Shampoo — $30.00

This is another great hydrating and replenishing shampoo. It uses glycerin and aloe leaf juice to hydrate while matcha and vitamin C provide antioxidant protection against environmental damage, spinach provides hair-strengthening vitamins and minerals, and procyanidin-rich apple supports a healthy scalp.

3. Make deep conditioning non-negotiable

When your hair is wet, it’s most able to soak in moisturizing ingredients, “hence why most if not all masks and treatments need to be applied to damp or wet hair,” says Larisa Love, a hairstylist in Los Angeles. These deep-conditioning treatments deeply penetrate the hair shaft, giving it the nutrients it needs while helping it hold onto hydration.

DevaCurl Curlbond Re-Coiling Treatment Mask — $40.00 to $66.00

If you have curly hair, Kari Williams, PhD, a trichologist and hairstylist in New York City, recommends this mask from DevaCurl. “The patented curlbond complex will heal curls that have become distressed and maintain healthy elasticity in the hair strands,” says Dr. Williams, who serves as a member of the DevaCurl Expert Curl Council.

Joico HydraSplash Hydrating Gelee Masque — $27.00

Love says this mask is great for providing lightweight hydration to fine-to-medium hair types. It uses coconut water and sea kelp to gently detangle and soften strands.

Mizani Moisture Fusion Intense Moisturizing Hair Mask — $36.00

For super-dry, textured hair, Campbell loves this Mizani Mask. “It’s a treatment that penetrates past the cuticle to fill and support the strand more intensely than a typical conditioner,” he says. It does this with cupuaçu butter to lock and seal in moisture, argan oil to restore shine and hydration to hair, and honey to prevent damage and promote scalp health.

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Color Wow Money Mask Deep Hydrating & Strengthening Hair Treatment — $45.00

Packed with blue sea kale, a hydrolyzed vegetable protein complex, and Mediterranean sea kelp and algae, this mask strengthens damaged hair, smooths down the hair cuticle, and provides intense moisture. It’s designed to leave your hair looking nourished and expensive.

4. Use nourishing leave-in products

“While treatments are amazing for nourishing the strand, a good leave-in to support and prime the strand will change the game,” says Campbell.

Mizani 25 Miracle Milk Heat Protectant Leave-In Conditioner — $14.00 to $40.00

Campbell is a huge fan of this spray-on leave-in. It uses coconut oil to moisturize dry hair, and add shine and softness along with fennel seed oil to strengthen hair and prevent breakage. Plus, it doubles as a heat protectant. If you like something heavier than a spray, he says the Mizani 25 Miracle Leave-In Cream ($14 to $25) is a better option.

Ouai Jumbo Leave In Conditioner — $40.00

For a cream leave-in with heat protection, reach for this one from Ouai. It protects against heat up to 450°F while conditioning, detangling, and fighting frizz. It uses tamarind seed extract to hydrate, vitamins B5 and E to condition and detangle, and hydrolyzed proteins to protect against damage.

Pureology Color Fanatic Multi-Tasking Leave-In Spray — $32.00 to $49.00

If you have color-treated hair, Querisma recommends this spray since it’s full of nourishing ingredients that are rich in fatty acids, like camelina and olive oils.

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Joico Defy Damage Sleepover Overnight Nourishing Treatment — $29.00

For super deep hydration, use this leave-on mask from Joico. It “will add extra hydration and moisture to the hair to recover from any dryness,” says Love.

Day-to-day tips to help you retain the hydration from your wash day

1. Don’t leave the house with wet hair

After you’ve put all this work into infusing your hydrating wash-day routine, do NOT step outside with wet hair. “Water expands when it freezes, and if your hair is wet it can cause breakage,” says Dr. Williams. Make sure your hair is fully dry before exposing it to the elements.

2. Drink lots of water

“The human body is 60 percent water and depends on water for survival. Every cell, tissue, and organ needs water to work properly. Therefore, [drinking] water is the solution for dry hair and helps to maintain the suppleness and elasticity in the hair and skin,” says Dr. Williams. “True hair and scalp health always starts from the inside, so continue to drink plenty of water during the winter months to prevent dry hair and scalp.”

3. Sleep on silk or satin

“The environment is full of culprits that rob our hair of moisture but don’t let your bedding be one of them,” says Querisma. “Using a silk or satin pillowcase at bedtime will help discourage the dryness and breakage that can come with cotton bedding.”

Kitsch Satin Pillowcase — $19.00

These satin pillowcases are great to protect your hair and are available in a variety of colors and patterns to complement your bedding.

Quince 100% Mulberry Silk Pillowcase — $40.00

Get luxe with this 100 percent mulberry silk pillowcase from Quince. In addition to preventing friction while you sleep, silk fiber contains 18 kinds of amino acids that will nourish your hair and skin.

4. Be mindful of your hats and scarves

“Wool and cotton scarves are popular fashion accessories, but they have fibers that can cause frizz and can catch onto the ends of the hair causing breakage,” says Dr. Williams. “These fibers also absorb moisture from the hair, so before wearing these items, protect your hair by wrapping it with a silk or satin scarf.” You can also tie your hair back and throw on a satin-lined hat to protect your ends.

Grace Eleyae Chunky Knit Satin-Lined Beanie — $30.00

This hat provides the warmth and comfort you’d expect from a beanie with the hair protection you get from a satin scarf.

Learn about the deep-conditioning treatments a dermatologist loves:

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Virginia police say 6-year-old student shot teacher at Newport News elementary school

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Virginia police have taken a 6-year-old student in custody after a staff member was injured in a shooting at an elementary school in Newport News on Friday afternoon, according to Police Chief Steve Drew.

The incident unfolded at Richneck Elementary School, a school for kids ages 5-9. 

In a press conference Friday evening, the Chief Drew said the shooting was not accidental and that the teacher’s injuries were life-threatening. No students were injured during the incident. 

Police say that the 6-year-old student was immediately taken into custody following the incident. It is unclear how the student got a gun. 

MICHIGAN COP NARROWLY DODGES SHOOTING AMBUSH, 2 IN CUSTODY

Following the shooting, the school was put on lockdown at approximately 2 p.m. In a Facebook post, Newport News Public Schools wrote that the reunification site was at the school’s gym door. Parents and guardians were required to present a photo ID to pick up their child at the door.

“The police did an amazing job, got here very, very quickly, along with the sheriff’s office,” Newport Mayor Jones said. “We are ensuring that everyone is safe, we are ensuring that everyone is accounted for, they’re going to be in the cafeteria right now, and people are being escorted out to their parents.”

 

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Colorado launches new alert system to help find missing Indigenous people



CNN
 — 

After community members searched for Wanbli Vigil in knee-deep snow and brush in Denver, authorities activated a statewide alert system on Tuesday to help find the missing 27-year-old Lakota man.

Vigil’s disappearance is the first case to activate Colorado’s new Missing Indigenous Person Alert (MIPA). The system was launched last week to address the state’s missing Indigenous people crisis. Colorado is among a handful of states that have created similar alert systems in the past year amid the nationwide crisis of unsolved Indigenous missing and murder cases.

“It’s needed, because we … as Indigenous people have been silenced too long, and abused too long and not taken seriously,” said Daisy Bluestar, a Southern Ute advocate and member of the Missing & Murdered Indigenous Relatives Taskforce of Colorado, a grassroots group that lobbied for the creation of the new alert system.

Wanbli Oyate Vigil, 27, was last seen on December 29 in Denver, Colorado.

Vigil was found dead on Thursday after police responded to reports of a deceased person at a site about a mile away from his apartment, the Denver Police Department said. Police said his death does not appear to be suspicious and an autopsy will be performed.

The Missing Indigenous Person Alert system did not play a role in finding Vigil, police said.

Vigil was last seen on December 29 around 2 p.m. as he left an apartment building in Denver and was reported as missing on New Year’s Day, his aunt, Jennifer Black Elk, told CNN. He was wearing blue jeans and a black jacket with white stripes, according to the alert issued by the Colorado Bureau of Investigation (CBI).

Black Elk said Vigil walked out of their apartment after sharing “personal issues” and left the door cracked. She initially thought Vigil went to pray because he was seen carrying a chanunpa, a ceremonial pipe, she said.

“He’s pretty funny. He’s pretty laid-back, easygoing and helpful and just a good person inside,” Black Elk said of her nephew.

The Colorado Bureau of Investigation launched the Missing Indigenous Person Alert system on December 30.

Its creation is the result of legislation passed last year to expand the investigation of cases of missing and murdered Indigenous people. Bluestar and other Indigenous advocates like her worked with state lawmakers to draft and pass Senate Bill 22-150 despite pushback from some lawmakers and agencies in the state. Gov. Jared Polis signed the bill into law last summer.

The legislation also required the state to create an office of liaison for missing and murdered Indigenous people.

The alert system is designed to be activated when an Indigenous person is reported missing to law enforcement. The legislation requires law enforcement agencies that receive a report of a missing Indigenous person to notify the CBI within eight hours of a report of a missing adult or within two hours of a report of a missing child, according to the Colorado Department of Public Safety.

If an Indigenous child is abducted, an Amber Alert will go out statewide, pinging residents’ phones, the CBI said. An alert under the new system will be issued if an Indigenous child goes missing in a non-abduction case.

Once an alert is issued, local and state law enforcement in Colorado are notified, as well as media outlets and other stakeholders who might distribute the alert information via email or text, CBI said. Unlike an Amber Alert, state investigators say the Missing Indigenous Person Alert will not go out to cell phones.

“The CBI understands the importance and effectiveness of the various alerts that are in place in Colorado, and we are pleased to have been asked to develop this newest alert in an effort to quickly locate missing Indigenous persons and return them safely to their loved ones,” CBI Director John Camper said in a statement.

As the search for Vigil continues, activists criticized how the new alert system was activated this week and said it could have been done in a more timely manner.

Denver Police said Vigil was reported missing on Sunday, but the Missing Indigenous Person Alert wasn’t issued until Tuesday.

“We’re losing valuable time in locating this young man or finding evidence as to where his whereabouts might be,” said Raven Payment, a Ojibwe and Kanienkehaka activist and member of the Missing & Murdered Indigenous Relatives Taskforce of Colorado who has joined the search for Vigil.

When asked about the time it took for the Missing Indigenous Person Alert to be issued, the Denver Police Department said its missing persons unit “opened a missing persons case and followed the notification procedure.”

When asked about the alert’s timing, the Colorado Bureau of Investigation said it issued the alert when it received information from the Denver Police Department. “The Denver Police Department is the lead on this case, as they took the report, and may have been performing investigative tasks leading up to the request for the alert,” the CBI said.

“For us to get this pushed through was an accomplishment, major accomplishment. But right now, you know, we’re at this point where it still doesn’t seem like it’s important enough or urgent enough,” said Bluestar, the other advocate.

Colorado is among three states that have implemented alert systems aimed to locate missing Indigenous people. Last year, Washington became the first state to create one and California launched a Feather Alert to assist in search efforts for an Indigenous person who has been reported missing under suspicious circumstances.

Nationally, there were 782 unresolved cases of missing Native American people as of August 2022, according to data from the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System.

Correction: This story has been updated to correct the length of time authorities spent searching for Vigil before the alert system was activated.

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Suspect arrested after allegedly breaking into Billie Eilish's childhood home: report

A suspect believed to have broken into the childhood home of singer-songwriter Billie Eilish has been arrested and is in custody, according to multiple reports.

Los Angeles police responded to the scene at approximately 9:16 p.m. local time Thursday evening after the unidentified suspect jumped over a fence around the property and entered the Highland Park house, according to FOX 11 Los Angeles.

The home, located in a neighborhood along North Avenue 57, is currently owned by Eilish’s parents, according to KABC reporter Chris Cristi.

Citizen and a local news blogging account, California News Watch, reported the suspect entered the home and fought with police officers during the arrest.

KTTV captures aerial video of the scene around Billie Eilish's childhood home after a suspect was arrested in connection to a break-in.

KTTV captures aerial video of the scene around Billie Eilish’s childhood home after a suspect was arrested in connection to a break-in.
(KTTV)

Billie Eilish performs onstage at The Kia Forum on Dec. 13, 2022 in Inglewood, California. 

Billie Eilish performs onstage at The Kia Forum on Dec. 13, 2022 in Inglewood, California. 
(Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for ABA)

By 9:31 p.m., the suspect had been taken into custody.

Photos and videos at the scene show a large police presence in the area, including multiple helicopters.

It is not immediately clear if the “Bad Guy” singer or her parents were in the home at the time of the incident. Several people have reached out and commented on Eilish’s latest social media post asking about her situation.

Billie Eilish attends the 11th Annual LACMA Art + Film Gala at Los Angeles County Museum of Art on Nov. 5, 2022 in Los Angeles.

Billie Eilish attends the 11th Annual LACMA Art + Film Gala at Los Angeles County Museum of Art on Nov. 5, 2022 in Los Angeles.
(JC Olivera/WireImage)

Billie Eilish performs onstage at The Kia Forum on Dec. 13, 2022 in Inglewood, California. 

Billie Eilish performs onstage at The Kia Forum on Dec. 13, 2022 in Inglewood, California. 
(Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for ABA)

No additional information about the suspect has been provided at this time. 

No injuries have been reported.

source
Fox News

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Financial World Celebrates Slowing Wage and Employment Growth in New Jobs Report

The Intercept 

The drops in both new jobs and wage growth contained in a Department of Labor report released on Friday elicited cheers from financial world insiders.

“This is a really terrific jobs report in lots of subtle ways,” tweeted Neil Irwin, Axios’s chief economic correspondent. He said, “Job growth is soft-landingish” — polite econ-speak for saying growth is decreasing steadily.

quite the backdrop for “more people need to lose their jobs” https://t.co/AndhaayB4g

— jordan (@JordanUhl) January 6, 2023

“This looks like the right direction of travel re: jobs,” New York Times economic reporter Jeanna Smialek said on Twitter, above a chart depicting a steady decline in jobs. “But it’s probably not *as much* of a slowdown as the Fed wants, yet,” Smialek hedged, adding that “[Federal Reserve] Chair Powell is looking for notable cooling in wages” — the dip in wage growth depicted in the jobs report apparently not steep enough.

Others reacted to the news with even less restrained enthusiasm. “Wage growth … slowed a lot,” tweeted Harvard economics professor Jason Furman, declaring that it represented the “best reason for hope on moderating inflation.”

Even President Joe Biden welcomed the news, saying that “this moderation in job growth is appropriate,” after acknowledging that “average monthly job gains have come down from over 600,000 a month at the end of last year to closer to 200,000 a month.”

Last year, amid the economic recovery following the dips of the pandemic, the central bankers of the U.S. Federal Reserve launched a campaign of some of the steepest interest rate hikes in years in an attempt to tamp down inflation. By making money more expensive to borrow, rate hikes can reduce inflation by slowing down the economy and driving up unemployment.

“While higher interest rates, slower growth, and softer labor market conditions will bring down inflation, they will also bring some pain to households and businesses,” Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said in August. “These are the unfortunate costs of reducing inflation.”

Not all experts agree. Some argue that the medicine of rate hikes and their attendant costs to workers, including higher unemployment and lower wages, can be worse than the inflationary disease. Other dissenting experts say the primary, underlying causes of inflation — a pandemic, supply-chain crisis, corporate concentration, climate crisis straining agriculture — aren’t addressed by tighter monetary policy and that the pandemic-related inflation was always going to be transitory.

At stake in the debate is millions of Americans’ jobs. To tame inflation, former treasury secretary and economist Larry Summers has called for a year of 10 percent unemployment, far above what we have now and which would see millions of people put out of work. The Fed, for now, appears to be heeding that advice, albeit on a smaller scale — a scale that could grow depending on which side of the debate prevails.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., has warned that the Fed’s rate hikes “risks triggering a devastating recession.” Warren’s assessment was echoed by the Fed’s own research, which this summer warned that, in a past example, aggressive interest rate hikes in rapid succession resulted in the depression of 1920. The United Nations has also called on the Fed to stop its rate hikes, warning that it risks a “global recession.” The International Monetary Fund issued a similar warning, as did a World Bank paper.

Rate hikes can be an effective tool against inflation depending on its causes, but it is far from the only one. The inflation currently besetting the U.S. is being driven by forces beyond the control of the Fed, like supply chain problems and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Warren argued. (Princeton political science professor Thomas Ferguson identifies the same causes as well as another one: extreme weather events resulting from climate change.)

Instead of rate hikes, Warren suggested several other ways to bring down inflation, including fighting corporate price gouging with aggressive antitrust policies, bringing more parents into the workforce by subsidizing child care, strengthening supply chains by ending tax breaks for corporations that offshore jobs, and bringing down drug prices by allowing Medicare to negotiate them.

“As with any illness, the right medicine starts with the right diagnosis,” Warren has said. “Unfortunately, the Fed has seized on aggressive rate hikes — a big dose of the only medicine at its disposal — even though they are largely ineffective against many of the underlying causes of this inflationary spike.”

Warren has asked Powell, the Fed chair, how many job losses the central bank is willing to accept in its war on inflation. The Fed has no clear answer.

In a press release announcing further rate hikes last month, the Fed specified the inflation rate it was aiming for — 2 percent — but, in terms of employment, only vaguely claimed to seek the “maximum.”

In contrast to the 2 percent figure, the president of the New York Fed recently said unemployment could reach 5 percent this year — representing millions of people losing their jobs. Despite the Fed’s famous mandate to pursue both the highest employment and lowest inflation possible, the priority seems obvious.

Inflation has been steadily falling since July, buoying hopes that the “pain to households” that Powell warned about might subside. For now, though, it appears the Fed’s aggressive war on inflation is just beginning, despite growing warnings that it could trigger a recession.

An alarming but little-noticed report released by the St. Louis Fed on December 28 found that slightly over half of U.S. states are experiencing “recession-like conditions” that serve as a key indicator for a coming national recession.

“Huge downward revision to November wage growth,” Dean Baker, an economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research, said of the new jobs report. An earlier report had suggested wages were rising again, but the finding was corrected in the latest report once better data became available. Dean called on the Federal Reserve to “hold the rate hikes please.”

The post Financial World Celebrates Slowing Wage and Employment Growth in New Jobs Report appeared first on The Intercept.

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