The secret life of Jimmy Zhong, who stole – and lost – more than $3 billion

US Top News and Analysis 

Athens, Georgia, is home to the University of Georgia, and the police there are used to college town-type crimes: break-ins, bar fights and assorted rowdiness. That kind of thing.

But the 911 call that came in on the night of March 13, 2019, was unlike anything the Athens-Clarke County Police Department had ever encountered.

On the phone was 28-year-old Jimmy Zhong, a local party boy and Georgia alum who frequented Athens’ drinking establishments. He wasn’t like the other town rowdies – Zhong was also a computer expert who had an unusually robust digital home surveillance system.

Now, he was calling to report a crime: hundreds of thousands of dollars in crypto currency that he said had been stolen from his home. Thinking of all that lost money, Zhong was distressed.

In March 2019, someone broke into Zhong’s home, shattering the window.
Source: Athens-Clarke County Police

“I’m having a panic attack,” Zhong told the dispatcher, according to a recording obtained by CNBC.

Zhong turned down the dispatcher’s offer of an ambulance, and began trying to explain the situation. “I’m an investor in bitcoin, which is like an online thing,” he said.

What happened next would bring an end to a nearly decade long manhunt and solve one of the biggest crimes of the crypto era. And it also would lead to the largest seizure of cryptocurrency from an individual in the history of the Department of Justice.

Zhong’s emergency call that winter evening sent investigators down a long digital trail that led back to the earliest days of bitcoin and revealed a dark truth about the universe of hackers and coders responsible for the creation of cryptocurrencies. It’s a world where heroes and villains traded places and could even be the same people.

None of it would go at all the way Zhong wanted.

The 911 call didn’t produce a suspect in the theft from Zhong’s house. Athens police were dealing with one of their first crypto cases and unfamiliar with the shadowy underworld, and they failed to make progress in the case.

So Zhong turned to local private investigator Robin Martinelli, who owns and operates Martinelli Investigations in nearby Loganville, Georgia.

Robin Martinelli, Martinelli Investigations owner and private investigator.
CNBC

A former sheriff’s deputy turned PI, Martinelli was far from an expert in crypto. She specialized in process serving, cheating spouses and custody investigations, the type of probes that once got her firm featured on an episode of “The Montel Williams Show.”

Martinelli had recently undergone surgery to amputate one leg, leaving her to conduct her surveillance operations with the help of a prosthetic.

Still, she was motivated to solve Zhong’s case.

“When you wake up and don’t put two feet on the ground, but you still have to run a company, you got to get out there and kick ass,” Martinelli told CNBC in an interview for the new documentary, “Crypto 911: Exposing a Bitcoin Billionaire.”

She began by examining Zhong’s robust surveillance video archive of his home. In looking at footage from the night of the crime, Martinelli spotted a slender male figure.

Surveillance footage CNBC obtained captures someone breaking into Zhong’s home in March 2019.
Source: Athens-Clarke County Police  

“We could tell that they had like a hood on – a gray hood – but then they had almost like a black ski mask,” Martinelli said.

The suspect appeared to know his way around Zhong’s house, which led Martinelli to believe that he was a friend or at least someone who had heard Zhong boast about his bitcoin stash. From the video, Martinelli was able to determine the suspect’s height and even the size of his hands.

She said she began her investigation by putting Zhong’s friends under surveillance, following them to their homes and downtown bars on Broad Street and College Avenue. She put trackers on cars and scoured social media and conducted background checks.

As she watched Zhong’s bar friends come and go, Martinelli formed a low opinion of the group. She described them as “very, very casual, plastic, not really caring, maybe using Jimmy a little bit.”

Martinelli said Zhong appeared resistant to her theories, especially when they began to focus on his circle of friends. Martinelli eventually settled on one suspect in particular who she believed had stolen 150 bitcoins from Jimmy. At the time, that amount of the digital currency was worth nearly $600,000.

Zhong didn’t want to hear it, she said.

“He would get upset when I would kind of mention somebody would had to have known where this cash was,” Martinelli said. And she understood why Zhong was so hurt by the idea that someone close to him could have betrayed him.

“Jimmy wanted to be loved,” she said. “Jimmy wanted friends.”

Even as Martinelli soured on the friend group, she was warming up to her client, who she perceived as an odd man in search of friends.

“Jimmy was a good guy,” she said. 

A lot of people around Athens felt similarly about him.

In the years before the theft, Zhong was known for throwing a lot of money around town. He was the kind of guy who would buy a round of expensive shots for the whole bar, hundreds of dollars vanishing in seconds down eager throats.

Zhong pictured with two women in front of a limousine.
Source: Zhong’s social media profile

Although he lived in a modest off-campus bungalow, near student housing and the downtown college bar scene, he stayed at fancy hotels, including the Ritz Carlton, the Plaza and the Waldorf Astoria, according to court documents CNBC reviewed. He shopped at high-end stores such as Louis Vuitton, Gucci and Jimmy Choo. He drove fancy cars, including a Tesla. He bought a second home, a lake house with a dock in Gainesville, Georgia, a short drive from Athens. He stocked it with jet skis, boats, a stripper pole, and lots and lots of liquor.

Zhong pictured with two women on a yacht.
Source: Zhong’s social media profile

His parties were epic.

Zhong was living his best life with no visible source of income. As far as anyone knew, he didn’t really have a job. He told his friends that he’d gotten into bitcoin early, mining thousands of coins in the earliest days of the technology. Zhong told people he dabbled in crypto as far back as 2009, the year bitcoin was invented by the mysterious Satoshi Nakamoto and a small crew of developers tied online to the anonymous crypto creator.

Whatever Zhong was doing, he was making mountains of cash. And he was willing to splurge.

In 2018, when his beloved Georgia Bulldogs football team made the Rose Bowl, Zhong rounded up a small group of friends for a pilgrimage to Los Angeles. 

Zhong pictured with a group of friends at the 2018 Rose Bowl game.
Source: Zhong’s social media profile

“It really felt like with Jimmy, there were no limits,” Stefana Masic, a Georgia alum and one of the friends on the trip, told CNBC. 

Stefana Masic, Zhong’s friend.
CNBC

Masic said not only did Zhong pay for all the tickets, but he also rented a private jet for the cross-country flight. And he gave each friend up to $10,000 for a Beverly Hills shopping spree on Rodeo Drive. They spent it on outfits, accessories and baubles to wear in the city.

“I had never flown private before, and I never stayed in such a nice Airbnb. It was cool because, you know, I got to experience a lot of things that I normally wouldn’t.”

As he was cheering on his team in LA, Zhong couldn’t have known that a small group of agents from the IRS Criminal Investigation unit, led by officials in the same city, were painstakingly trying to solve a crime that dated back years. 

What had captured the investigators’ attention was a 2012 hack in which someone had stolen 50,000 bitcoins from a site on the dark web called Silk Road, according to court documents CNBC reviewed. That site was one of the earliest crypto marketplaces, where anonymous buyers and sellers exchanged all manner of illicit material. It was full of drugs, guns, pornography and other stuff people wanted to keep secret.

Over the years, the value of the bitcoin stolen by the Silk Road hacker had soared to more than $3 billion, according to court documents. Investigators could track the location of the currency on the blockchain, which is a public ledger of all transactions. But they couldn’t see the identity of the new owner of the funds. So they watched and waited for years as the hacker transferred funds from account to account, peeled some away, and pushed some of it through crypto “mixers” designed to obscure the source of the money.

Finally, Chainalysis, a blockchain analytics company that was tracing the digital wallets containing the stolen Silk Road assets, saw the hacker made a tiny mistake. He transferred around $800 worth to a crypto exchange that followed established banking rules, including so-called know your customer processes, requiring real names and addresses of account holders.

The account was registered in Zhong’s name. The transaction took place in September 2019, six months after Zhong’s 911 call to the local police.

That alone wasn’t enough to prove Zhong was the hacker. They had to be sure.

So the IRS called the Athens-Clarke County Police Department and asked for some help, according to sources at both agencies. At the time, the police investigation into Zhong’s own crime report had been languishing.

“I got a call from an IRS agent,” Lt. Jody Thompson, who leads the local property and financial crimes unit, told CNBC.  “And he said, ‘can I come by and speak to you about Jimmy?’ And I was like, sure, I remember this case.”

Lt. Jody Thompson, Athens-Clarke County Police.
CNBC

After that, Thompson joined forces with IRS-CI special agent Trevor McAleenan and Shaun MaGruder, CEO of a cyber intelligence company called BlockTrace. MaGruder’s company works with the IRS as an embedded contractor and was hired for its experience untangling complicated blockchain transactions. 

Shaun MaGruder, BlockTrace CEO.
CNBC

Together, the three investigators said they devised a plan. They would approach Zhong using a ruse, telling him they were investigating the crime that he’d called about, the one in which a thief had stolen hundreds of thousands of dollars of his bitcoin.

In reality, they were investigating Zhong for a crime they believed he had committed. A crime whose proceeds were now worth billions of dollars. 

When the three men knocked on the door of his lake home in Gainesville, Zhong opened it enthusiastically, according to body camera footage CNBC exclusively obtained. He believed the police officer and the two specialists were there to help solve his crypto cold case.

“If you guys solve this for me, I will invite you out for a party,” Zhong told the trio on the body camera footage.

The video shows the officers pouring on the praise. They called his front door “beautiful.” They called his speakers “crazy,” and they complimented his dog, Chad. They asked for a tour of the house. Body camera footage shows the men tapping on stone floors, looking in closets and checking out wood paneling. Zhong didn’t know it, but they were scouring for secret compartments. 

Zhong brought investigators to his basement, equipped with a full bar and a stripper pole.

“Is this your workout?” McAleenan asked Zhong.

“Nope, that’s for girls,” Zhong replied.

Body camera footage CNBC obtained shows investigators in Zhong’s basement, which contains a full bar and a stripper pole.
Source: Athens-Clarke County Police

The body camera footage also shows they got a good look at Zhong’s security system, asking him to explain each of its features and capabilities. Zhong is also captured showing them a metal case he said he once used to store $1 million in cash so he could impress a woman.

“Did it work?” asked Lt. Thompson.

“Nope,” Zhong said.

“It never does,” Thompson replied.

The law enforcement officers learned that Zhong had a flamethrower on the premises. And they saw his AR-15 rifle hanging on the wall.

MaGruder said Zhong’s level of sophistication was apparent.

“He was navigating that keyboard like I’ve never seen someone navigate a keyboard,” MaGruder said. “He didn’t have to use a mouse because he knew all the hotkeys.”

Playing on the ruse, the officers asked Zhong to open his laptop and explain how he came to have the bitcoin in the first place. Zhong sat on the couch next to the investigators and entered his password, asking them to turn away as he typed.

When he opened the laptop, law enforcement could see his bitcoin wallet.

“Lo and behold, he had $60 or $70 million worth of bitcoins right there next to us,” MaGruder told CNBC in an interview. 

Body camera footage CNBC obtained captures Zhong showing investigators millions of dollars of bitcoin on his laptop.
Source: Athens-Clarke County Police

The evidence was enough to convince the investigators they were on the right track. As he exited Zhong’s lake house, MaGruder told CNBC he thought to himself, “This is incredible. I think we found our guy.”

The first visit allowed the investigators to obtain a federal search warrant for Zhong’s home, McAleenan said. McAleenan, MaGruder, and Thompson returned with an enormous team of officers on Nov. 9, 2021.

Before the officers raided the house, McAleenan had to explain to Zhong that he wasn’t really trying to help him. He was trying to convict him.

“I said, Jimmy, you know me as ‘Trevor.’ I’m actually Trevor McAleenan. I’m a special agent with IRS Criminal Investigation, and we’re here to execute a federal-approved warrant on your house,” McAleenan said.

Trevor McAleenan, IRS-CI Special Agent.
CNBC

“And he kind of had this look like, ‘Am I being punked?'” McAleenan added.

At that moment, another officer slid a device known as a “jiggler” into Zhong’s laptop, causing the cursor to continually move and giving law enforcement access to the password-protected contents of the computer, McAleenan said.

Officers flooded into the home, cracking open every crevice in search of evidence. McAleenan said in an upstairs closet, they found a popcorn tin with a computer hidden inside that held millions of dollars worth of bitcoin.

The popcorn tin where investigators found a single board computer hidden inside that held millions of dollars worth of bitcoin.
Source: IRS Criminal Investigations
The single board computer investigators found inside the popcorn tin.
Source: IRS Criminal Investigations

Using sniffer dogs trained to detect electronics, McAleenan said they found a safe buried in concrete under some basement floor tile. Court documents said the safe contained precious metals, stacks of cash and physical bitcoins minted in the early years of crypto. They also found a wallet with bitcoin from the original hack of Silk Road in 2012.

Physical bitcoin and cash investigators found during the search warrant.
Source: IRS Criminal Investigations

Zhong was busted.

“Really late at night we were able to say we were successful,” McAleenan said. “We found the evidence that we were looking for. And the house lit up. I mean, every agent on the site cheered.”

As they sorted through the evidence, agents discovered something else about the unusual Mr. Zhong. He was, in crypto slang, an “original gangster,” or OG.

Investigators discovered that as far back as 2009, the year bitcoin was invented, Zhong was among a small group of early coders who worked to develop and perfect the technology. He was a smaller contributor than some of the other OG players who have since become famous in the bitcoin community, McAleenan said. But investigators concluded that he made contributions to the original bitcoin code and offered ideas to the early developers on key topics like how to reduce blockchain size.

In other words, a hacker who had been involved in the development of bitcoin itself went on to become one of the biggest bitcoin thieves of all time.

“He is one of the, as we dubbed it, the original gangsters, OGs, as far as bitcoin core software developers,” McAleenan said. “He had been in this space for quite a while.”

The irony of Zhong’s role in the history of bitcoin is emblematic of the culture that built the cryptocurrency in the first place, said Nathaniel Popper, author of “Digital Gold: Bitcoin and the Inside Story of the Misfits and Millionaires Trying to Reinvent Money.”

Nathaniel Popper, author of “Digital Gold: Bitcoin and the Inside Story of the Misfits and Millionaires Trying to Reinvent Money.”
CNBC

“Everybody came to this for their own reason,” Popper told CNBC. “And it was, as a result of that, a very sort of eclectic and eccentric group of people.”

“Bitcoin was always shot through with irony,” Popper said. “Yes, there was something ironic about a bitcoin proponent stealing bitcoin from another bitcoin proponent. But I think that was also in some ways a part of what defined bitcoin.” 

Zhong was charged with wire fraud. After pleading guilty, he was sentenced to one year and a day in federal prison. Zhong, now 33 years old, began his sentence at the federal prison camp in Montgomery, Alabama, on July 14, 2023.

In the end, Zhong didn’t get to keep the stolen bitcoin. The U.S. government seized those assets. Officials opened a process that allowed victims of the hack to apply to get their bitcoin back, according to a forfeiture document CNBC reviewed.

Nobody came forward to claim the loot. That’s not surprising, given that users of Silk Road in 2012 were largely drug dealers and their customers. The federal government simply sold off the stolen bitcoin and will keep the proceeds. Some of the revenue generated will likely be shared with the Athens-Clarke County Police Department, in recognition of the local officers’ help in the case, according to the IRS-CI.

As he left the courthouse after his sentencing on April 14, CNBC attempted to question Zhong about his role in the crime. Zhong covered his head with his coat and left without saying a word. 

In his statement to the judge before sentencing, Zhong said having billions in stolen bitcoin made him feel important. 

Zhong with his attorneys, Michael Bachner and John Garland, at sentencing.
Source: IRS Criminal Investigations

Zhong’s attorney, Michael Bachner, says the theft never actually damaged the U.S. government.

Michael Bachner, Zhong’s attorney.
CNBC

“The government has certainly not been hurt by Jimmy’s conduct whatsoever,” Bachner told CNBC. “If Jimmy had not stolen the coins and the government had in fact seized them from [Silk Road operator Ross Ulbricht] they would have sold them two years later in 2014 as they did with other coins.”

At that point, the government “would have gotten $320 a coin or made somewhere about $14 million,” Bachner said. “Now, as a result of Jimmy having them, the government has gotten a $3 billion profit.”

Zhong asked for no jail time because he was concerned about the fate of Chad, his 13-year-old dog. Zhong has had a difficult life. On the autism spectrum, Bachner said he was severely bullied at school. And he found solace over the years in an online community where he could deploy his computing skills. 

Chad, Zhong’s elderly dog.
Source: Zhong’s social media profile

As for the original crime against Jimmy Zhong — the bitcoin theft in Athens that led him to the 911 call in March 2019 — that crime has never been solved. The perpetrator remains at large.

Zhong’s dog, Chad, is staying with a friend.

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Bears fans get into nasty brawl at Soldier Field

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Chicago Bears fans got into a nasty brawl at Soldier Field on Sunday as they watched their team fall to their NFC North rival – the Minnesota Vikings.

The fight appeared to take place on the concourse and involved multiple people. A man wearing a Justin Fields jersey pushed one man off him and then punched a man in a Walter Payton jersey. The man in the Payton jersey went down.

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The man in the Fields jersey peeled the man he shoved off of another person. Then, a man in a black-hooded sweatshirt got on top of him and started punching him in the face. The man in the Payton jersey then tried to get involved again, and he got shoved backward.

The man in the sweatshirt delivered two more punches and then a kick in the head before the skirmish finally ended.

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It is unclear what sparked the melee.

The Vikings won the game 19-13 in a game that saw Fields go down with an injury. He suffered a dislocated thumb and is doubtful to play in Chicago’s next game.

Fan fights have been prevalent over the course of the season so far. At least one person has died afterward, but it appears the rage started in the preseason and will continue through the rest of the season with no signs of it stopping any time soon.

 

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Car thefts surge as FBI data reveal latest crime trends

Nearly a million vehicles – worth more than $20 billion – were stolen throughout the United States last year as the rate of motor vehicle thefts increased by more than 8% nationwide, the FBI revealed Monday.

The agency’s 2022 Crime in the Nation data provided insights into the latest crime trends based on statistics shared by thousands of law enforcement agencies around the country.

The FBI’s numbers showed police handed down 1,213,913 total charges related to motor vehicle thefts in 2022 within the 93.5% of law enforcement agencies – 15,724  total – that share their data with.

In 2021, the FBI recorded 636,941 total charges related to motor vehicle theft

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Motor vehicle theft trends from 2012 to 2022

Motor vehicle thefts increased by an estimated 8.6% in 2022, per data compiled by the FBI from 93.5% of U.S. police agencies. (FBI)

However, the agency said in an earlier press release, only 76.9% of U.S. police departments shared their data with the FBI in 2021 due to its switch from the Summary Reporting System – an aggregate monthly tally of crimes – to its National Incident-Based Reporting System which “provide[s] circumstances and context for crimes like location, time of day and whether an incident was cleared.”

But the agency said that it managed to account for last year’s data shortcomings, arriving at an estimated 8.6% increase in motor vehicle thefts and 8.1% increase in carjackings between the two years.

Nearly 70,000 were arrested for motor vehicle theft in 2022, with 2,000 of those suspects carrying a firearm on their person when they were arrested.

Reflecting national data, motor vehicle thefts on college campuses shot up from 2,700 incidents in 2021 to 4,900 incidents in 2022. 

Of approximately 69,600 motor vehicle theft arrestees whose age and sex were reported to the FBI, 78.3% were men. Men under 18 accounted for 17.8% of reported stolen vehicles. Men between 35 and 64 were the most largely represented group, accounting for about 26% of the total. 

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Property crime offenses in all categories spiked by 7.1 percent in 2022 from the previous year.

Property crime offenses in all categories spiked by 7.1% in 2022 from the previous year.  (FBI)

Women between 25 and 34, meanwhile, carried out the most vehicle thefts among their sex, accounting for 31% of the approximately 15,100 car thefts carried out by women and 8% of the total thefts.

In total, per the FBI data, the stolen cars reported by the agency were collectively worth $21,156,141,491. Of that amount, about $8,140,125,633 – 38% of the total value – was returned to owners by law enforcement.

Carjacking incidents – thefts of automobiles that involved use of force – increased from an estimated 23,500 incidents in 2021 to 25,400 last year, per the data. At least one weapon was involved in 22,700 of 2022’s carjackings. 

Nearly half of all carjackings took place between 8 p.m. and 4 a.m., the agency wrote.

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Nearly half of all reported 2022 carjacking incidents took place between 8pm and 4am, per the FBI

Nearly half of all reported 2022 carjacking incidents took place between 8 p.m. and 4 a.m., per the FBI. (FBI)

More offenders worked in groups, per the data, with a 13% increase seen in carjacking arrests involving two or more suspects. 

The rate of property crimes per 100,000 citizens increased 7.1% from 2021 to 2022, per the data, with a total of 6,513,829 related charges filed by police. Larcenies, the agency said, increased by 7.8%. The rate of burglaries, however, remained unchanged.

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But, amid the increase in property crimes, the statistics showed violent crimes were trending downward, decreasing collectively by 1.7% last year.

Homicides dropped by 6.1%, the agency estimated, and rapes dipped by 5.4% from 2021. Aggravated assaults saw a lesser decrease with 1.1% fewer incidents.

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Jordan will not accept Palestinian refugees, king says

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Jordan will not be accepting Palestinian refugees displaced by the Israeli-Hamas conflict, the nation’s monarch says.

King Abdullah II made the remark Tuesday following a meeting with German Chancellor OIaf Scholz in Berlin.

“This is a red line,” Abdullah said. “No refugees to Jordan and also no refugees to Egypt.”

Hamas leaders have encouraged residents in Gaza to stay, but the Israeli Defense Forces is expected to launch widespread ground offensives that could push civilians south into nearby Jordan or Egypt.

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“This is a situation that has to be handled within Gaza and the West Bank,” Abdullah said. “And you don’t have to carry this out on the shoulders of others.”

At least 4,200 people have been killed in the war on both sides, including at least 1,400 Israeli civilians and soldiers and 30 Americans.

Palestinian health authorities say at least 2,808 Palestinians have been killed and more than 10,950 wounded. Thirteen American citizens are unaccounted for.

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Abdullah lamented the continued bloodshed between Israel and Hamas, saying the violence poses an existential threat to the region.

“The whole region is on the brink,” Abdullah said. “This new cycle of violence is leading us towards the abyss.”

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Hamas terrorists from within Gaza are still firing rockets into central Israel as of Tuesday morning, posing a continued threat to Israeli civilians.

“Their ability to target major cities remains. 6,500 rockets have been fired into Israel since last Saturday,” reported Fox News’ Trey Yingst, who is in Israel.

The rockets come 11 days after the war began last Saturday, after Hamas launched a surprise attack on Israeli soil, killing hundreds of soldiers and civilians on the Jewish holiday of Simchat Torah.

 

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Gunfire breaks out near Guatemalan pro-democracy protest

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One person died and at least two more were injured by gunshots near a pro-democracy demonstration in Guatemala on Monday, local authorities said.

Victor Gomez, spokesman for the volunteer firemen in Malacatan, near the border with Mexico, said it was not clear whether the victims were protesters themselves, or just caught nearby.

The incident marked the beginning of a third week of demonstrations against Attorney General Consuelo Porras, who protesters accuse of attempting to undermine a popular vote for progressive President-elect Bernardo Arévalo.

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Videos from Malacatan circulating on social media painted a chaotic picture. Some appear to show civilians and police officers fleeing as bursts of gunfire are heard. In one recording, a vehicle and a police patrol are burning. It is not clear who fired the shots.

In response to the incident, Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei said authorities were “carrying out corresponding investigations” and promised more details in due course.

The National Police later announced the arrest of 11 people.

The Interior Department said in a statement that after the attack it coordinated a search for the vehicles involved and found three wounded people, but it made no mention of a death.

Arévalo took to the social network X, formerly known as Twitter, to condemn the violence. “We demand that the authorities ensure the safety of those who peacefully demonstrate and guarantee that this act does not go unpunished,” he said.

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The incident is the latest violent episode after 15 days of protests and roadblocks in the Central American country.

On Sunday, Porras’ supporters in Guatemala City called for violence against demonstrators blocking roads. Then on Monday, other social media videos appeared to show people in civilian clothing carrying machetes attacking protestors at three roadblocks in the township of El Asintal, Retalhuleu, just under 55 miles southwest of Malacatan.

Porras herself has called for the roadblocks to be cleared, using force if necessary, “in the public interest.” On Monday she urged the government to sack Interior Secretary Napoleón Barrientos for failing to do so.

Demonstrators maintain that after Arévalo’s victory in the August runoff election, Porras mounted an undemocratic challenge against Arévalo, his left-wing Seed Movement party and electoral authorities. They have called for the resignation of Porras, prosecutors Rafael Curruchiche and Cinthia Monterroso, and Judge Fredy Orellana.

 

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Images show crowds of people gathering at the Rafah crossing between Gaza and Egypt

US Top News and Analysis 

Maxar collected new satellite images over the past 24 hours that focus on the southern border of Gaza and the Rafah border crossing that leads to Egypt.
Satellite image ©2023 Maxar Technologies

The U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees said Tuesday that the deepening humanitarian crisis has become “really drastic,” with crowds of people seen waiting to leave on the Gaza side of the border and an aid convoy of trucks lined up at the Rafah crossing in Egypt.

Located on the Gaza-Egypt border, the Rafah crossing is the sole crossing point between Egypt and the Gaza Strip. To most of the more than 2 million Palestinians living in the enclave, it represents the only potential exit as Israel continues its aerial bombardment campaign.

Egypt tightly restricts the opening of the Rafah crossing and has so far been reluctant to open it for the movement of people unless Israel allows humanitarian aid to enter the territory.

Talks between Egypt and Israel on Monday failed to give the green light for the delivery of desperately needed humanitarian supplies into Gaza.

People living in the territory have been caught in the crossfire of the Israel-Hamas war, with Israel declaring a full siege of the Gaza Strip at the start of last week following a devastating attack from the Palestinian militant group Hamas on Oct. 7.

The United Nations has repeatedly called for humanitarian access to the Gaza Strip via the Rafah crossing.

Here are some of the latest images from the Rafah crossing:

Maxar collected new satellite images over the past 24 hours that focus on the southern border of Gaza and the Rafah border crossing that leads to Egypt.
Satellite image ©2023 Maxar Technologies
Maxar collected new satellite images over the past 24 hours that focus on the southern border of Gaza and the Rafah border crossing that leads to Egypt.
Satellite image ©2023 Maxar Technologies
Palestinians, some with foreign passports hoping to cross into Egypt and others waiting for aid wait at the Rafah crossing in the southern Gaza strip, on October 16, 2023.
Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images
Aid convoy trucks are seen at the Rafah border with Gaza on October 17, 2023 in North Sinai, Egypt.
Mahmoud Khaled | Getty Images News | Getty Images
Volunteers and NGOs staff are seen at the Rafah border with Gaza on October 17, 2023 in North Sinai, Egypt.
Mahmoud Khaled | Getty Images News | Getty Images
Palestinians, some with foreign passports hoping to cross into Egypt and others waiting for aid wait at the Rafah crossing in the southern Gaza strip, on October 16, 2023.
Mohammed Abed | Afp | Getty Images

Tamara Alrifai, spokesperson for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA), said Tuesday that it was imperative for the group to be able to distribute humanitarian supplies urgently and safely into the Gaza Strip.

“Over the last two days, reports of about 1 million people — that is a sea of people — going south moved using whatever means they could and given the lack of fuel in Gaza a lot of them moved by feet. So, the images we have been receiving from my colleagues are harrowing images of people on their feet walking under airstrikes and air bombings to try to find shelter in a safer area,” Alrifai told CNBC’s “Street Signs Europe.”

“My colleagues from UNRWA have also moved south and are now in one of our logistical bases, effectively a warehouse in the south of the strip. In that warehouse, my colleagues are working, sleeping and eating whatever they find with around 6,000 civilians from Gaza.”

Alrifai said the conditions in the warehouse were “very, very difficult,” noting that her UNRWA colleagues each have access to one liter of drinking water per day.

“The situation is really drastic. We have to get aid in. We have to get supplies in. We have to get fuel in and mostly all that access has to be safe,” she added.

VIDEO4:2604:26
‘We have to get aid in’: UNRWA spokesperson says the situation in the Gaza Strip is really drastic

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Rapper convicted of pumping millions to Obama campaign seeks new trial, says ex-attorney used AI for argument

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Pras Michel of the Fugees is seeking a new trial by arguing his former lawyer used artificial intelligence to generate his closing argument before the hip-hop artist was found guilty of helping a foreign national launder millions of dollars in illegitimate contributions to former President Barack Obama’s campaign. 

Michel was convicted in April after being accused of taking part in an extensive conspiracy to use about $88 million in foreign funds to engage in illegal back-channel lobbying and make unlawful campaign contributions at the direction of the People’s Republic of China. He filed a motion on Monday asking the court for a new trial on all counts. 

The motion argues Michel’s former defense attorney David Kenner “used an experimental AI program to write his closing argument, which made frivolous arguments, conflated the schemes and failed to highlight key weaknesses in the Government’s case.” 

Kenner “then publicly boasted that the AI program ‘turned hours or days of legal work into seconds,’” Michel’s new defense team from D.C.-based ArentFox Schiff wrote. “It is now apparent that Kenner and his co-counsel appear to have had an undisclosed financial stake in the AI program, and they experimented with it during Michel’s trial so they could issue a press release afterward promoting the program — a clear conflict of interest.”

FUGEES RAPPER PRAS FOUND GUILTY OF POLITICAL CONSPIRACY IN TRIAL THAT INCLUDED TESTIMONY FROM DICAPRIO

In a declaration accompanying the motion, former federal prosecutor Peter Zeidenberg noted how “Michel’s prior publicist also informed members of the current defense team that Kenner proudly stated at the end of the trial words to the effect of ‘AI wrote our closing.’” Zeidenberg cited a press release published by a firm called Eyelevel in May that claimed its AI litigation assistance technology “made history” in “becoming the first use of generative AI in a federal trial.”

“The case involved Pras Michel, a former member of the hip-hop band The Fugees, who was on trial for international fraud charges,” the press release said, omitting the fact Michel had been convicted on all ten felony charges after three days of jury deliberation. 

The three-week trial involved testimony from high-profile witnesses including Leonardo DiCaprio and former Attorney General Jeff Sessions. 

LEONARDO DICAPRIO TESTIFIES IN FEDERAL CASE AGAINST RAPPER ACCUSED OF FUNNELING MILLIONS

The firm’s press release quoted Kenner as having described the AI technology as “an absolute game changer for complex litigation.”

According to court documents and evidence presented at trial, Michel conspired with wealthy Malaysian businessman Jho Low and several others to engage in undisclosed lobbying campaigns at the direction of Low and the Vice Minister of Public Security for the People’s Republic of China, the Justice Department said. A federal grand jury found Michel guilty of using his celebrity status and access to influence U.S. government officials on behalf of undisclosed foreign interests. 

The entertainer was convicted of orchestrating an unregistered, back-channel campaign beginning in or about 2017 to influence the Obama administration and the Department of Justice to drop tan embezzlement investigation of Low in connection with the international strategic and development company known as 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB), and to send a Chinese national back to China, as well as conspiring to make and conceal foreign and conduit campaign contributions during the 2012 U.S. presidential election.

 

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A’s Trevor May rips team’s owner as he announces retirement

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Oakland Athletics pitcher Trevor May announced his retirement from baseball on Monday and ripped the owner of his former team as the organization starts prepping its move to Las Vegas.

John Fisher has drawn the ire of fans over the last few seasons over the team’s low payroll, and things reached a boiling point when it was revealed he intended to move to the team just a little farther east. Fans came out in full force and protested the move, imploring Fisher to “sell the team.”

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May appeared on a Twitch stream and did not mince words.

“Sell the team, dude. I tried to get a ‘Sell’ shirt. It didn’t get here fast enough. Sell it, man. Let someone who actually, like, takes pride in the things they own, own something. There’s actually people who give a s— about the game. Let them do it. Take mommy and daddy’s money somewhere else, dork,” he said referring to Fisher’s parents who founded Gap.

“If you’re going to be a greedy f—, own it. There’s nothing weaker than being afraid of cameras. … Do what you’re going to do, bro. Whatever, you’re a billionaire, they exist, you guys have all this power — you shouldn’t have any because you haven’t earned any of it, but anyway, whatever.

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“It is what it is. Reality is you got handed everything you have. And now, you’re too soft to take any responsibility for anything you’re doing,”

Fisher told the Las Vegas Journal-Review in August he has not considered selling the team and claimed he lost millions.

“We’ll lose $40 million this year and in previous years, which included COVID when the losses were more significant, but we lost $175 million,” he told the paper.

The team finished 50-112 on the year.

 

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Morgan Stanley says buy this real estate name focused on sustainability after sell-off

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Hannon Armstrong ‘s improving fundamentals should lead to a turnaround for the stock, according to Morgan Stanley. The investment bank upgraded the stock to overweight from equal weight and reiterated its $23 per share price target. That forecast points to more than 32% upside from Monday’s close. Structured as a real estate investment trust, Hannon Armstrong provides renewable energy projects with debt and equity capital. Shares are down roughly 40% this year. Analysts led by Andrew Percoco attributed the steep decline to “overdone” investor frustrations toward the outlook for renewables. HASI YTD mountain HASI YTD chart The analysts believe the selloff cannot be justified when given the company’s strategic business decisions, along with its balance sheet flexibility and move toward an equity self-funding model. “At current levels, we estimate that the stock currently prices in no future dividend growth assuming an approximately 12% discount rate, an overly punitive assessment of HASI’s forward outlook,” the note said. Additionally, Morgan Stanley noted that the sustainable investment firm’s high cash flow can support steady dividends to come. Debt refinancing also poses no near-term risks – an added catalyst in this higher-rate environment – since Hannon Armstrong’s next corporate debt won’t mature until 2025 and 2026. Finally, the analyst praised the company’s demonstrated ability to maintain investment spreads in a higher-rate environment. “HASI has demonstrated success in pricing gross asset yields higher to account for higher interest rates, allowing it to generate consistent net investment margins across different funding environments,” he wrote. “We expect the stock to migrate toward our DDM [dividend discount model]-derived fair value as execution refocuses investors on HASI’s solid fundamentals.” Morgan Stanley isn’t the only firm on Wall Street that likes Hannon Armstrong. Earlier this month , Baird named the stock a bullish fresh pick, noting it sees more than 80% upside. — CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed to this report.

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Johnson & Johnson beats on earnings and hikes outlook as medtech, pharmaceutical sales surge

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An entry sign to the Johnson & Johnson campus shows their logo in Irvine, California on August 28, 2019.
Mark Ralston | AFP | Getty Images

Johnson & Johnson on Tuesday reported adjusted earnings and revenue that topped Wall Street’s expectations, and lifted its full-year guidance as sales in the company’s pharmaceutical and medical devices businesses surged.

It marks J&J’s first quarterly results since it completed the separation from its consumer health spinoff Kenvue in August, the company’s biggest shake-up in its 137-year history.

Upon that split, J&J lowered its full-year sales and profit guidance. 

The drugmaker raised that revised outlook on Tuesday: J&J expects 2023 sales of $83.6 billion to $84 billion, compared to a previous guidance of $83.2 billion to $84 billion in August. J&J also expects adjusted earnings per share of $10.07 to $10.13, up from a previous forecast of $10.00 to $10.10.

Investors are now focused on how J&J will perform as a standalone pharmaceutical and medical devices company.

Here’s what J&J reported compared with what Wall Street was expecting, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG, formerly known as Refinitiv:

Earnings per share: $2.66 adjusted vs. $2.52 expectedRevenue: $21.35 billion vs. $21.04 billion expected

J&J’s stock rose more than 1% in premarket trading Tuesday. Shares of J&J have dropped nearly 11% for the year, putting the company’s market value at roughly $379 billion.

The company, whose financial results are considered a bellwether for the broader health sector, said its sales during the quarter grew 6.8% over the same period last year. 

The pharmaceutical giant reported net income of $4.31 billion, or $1.69 per share. That was flat compared with net income of $4.31 billion, or $1.62 per share, for the same period a year ago.

Excluding certain items, adjusted earnings per share were $2.66 for the period.

J&J reported $13.89 billion in pharmaceutical sales, which grew more than 5% year over year. Excluding sales of its unpopular Covid vaccine, the pharmaceutical division raked in $13.85 billion. 

That business division is focused on developing drugs across different disease areas.

The company said the growth was driven by sales of Darzalex, a biologic for the treatment of multiple myeloma, along with Erleada, a prostate cancer treatment, and other oncology treatments. 

J&J’s blockbuster drug Stelara, which is used to treat a number of immune-mediated inflammatory diseases, also contributed to that growth. J&J will lose patent protection on Stelara later this year. 

The company said growth was partially offset by a decline in sales of its prostate cancer drug Zytiga and blood cancer drug Imbruvica, which is co-marketed by AbbVie and will be subject to the first round of Medicare drug price negotiations

J&J’s Covid vaccine also weighed on pharmaceutical sales growth. This quarter was the second without any U.S. sales from J&J’s Covid vaccine, which brought in $41 million in international revenue.

Meanwhile, sales for the company’s medical devices business rose to nearly $7.46 billion, up 10% from the third quarter of 2022. 

J&J said its acquisition of Abiomed, a cardiovascular medical technology company, in December fueled that rise.

J&J said growth came from electrophysiological products, which evaluate the heart’s electrical system and help doctors understand the cause of abnormal heart rhythms. Wound closure products and devices for orthopedic trauma, or serious injuries of the skeletal or muscular system, contributed, along with contact lenses.

The third-quarter results come amid investor anxiety over the thousands of lawsuits claiming that J&J’s talc-based products were contaminated with the carcinogen asbestos, which caused ovarian cancer and several deaths.

Those products, including J&J’s namesake baby powder, now fall under Kenvue. But J&J will assume all talc-related liabilities that arise in the U.S. and Canada.

In 2021, J&J offloaded its talc liabilities into a new subsidiary, LTL Management, and immediately filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protections. But a federal bankruptcy judge in July rejected J&J’s second attempt to resolve those lawsuits in bankruptcy.

J&J previously said LTL Management intends to appeal the decision.

J&J will hold a conference call with investors at 8:30 am ET.

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