Tag Archives: cited

17 arrested, cited at Soldier Field as Taylor Swift fans flock downtown – FOX 32 Chicago

  1. 17 arrested, cited at Soldier Field as Taylor Swift fans flock downtown FOX 32 Chicago
  2. Taylor Swift fans’ lawsuit against Ticketmaster gains momentum as Metro Detroit woman joins the figh FOX 2 Detroit
  3. ‘Swiftian’ takes on a new meaning as Taylor Swift fans descend on Chicago Chicago Sun-Times
  4. ‘It was like Ravinia:’ Ticketless fans create their own Taylor Swift concert experience on grass outside Soldier Field NBC Chicago
  5. Five moments to relive from Taylor Swift’s ‘The Eras Tour’ shows at Soldier Field in Chicago NBC Chicago
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Suspect accused of killing CashApp founder Bob Lee had been cited in 2022 domestic battery incident but never charged, San Francisco Chronicle reports – CNN

  1. Suspect accused of killing CashApp founder Bob Lee had been cited in 2022 domestic battery incident but never charged, San Francisco Chronicle reports CNN
  2. Alleged CashApp-killer Nima Momeni was cited for battery months before Bob Lee’s murder New York Post
  3. Unraveling mystery of CashApp founder Bob Lee’s shock stabbing death Daily Mail
  4. Exclusive: Nima Momeni cited in domestic battery case before Bob Lee stabbing San Francisco Chronicle
  5. Nima Momeni was cited with assault before facing Bob Lee allegation Business Insider
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Stephen Smith’s mom cited Buster Murdaugh as possible suspect in son’s death in letter to FBI – New York Post

  1. Stephen Smith’s mom cited Buster Murdaugh as possible suspect in son’s death in letter to FBI New York Post
  2. Stephen Smith death probe: South Carolina law enforcement says ‘progress has been made’ Fox News
  3. Hear Stephen Smith’s mother describe her late son CNN
  4. Stephen Smith’s death now considered a homicide, attorney says FOX Carolina News
  5. Stephen Smith family attorneys shed light on ‘surprising’ call from South Carolina’s ‘top cop’ about dead teen, a ‘piece of evidence,’ and connection to Alex Murdaugh trial Law & Crime

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Russian ‘megalomania’ in Ukraine war cited at death camp memorial | The World Wars News

The Auschwitz camp memorial director equated Nazi crimes of World War II with Russian forces now in Ukraine.

The director of the Auschwitz Nazi death camp memorial has compared the recent killing of people in Ukraine by Russian forces with similar suffering experienced during World War II.

Marking the 78th anniversary of the liberation of the camp, set up on Polish soil by Nazi Germany and where more than 1.1 million people — most of them Jews — perished in gas chambers and from starvation, cold and disease, the memorial site’s director compared Nazi crimes to those Russians have recently committed in Ukrainian towns such as Bucha and Mariupol.

“Similar sick megalomania, similar lust for power, and similar-sounding myths about uniqueness, greatness, primacy … only written in Russian. Innocent people are dying en masse in Europe, again,” the director Piotr Cywinski said in an address to an audience including Holocaust survivors on Friday.

“Wola district in Warsaw, Zamojszczyzna, Oradour and Lidice today are called Bucha, Irpin, Hostomel, Mariupol and Donetsk,” he said, referring to places where mass killings took place in World War II and sites where Ukraine and its allies accuse Russian forces of committing atrocities.

“Being silent means giving voice to the perpetrators,” Cywinski said. “Remaining indifferent is tantamount to condoning murder,” he said.

“Russia, unable to conquer Ukraine, has decided to destroy it. We see it every day, even as we stand here.”

 

Set up by Nazi Germany in occupied Poland in 1940, the camp became the largest of Adolf Hitler’s extermination centres.

Though the camp was liberated by the Soviet-era Red Army on January 27, 1945, Russian officials were not invited to take part in this year’s commemorations due to its war in Ukraine.

Valentina Matvienko, speaker of Russia’s upper house of parliament, deplored that as a “cynical” move on Friday.

“They refused to invite the liberators so that they could pay tribute to the memory of the victims,” she said. “Of course, this is very worrying.”

In a post on Telegram on Thursday, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova accused the West of trying to rewrite history and said, “the memory of the horrors of Nazism and the Soviet heroes-liberators cannot be erased”.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, who attended observances marking the 60th anniversary of the camp’s liberation in 2005, repeated his claim on Friday that Russian soldiers were fighting against neo-Nazis in Ukraine.

“This is evidenced by the crimes against civilians, ethnic cleansing and punitive actions organised by neo-Nazis in Ukraine. It is against that evil that our soldiers are bravely fighting,” Putin said.

“Forgetting the lessons of history leads to the repetition of terrible tragedies,” he said.

During Friday’s commemorations, Holocaust survivors wearing hats and scarves in the blue and white stripes of camp uniforms laid candles on the ruins of a gas chamber.

 

 



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What happened in stalking incident Musk cited to ban @ElonJet

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LOS ANGELES — A confrontation between a member of Elon Musk’s security team and an alleged stalker that Musk blamed on a Twitter account that tracked his jet took place at a gas station 26 miles from Los Angeles International Airport and 23 hours after the @ElonJet account had last located the jet’s whereabouts.

The timing and location of the confrontation cast doubt on Musk’s assertion that the account had posted real-time “assassination coordinates” that threatened his family and led to the confrontation. Police have said little about the incident but say they’ve yet to find a link between the confrontation and the jet-tracking account.

The incident last week triggered a major rewrite of Twitter’s rules and the suspensions of a half dozen journalists’ accounts, which were condemned by free-speech advocates. It also underscored how Musk’s personal concerns can influence his governance of a social media platform used by hundreds of millions of people around the world.

As the sole owner of Twitter, Musk can dictate policies as he chooses. Musk disbanded Twitter’s board of directors, which at other companies might have influenced the company’s reaction to the incident, as well as its long-standing “trust and safety” committee that had advised the social media platform on its policies. No executive at Twitter has the stature to balance Musk’s directives.

The incident occurred in South Pasadena, a Los Angeles suburb, on Tuesday at about 9:45 p.m. South Pasadena police were called to the gas station, according to the business’s manager, but made no arrests. South Pasadena police have not responded to requests for comment.

The Los Angeles Police Department said in a statement Thursday that its Threat Management Unit was in contact with Musk’s representatives and security team but that no crime reports had been filed. Police did not respond to requests for updates on Sunday.

Using a video of the incident that Musk posted to Twitter, The Washington Post identified the owner of the car involved and then the driver shown in the video who had rented it through the car-sharing service Turo.

The car’s renter, Brandon Collado, confirmed in interviews with The Post that he was the person shown in the video. He also provided The Post with videos he shot of Musk’s security guard that matched the one Musk had posted to Twitter.

In his conversations with The Post, Collado acknowledged he has an interest in Musk and the mother of two of Musk’s children, the musician known as Grimes, whose real name is Claire Elise Boucher. Boucher lives in a house near the gas station.

In his communications with The Post, Collado, who said he was a driver for Uber Eats, also made several bizarre and unsupported claims, including that he believed Boucher was sending him coded messages through her Instagram posts; that Musk was monitoring his real-time location; and that Musk could control Uber Eats to block him from receiving delivery orders. He said he was in Boucher’s neighborhood to work for Uber Eats.

Musk did not respond to emailed and tweeted requests from The Post to discuss the incident. Boucher did not respond to requests for comment.

Due to its concentration of high-profile figures, stalking is a pervasive problem in Los Angeles. After 21-year-old actress Rebecca Schaeffer was shot to death at the entrance to her Los Angeles home in 1989 by an obsessive fan, the city adopted several measures meant to protect targets of stalking, such as restrictions on public access to address information from California driving records and a specialized police unit focused on the problem.

However, in 2015, actress and singer Selena Gomez was forced to move out of her $4.5 million home due to a relentless stalker. Actress Sandra Bullock recently opened up about the trauma and PTSD she experienced after a stalker broke into her home in 2014. In 2012, a man accused of stalking actress Halle Berry was sentenced to over a year in jail.

Boucher, too, has been the target of stalking. In 2018, she was granted a restraining order against a man named Raymond Barrajas after he showed up at her home and said he believed she was secretly communicating with him through her music.

Marc Madero, a Los Angeles police detective with the unit that investigates high-profile stalking cases, told The Post the unit has investigated a man who was accused of stalking Boucher. After the confrontation in the gas station, Musk’s security team alerted the police, who began investigating whether the man in the video was the same alleged stalker, Madero said. He said the unit had yet to make a determination and continues to investigate.

Madero said the video of the man suggested he had taken efforts to hide his identity, including wearing gloves and partially covering his face. But he said his unit had no evidence to suggest the man police were investigating had used the jet-tracking account. He noted that stalkers commonly use “open-source searches of a targeted individual,” adding, “Nothing would surprise me.”

Musk tweeted Thursday that journalists had been “aware of the violent stalker and yet still doxed the real-time location of my family.” He did not say which journalists he was referring to or provide evidence. The Post was unaware of the incident until Musk tweeted about it. A review of the internet found no news accounts about a stalker. A volunteer with the investigative journalism group Bellingcat used the video Musk posted to locate the incident to the gas station.

Musk’s jet landed in Los Angeles last Monday, Dec. 12, following a flight from Oakland, the @ElonJet account said, citing flight information, known as ADS-B data, that is legally and routinely gathered by aviation hobbyists and posted to public websites such as ADS-B Exchange.

Musk had been in San Francisco the previous night, getting booed onstage at Dave Chappelle’s comedy show. Three days earlier, he had posted another photo from San Francisco of his 2-year-old son, X Æ A-Xii, whom Musk refers to as “X.”

The incident took place at the gas station on Tuesday, Dec. 13, approximately 15 minutes before the station closed, according to its manager, Daniel Santiago, who was working that night. Santiago said he was surprised when the car Collado was driving pulled into the Arco station and into the space next to Santiago’s car, which is not a normal location for a customer to park.

He said the incident was caught on the gas station’s security camera and that footage had been turned over to the South Pasadena police on Thursday.

According to the video of the incident that Musk posted, the member of Musk’s security team confronted Collado sitting in the car wearing gloves and a hood. “Yeah, pretty sure. Got you,” the Musk security team member can be heard saying on the video.

What took place between the two men before they arrived at the gas station is unknown. There’s no indication in videos shared with The Post that Musk’s children were present.

Collado claimed he was making Uber Eats deliveries and visiting a friend when he pulled into the gas station and said Musk’s security worker then confronted him without reason. Collado said he believed that Musk was monitoring his real-time location.

Two videos of the altercation Collado shared with The Post show him exiting his rental car and standing in front of a Toyota driven by Musk’s security worker.

Shortly after the incident, officers with the South Pasadena police arrived at the gas station, questioned Collado and told him they’d file a report, Collado said.

On Saturday, Collado tweeted at Musk, “I am the guy in this video … You have connections to me and have stalked me and my family for over a year.” Collado said he had not been contacted by the police since Tuesday night.

After the gas-station incident, Twitter changed its rules to ban the sharing of all “live location information,” including links to other websites that noted “travel routes, actual physical location or other identifying information that would reveal a person’s location, regardless if this information is publicly available.”

It also suspended @ElonJet, its operator, Jack Sweeney, and dozens of his other jet-tracking accounts, which monitored the public movements of sports teams, political figures and Russian oligarchs.

Twitter also suspended journalists from The Post, the New York Times, CNN and other news organizations who were covering the @ElonJet suspensions. Two former employees in contact with Twitter staff told The Post that the suspensions were at one time marked “direction of Elon.”

Musk representatives have previously asked the Federal Aviation Administration to limit the sharing of certain flight records, using a program known as Limiting Aircraft Data Displayed. But such requests do not prevent the transmission of ADS-B data, which come from unencrypted signals that are broadcast from the planes, and which anyone with the proper equipment can receive from the ground.

On Sunday, Musk posted videos showing he was attending the World Cup championship game in Qatar. When some in the stands shared photos showing Musk in attendance, Twitter users noted that the details could be classified as real-time location information, like the kind Musk had labeled “assassination coordinates,” and were no longer allowed.

Alice Crites contributed to this report.



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San Francisco airport workers ‘arrested and cited’ after ‘civil disobedience’

A food workers union at San Francisco International Airport says 41 protesters were arrested and cited for blocking traffic.

The union, Unite Here Local 2, said in a Friday press release that the group intended to practice “civil disobedience” with the potential to “block traffic” in protest for higher wages.

Union members and supporters of Unite Here Local 2 blocked traffic outside terminal three at the airport on Friday afternoon, according to a press release by the group.

Food service workers at the airport voted 99.7% in favor of authorizing a strike in August.

STRIKES BECOMING MORE COMMON AMID INFLATION, TIGHT LABOR MARKET

The union, Unite Here Local 2, said in a Friday press release that the group intended to practice “civil disobedience” with the potential to “block traffic” in protest for higher wages. (California State Sen. Josh Becker / Fox News)

“The non-violent civil disobedience, as well as picket lines by hundreds of workers and supporters, drew attention to workers’ fight against poverty wages and unaffordable health care,” a press release by the union states.

According to the press release, many fast-food workers “have not seen a raise in three years,” and make $17.05 an hour, requiring people to work two or three jobs in order to make ends meet.

Lucinda To, a lounge attendant at the United Club as well as a server at Cat Cora’s Kitchen at the airport, said in the press release that she lives on four hours of sleep per day.

SURVEY FINDS NEARLY 50% OF NYC OFFICE STAFF GO INTO THE OFFICE ON A TYPICAL WEEKDAY

Union members and supporters of Unite Here Local 2 blocked traffic outside terminal three at the airport on Friday afternoon. (California State Sen. Josh Becker / Fox News)

“I have to work two jobs to support my family, and I’m exhausted from living on four hours of sleep a day,” To said. “I’m making $16.99 per hour even though a meal at the airport costs at least $20. I hope this protest will show people that workers at SFO need a change, and we are ready to strike for it.”

Among those present at the protest were former California Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher and State Sen. Josh Becker.

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The union, Unite Here Local 2, said in a Friday press release that the group intended to practice “civil disobedience” with the potential to “block traffic” in protest of higher wages. (California State Sen. Josh Becker / Fox News)

The union noted that a “strike could begin at any time.”

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Pixel Watch requires Android 8.0+, no iPhone support cited

Google today previewed its first smartwatch ahead of a fall launch alongside the Pixel 7 and 7 Pro. In doing so, Google made note of how the Pixel Watch “requires an Android 8.0 or newer phone,” while foregoing any mention of iPhone support.

Wear OS 2 watches have long required “phones running Android 6.0+ (excluding Go edition) or iOS 13.0+.” The Galaxy Watch 4 had the same minimum Android requirement even as Samsung uses its own Galaxy Wearable companion app.  

Compatible with Android 6.0 or higher, RAM 1.5GB above

Samsung

According to the fine print on the 16-second Pixel Watch “first look” clip, Android 8.0 Oreo from 2017 (compared to 2015’s Marshmallow) is required. In practical terms, excluding Android 6, 7, and 7.1 does not really exclude that many prospective Pixel Watch owners.

Meanwhile, Google makes no mention of iPhone support for the Pixel Watch. This is similar to how the Galaxy Watch 4 was the first Wear OS device since 2015 to not be compatible with iOS. It remains to be seen whether this will also be the case for new third-party watches running Wear OS 3 later this year.

This comes as an interview with Fitbit founder James Park on Wednesday said that the company’s smartwatches and trackers would continue working with iOS. Park didn’t have anything to say about the Pixel Watch and iPhone, but that lack of support does give Fitbit a cross-platform differentiator.

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Rep. Madison Cawthorn cited for having gun at Charlotte Douglas – WSOC TV

CHARLOTTE — Rep. Madison Cawthorn was cited for having a gun at Charlotte Douglas International Airport Tuesday morning, police said.

According to the TSA, a 9 mm handgun was discovered in a bag at Checkpoint D, and TSA officials contacted Charlotte-Mecklenburg police.

A photo obtained by Channel 9 shows that a loaded Staccato C2 was recovered at the airport Tuesday.

Officers confirmed the gun was Cawthorn’s and said he cooperated with police.

Cawthorn was cited for possession of a dangerous weapon on city property, which is a city of Charlotte ordinance.

CMPD said it took the firearm, which is normal procedure.

This is not the first time a gun has been discovered on Cawthorn at an airport. In February 2021, TSA found a 9 mm handgun in Cawthorn’s carry-on bag at Asheville Regional Airport. Cawthorn did not face any criminal charges for the incident.

The TSA found 106 guns at Charlotte Douglas International Airport in 2021.

A spokesperson for Cawthorn did not respond to a request for comment.

(WATCH BELOW: Police concerned over increase in guns stolen from cars in Charlotte)



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Southwest pilot cited after allegedly fighting with flight attendant over masks at hotel

A Southwest Airlines pilot is facing assault and battery charges following an alleged altercation after a mask dispute with a flight attendant at a California hotel last month.

The alleged attack happened Oct. 18 at a bar in San Jose, where pilots and flight attendants were spending the night after a flight, USA Today reported. 

There was “a disagreement over mask-wearing or masks” and the pilot was cited for assault and battery, said San Jose police Sgt. Christian Camarillo. The case was being referred to the San Clara County District Attorney’s Office for review and possible charges, Camarillo added.

CALIFORNIA MAN ARRESTED, CHARGED IN AMERICAN AIRLINES ATTACK ON FLIGHT ATTENDANT

Southwest Airlines Boeing 737-700 aircraft seen at Norman Y. Mineta San Jose International Airport on Feb. 25, 2020. (Photo by Alex Tai/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

The pilot was placed on leave during an investigation, airline spokesperson Brandy King told the paper. No further details were provided. 

“We do not have information to provide regarding the context of the event, and we do not discuss personnel issues externally,” King said.

Just days after the alleged incident, Southwest sent a memo to pilots and flight attendants warning that: “Crossing the line in a heated conversation can be a violation of our guidelines for employees and can even end in loss of job,” according to the USA Today. 

“We realize there has been a steady drumbeat over the last 19 months about civility and respectful discourse – and that is for good reason. Many of our people have been faced with an uncomfortable situation where their beliefs are not shared by someone else, resulting in a confrontation of some kind,” the memo read, in part. “And for every situation we hear about, there are dozens more for which we don’t. It is vital that we treat everyone with respect and honor our differences without pushing our ideals on someone else.”

Southwest Airlines did not immediately respond to a late-night request for comment from Fox News.

The incident comes as the company has been at the center of political controversy in recent weeks. 

SOUTHWEST LAUNCHES INVESTIGATION INTO PILOT ACCUSED OF SAYING ‘LET’S GO BRANDON’: UNACCEPTABLE’

On Sunday, Southwest Airlines said it has opened an internal investigation into the pilot accused of saying “Let’s go Brandon” at the conclusion of an intercom announcement to passengers during a flight last Friday. 

And last month, hundreds of Southwest flights were canceled, which the airline blamed on bad weather and air traffic control issues. The disruptions began shortly after the Southwest Airlines Pilots Association, representing 9,000 pilots, asked a federal court to block the airline’s order that all employees get vaccinated.

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The issues were “not a result of Employee demonstrations, as some have reported,” the airline said. 

San Jose is about 50 miles southeast of downtown San Francisco. 

The Associated Press and Fox Business’s Daniella Genovese contributed to this report

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Walgreens cited shoplifting as rationale for closing 5 stores in San Francisco, but local officials, data, and experts cast doubt on that explanation

Customers walk by products locked in security cabinets at a Walgreens store that is set to be closed in the coming weeks on October 13, 2021 in San Francisco, California. Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

  • Walgreens said it’s closing some San Francisco stores because of an increase in retail theft.

  • Police data obtained by the Chronicle did not show high rates of shoplifting reports at the closing stores.

  • One expert said people moving out of the city during the pandemic could’ve hurt Walgreens’ business.

Walgreens announced Tuesday it would be closing five of its San Francisco locations due to “organized retail crime,” but police department data, local officials, and policy experts are casting doubt on that reasoning, according to a report published by the San Francisco Chronicle on Saturday.

While the report said the chain has experienced retail theft, other factors like the COVID-19 pandemic and oversaturation of stores were cited as potential factors behind the decision to close the stores.

Walgreens spokesperson Phil Caruso said retail theft across its San Francisco locations has increased in the past few months to five times the chain’s average, SFGate reported.

However, San Francisco Police Department data obtained by the Chronicle contradicts Walgreens’ claims, with one of the stores slated to close reporting only 23 shoplifting incidents since 2018. Some incidents of shoplifting likely go unreported, but the closing stores had on average less than two shoplifting reports per month since 2018.

“Organized retail crime continues to be a challenge facing retailers across San Francisco, and we are not immune to that,” Caruso told SFGate. “During this time to help combat this issue, we increased our investments in security measures in stores across the city to 46 times our chain average in an effort to provide a safe environment.”

San Francisco Mayor London Breed pushed back against Walgreens’ stated reasoning for closing the stores.

“They are saying (shoplifting is) the primary reason, but I also think when a place is not generating revenue, and when they’re saturated – SF has a lot of Walgreens locations all over the city – so I do think that there are other factors that come into play,” she told reporters last week.

Dean Preston, supervisor of San Francisco’s 5th district, which will be impacted by a store closure, said the pharmacy chain is “abandoning the community” and has “long planned to close stores,” the San Francisco Chronicle reported.

“Odd that some are so offended that I would suggest that a massive corporate chain might be closing retail locations for the exact reason they told investors they would close locations, rather than the reasons stated in their external PR,” Preston said in a tweet on Friday.

In a 2019 Security and Exchange Commission filing, Walgreens announced it would launch a “Transformational Cost Management Program” that would shutter 200 stores in the US in order to save $1.5 billion in annual expenses by 2022.

A May study published by Stanford economist Nicholas Bloom found 15% of residents left San Francisco during the pandemic and have not returned, which he told the Chronicle could explain Walgreens’ waning customer base in the city.

San Francisco does have relatively high rates of property crime, which criminal justice researcher Magnus Lofstrom told the Chronicle could be due in part to the Bay Area’s vast income equality.

Walgreens did not immediately respond to Insider’s request for comment.

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