Tag Archives: 8year

Russia seeks an 8-year prison term for an artist and musician who protested the war in Ukraine – Yahoo News

  1. Russia seeks an 8-year prison term for an artist and musician who protested the war in Ukraine Yahoo News
  2. Russian artist who staged anti-war supermarket protest faces eight years in jail Reuters
  3. Russian artist facing 8 years for supermarket protest Bangkok Post
  4. Prosecutors Seek Eight Years For Russian Artist Who Used Price Tags For Anti-War Protest Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
  5. Prosecution requests eight-year sentence for Sasha Skochilenko, St. Petersburg artist who replaced price tags with information about war in Ukraine Meduza
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Family of Rudy Farias demands charges, transparency in investigation of fake 8-year disappearance – KPRC Click2Houston

  1. Family of Rudy Farias demands charges, transparency in investigation of fake 8-year disappearance KPRC Click2Houston
  2. Mystery surrounds Rudy Farias, missing Houston teen who wasn’t really missing Yahoo News
  3. Rudy Farias case: Quanell X calls for charges against Rudy’s mother | LiveNOW from FOX LiveNOW from FOX
  4. Rudy Farias case: Longtime Houston police detective doesn’t think activist Quannel X’s involvement helps investigation KTRK-TV
  5. Teenager reported missing 8 years ago has been at living with mom all along PhilStar Life
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Son and 8-year old grandson of former Red Sox star George ‘Boomer’ Scott found dead in apparent murder-suicide – CNN International

  1. Son and 8-year old grandson of former Red Sox star George ‘Boomer’ Scott found dead in apparent murder-suicide CNN International
  2. Son of Red Sox Hall of Famer found dead in apparent murder-suicide 4 years after child’s mother went missing Yahoo News
  3. Son of former Red Sox player killed 8-year-old son, then himself, police suspect Fox News
  4. New Bedford man allegedly kills 8-year-old son before taking his own life, authorities say The Boston Globe
  5. Son of former Red Sox star George Scott kills his 8-year-old boy before taking own life New York Post
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Japan’s inflation hits 8-year high in test of BOJ’s dovish policy

  • Sept core CPI rises 3.0% yr/yr, matches forecast
  • Core consumer inflation stays above BOJ goal for 6th month
  • Data underscores broadening inflationary pressure
  • BOJ seen keeping ultra-low interest rates on fragile economy

TOKYO, Oct 21 (Reuters) – Japan’s core consumer inflation rate accelerated to a fresh eight-year high of 3.0% in September, challenging the central bank’s resolve to retain its ultra-easy policy stance as the yen’s slump to 32-year lows continue to push up import costs.

The inflation data highlights the dilemma the Bank of Japan faces as it tries to underpin a weak economy by maintaining ultra-low interest rates, which in turn are fuelling an unwelcome slide in the yen.

Reuters Graphics

The increase in the nationwide core consumer price index (CPI), which excludes volatile fresh food but includes fuel costs, matched a median market forecast and followed a 2.8% rise in August. It stayed above the BOJ’s 2.0% target for the sixth month, and was the fastest pace of gain since September 2014, data showed on Friday.

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The broadening price pressures in Japan and the yen’s tumble below the key psychological barrier of 150 to the dollar will likely keep alive market speculation of a tweak to the Bank of Japan’s dovish stance over coming months.

“The current price rises are driven mostly by rising import costs rather than strong demand. Governor Kuroda may maintain policy for the rest of his term until April, though the key is whether the government will tolerate that,” said Takeshi Minami, chief economist at Norinchukin Research Institute.

The data heightens the chance the BOJ will revise up its consumer inflation forecasts in new quarterly forecasts due at next week’s policy meeting, analysts say.

The yen’s decline has been particularly painful for Japan due to its heavy reliance on imports for fuel and most raw material, forcing companies to hike prices for a wide range of goods including fried chicken, chocolates to bread.

The so-called ‘core-core’ index, which strips away both fresh food and energy costs, rose 1.8% in September from a year earlier, accelerating from a 1.6% gain in August and marking the fastest annual pace since March 2015.

The rise in the core-core index, which the BOJ closely watches as a key gauge of the underlying strength of inflation, toward its 2% target casts doubt on the central bank’s view that recent price rises will prove temporary.

With Japan’s inflation still modest compared with price rises seen in other major economies, the BOJ has pledged to keep interest rates super-low, remaining an outlier in a global wave of monetary policy tightening.

BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda has stressed the need to focus on supporting the economy until wage growth picks up enough to compensate for the rising cost of living.

While Japan’s labour union lobby has pledged to demand wage hikes of around 5% in next year’s wage negotiations, analysts doubt pay will rise so much with fears of global recession and soft domestic demand clouding the outlook for many companies.

The September CPI data showed that while goods prices rose 5.6% year-on-year, services prices were just up 0.2% in a sign of how Japan’s inflation is still driven mostly by cost-push factors.

“Consumer inflation is likely to slow in 2023. If so, any tweak to the BOJ’s easy monetary policy will be minor even under the change to the bank’s leadership next year,” said Yasunari Ueno, chief market economist at Mizuho Securities.

Governor Kuroda will see his second, five-year term expire in April next year. The term of his two deputy governors will also end in March.

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Reporting by Leika Kihara and Takahiko Wada; Additional reporting by Yoshifumi Takemoto; Editing by Sam Holmes and Shri Navaratnam

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Spanish prosecutors to ask for 8-year prison sentence for Shakira in tax fraud case

Prosecutors in Spain said Friday they would ask a court to sentence Colombian pop star Shakira to eight years and two months in prison, if she is convicted in her expected trial for alleged tax fraud.

Shakira, whose full name is Shakira Isabel Mebarak Ripoll, is charged with failing to pay the Spanish government 14.5 million euros ($15 million) in taxes between 2012 and 2014. The prosecutors said they would also seek a fine of 24 million euros ($24 million).

Singer Shakira attends the screening of “Elvis” during the 75th annual Cannes film festival at Palais des Festivals on May 25, 2022, in Cannes, France. 

Marc Piasecki/FilmMagic/Getty Images


 
The indictment details six charges against Shakira. The singer this week rejected a settlement deal offered by prosecutors, opting to go to trial instead. A trial date has yet to be set.

Her publicists in London said in a statement Friday that Shakira “has always cooperated and abided by the law, demonstrating impeccable conduct as an individual and a taxpayer.” The publicists accused the Spanish Tax Agency of violating her rights.

Shakira’s Spanish public relations team said earlier this week that the artist has deposited the amount she is said to owe, including 3 million euros in interest.

Prosecutors in Barcelona have alleged the Grammy winner spent more than half of each year between 2012 and 2014 in Spain and should have paid taxes in the country.

Shakira recently ended an 11-year-long relationship with FC Barcelona star Gerard Piqué, with whom she has two children. The family used to live in Barcelona.

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Spain: Prosecutors to seek 8-year prison term for Shakira

MADRID (AP) — Prosecutors in Spain said Friday they would ask a court to sentence Colombian pop star Shakira to eight years and two months in prison, if she is convicted in her expected trial for alleged tax fraud.

Shakira, whose full name is Shakira Isabel Mebarak Ripoll, is charged with failing to pay the Spanish government 14.5 million euros ($15 million) in taxes between 2012 and 2014. The prosecutors said they would also seek a fine of 24 million euros ($24 million).

The indictment details six charges against Shakira. The singer this week rejected a settlement deal offered by prosecutors, opting to go to trial instead. A trial date has yet to be set.

Her publicists in London said in a statement Friday that Shakira “has always cooperated and abided by the law, demonstrating impeccable conduct as an individual and a taxpayer.” The publicists accused the Spanish Tax Agency of violating her rights.

Shakira’s Spanish public relations team said earlier this week that the artist has deposited the amount she is said to owe, including 3 million euros in interest.

Prosecutors in Barcelona have alleged the Grammy winner spent more than half of each year between 2012 and 2014 in Spain and should have paid taxes in the country.

Shakira recently ended an 11-year-long relationship with FC Barcelona star Gerard Piqué, with whom she has two children. The family used to live in Barcelona.

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Prosecutors to seek 8-year prison term for Shakira

MADRID (AP) — Prosecutors in Spain said Friday they would ask a court to sentence Colombian pop star Shakira to eight years and two months in prison, if she is convicted in her expected trial for alleged tax fraud.

Shakira, whose full name is Shakira Isabel Mebarak Ripoll, is charged with failing to pay the Spanish government 14.5 million euros ($15 million) in taxes between 2012 and 2014. The prosecutors said they would also seek a fine of 24 million euros ($24 million).

The indictment details six charges against Shakira. The singer this week rejected a settlement deal offered by prosecutors, opting to go to trial instead. A trial date has yet to be set.

Shakira’s public relations team says the singer has always fulfilled her tax duties. It says the artist has deposited the amount she is said to owe, including 3 million euros in interest.

Prosecutors in Barcelona have alleged the Grammy winner spent more than half of each year between 2012 and 2014 in Spain and should have paid taxes in the country.

Shakira recently ended an 11-year-long relationship with FC Barcelona star Gerard Piqué, with whom she has two children. The family used to live in Barcelona.

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We Lose One Crucial Feature of Consciousness While We Sleep, an 8-Year Study Reveals

When we dream, something mysterious happens within our brains – we experience something similar to being awake, and yet also very different to being awake, and scientists are still trying to unpick exactly what’s going on in that in-between state.

 

Now another clue has been discovered. A new study has found that one crucial feature of consciousness – the ability to be aware of sounds or to identify them – actually gets switched off while we’re asleep, and it could help us figure out how our brains dream.

Mapping the brains of living people while both awake and asleep isn’t easy – few of us would want electrodes implanted in our skulls during our day-to-day activities – but here the team took advantage of medical research being carried out on epilepsy patients.

“We were able to utilize a special medical procedure in which electrodes were implanted in the brains of epilepsy patients, monitoring activity in different parts of their brain for purposes of diagnosis and treatment,” says neuroscientist Yuval Nir, from Tel Aviv University in Israel.

“The patients volunteered to help examine the brain’s response to auditory stimulation in wakefulness versus sleep.”

The electrodes enabled the researchers to see the differences in the response of the cerebral cortex when patients were in different stages of sleep compared to when they were awake – right down to individual neurons.

 

For the purposes of the study, the researchers played a variety of sounds through speakers at the bedsides of the volunteers. Data on over 700 neurons (about 50 per patient) were collected across the course of eight years.

While the brain’s response to sound remained largely switched on during sleep, there was a rise in the level of alpha-beta waves – waves associated with attention and expectation. It seems incoming sounds are being analyzed, but not passed to the consciousness.

This goes against previous thinking: that during sleep, sound-related signals quickly decay in the brain. In fact, they stay stronger and richer than we thought, it’s just that there’s one significant difference in the way they’re processed while we’re snoozing.

“The strength of brain response during sleep was similar to the response observed during wakefulness, in all but one specific feature, where a dramatic difference was recorded: the level of activity of alpha-beta waves,” says first author, neuroscientist Hanna Hayat, from Tel Aviv University.

These alpha-beta waves (10-30Hz) are controlled by feedback from higher up in the brain – this feedback (including whether or not sounds are new) helps our minds work out which sounds are important and need to be listened to.

A similar sort of upward shift in alpha-beta wave patterns has previously been observed in patients under anesthetic, but it hasn’t been seen in people sleeping. The researchers describe it as one way of grasping the “fascinating enigma” of how the conscious brain differs from the unconscious brain.

This also gives scientists a quantitative and reliable method of measuring if someone really is unconscious or not: during hospital operations, in comatose individuals, when checking for signs of dementia, and so on.

“Our findings have wide implications beyond this specific experiment,” says Nir. “In future research we intend to further explore the mechanisms responsible for this difference.”

The research has been published in Nature Neuroscience.

 

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Boston Bruins, Charlie McAvoy agree to 8-year, $76M extension, source says

Boston Bruins defenseman Charlie McAvoy has agreed to an eight-year, $76 million contract extension, a source told ESPN on Friday.

The 23-year-old was due to be a restricted free agent after the season. McAvoy is in the final year of a three-year bridge deal that paid him $4.9 million annually and is now getting the biggest deal in Bruins franchise history.

The $9.5 million average annual value on McAvoy’s deal is in line with several defensemen around the NHL who received massive contracts during the offseason, including the Colorado Avalanche’s Cale Makar (six years, $9 million AAV), the Dallas Stars’ Miro Heiskanen (eight years, $8.45 million AAV), the Chicago Blackhawks’ Seth Jones (eight years, $9.5 million AAV), the Columbus Blue Jackets’ Zach Werenski (six years, $9.58 million AAV) and the New Jersey Devils’ Dougie Hamilton (seven years, $9 million AAV).

After beginning his career paired with Zdeno Chara, McAvoy inherited the true No. 1 defenseman role last season. He led all Bruins skaters in ice time (23:59 per game) while tallying five goals and 25 assists in 51 games. McAvoy finished fifth in Norris Trophy voting.

“We think highly of him both as a player and as a person,” Bruins general manager Don Sweeney told reporters earlier this week. “He’s growing into a leadership role, he’s been included in that leadership group, and hopefully that’s an indication that Charlie’s grown into the person, both as a leader as a player, that we all hoped he would be.”

McAvoy, who played at Boston University, was selected by the Bruins with the No. 14 overall pick of the 2016 draft. The Long Beach, New York, native is expected to be part of the blue line for Team USA at the 2022 Olympics in Beijing.

The Bruins open their season Saturday at home against the Stars.

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