South Korea: Talks with US on management of nukes underway

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea maintained that Seoul and Washington are discussing its involvement in U.S. nuclear weapons management in the face of intensifying North Korean threats, after President Joe Biden denied that the allies were discussing joint nuclear exercises.

The purported difference came as South Korea is seeking a greater U.S. security commitment after North Korea’s record number of missile tests and escalating nuclear doctrine last year caused security jitters among many people in the South.

Some experts say South Korea’s statement on the discussion is likely largely based on an agreement between their defense chiefs in November to conduct table-top exercises, usually computer simulations, annually and further strengthen the alliance’s information sharing, joint planning and execution. In November, they also reaffirmed the U.S. commitment to providing extended deterrence, a reference to a U.S. promise to use full U.S. capabilities, including nuclear, to protect its allies.

In a newspaper interview published Monday, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol said that Seoul and Washington were pushing for joint planning and training involving U.S. nuclear assets and that the United States responded positively to the idea. Asked by a reporter later at the White House about whether the two countries were discussing joint nuclear exercises, Biden replied, “No.”

After Biden’s comments created a brief stir in South Korea, Yoon’s top adviser for press affairs, Kim Eun-hye, issued a statement Tuesday to reconfirm Yoon’s earlier remarks. Kim said the two countries “are discussing an intel-sharing, a joint planning and subsequent joint execution plans over the management of U.S. nuclear assets in response to North Korea’s nuclear (threats).”

The White House National Security Council in a statement on Tuesday said Biden and Yoon have “tasked their teams to plan for an effective coordinated response to a range of scenarios, including nuclear use by North Korea.”

A senior Biden administration official said U.S. and South Korean officials are expected to hold table-top exercises soon to chart out a potential joint response to a range of scenarios, including deployment of a nuclear weapon by the North. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss planning.

Moon Seong Mook, an analyst for the Seoul-based Korea Research Institute for National Strategy, said Yoon likely was referring to the November agreement on the alliance’s capabilities, which he said definitely include U.S. nuclear assets that are essential to the U.S. extended deterrence commitment.

“South Korea isn’t a nuclear state so it won’t be likely South Korea jointly using U.S. nuclear weapons. But the wording (in the November agreement) meant that South and the U.S. would consult on the operations of U.S. nukes from the planning stage until the training stage,” said Moon, a retired brigadier general.

While some observers say Yoon’s comments to the Chosun Ilbo newspaper didn’t reveal much new development on the issue, Moon said that Yoon might have tried to emphasize efforts to boost the effectiveness of the U.S. extended deterrence because North Korea is escalating its nuclear threats on South Korea. In the interview, Yoon said he finds it difficult to assure his people of a security guarantee with the current levels of U.S. security commitment.

“This is an unnecessary dispute. Neither side was talking inaccurately,” said Park Won Gon, a professor at Seoul’s Ewha Womans University.

“The extended deterrence is a commitment and a promise but not a treaty or a binding one,” Park said. “For South Korea, they trust the U.S. but think there should be ways to institutionalize it because North Korea’s nuclear threats are rising. To do so, (the joint) planning and execution are the key.”

South Korea has no nuclear weapons and is under the protection of a U.S. “nuclear umbrella,” which guarantees a devastating American response in the event of an attack on its ally. But some experts question the effectiveness of such a security commitment, saying the decision to use U.S. nuclear weapons lies with the U.S. president.

Last year, North Korea test-launched more than 70 ballistic and other missiles capable of reaching the U.S. mainland and U.S. allies South Korea and Japan. In September, North Korea also adopted a new law authorizing the preemptive use of its bombs in a broad range of cases, including non-war scenarios.

During a recently ended ruling party meeting, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un ordered the “exponential” expansion of his country’s nuclear arsenal and the mass-production of tactical nuclear weapons missioned with attacking South Korea, as well as the development of a new ICBM tasked with having a “quick nuclear counterstrike” capability — a weapon he needs to strike the mainland.

On Wednesday, Yoon ordered officials to consider ending a 2018 tension-reduction deal with North Korea if the North launches provocations that violate South Korea’s territory, according to Yonhap news agency. It said Yoon made the instruction during a meeting to discuss North Korea’s recent flying of drones that Seoul says crossed the rivals’ border for the first time in five years.

Yoon’s office didn’t provide many details about his government’s discussion with the United States. Some observers say South Korea is seeking to obtain a greater role in the U.S. decision-making process on the deployment of its nuclear assets in times of tensions with North Korea.

Kim Taewoo, a former head of Seoul’s Korea Institute for National Unification, said the reported South Korea-U.S. discussion likely “benchmarked a NATO-style nuclear-sharing arrangement” that allows NATO member states’ warplanes to carry U.S. nuclear weapons. He said the discussion still appears to be falling short of the NATO arrangement because possible nuclear exercises between the two countries would likely be South Korean air force aircraft escorting U.S. aircraft simulating nuclear strikes during joint drills.

“North Korea would take this sensitively. (South Korea and the U.S.) are discussing this to get North Korea to take this sensitively … because that can be a deterrence against North Korea,” Kim Taewoo said. ___

Associated Press White House correspondent Zeke Miller contributed to this report from Washington.

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First ‘gender-queer’ priest in Church of England expresses desire for ‘normalizing’ identity among children

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A non-binary gender-queer Anglican priest in the United Kingdom is on record claiming to use the clerical position in hopes of “normalizing” such behavior among children.

“I try to get involved in, not just in my religious work but outside it, with the local secular LGBT youth groups,” said Rev. Bingo Allison, a Church of England priest in the Diocese of Liverpool who identifies as gender-queer and uses “they/them” pronouns, according to an interview with the Liverpool Echo.

“One of the biggest things is just being a visual representation in my community and going into schools, doing assemblies and making a huge difference in normalizing it for children. When I’m wearing my collar it lets children know that is OK and that there is a place in church and the outside world for people like me,” Allison added.

Allison, who claims to be the first non-binary gender-queer priest in England’s established church, claimed to have discovered a biblical basis for gender fluidity during a late-night reading of Genesis 1:27, which recounts how God created humans male and female.

UK SCHOOL CHAPLAIN SUES AFTER BEING FIRED, REPORTED AS TERRORIST FOR SERMON QUESTIONING LGBTQ ACTIVISTS

“So God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them,” reads the verse, which Allison maintained expresses “maleness to femaleness” instead of men and women.

Allison described the revelation as “a deepening spiritual experience” by which God “was guiding me into this new truth about myself.”

CAMBRIDGE DEAN DEFENDS SERMON ABOUT JESUS’ ‘TRANS BODY,’ ‘VAGINAL’ SIDE WOUND BLASTED AS ‘HERESY’

“One of the things that has kept with my ministry ever since is that transition and coming out can and should be a spiritual experience, as well as an emotional and social and sometimes physical one,” Allison told the U.K. outlet. “There is something beautiful about growing into who we were created to be and growing into our authentic selves.”

A third-generation priest and father of three who was ordained at Liverpool Cathedral in 2020, Allison claimed to have grown up in a household that was “strongly religious” and believed homosexuality and transgender behavior to be a “sinful thing.”

But after learning the term “gender-queer” about seven years ago, Allison said “everything suddenly clicked.”

“It was a lot harder than I thought having come out to myself to then remain in the closet,” Allison said. “There were definitely lots of times before when I kind of questioned my identity but growing up in a more conservative form of Christianity meant that it was just so far beyond my imagination.”

In a sermon commemorating Trans Day of Visibility in 2021, Allison likened the plight of transgender people to the suffering of martyrs mentioned in the 11th chapter of Hebrews in the New Testament.

CHURCH OF ENGLAND RECEIVES PETITION TO SCRAP ‘DEEPLY DAMAGING AND WRONG’ TRANSGENDER GUIDANCE FOR CHILDREN

Calvin Robinson, an Anglican deacon in the separatist Free Church of England who recently told Fox News Digital that his ordination in the Church of England was “snatched away” because of his conservative theological views, condemned Allison’s positions and urged others to “call out his heresy and blasphemy.”

“Challenge the Church’s apparent apostasy,” Robinson said. “Don’t resort to ad hominem attacks. We know how this story goes. The conversation gets shifted from truth/lies to ‘bullying.’”

“You can predict it like clockwork,” Robinson continued. “In a week or so, he’ll be back in the headlines of left-wing papers saying he was abused and targeted for his looks. The Church of England won’t rebuke him for his errors, instead it’ll double-down and say it needs to be even more inclusive. Pray for his wife and children and the awful time he must be putting them through with this scandal.”

A spokesperson for the Church of England referred Fox News Digital to the Diocese of Liverpool, which did not respond to a request for comment by time of publication.

CHRISTIAN PARENTS WIN IN COURT AFTER SCHOOL LABELED 6-YEAR-OLD SON POTENTIALLY ‘TRANSPHOBIC’

A box of petitions urging the Church of England to scrap its controversial transgender guidance for primary schools was delivered to Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby’s palace in London last month.

Critics claim the guidance maintains children as young as 5 years old should be affirmed in the opposite sex if they identify with it, though the Church of England has said the guidance “is intended as a document to prevent bullying so that all children are afforded their dignity.”

Multiple bishops in the Church of England have publicly urged the institution in recent months to begin conducting same-sex weddings, and the church is slated to vote on the issue during its general synod in February.

 

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[World] Jeremy Renner: Avengers star thanks fans after being run over by snow plough

Jeremy RennerImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Marvel stars including Chris Evans and Chris Hemsworth were among those sending well wishes to Renner (pictured)

US actor Jeremy Renner has thanked fans for their support after he was seriously injured by his snow plough.

Sharing a picture of his bruised face on Instagram, Renner said he was “too messed up now to type”.

The Avengers star was airlifted to hospital on Sunday after the accident outside his home in Reno, Nevada.

Renner was run over by his own snow plough, which weighs at least 14,330lb (6.5 tonnes) – three times as heavy as a car – the local sheriff said.

He suffered blunt chest trauma and orthopaedic injuries, his publicist said on Monday. At that time he was in a stable but critical condition in intensive care.

In an Instagram post from his hospital bed on Tuesday evening, Renner, 51, wrote: “Thank you all for your kind words. I’m too messed up now to type. But I send love to you all.”

The incident happened after a new year storm left around 3ft of fresh snowfall on the ground, Washoe County Sheriff Darin Balaam said in a press conference.

A family member driving Renner’s car had got stuck in the snow near his house, the sheriff said. Using his snow plough, Renner successfully towed the car free.

He then got out to talk to his relative, but the snow plough began to move while empty.

Renner was trying to get back into the driver’s seat to stop it moving, when the “extremely large” piece of equipment ran him over, Mr Balaam said.

The PistenBully weighs at least 14,330lb, he said. The average weight of a car, according to the US Environmental Protection Agency, is 4,289lb (2 tonnes).

“An eyewitness detailed seeing Mr Renner getting into the PistenBully and not seeing him again until the PistenBully came to a rest in a pile of snow in front of his driveway,” Mr Balaam said.

A PistenBully or Snowcat snow ploughImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

A PistenBully or Snowcat snow plough similar to the type owned by Renner

Renner is a “great neighbour” and always uses his snow plough to clear local roads, the sheriff added.

“Throughout the community he has been very generous and he’s one of those individuals that most of the time you don’t know he’s doing it, but he has made a tremendous impact on this community.”

‘Tough as nails’

A number of Hollywood figures, including several of Renner’s former Marvel co-stars, posted their well wishes after Renner’s latest health update.

Commenting on the actor’s Instagram post, Captain America star Chris Evans wrote: “Tough as nails. Love you buddy.”

Guardians of the Galaxy star Chris Pratt said he was sending “continued prayers your way brutha”, while WandaVision actor Paul Bettany added: “Love you mate. Sending you love and healing.”

Chris HemsworthImage source, EPA
Image caption,

Thor star Chris Hemsworth wished Renner a “speedy recovery”

Vanessa Hudgens, Heidi Klum and Orlando Bloom also sent messages of support, as talk show host Jimmy Fallon told Renner there was “lotsa love out there for you bud”.

Thor star Chris Hemsworth commented: “Speedy recovery buddy. Sending love your way!” while Taika Waititi, who has directed two Thor films, said simply: “My brother I love you.”

At least 60 people in eight states were killed in the new year snowstorm. A day after Renner’s accident, news emerged that rally driving champion Ken Block was killed when his snowmobile flipped at his ranch in Utah.

Two-time Oscar nominee Renner is best known for his role as Clint Barton/Hawkeye in the Marvel cinematic universe, starring in several Avengers films and in the spin-off television series Hawkeye.

He was nominated for an Academy Award for best actor for his role in The Hurt Locker in 2008, and for best supporting actor in The Town in 2010.

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Iran sentences two teens to death for waging ‘enmity against God’ in protest against regime

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Tehran handed down two death penalty sentences this week to two teenagers who were involved in the nationwide demonstrations protesting the Khamenei regime and who were deemed to have waged “enmity against God” and “corruption on Earth.”

Arshia Takdastan, 18, was sentenced by Iran’s Revolutionary Court in the northern city of Sari Tuesday after being arrested in coastal city of Nowshahr roughly 100 miles west. 

The circumstances around his arrest remain vague but Takdastan is said to have participated in a Sept. 21 protest in Nowshahr before being detained. 

PROTESTS AGAINST REPRESSIVE REGIMES DEMONSTRATED GREATEST PUSHBACK IN DECADES AS CITIZENS DEMAND FREEDOM

A source familiar with the trial reportedly told the Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) that “the court issued its verdict based on an accusation that he threw a bottle and a stone at a police car.” 

Takdastan was also sentenced to six years in prison for “disrupting security and inciting people to kill each other,” along with “propaganda against the institution,” reported Iran International.

The 18-year-old was also sentenced to two years in prison for “insulting the Supreme Leader.”

It is unclear if he will be required to fulfill his full prison time before his execution. 

The ruling on Takdastan came one day after 18-year-old Mehdi Mohammadifard was sentenced to death for participating in a Nowshahr protest on Sept. 30.

An informant told HRANA that his confession was “extracted under torture and ill-treatment.”

AT LEAST 24 IN IRAN FACE EXECUTION FOR INVOLVEMENT IN PROTESTS

HRANA said he was also sentenced to six months for “propaganda against the regime,” two years for “inciting people to murder and disrupt national security,” and one year for “insulting the Supreme Leader of Iran.”

Two other men were sentenced to death for their participation in the protests Tuesday.

Some 60 people have been sentenced or face the threat of execution for protesting the regime. 

Thousands across Iran hit the streets in protest of the Khamenei regime’s oppressive policies and human rights abuses following the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, who was killed in September while in police custody for wearing her hijab incorrectly. 

Tehran harshly cracked down on the protesters and more than 19,000 people have been arrested since mid-September, when demonstrations first broke out, according to tracking by HRANA.

More than 515 protesters have reportedly been killed and over 670 have been convicted for participating in the demonstrations. 

 

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[Technology] Meta fined €390m over use of data for targeted ads

BBC News world 

Image source, AFP

Meta has been fined €390m euros (£346m) for breaking EU data rules.

The Irish Data Protection Commission (DPC) says the way Meta asked permission to use peoples’ data for ads on Facebook and Instagram was unlawful.

Meta, which owns both platforms, has three months to change how it obtains and uses data to target ads.

Meta says it is “disappointed” and intends to appeal, stressing that the decision does not prevent personalised advertising on its platforms.

The regulator said that Facebook and Instagram can not “force consent” by saying consumers have to accept how their data is used, or leave the platform.

As Facebook and Instagram have European headquarters in Ireland, the DPC takes the lead in ensuring they comply with EU data law.

Privacy campaigners say the decision is a major victory and means Meta will have to give users real choice over how their data is used to target online advertisements.

It means Meta will potentially have to change the way a key part of its business works.

The bulk of the firm’s money, over $118bn (£97.8bn) in 2021, comes from advertising.

The fine is the second significant penalty imposed by the watchdog in recent months.

In November it was fined €265m (£228m) by the DPC over a data breach that saw the personal details of hundreds of millions of Facebook users published online.

According to the Irish Times Meta set aside €2bn (£1.7bn) to cover potential European fines in 2023.

New law, new complaints

The DPC investigation was sparked by complaints made in 2018 by privacy campaigner Max Schrems, on behalf of two users in Austria and Belgium. The complaint was brought just as the EU’s new data and privacy law, the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), came into operation.

In order to comply with GDPR both Facebook and Instagram asked users to click “I accept” to indicate that they agreed to updated terms of service setting out how their data would be used in ads.

If users did not accept, they were unable to use Facebook or Instagram.

The complainants argued that this meant Meta was “forcing” them to consent to their data being used in targeted ads – and this breached the GDPR.

Meta’s representatives argued that Facebook and Instagram are “inherently personalised” and that, as part of that personalisation, targeted ads are a “necessary and essential part” of how the platforms work.

They said Meta was not giving users an ultimatum, and that there was just no way the platforms could work without using data for advertising.

But the DPC found that is not the case, and users were forced to consent.

The DPC also found that Meta was not clear enough with users about how it was using their personal data and why.

But the decision was only arrived at after a dispute with other European data authorities.

That was finally settled in December by the European Data Protection Board.

Meta’s spokespeople say that it plans to challenge the size of the fines imposed, “given that regulators themselves disagreed with each other on this issue”.

The company argues that far from forcing people to accept how it uses data, it gives consumers a number of tools to control how their data is used.

Let’s set the record straight.

“…these decisions do not prevent personalized advertising on our platform. The decisions relate only to which legal basis Meta uses when offering certain advertising.”https://t.co/EyD0eGBAeL

— Andy Stone (@andymstone) January 4, 2023

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter

Privacy campaigner Mr Schrems wrote in response to the decision: “This is a huge blow to Meta’s profits in the EU. People now need to be asked if they want their data to be used for ads or not.

“They must have a ‘yes or no’ option and can change their mind at any time”.

 

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Hugh Jackman pleads that Ryan Reynolds’ ‘Spirited’ song doesn’t get nominated for an Oscar in humorous video

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The Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman banter continues.

The two actors have been joking back and forth with one another on social media for years, but even more heavily since the announcement that the two would be working together on the upcoming “Deadpool” movie in which Reynolds plays the titular role and Jackman reprises his role as Wolverine from the “X-Men” franchise.

In the newest social media video posted by Jackman on Wednesday, the actor begs that the song “Good Afternoon” from Reynolds’ Christmas movie “Spirited” does not get nominated for an Oscar award.

“Good Afternoon” was one of 15 songs that was put out by the Academy that would be eligible for an Oscar for Best Music (Original Song) at this year’s award ceremony.

HUGH JACKMAN ON CONSTANTLY TROLLING RYAN REYNOLDS: ‘IT SHOULD BE A SPORT’

“Hey everybody, it’s 2023 and I really really wanted to send out a positive message at the beginning of the year, but recent events have made that impossible,” Jackman began his Instagram video.

Jackman went on to talk about how much he and his whole family loved the “Spirited” movie, the cast and the “Good Morning” song that is potentially up for the Oscar Award, but he said that Reynolds winning the Oscar would make his life “insufferable” for the next year.

“However, I’ve just heard the Academy have shortlisted ‘Good Afternoon’ in the Best Song category,” the actor said in the video. “Now, Ryan Reynolds getting a nomination in the Best Song category would make the next year of my life insufferable.”

“It would — I mean, I have to spend a year with him shooting ‘Wolverine’ and ‘Deadpool,’” Jackman added. “Trust me, it would be impossible. It would be a problem.”

HUGH JACKMAN REVEALS HIS FEUD WITH RYAN REYNOLDS BEGAN WITH HIS EX-WIFE, SCARLETT JOHANSSON

“So, just to recap, love ‘Spirited,’ love Will, love Octavia, love the song ‘Good Afternoon,’ love Benj and Justin,” Jackman said at the end of the video. “But please, please, from the bottom of my heart — do not validate Ryan Reynolds in this way. Please.”

Reynolds also posted the video to his own Instagram feed.

“I know it’s still early but Good Afternoon to you, Mr. Jackman,” Reynolds captioned the video.

Just before Christmas, Jackman posted a video of himself and his wife, Deborra-Lee Furness, dancing in a video that featured a life-size cutout of Reynolds from the “Spirited” movie.

In September 2022, the two revealed in a Twitter video that they would be working on “Deadpool 3” together.

 

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Rick Singer, ‘Operation Varsity Blues’ college admissions scandal mastermind, sentenced to 42 months in prison

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Rick Singer, the mastermind of the “Operation Varsity Blues” college admissions scandal that federal prosecutors say was “breathtaking in its audacity and levels of deception it involved,” was sentenced Wednesday to three-and-a-half years in prison.

It’s the longest sentence in the scandal, but short of the six years requested by prosecutors.

Singer, a 62-year-old businessman from Newport Beach, California, had pleaded guilty to charges of racketeering conspiracy, money laundering conspiracy, obstruction of justice and conspiracy to defraud the United States.

The scandal, which involved people such as “Full House” actress Lori Loughlin and “Desperate Housewives” star Felicity Huffman, helped deep-pocketed parents get their often undeserving kids into some of the nation’s most selective schools with bogus test scores and athletic credentials.

“It was a scheme that was breathtaking in its scale and its audacity. It has literally become the stuff of books and made-for-TV movies,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephen Frank told the judge Wednesday.

EX-YALE SOCCER COACH INVOLVED IN COLLEGE ADMISSIONS SCANDAL IS SENTENCED TO 5 MONTHS DESPITE ‘RELIABLE’ COOPERATION 

Singer apologized.

“My moral compass was warped by the lessons my father taught me about competition,” he said. “I embraced his belief that embellishing or even lying to win was acceptable as long as there was victory. I should have known better.”

Prior to the sentencing, federal prosecutors were pushing for Singer to be put behind bars for six years, followed by 36 months of supervised release. They also wanted the judge to order “restitution to the Internal Revenue Service in the amount of $10,668,841, forfeiture of specific assets with a value in excess of $5.3 million, and a forfeiture money judgment in the amount of approximately $3.4 million.” 

They described Singer as the “architect and mastermind of a criminal enterprise that massively corrupted the integrity of the college admissions process – which already favors those with wealth and privilege – to a degree never before seen in this country. 

“He found demand in his wealthy and overprivileged clients and helped to stoke it by convincing them that their children would not be admitted to the college of their choice without using his illicit services,” the prosecutors wrote. “Likewise, he established a network of corrupt test proctors and administrators who were willing to permit cheating to supplement their income, and college athletic coaches and administrators who were willing to sell their recruitment slots to bolster their fundraising efforts, their salaries, or both. 

“All of these players were integral to the scheme’s success,” they added, “but without Singer, the scheme never would have happened.” 

JOHN STAMOS SPEAKS OUT ABOUT LORI LOUGHLIN AFTER VARSITY BLUES SCANDAL: ‘SHE WENT TO F—ING JAIL, MAN’ 

Singer began secretly cooperating with investigators and worked with the FBI to record hundreds of phone calls and meetings before the arrest of dozens of parents and athletic coaches in March 2019. More than 50 people were ultimately convicted in the case authorities dubbed Operation Varsity Blues. 

In a letter to the judge, Singer blamed his actions on his “winning at all costs” attitude, which he said was caused in part by suppressed childhood trauma. His lawyer had requested three years of probation, or if the judge deems prison time necessary, six months behind bars. 

“By ignoring what was morally, ethically, and legally right in favor of winning what I perceived was the college admissions ‘game,’ I have lost everything,” Singer wrote. 

Authorities blew the lid off the scandal after an executive under investigation for an unrelated securities fraud scheme told investigators that a Yale soccer coach had offered to help his daughter get into the school in exchange for cash. The Yale coach led authorities to Singer, whose cooperation unraveled the sprawling scheme. 

For years, Singer paid off entrance exam administrators or proctors to inflate students’ test scores and bribed athletic coaches to designate applicants as recruits for sports they sometimes didn’t even play, seeking to boost their chances of getting into the school. Singer took in more than $25 million from his clients, paid bribes totaling more than $7 million, and used more than $15 million of his clients’ money for his own benefit, according to prosecutors. 

So far, the toughest punishment in relation to the scandal went to former Georgetown University tennis coach Gordon Ernst, who got 2 1/2 years in prison for pocketing more than $3 million in bribes. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

 

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8 found fatally shot in Utah home, including 5 children

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A law enforcement official stands near the front door of the Enoch, Utah, home where eight family members were found dead from gunshot wounds, Wednesday, Jan. 4, 2023. (Ben B. Braun/The Deseret News via AP)

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Eight family members, five of them children, were found dead from gunshot wounds in a southern Utah home Wednesday, according to authorities who did not provide more details or a potential motive for the killings.

The victims were found when police did a welfare check at the residence, according to a statement by city officials in Enoch, a small town of about 8,000 people located 245 miles (394 kilometers) south of Salt Lake City.

Police said they did not detect any threat to the public.

Enoch City Manager Rob Dotson said the community was sent reeling by news of the eight bodies and that the deceased — all members of one family — were well known in the southern Utah town.

“Many of us have served with them in church, in the community and gone to school with these individuals,” Dotson said in a video statement Wednesday night.

“This community at this time is hurting. They’re feeling loss, they’re feeling pain and they have a lot of questions,” Dotson added, noting that officials planned on releasing more information as it becomes available and the police investigation progresses.

“We won’t know the mindsets, the thoughts of the individuals who experienced this tragedy, but we all can pray that their families and the neighbors and all will come to an understanding of what happened in this place, probably in a day or two, or maybe longer,” said Dotson, choking up at one point.

Hub peek embed (Utah) – Compressed layout (automatic embed)

Welfare checks based on calls to the police department like the one that led them to the residence where the bodies were found are routine when individuals are not seen for extended periods of time, Dotson said.

The five children attended schools in the Iron County School District, officials said in a letter sent to parents.

Enoch, off Interstate 15 in rural Utah, just north of the city of Cedar City and about 80 miles (128 kilometers) west of Bryce Canyon National Park, had major flooding in 2021 that caused damage at hundreds of homes.

Utah Gov. Spencer Cox offered condolences in a tweet Wednesday night.

 

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[World] German new year riots prompt calls for firework ban

BBC News world 

Image source, Rex/Shutterstock

Image caption,

Some of the worst violence came in the Neukölln district of Berlin

A night of new year rioting and attacks on emergency services in Berlin and other cities has shocked Germans and prompted calls for a ban on fireworks and firecrackers.

Forty-one police officers were hurt in the capital alone and there were dozens of attacks on firefighters.

Mayor Franziska Giffey has called a youth summit, condemning the violence as “absolutely unacceptable”.

Several figures highlighted the migrant background of many of the youths.

But the Berlin mayor insisted the issue was more to do with the social environment in which young Berliners had grown up: “We’re not talking about immigration labels but about what went wrong in the social flashpoints.”

It was not just Berlin that witnessed violence. There were reports of rockets, firecrackers and even a starting pistol being fired at emergency vehicles in cities including Hamburg, Bonn, Dortmund and Essen.

Police said of the 145 arrests made during the Berlin riots that the majority were men, 45 were German while 27 were of Afghan nationality and 21 were Syrians.

The revelations fed into a broader debate, and leading conservative figure Jens Spahn spoke of “unregulated migration, failed integration”.

Some commentators questioned whether breaking down the suspects’ nationalities was helpful. Germany’s press code makes clear that ethnic or religious background should only be reported where there is legitimate public interest.

Government integration commissioner Reem Alabali-Radovan called for perpetrators to be judged on their actions and “not according to their presumed origins, as some are now doing”.

Interior Minister Nancy Faeser said that while a debate had to take place on the background to the riots, it should not be used to stir up “racist resentment”.

But she told the Funke newspaper group that Germany’s major cities had a significant issue with “certain young men with a migration background, who hold our state in contempt, commit acts of violence and who can hardly be reached via education and integration programmes”.

Part of the problem is thought to have stemmed from the brief lifting of a ban on sales of fireworks and firecrackers over the new year.

After a two-year halt on sales during the Covid pandemic to prevent hospitals coming under further pressure, authorities said pyrotechnics would be allowed between 6pm on New Year’s Eve and 6am on New Year’s Day. One of the police unions said sales should be banned completely in future.

The Berlin district of Neukölln was worst-hit by the violence and local mayor Martin Hikel spoke of conditions similar to a civil war, with rescue workers being lured into ambushes.

He told the newspaper Die Welt that the violence was less about migration issues and more to do with socially disadvantaged areas. He warned of the risk of moving towards a situation similar to that in suburban areas of France.

Neukölln’s integration commissioner Güner Balci said those who took part in the attacks came from a small group of “absolute losers”. In some inner city areas facing major social issues, she said children and young people were growing up witnessing domestic violence as part of their daily lives.

 

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Conservative civil war rages on Twitter as McCarthy fails to win Speaker vote

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Conservative lawmakers, journalists and influencers are trading blows on Twitter as House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., failed another pair of votes Wednesday to become the next House speaker. 

At least 20 Republicans currently stand in the way of McCarthy’s path to become the next Speaker of the House after Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.

Ever since the vote started Tuesday, conservative influencers have taken to Twitter to voice their support for McCarthy or take shots at him in favor if alternatives like Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, or Byron Donalds, R-Fla. 

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Some Twitter users rejected smears of the 20 Republican holdouts, a group some critics have taken to calling the “Taliban 20.” 

McCarthy also took flack on Twitter for reportedly moving his things into the Speaker’s office early, even though he has not officially won the position. “It will be embarrassing when he has to move out,” BotSentinel founder Christopher Bouzy tweeted in reference to McCarthy. 

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A number of GOP Congressmen also weighed in on the speaker race on Twitter. Rep. Andy Biggs, R-Ariz., slammed McCarthy, writing, “Kevin is now 0-4. His opposition has grown in just two days. It’s time for him to hang up the cleats and let the House move forward without him at the helm. Country > ego.”

Rep. Bob Good, R-Va. also blamed McCarthy for bringing about his own downfall in the speaker’s race. “If McCarthy had fought as hard for the American people over the last two years as he has for the speakership, we would be having a very different discussion right now,” he wrote.

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But not all conservatives agreed that Jordan was necessarily the right person for the top spot in the House. 

Fox Radio host Trey Radel responded to a Twitter debate about the battle, writing, “This isn’t my fight & not trying to provoke anyone.”

He continued: “Just curious: who do you … or anyone here, think can coalesce enough Rs to become Speaker? I agree it’s not KM. I don’t think Jordan can. And I don’t know if Scalise can win over enough conservatives or moderates.” 

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