Tag Archives: bruised

Fabio Jakobsen battered and bruised after crash in high-speed Tour de France sprint – Cyclingnews

  1. Fabio Jakobsen battered and bruised after crash in high-speed Tour de France sprint Cyclingnews
  2. On-Site: Chaos And Crashes Mar Tour de France Stage 4 FloBikes
  3. Philipsen makes it back-to-back Tour stage wins Buffalo News
  4. As it happened: Philipsen and Van der Poel combine again to win Tour de France stage 4 Cyclingnews
  5. “Should Be Relegated”: After a Deliberate Close-Call That Could’ve Led to a Dangerous Crash in the Ongoing Tour de France, Fans Demand Strict Action for the Cyclists Responsible EssentiallySports
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Colorado Springs shooting updates: Suspect Anderson Lee Aldrich denied bond as mugshot reveals bruised face

Army veteran gives account of tackling Colorado Springs gunman

Colorado Springs shooting suspect Anderson Lee Aldrich wanted to be the “next mass killer” and go out “in a blaze”, according to past arrest records.

Aldrich, who allegedly identifies as nonbinary, is now facing preliminary charges including five counts of murder along with five charges of committing a bias-motivated crime causing bodily injury following a mass shooting inside LGBT+ nightclub Club Q. The suspect will remain jailed without bond.

Booking photos reveal several bruises and other apparent wounds to the suspect’s face and neck.

One year before the the massacre, Aldrich was arrested for making an alleged bomb threat. No charges were filed, and the case was sealed.

Records have surfaced showing that the accused shooter’s grandmother told police that they said they were “going to be the next mass killer and has been collecting ammunition, firearms, bullet-proof body armour and storing it in the basement of the residence”.

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ICYMI: Colorado Springs attack suspect’s father gives shocking statement in reaction to mass shooting

Aaron Brink, a former porn actor and MMA fighter, told CBS8 he received a call on Sunday night from his child’s public defender to say he was under arrest for the Colorado Springs mass shooting that left five people dead and more than a dozen injured.

He told the CBS8 his family were Mormon, adding: “We don’t do gay.”

The father said that while he holds anti-gay views, there’s no excuse for his child allegedly shooting people in an LGTBQ+ club.

“I’m so sorry guys for your loss,” Mr Brink said. “With no regard to politics, it’s human life. I’m so sorry. My soul goes out to you.”

“Life is so fragile, and it’s valuable,” he said. “Those people’s lives were valuable.”

Aldrich’s lawyers have said in court documents that the 22-year-old is non-binary and uses they/them pronouns.

Bevan Hurley has more details from the interview here.

Johanna Chisholm24 November 2022 14:30

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Watch: Suspected gunman’s father speaks out to local news outlet

The father of Colorado Springs shooting suspect Anderson Aldrich says his first reaction to being informed of the attack at Club Q was to question why his child was at an LGBTQ bar.

Aaron Brink, a former porn actor and MMA fighter, told CBS8 he received a call on Sunday night from his child’s public defender to say he was under arrest for the mass shooting.

“They started telling me about the incident, a shooting involving multiple people,” Mr Brink said in an interview.

“And then I go on to find out it’s a gay bar. I said, ‘God, is he gay?’ I got scared, ‘S***, is he gay?’ And he’s not gay, so I said, ‘Phhhewww…’”

Watch the full interview with CBS 8 below.

Johanna Chisholm24 November 2022 14:10

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Local breweries in Colorado Springs create day-long fundraiser for shooting victims and families

More than 20 local breweries in Colorado Springs will be pooling resources for a day-long fundraiser, with a portion of tabs going towards providing financial support for the victims and survivors of the Club Q mass shooting last Saturday.

The “Brews for Q” fundraiser will pass on the day’s sales to charity campaigns set up after the attack that left five dead and more than a dozen injured at the popular LGBT+ nightclub.

A Facebook event for the fundraiser, put on by one of the local breweries, The Public House, describes how they are “joining many local establishments for #BrewsForQ this #SmallBusinessSaturday to raise money for the victims and their families”.

“From 12-5 pm on November 26, $1 from pints poured at both PH locations will be donated to a verified victim fund,” the event description adds.

Johanna Chisholm24 November 2022 13:50

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Motive in attack remains unclear as investigation continues

The motive behind the Club Q attack that left five people dead and at least another 18 injured is still under investigation by authorities.

Anderson Lee Aldrich, 22, has been charged with five counts of first-degree murder and five counts of committing those crimes as part of a bias attack.

Prosecutor Michael Allen said that the suspect, who appeared in court on Wednesday via video with visible injuries to his face and neck, was “physically competent” to stand trial.

His next hearing is scheduled 6 December.

Johanna Chisholm24 November 2022 13:30

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Father of Colorado Springs suspected shooter said he was told Aldrich died years ago

Aaron Brink, a former porn actor and MMA fighter, told CBS8 he received a call on Sunday night from his child’s public defender to say he was under arrest for the mass shooting.

During the course of that interview with the San Diego-based news outlet, Mr Brink, 48, said that his ex-wife Laura Voepel called him in 2016 to say that their child, who was born Nicholas Brink, had changed their name and died by suicide.

“His mother told me he changed his name because I was in (reality tv show) Intervention and I had been a porno actor,” Mr Brink told CBS8.

He had continued to believe that his child was dead until six months ago, when he got a call out of the blue from Aldrich.

According to Mr Brink’s account, Aldrich was “pissed off” and wanted to “poke at the old man”.

He went on to say he taught his child how to fight at a young age and “praised him for violent behaviour”.

“I told him it works. It is instant and you’ll get immediate results,” Mr Brink told CBS8.

Johanna Chisholm24 November 2022 13:10

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Who are the victims of the Club Q shooting?

Here’s what we know so far about the five people who were killed.

Johanna Chisholm24 November 2022 12:50

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Hero veteran reveals how he tackled suspect with help from trans woman

A former Army captain tackled a shooter who had opened fire on an LGBT+ nightclub in Colorado Springs and beat the suspect unconscious as a trans woman in heels stomped on him.

Richard Fierro, 45, said he was with family and friends at Club Q on Saturday night when the suspect burst in and began spraying the club with automatic gunfire.

Mr Fierro told the New York Times his military training kicked in and he ran towards the shooter, grabbed him from behind by his body armour and pulled him to the ground.

“I just knew I had to take him down,” Mr Fierro said.

Johanna Chisholm24 November 2022 12:30

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Gay club shooting suspect evaded Colorado’s red flag gun law

A year and a half before he was arrested in the Colorado Springs gay nightclub shooting that left five people dead, Anderson Lee Aldrich allegedly threatened his mother with a homemade bomb, forcing neighbors in surrounding homes to evacuate while the bomb squad and crisis negotiators talked him into surrendering.

Yet despite that scare, there’s no record prosecutors ever moved forward with felony kidnapping and menacing charges against Aldrich, or that police or relatives tried to trigger Colorado’s “red flag” law that would have allowed authorities to seize the weapons and ammo the man’s mother says he had with him.

Gun control advocates say Aldrich’s June 2021 threat is a example of a red flag law ignored, with potentially deadly consequences. While it’s not clear the law could have prevented Saturday night’s attack — such gun seizures can be in effect for as little as 14 days and be extended by a judge in six-month increments — they say it could have at least slowed Aldrich and raised his profile with law enforcement.

Bernard Condon and Colleen Slevin have the story.

Johanna Chisholm24 November 2022 12:10

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Records suggest suspect wanted to ‘go out in a blaze’

Anderson Lee Aldrich, the suspected shooter who killed five people in a Colorado Springs LGBT+ club over the weekend, previously told their family they wanted to be the “next mass killer”.

In June of 2021, Aldrich, who identifies as nonbinary, was arrested for threatening the grandmother, with whom they lived, with a homemade bomb, prompting a heavily armed police tactical team to respond and evacuate surrounding homes.

Eventually, crisis negotiators were able to bring Aldrich in, and they were booked into El Paso County Jail on two counts of felony menacing and three counts of first-degree kidnapping, according to the sheriff’s office.

Johanna Chisholm24 November 2022 11:50

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Colorado Springs shooting suspect had ‘threatened mother with home-made bomb’ in June 2021

A person with the same name and age was arrested in June 2021 after their mother told officers that he was threatening her with a homemade bomb and other weapons.

Colorado prosecutors declined to explicitly confirm the connection on Sunday morning, saying only that the incident in 2021 was “all part of the investigation and will be released as appropriate”.

Johanna Chisholm24 November 2022 11:30

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Bruised stocks find support as growth fears dent commodities By Reuters

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Men wearing protective masks amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, use mobile phones in front of an electronic board displaying Japan’s Nikkei index outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan June 16, 2022. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

By Tom Westbrook and Sam Byford

SINGAPORE/TOKYO (Reuters) – Global stocks and bonds headed for their first weekly gain in a month on Friday, with growth concerns tempered by hopes that sliding commodity prices can help brake runaway inflation.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 1.4% on Friday, helped by short sellers bailing out of Alibaba (NYSE:) – which rose nearly 7% – amid hints that China’s technology crackdown is abating.

rose 1.2% for a 2% weekly gain, while extended overnight gains by 0.76%. EuroSTOXX 50 futures rose 1% and futures rose 0.6%.

The week has been marked by steep declines for commodities on worries that the world economy is looking shaky and that interest rate hikes will hurt growth – which in turn is also prompting traders to pare back some bets on the size of rate hikes.

, a bellwether for economic output with its wide range of industrial and construction uses, is heading for its steepest weekly drop since March 2020. It fell in Shanghai on Friday and is down about 8% on the week.

Oil is also headed for a weekly loss. futures are down 2.5% on the week to $110.35 a barrel, while benchmark grain prices sank with Chicago wheat off more than 8% for the week. [O/R][GRA/]

The falls have made for some relief in equities since energy and food have been the drivers of inflation. After heavy recent losses, MSCI’s World equities index is up 2.3% this week, setting it up for the first weekly gain since May.

“While market worries about an abrupt slowdown are the culprit behind recent moves lower in raw materials prices, lower commodity prices do feel like they could be just what the doctor ordered for the global economy,” said NatWest markets strategist Brian Daingerfield.

“So much of our hard landing fears relate to concerns that link back to commodity prices.”

Soft data through this week has been to blame.

Gauges of factory activity in Japan, Britain, the euro zone and United States all softened in June, with U.S. producers reporting the first outright drop in new orders in two years in the face of slumping confidence.

Bonds rallied hard on hopes the bets on aggressive rate hikes would have to be curtailed, with German two-year yields down 26 basis points on Thursday in their biggest drop since 2008. [GVD/EUR]

The benchmark fell 7 bps on Thursday and was steady at 3.0908%. [US/]

The U.S. dollar has slipped from recent highs, but not too far as investors remain cautious. It was last fairly steady at $1.05395 per euro and bought 134.73 yen. [FRX/]

The battered yen has steadied this week and drew a little support on Friday from Japanese inflation topping the Bank of Japan’s 2% target for a second straight month, putting more pressure on its ultra-easy policy stance.

European Central Bank and Federal Reserve speakers will be watched closely later in the day, as will British retail sales data and German business confidence. Beyond that, the main worry is what it all means for company performance.

“Second quarter earnings reports will send shockwaves to the market as the earnings outlook hasn’t deteriorated materially so far, and that will further build concerns of a recession,” said Charu Chanana, market strategist at brokerage Saxo in Singapore.

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Amber Heard defends her op-ed, shares bruised photos

Jurors at Johnny Depp and Amber Heard’s bombshell defamation trial were shown photos of the bruised-up actress Monday — as she denied the op-ed at the heart of the case was about her ex-husband.

Heard’s attorneys showed several images of the actress with a red and swollen face from what she said was the troubled former couple’s last fight, in May 2016.

“This is my face after Johnny threw a phone at it,” Heard, 36, testified about the aftermath of the alleged brawl with Depp, 58.

The “Aquaman” actress also defended the 2018 essay she wrote in The Washington Post in which she referred to herself “a public figure representing domestic abuse.”

“What, if anything, in this op-ed is incorrect?” Heard attorney Elaine Bredehoft asked.

“Nothing,” Heard answered. “Every word is true.”

“It’s not about Johnny,” she continued. “The only one who thought it was about Johnny was Johnny. It’s about me. It’s about what happened to me.”

Amber Heard gave an emotional testimony in the courtroom at the Fairfax County Circuit Courthouse in Fairfax, Va., May 16, 2022.
Reuters/ Steve Helber
Heard showed photos of bruises from her alleged 2016 altercation with Depp.
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Depp is suing his ex-wife for $50 million over the column, which does not name him. He claims it clearly referenced allegations of domestic abuse Heard made when she filed for divorce after less than two years of marriage in May 2016 — and that it defamed him, causing harm to his career and reputation.

Team Depp’s slideshow

On cross-examination, Depp’s lawyers confronted Heard with several photos taken of the couple at public affairs after alleged violent fights — that showed her without any visible injuries.

One image showed Heard looking fresh-faced next to Depp at Spike TV’s “Don Rickles: One Night Only” special — the day after she claimed Depp possibly broke her nose following the 2014 Met Gala.

Many people have questioned Heard for using makeup to create the bruises.
AP

“For the record, I don’t know that it was broken,” Heard acknowledged under questioning by Depp attorney Camille Vasquez. “You should have seen how it looked under makeup.”

“Your nose doesn’t appear to be injured in any of these pictures?” the lawyer asked.

“I’m wearing makeup and makeup covers up swelling, right?” Heard answered.

Other photos produced by Depp’s team included the pair attending the 2015 Tokyo premiere of his comedy movie “Mordecai,” which followed an alleged fight, as well as stills from an appearance by Heard on “The Late Late Show with James Corden.”

The actress shared how Depp threw a phone at her face.
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Heard’s attorney released the photos of their client.
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Depp also accused Heard of painting on a bruise with makeup.
AP/ Steve Helber

Heard claimed she had a split lip from a beating by Depp that she covered with lipstick at the time.

Earlier, during questioning from her own lawyers, Heard had detailed her makeup routine for the jury, even holding up a coverup kit.

“I’m certainly not going to walk around LA with bruises on my face,” she said.


The latest from the Johnny Depp defamation trial:


Jurors were also shown a now-infamous photo of Heard with what appear to be bruises on her face — taken at a LA courthouse the day she filed for a temporary restraining order against Depp in May 2016.

Heard became emotional on the stand as she recalled how photographers “just surrounded me as I walked out of that courthouse” and “screamed horrible things.”
Depp has accused Heard of painting on a bruise with makeup that day, a claim she denies.

Heard explained why she decided to file for divorce that month despite Depp’s assurances that he was sober, that he was sorry and that he “wasn’t the monster.”

“I knew if I didn’t [divorce him], I likely wouldn’t literally survive,” she said. “I was so scared.”
Depp’s attorneys did get Heard to acknowledge that she never actually delivered on her pledge to donate her $7 million divorce settlement to the American Civil Liberties Union and a California children’s hospital.

“I use ‘pledge’ and ‘donation’ synonymously,” Heard testified.

“I don’t,” Vasquez shot back.

Additional reporting by Snejana Farberov

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