Tag Archives: collector

James Gunn on Guardians Holiday Special and Future DC Questions

James Gunn (with Chris Pratt and Dave Bautista) on the set of the Guardians Holiday Special.
Image: Marvel Studios

It’s fitting that James Gunn just released a holiday special because he’s currently the bright star at the center of the superhero movie world. Not only did Gunn just release The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special ahead of next year’s Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3, but he’s also the new co-head of DC Films, currently working out how to compete with Marvel across all media.

If those types of things interest you—and if you’re reading this, they probably doGunn’s Twitter is a must-follow. He’s one of a very, very small handful of powerful geek creatives who still actively engages on the platform, and this past weekend Gunn was in full force, answering fans’ burning questions about the Guardians and even teasing some larger generalizations about the future of DC.

Starting with Guardians, Gunn did his best to clear up one of the bigger questions surrounding the special, which is when and how did the Guardians of the Galaxy buy Knowhere, the huge celestial skull where the Collector resided in the first film. “Although the Guardians are sometimes heroes, they work as mercenaries & it brings in a fair amount of money,” Gunn tweeted. “So after Thanos attacked Knowhere they bought it from the Collector. It was a burnt out husk & they’ve been rebuilding it.” On Knowhere, we see the Guardians are now friends with Cosmo, the dog briefly seen in the Collector’s collection in the original Guardians. Gunn confirmed Cosmo hadn’t left, and met the Guardians on the planet.

In terms of timelines between the Holiday Special and the Guardians’ last appearance in Thor: Love and Thunder, Gunn was a little less clear. “I’m not sure how it works out in the timeline (these things aren’t discussed) but in my mind they were only with Thor a few weeks,” he said. He was clear though on why Peter Quill is less OK going back to Earth than he is other places. “Because when we’re 8 years old we process trauma much, much differently than we do when we’re 38,” Gunn tweeted. 

There also seemed to be many, many questions about the new Groot, which Gunn has lovingly dubbed “Swole Groot.” In his mind, this is not the same Groot we saw in the first film who lovingly sacrificed himself for his team. And with a new life and experiences, that explains why his body has developed differently. “I think it’s explicit in the movies,” Gunn tweeted. “As Baby Groot was explicitly a baby without the knowledge of OG Groot. But now that Groot’s body is developing differently it’s more obvious.”

Answering questions about the practicality of the special, Gunn confirmed what was, and wasn’t real, in terms of shooting locations. “Knowhere was mostly practical with some extensions & the spaceship (& Hollywood Blvd) were all practical,” he said.

Just a bevy of Marvel information. Since it’s much newer in Gunn’s career, his openness about the future of DC Film was certainly less specific, but no less exciting. “The DCU will be connected across film and TV (and animation),” Gunn said, kind of wrapping up a slew of tweets where he said there would be 2D and 3D animation, that some of the animations would tie into the world of the movies and TV (while others won’t), future video games will tie into the larger DC Universe, he expects to write and direct some DC projects in the future, and while there is communication between film and comics, he is only involved with the films.

Finally, while Gunn is honest that he’s only been at DC a few weeks and plans are in place, he expects at least some news to be out about his and co-chair Peter Safran’s plans well before next year’s San Diego Comic-Con. But in the meantime, he’s got to finish and promote Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3, which will tie up not just the story of the Guardians, but Gunn’s at Marvel too.

What’s the main takeaway here? Well, follow James Gunn on Twitter for one. And two, everyone please keep being nice to him so he doesn’t leave. Because it’s incredible to have someone with such influence be so accessible.


Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about James Cameron’s Avatar: The Way of Water. 



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God Of War Ragnarök Collector Editions Are Missing The Game

Image: PlayStation / Sony Santa Monica

God Of War Ragnarök’s $200 Collector’s Edition comes in a gold embossed box, with a 16-inch replica of Norse god Thor’s Mjölnir hammer, a set of engraved dwarven dice, downloadable cosmetics, and more. That “and more” ideally will suck out some of the sting if you, like other buyers have reported, open up your $200 box and realize that not only is there no steelbook display case, but there’s no game code, either.

The steelbook case, digital code combo was already annoying without this apparent manufacturing blunder. When the Ragnarök collector’s edition was announced earlier this summer, with custom items and downloadable content but no physical game to plop inside of the very expensive steelbook case, Ian Walker wrote for Kotaku that “it seems the gaming industry is becoming increasingly hostile to the concept of ownership, which can be worrisome as older online storefronts are phased out.”

So you pay a premium for physical, for the $200 cases and the $70 games, but you still might not get what you wanted. It appears that most Collector’s Edition errors involve both a missing steelbook case and game code, but one Reddit user, who has since created the Twitter account @HelpUsSMS dedicated solely to seeking rectification and compiling examples of similar errors, received two codes for the same in-game cosmetics instead of one cosmetic code and one game code. And thus far, the lack of perceived urgency in Sony’s efforts to resolve these issues is only leading to more frustration.

“Were you able to get this resolved?” another user asked them.

“In 5-7 days apparently,” they responded.

Other people report similar waiting times and difficulty in commanding Sony’s immediate attention.

“It’s unfortunate that Sony has pretty much gutted their online support. @AskPlayStation no longer responds, and there’s no email either,” HelpUsSMS told me over Twitter. “So we have to either wait on the phone, or wait for an online chat.” And if you’ve ever bought anything before, you know how long that can take. Sony did not respond to requests for comment in time for publication.

 



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eBay Collector Seeks 1 Million For 50 Years’ Of Gaming Consoles

Image: Kaori30 / Kotaku

While many a collector can claim to have any number of rare video games and memorabilia, few, if any, actually own a majority of every console variation manufactured in the last 50 years. But that’s exactly what one France-based collector has just put up for auction, some 2,400 different consoles—from standard-issue to special editions to variations never officially for sale—for the cool asking price of €984,000.00, or around a million U.S. dollars.

Listed on French eBay and spotted by Consolevariations.com, video game uber-enthusiast Kaori30’s sale includes some 2,400 consoles, “from the first to the very last,” a number of games for said consoles, and a bunch of fun statues and other video game collectibles. While the current price “Buy It Now” price of nearly one million Euros might be well outside of your budget (not to mention how much storage space you’d need), the pictures and videos of Kaori30’s collection are more than worth a look. Check out their Sega collection, for example

KAORI30

Kotaku has reached out to Kaori30.

A Google translation of the eBay listing reveals that Kaori30 began collecting in the early ‘90s, before collecting might’ve been considered a thing. The road to this current mega collection was not without some back and forth, as they sold their entire ‘90s collection at the turn of the century.

Though they kept collecting during the ‘00s, it came to an end in 2011 when they stopped for “lack of time” and the difficulty in finding rare items. But the story doesn’t end there.

Read More: Someone Paid Over $750,000 For The World’s Largest Video Game Collection

In 2018, they “fell back into the trap” of collecting after visiting Tokyo, where they acquired almost everything they sold off previously. That twist is what leads them to this gargantuan collection of a majority of consoles ever made all in one place. And it is a sight to behold. As they say on their eBay auction, they do not believe it’s possible to find some of these items anymore, even if one had the financial means. They also suggest that their stunning collection might be a good fit for a museum.

I have neither the wallet nor the space to even think about something like this, but it sure is fun to peruse the pictures and videos and imagine the wild logistics. There’s stuff in there I never knew existed!

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Random: Vintage Nintendo Playing Card Opening Ends In Disaster For Collector

Image: Nintendo / Nintendo Life

We’ve covered Nintendo’s history a lot here at NL, and not just the video game side. At this point, it’s pretty well known that before Nintendo jumped into gaming, it was well known for producing handmade hanafuda playing cards. And if you’re a hardcore Nintendo collector, you’ll likely want to get your hands on these.

Erik Voskuil is one person who managed to get hold of two packets of these playing cards. As the owner of the Before Mario blog, and author of the book of the same name, he managed to get two 1950s packs that depicted Nintendo’s own Kyoto headquarters on the box, and they appeared to be in pretty decent condition. But Voskuil’s cards had, unfortunately, met a tragic fate. (Thanks, Kotaku!)

Understandably, Voskuil shared his excitement of getting the cards on Twitter, toying with the idea of opening them or leaving them sealed. Eventually, he decided on opening one of them to document the images of Kyoto.

As you can see in the photos, despite the boxes being 70+ years old, they don’t look bad! We’re pretty envious. But when Voskuil opened the packet, he wasn’t greeted by a deck of cards, per se — rather, a block of them.

Because the cards had remained tightly packed together for all of these years, the ink on them had likely warmed up and caused the cards to stick together. Plus, because the cards were made in the ’50s, they weren’t the plastic-covered kind you get nowadays, meaning they were fragile

Voskuil documents the process and disappointment over on his blog, but here’s an extract from his attempt:

“…when I carefully removed part of the wrapper, I quickly discovered that all cards had been completely fused together. They had remained pressed together for such a long time, likely under hot and humid conditions, that the ink on all cards had made them stick together completely. The stack of individual cards had turned into one solid brick. The photo prints on the cards, that contain relatively large amounts of ink, may have contributed to this as well.

It is also good to note that these cards pre-date the ‘all plastic’ cards. These are made from paper, and more fragile than plastic cards.

After applying some further force to the pack, and trying to bend it, it became clear that there was a real risk of the layers of paper within the card giving way and tearing, rather than the cards coming loose. The other pack had the same problem. It was a solid brick as well.”

Despite receiving advice on how to save the cards, Voskuil is sure that the cards are beyond any help. Disappointing! But he at least hopes that he’ll find another pack to open in the future. He’s still open to suggestions on how to save these fragile paper cards, so if you can think of any, send them over to him on his blog!

We can’t imagine the disappointment and frustration, but at least the boxes look nice! And the boxes did come with one loose card each, so that’s something.

Have you ever been disappointed by a collector’s purchase? Would you like a set of Nintendo’s hanafuda playing cards for yourself? Let us know!



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Woman suffers bloody face after getting smacked with a durian by a debt collector in Thailand

A woman was left with a bloody face after she was smacked with a durian by a debt collector in Lamphun province, Thailand.

The Thai woman, identified as Duangduen, parked her motorbike in front of the Chang Rong Temple in the Nai Mueng subdistrict to answer a phone call when she was allegedly slapped in the face with a spiky durian peel on July 17 by a woman she said was her debt collector.

The attacker reportedly fled the scene in a pickup, leaving Duangduen with a bloody face.

Duangduen has since called on local media for help after there were no developments in the complaint she filed at the Mueng Lamphun Police Station after the incident.

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She admitted to borrowing about 20,000 baht (approximately $545.44) from a money lender last year to open a shop with her friend. Due to financial struggles, she said her interest repayment turned into 700,000 baht (approximately $19,090.51).

Duangduen said the COVID-19 pandemic affected the income of their shop, which caused her to miss repayments. The loan shark reportedly sold the arrears to debt collectors who then threatened Duangduen and her friend and raided their homes. The debt collector tricked the women by informing them that borrowing more money would help clear their debt’s interest. However, the new terms only escalated to a demand of 20,000 baht (approximately $545.44) repayment per day.

Duangduen’s friend reportedly fled out of fear and left her to deal with the consequences.

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The debt-ridden woman has since contacted an official government department that deals with debt management for help. The lender reportedly agreed to pause the repayment but later reappeared at her home to demand money.

Duangduen said she is still being threatened by the debt collector.

 

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Retro Game Collector Accused Of Selling $100k Worth Of Fakes

Photo: BBPCGC

The retro PC game collecting scene was rocked by an unexpected scandal last week when a prominent member of the community, who was also a moderator of a major Facebook group, was accused of selling people fake copies of classic games.

Enrico Ricciardi, who for years has been an active member of the community as a buyer, seller and source of advice, has been booted from the Big Box PC Game Collectors group after several members came forward with evidence they say proves that many of the boxes, floppy disks and pieces of art he has been selling people are not what they seem.

The group’s members have collected all their evidence and accusations in a public document, saying that after one member received a suspicious game—a supposed copy of 1979’s Akalabeth: World of Doom, which was developed by Richard Garriott before he started the Ultima series and is one of the first RPGs ever made—they began to poke around other titles that had been sold by Ricciardi, and found many of those were a little off as well.

Comparing Ricciardi’s games to originals owned by other members, the group quickly found a number of discrepancies with the former, like game labels being hand-cut instead of machined, marks on supposedly decades-old stickers that could only have been made with modern printers and slight differences in things like fonts and logo placement. You can see these examples yourself here and here.

Photo: BBPCGC

The most damning evidence presented, though, was that in many cases the disks that had been sold by Ricciardi were blank, something many buyers were only discovering now that they had been prompted to check. If you’re thinking to yourself “why didn’t these guys check that before?”, we’re talking about disks and tapes that are in some cases over 40 years old, which as the Big Box PC Game Collectors members explain, means doing this isn’t always the best idea:

These disks are 40 years old, and the software is widely available online via emulators at this point. The goal in getting these games is not to play them, but to collect them (people who collect baseball trading cards do not trade them much either). “Testing” a 40-year-old disk can risk damaging the disk. Further, some collectors do not have access to the computers which originally ran these games.

With multiple members having now compared the games they received from Ricciardi to other, legitimate copies, it has become clear that he has been selling these intricate fakes for years (since at least 2015, by their reckoning), covering everything from old Sierra and Origin games to “multiple copies of Ultima: Escape from Mt. Drash, Akalabeth and Mystery House.”

Wildly, it’s even believed that while most of Ricciardi’s fakes were sold directly to buyers, the group says “there is at least one black box Ultima 1 that we think may be fake that was graded by WATA.”

It’s estimated that Ricciardi has been involved in “at least €100K in transactions of suspected counterfeit game items”, which at time of posting works out to be roughly USD$107,300. That’s…a lot of money, as you’d expect for games both this old and this important, though as the group explain in a FAQ accompanying their post, it’s unclear if any legal proceedings are underway, or ever will be, since they say “the individuals affected are choosing the best recourse for them and do not wish to discuss this publicly.”

If you’re a collector and this has you a bit spooked, or you’re just an outside observer curious about how all this works, the Big Box PC Game Collectors group have an “anti-scammers guide” that’s an interesting read.

Photo: BBPCGC

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Russia lists Pussy Riot member, art collector and satirist as ‘foreign agents’

Capping a year of crackdowns on Kremlin critics unseen since the Soviet era, Russian authorities this week ordered the closure of the country’s oldest human rights group Memorial International.

2021 also saw the jailing of Alexei Navalny, the Kremlin’s top critic, and his movement banned. Many of his allies were forced to flee.

The government says it is enforcing laws to thwart extremism and shield the country from what it says are malign foreign influences.

On Thursday, Russia’s justice ministry added Nadezhda Tolokonnikova from Pussy Riot, art collector Marat Gelman, satirist and Kremlin critic Viktor Shenderovich and five others to the list of “foreign agents” that has now grown to 111 names from 17 as of late 2020.

The term “foreign agent” carries negative Soviet-era connotations and subjects those listed to stringent financial reporting requirements. It also obliges them to preface anything they publish with a disclaimer stating they are foreign agents.

Shenderovich is one of Russia’s most prominent satirists, best known for a political caricature puppet show televised in the 1990s.

Tolokonnikova helped launch Pussy Riot, which became known for a series of provocative performances including protesting against the leaders of the Russian Orthodox Church.

She is also one of the founders of independent news outlet Mediazona, which was itself labeled “foreign agent” in late September.

On Thursday, Mediazona said the justice ministry had put it on the list for citing other “foreign agents” and receiving money from Google advertisements.

Media outlets have complained that carrying “foreign agent” disclaimers is akin to defacing their own products and severely dents advertising revenue.

Several Russian media outlets with the label opted to shut down as finding sponsors and advertisers became almost impossible.

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NYU students want to rename department named after billionaire art collector

New York University students want school officials to rename a building dedicated to a billionaire art collector who was ordered to return looted antiquities this week, according to a report.

In a deal with the Manhattan District Attorney, philanthropist Michael Steinhardt agreed to surrender 180 items worth roughly $70 million.

The deal allowed Steinhardt to avoid any criminal repercussions for possessing the illicit items.

But students at NYU’s Steinhardt School for Culture, Education, and Human Development — which is named for the philanthropist — want to scrub the association, according to the student newspaper.

Anthony Cruz, the president of the department’s undergraduate student government, told Washington Square News that he will press for the removal of Steinhardt’s name.

Philanthropist Michael Steinhardt was accused of owning 180 antiques stolen from 11 countries including Egypt, Greece, Israel, Syria and Turkey.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
NYU’s Steinhardt School for Culture, Education, and Human Development.
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“We are really emphasizing again how his actions and his behavior really go against the very core of the mission and the values that we should have as a school and as an institution,” Cruz said.

The department was named for Steinhardt after he donated $10 million to the school in 2001.

Michael Steinhardt was no stranger to owning carvings of historical figures.
Manhattan District Attorney
Billionaire Michael Steinhardt is banned from collecting antiques for life.
Manhattan District Attorney
Billionaire Michael Steinhardt owned a Larnax (left), a Death Mask (center) and a Stag’s Head Rhyton (right).
Manhattan District Attorney
Michael Steinhardt held a prize possession of a Sardinian Idol.
Manhattan District Attorney
Michael Steinhardt had owned a bronze griffin protome.
Manhattan District Attorney

Students previously tried to efface his name in 2019 after Steinhardt was hit with sexual misconduct allegations.

But the school declined to take any action after an investigation.

“I think that a lot of other students at NYU are also going to feel similarly about renaming the school,” student Olivia Hughart told the outlet. “We want our school to be represented by people that we all see as leaders.” 

Michael Steinhardt owned gold masks.
Manhattan District Attorney
Michael Steinhardt previously owned an ivory plaque.
Manhattan District Attorney

Cruz said he will be issuing a formal statement on the matter signed by both the undergraduate and graduate Steinhardt student governments in the coming days.

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The Body Collector of Spain: When Migrants Die at Sea, He Gets Them Home

ALGECIRAS, Spain — No one knew the man’s name when he washed ashore. His body had floated in the ocean for weeks, and it then sat much of the summer unidentified in a refrigerator in a Spanish morgue.

He was one among thousands lost at sea during what has been a record year for migrant drownings in Spain. And he might have been sent with the other unclaimed dead to an unmarked grave if Martín Zamora had not figured out that the body had a name, and a life.

He was Achraf Ameer, 27, a mechanic from Tangier. He had been missing for weeks when Mr. Zamora reached his family by WhatsApp. He had found their son’s body. He could bring it to them in Morocco, for a price.

“Sometimes, I get the feeling that some years ahead — in 30, 40, 50 years, I don’t know how many — they will look at us like monsters,” he said. “They’ll see us all as monsters because we just let people die this way.”

Mr. Zamora, a 61-year-old father of seven, is the owner of Southern Funeral Assistance, a mortuary in Algeciras. But in this port city where the lights of Morocco can be seen across the Mediterranean, he has become more than that. Mr. Zamora is the body collector of those who don’t make it to Spain alive.

Mr. Zamora, who says he has repatriated more than 800 bodies in two decades, has forged a business model like few others. He wrestles with municipal officials to hand over bodies so he can embalm them. He works with smugglers to find the relatives of the dead, and has made scores of trips to Africa. His last, to Morocco, came the month before the pandemic.

For families who had given up their loved ones as missing, Mr. Zamora’s work can offer a kind of closure they had lost all hope for.

But his services come at a steep cost — he charges $3,500 or more to get a body home. No Spanish agency will pay for what he does, and the profit margins of the work are low, he says. And so it leaves him in the gray zone, not uncommon in border towns like this, between the will to do good and the need to make a living.

“My next worry is finding the money,” Mr. Zamora said. “The family has nothing.”

Spain is witnessing a devastating procession of migrants drowning at sea.

During the first six months of the year, 2,087 people died or went missing trying to make it to the country’s shores, including 341 women and 91 children, according to Caminando Fronteras, a nongovernmental group that tracks the deaths. The International Organization for Migration, a United Nations body that keeps a more conservative count, has recorded more than 1,300 deaths so far this year.

Helena Maleno Garzón, who heads Caminando Fronteras, said Spain’s situation was especially perilous because it is the only European country with smuggling routes on both the Atlantic and the Mediterranean. “These include some of the most dangerous routes which are now being used,” she said.

Dozens of boats have gone down this year near the Canary Islands, a Spanish archipelago off West Africa.

Migrant boats also are tempted by the narrowness of the Gibraltar Strait, only nine miles wide in one section, despite strong currents that sink many boats. Some migrants drown only hours after leaving Africa, their bodies later washing ashore on beaches in Spain’s southern region of Andalusia.

The Spanish media sometimes carry stories about the latest bodies. Then, when the headlines recede, Mr. Zamora’s work begins.

The body is the mystery. The clothes are often the only clues.

“It can be hard to identify someone’s face,” Mr. Zamora said. “But a shoe, a jersey, a T-shirt — suddenly a family member will recognize it, because it once was a gift.”

His first clue came in 1999, when he found a note inside the clothes of a dead Moroccan man. Back then, the government was outsourcing to funeral homes the job of burying unclaimed remains in a field alongside the local cemetery.

Mr. Zamora was on call when that body and 15 others were discovered on the beaches. He brought the corpses back to his mortuary and discovered the damp note with a phone number in Spain.

He called and a man on the other end of the line claimed to know nothing. But a few days later, Mr. Zamora recalled, the same man called back and admitted he was the brother-in-law of the young man who had drowned.

“I told him, ‘I’ll make you a deal: I’ll charge you half the price to get the body home, but you have to help me look for the rest of the families,’” Mr. Zamora said.

The man agreed to guide him to the region in southeastern Morocco where his brother-in-law had lived. Mr. Zamora first took care of the body of the young man, embalming it and sending it back to Morocco. Then he got permission from a local judge to take the clothes of the other dead migrants to Morocco.

Mr. Zamora and the relative went from village to village, carrying a large rack on which they hung the clothes of the dead migrants, along with rings and other personal effects, which they took to markets where they knew people would go.

After two weeks they had identified the remaining 15 relatives and repatriated every body.

Mr. Zamora realized he had a solution to what had been seen as a lost cause in Spain. Yet it costs thousands of euros to repatriate the bodies. And the families that he was meeting had far less than he did.

“You find the family, you get the father and the mother, they take you to where they live and you see it’s a tin shack on the side of a mountain with two goats and a rooster, and they tell you they want their son back,” he said. “What do you do? Be a businessman or be sentimental?”

Mohammed El Mkaddem, an imam at the mosque in Algeciras which makes collections for the families of the dead, said he understood Mr. Zamora’s constraints. “In the end, they run a funeral home and it’s a business,” said the imam. “But they do what they can, and we’re thankful for it.”

José Manuel Castillo, the director of the city morgue in Algeciras, said Mr. Zamora filled a gap left by the authorities. “Someone has to take care of the paperwork and the repatriation of the bodies, and if it’s Martín Zamora, that is great,” he said.

Even in the heat of southern Spain, Mr. Zamora wears a tie and loafers, looking more like a lawyer than an undertaker. On a recent afternoon, he was working on a body with his son, Martín Jr., 17.

“They found him in his work clothes,” Martín Jr. said of the corpse. “Maybe he went straight from work into the boat.”

The boy wandered off for a moment, and Mr. Zamora began to speak, almost to himself. His son was 15 the first time they worked together, after a boat carrying 40 people capsized off the coast of Barbate, just north of Algeciras, leaving 22 dead.

He was afraid his son would have nightmares, but Martín Jr. wanted to work, he said.

“No father wants his son to see these things,” Mr. Zamora said. “But this is the world we live in.”

Just before the summer, Mr. Zamora said he received a WhatsApp message from a man who identified himself as Yusef and said he worked at a mosque in the city of La Linea, across the border from the Rock of Gibraltar.

“There were two boys we don’t know if they are alive or dead — surely they are dead,” began the voice message. “The family was looking everywhere and I said we would ask someone we know who is involved in this kind of thing.”

The next message contained a picture of three men in a dinghy with homemade life vests, taken moments before they left Morocco. One was Achraf Ameer, the illiterate mechanic from Tangier.

With that, Mr. Zamora contacted the local authorities, who had a body in the morgue. They gave Mr. Zamora’s photographs of the man’s clothes, and Mr. Zamora — helped by Yusef — located Mr. Ameer’s sister in Tangier and showed her a photo of the clothes. These days, Mr. Zamora rarely needs to make the trips to Morocco that he used to, making identifications from afar.

“The paint on his clothes was the paint he has on his clothes at work,” the sister, Soukaina Ameer, 28, said in a telephone interview from Tangier.

She said her brother had tried once before to cross into Spain, only to be deported. This time, he didn’t tell anyone but left cryptic hints when the family began making plans to move to a new home.

“He was always telling us: ‘I won’t be living with you in the new house,’” Ms. Ameer recalled.

He left on April 13, she said, his boat likely sinking the same night. His body floated in the sea for much of April before it came ashore around the end of the month. For the rest of the spring and part of the summer, it was placed in a morgue, where it deteriorated from not being frozen.

And so on a sweltering day, Mr. Zamora loaded Mr. Ameer’s body into his hearse and, with his son, drove past pines and sunflower fields. The body was wrapped in blankets from the Red Cross, which had found him. A hospital tag was affixed to one leg. At the mortuary, Mr. Zamora and his son arrived dressed in hazmat suits and began embalming.

Ten pumps from a long needle into Mr. Ameer’s shoulder. Another 10 into his chest. After an hour, Mr. Zamora wrapped the body in a shroud which he covered in a green cloak and sprinkled it with dried flowers, recreating a Muslim rite that an imam had once shown him. Then he shut the lid on the coffin and he and his son took off their hazmat suits. The two were covered in sweat.

Yet the work hardly felt finished. In the adjoining room sat stacks of case files, people whose bodies Mr. Zamora was still trying to locate after their relatives had gotten in touch with him. There was an Algerian man, born in 1986. There were two Moroccans who had been lost at sea; and a Syrian man, who once had a wife and lived in Aleppo.

And there was a ringing from the other room, and with it, another possible lead.

“Martín, go get my phone,” Mr. Zamora said to his son, taking off his gloves.

Aida Alami contributed reporting from Rabat, Morocco, and José Bautista from Madrid.

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Former Seminole County tax collector accused of stealing $400,000 in taxpayer money

SEMINOLE COUNTY, Fla. – Former Seminole County Tax Collector Joel Greenberg now faces 21 new federal charges, in addition to the 12 he was already facing.

The superseding indictment was filed on Tuesday, according to court records.

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The new charges include nine counts of wire fraud. According to prosecutors, Greenberg diverted more than $400,000 in tax collector funds for his own personal gain.

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Greenberg used the tax collector’s American Express card to purchase cryptocurrency and used tax collector funds to operate a cryptocurrency mining operation for his own benefit and also used tax collector funds to run a business selling cryptocurrency mining tools to others, according to the indictment.

Additionally, prosecutors said Greenburg used tax collector funds to buy sports memorabilia signed by Kobe Bryant and Michael Jordan.

The former tax collector also set up a bank account at Fifth Third Bank in the name of the tax collector’s office to receive office funds and then used that account to write checks to himself, according to the affidavit.

He would “falsely represent in the memo lines of the checks the purpose of the transactions in an attempt to conceal the true personal nature of the transaction,” the affidavit stated.

Among the fraud charges, investigators said Greenberg reinstated two businesses — Greenberg Media and DG3 Network — in June, which he had dissolved earlier in 2020. Prosecutors said the businesses were reinstated with the purpose of falsely applying for Economic Injury Disaster Relief Loans, EIDLs, through the Small Business Administration. Those loans were created to help businesses impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Greenberg, along with another unnamed conspirator, bribed an SBA employee to assist with the loan applications, ultimately paying the employee at least $3,000, according to investigators. In the applications, it was claimed that DG3 Network employed two people and that Greenberg Media employed 10 people.

In all, prosecutors said this conspiracy saw Greenberg pocket more $432,700 from those EIDLs.

In addition to the fraud charges, the court records also reveal new evidence of the steps Greenberg took to smear a political opponent, according to prosecutors.

Below is a letter that Greenberg is accused of sending to school officials, posing as an anonymous “concerned student,” detailing false allegations of sexual misconduct by his opponent, according to prosecutors.

A letter sent by Joel Greenberg to smear a political opponent, according to prosecutors. (Copyright 2021 by WKMG ClickOrlando – All rights reserved.)

Additionally, the affidavit contains social media posts that investigators believe were made by Greenberg posing as his rival.

“I’m running for office to keep #seminolecounty white and segregated. It’s time we take back our county!” one post read.

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Similarly, the affidavit also contained posts from Greenberg, according to prosecutors, posing as a concerned employee at the school where Greenberg’s opponent worked.

“I am a teacher at (the school). I post this today to make the public aware that Mr. (school employee) has had several accusations of sexual misconduct made against him over the past two years,” the post read before further lobbing accusations of sexual encounters with a student.

Greenberg was indicted last June on federal stalking charges, later prosecutors filed more charges, including unlawful use of means to identify another person, production of identification and false identification documents, aggravated identity theft, sex trafficking of a child and violating the Driver’s Privacy Protection Act.

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In addition to the new accusations, Greenberg is accused of stalking his political opponent by creating fake social media accounts and spreading a false rumor that he sexually abused a student, using information from surrendered driver’s licenses to make fake IDs with his picture on it, trying to create fake concealed weapons permits and using fake IDs for individuals he was involved in “sugar daddy relationships” with so they could “engage in commercial sex acts,” despite being underage.

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Greenberg has pleaded not guilty to the first 12 charges against him.

He was ordered back to jail in early March when police said he violated his probation by going to his mother-in-law’s home in Jupiter to find his wife.

The investigation into Greenberg was recently connected to another investigation into accusations of a sexual relationship between a 17-year-old girl and U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz. The report first appeared in The New York Times on Tuesday.

Gaetz has denied the accusations and said they are part of a plot to extort money out of him and smear his name.

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Copyright 2021 by WKMG ClickOrlando – All rights reserved.



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