Tag Archives: counts

Off-duty pilot charged with 83 counts of attempted murder for allegedly trying to shut off engines on Alaska Airlines flight – ABC News

  1. Off-duty pilot charged with 83 counts of attempted murder for allegedly trying to shut off engines on Alaska Airlines flight ABC News
  2. An off-duty pilot tried to take control of Alaska Airlines flight before being subdued, source and airline say CNN
  3. FAA investigating dangerous close call between 2 passenger jets over Oregon | WNT ABC News
  4. Airline pilot gets 83 counts of attempted murder after plane emergency lands at PDX Fox 12 Oregon
  5. Flight diverted to Portland over ‘credible security threat,’ off-duty pilot charged with 83 attempted murders Fox Business
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‘We’ll never understand why this happened:’ Jury finds Yohn guilty on all 6 counts – WGEM

  1. ‘We’ll never understand why this happened:’ Jury finds Yohn guilty on all 6 counts WGEM
  2. Jury quickly convicts man for kidnapping, sexually assaulting a 77-year-old great-grandmother following bizarre closing argument where he denied being a ‘creep’ Law & Crime
  3. Yohn plans to put alleged accomplice and his father on witness stand during what could be unpredictable Monday – Muddy River News Muddy River News
  4. Yohn guilty on all charges in 2021 home invasion, attack Herald-Whig
  5. ‘She was a survivor’: Victim’s daughters testify about sexual assault in Yohn trial khqa.com
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Nate Paul, Austin investor tied to AG Paxton, charged with 8 federal counts – KXAN.com

  1. Nate Paul, Austin investor tied to AG Paxton, charged with 8 federal counts KXAN.com
  2. Lawyers in in impeachment case for Texas AG Ken Paxton sent cease-and-desist letter to House impeach FOX 26 Houston
  3. FBI arrests Texas businessman linked to impeachment of state Attorney General Ken Paxton Yahoo News
  4. Love those Houston lawyers. But it’s time for impeached Texas AG Ken Paxton to quit | Opinion Fort Worth Star-Telegram
  5. Paxton trial promises to be as serious as this past legislative session (Opinion) Houston Chronicle
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Nate Paul charged with 8 felony counts of making false statements to financial institutions – The Texas Tribune

  1. Nate Paul charged with 8 felony counts of making false statements to financial institutions The Texas Tribune
  2. Nate Paul, real estate investor linked to Ken Paxton, faces felony charges WFAA
  3. Man at center of Paxton impeachment charged with lying to get $172M in loans FOX 4 Dallas-Fort Worth
  4. Love those Houston lawyers. But it’s time for impeached Texas AG Ken Paxton to quit | Opinion Fort Worth Star-Telegram
  5. Paxton’s trial must be impeccable, but right now, it looks like a playground fight | Opinion Fort Worth Star-Telegram
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New Zealand counts cost of Auckland floods, more rain forecast

WELLINGTON, Jan 30 (Reuters) – Flood-ravaged Auckland is forecast to receive further heavy rain in the coming days, authorities in New Zealand’s largest city said on Monday, as insurers counted the costs of what looks likely to be the country’s most expensive weather event ever.

Four people lost their lives in flash floods and landslides that hit Auckland over the last three days amid record downpours. A state of emergency remains in place in Auckland. A state of emergency in the Waitomo region south of Auckland was lifted.

Flights in and out of Auckland Airport are still experiencing delays and cancellations, beaches around the city of 1.6 million are closed and all Auckland schools will remain closed until Feb. 7.

“There has been very significant damage across Auckland,” New Zealand Prime Minister Chris Hipkins told state-owned television station TVNZ on Monday. “Obviously there were a number of homes damaged by flooding but also extensive earth movements.”

Currently, around 350 people were in need of emergency accommodation, he added.

LOOMING CLOUDS

Metservice is forecasting further heavy rains to hit the already sodden city late on Tuesday.

“We have more adverse weather coming and we need to prepare for that,” Auckland Emergency Management duty controller Rachel Kelleher told a media conference.

Fire and Emergency services received 30 callouts overnight Monday, including responding to a landslide when a carport slid down a hill.

The council has designated 69 houses as uninhabitable and has prevented people from entering them. A further 300 properties were deemed at risk, with access restricted to certain areas for short periods.

The north of New Zealand’s North Island is receiving more rain than normal due to the La Nina weather event.

The National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA) said Auckland has already recorded more than eight times its average January rainfall and 40% of its annual average rainfall.

INSURERS FACE HEFTY BILL

The cost of the clean up is expected to top the NZ$97 million ($63 million) bill for flooding on the West Coast in 2021 but will not be anywhere near as expensive as the estimated NZ$31 billion insured costs of two major earthquakes in Christchurch in 2010-2011, said Insurance Council of New Zealand spokesperson Christian Judge.

Insurance Australia Group’s (IAG.AX) New Zealand divisions have received over 5,000 claims so far and Suncorp Group (SUN.AX) said it received around 3,000 claims across the Vero and AA Insurance Brands. New Zealand’s Tower (TWR.NZ) said it had received around 1,900 claims.

“The number of claims is expected to rise further over the coming days, with the event still unfolding and as customers identify damage to their property,” IAG said in a statement.

Economists say the recovery and rebuild could add to inflationary pressures in New Zealand as vehicles and household goods need to be replaced and there is an increase in construction work needed to repair or rebuild houses and infrastructure damaged by the flooding.

($1 = 1.5385 New Zealand dollars)

Reporting by Lucy Craymer; Editing by Aurora Ellis and Lincoln Feast

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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NYC bike path terror suspect found guilty on all counts



CNN
 — 

Sayfullo Saipov was found guilty of murder by a federal jury for using a rented truck to fatally strike eight people on a New York City bike path on Halloween Day in 2017.

Jurors deliberated about six hours over two days in the case involving the deadliest terrorist attack New York had seen since 9/11 – which left six foreign tourists and two Americans dead.

The same jury will determine whether Saipov is sentenced to life in prison or the death penalty. The vote must be unanimous for the death penalty to be imposed. The penalty phase of the trial is scheduled to begin on February 6.

The trial was the first federal death penalty case heard during the administration of President Joe Biden, who had campaigned against capital punishment at the federal level.

Jury deliberations began Wednesday afternoon after Judge Vernon Broderick read them instructions.

Saipov had pleaded not guilty.

He was convicted Thursday in the Southern District of New York of counts of murder in aid of racketeering activity, assault with a dangerous weapon and attempted murder in aid of racketeering activity, attempted murder in aid of racketeering activity, provision of material support to ISIS, and violence and destruction of a motor vehicle.

In closing arguments, defense attorney David Patton did not dispute the facts of the attack Saipov is accused of committing. But the defense disputed the prosecution’s claim that Saipov was motivated to commit the attack to gain entry to ISIS. Patton argued that the attack was spurred by religious fervor to please his God and “ascend to paradise” in his religion.

Prosecutors told jurors that Saipov carried out the attack to become a member of the terrorist group.

“People who ISIS relies upon to conquer territory and kill non-believers, those are its soldiers. Of course they are part of ISIS. That is common sense,” prosecutor Amanda Leigh Houle said. “An organization engaged in a worldwide war needs its soldiers and its soldiers are part of the group.”

The charges stemmed from the 2017 attack in which Saipov drove a U-Haul truck into cyclists and pedestrians on Manhattan’s West Side bike path. He then crashed the vehicle into a school bus and left the truck while brandishing a pellet gun and paintball gun, authorities said at the time. He was shot by an NYPD officer and taken into custody, officials said.

Investigators said Saipov told them he planned the attack for about a year and was inspired by ISIS videos, according to a criminal complaint.

Saipov became radicalized by consuming extremist content during lengthy solo stints as a long-haul truck driver, his attorney said.

He grew up culturally Muslim in Uzbekistan but was not exposed to any significant amount of religious study, and his family members are not ISIS supporters, Patton said.

Saipov came to the United States from Uzbekistan in 2010 and was living in New Jersey before the attack. He lived with his wife and three children and drove for Uber, according to officials.

Saipov came to the US on a diversity immigrant visa, which allows people from countries with low recent immigration to apply for a visa and green card, according to the Department of Homeland Security. He later became a legal permanent resident, officials said.

Of the eight people killed in the attack, five were from Argentina, two were Americans, and one was from Belgium, police said.

The Argentinians were part of a group celebrating the 30th anniversary of their high school graduation in New York City.

Argentina’s Foreign Affairs Ministry identified them as Hernán Diego Mendoza, Diego Enrique Angelini, Alejandro Damián Pagnucco, Ariel Erlij and Hernán Ferruchi.

Nicholas Cleves, 23, from New York, and Darren Drake, 32, from New Milford, New Jersey, were the two Americans killed.

Ann-Laure Decadt, a 31-year-old Belgian woman, was also among those killed, according to a statement from her husband, Alexander Naessens. Decadt, a mother of two young sons, was on a trip to New York with her two sisters and her mother, Naessens said after the attack.

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Alleged Jan. 6 rioter photographed in Pelosi’s office convicted of 8 counts

An Arkansas man who entered the U.S. Capitol with rioters on Jan. 6, 2021, and was photographed lounging at a desk in then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office suite was convicted Monday of eight federal crimes related to the incursion.

Richard “Bigo” Barnett, now 62, who left a crude written message for Pelosi before departing the office suite with a purloined envelope bearing the California Democrat’s digital signature, sat impassively as a jury in U.S. District Court in Washington delivered its decisions.

After nine days of testimony and legal arguments in the trial, the panel began deliberating Monday morning and reached guilty verdicts on all eight counts against Barnett, including four felonies, in less than two hours.

The most serious charge he faced, obstructing an official government proceeding, carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison. But advisory sentencing guidelines used by the court are likely to recommend a much shorter term in his case.

Although a prosecutor argued that Barnett should be jailed pending his sentencing, scheduled for May 3, Judge Christopher R. Cooper allowed him remain on home detention in his small hometown in the Ozarks.

Barnett, an ardent supporter of former president Donald Trump, was carrying a walking stick equipped with a high-voltage stun device when he entered the Capitol. Congress was meeting that day to confirm President Biden’s victory in the November election, despite Trump’s debunked claims that he had been denied reelection because of massive voter fraud.

Besides obstructing an official proceeding, Barnett was convicted of two felonies related to carrying a dangerous weapon in the Capitol and a felony charge of civil disorder. The four misdemeanors he was convicted of included theft of government property, meaning the envelope.

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Death of Elijah McClain: Colorado officials plead not guilty to 32 counts including manslaughter

Police officers, two paramedics and another official in Colorado who are accused of being responsible for the death of Elijah McClain, a 23-year-old Black man who died after being handcuffed and injected with a powerful sedative, plead not guilty on Friday to various charges including manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide.

The Aurora Police officers Randy Roedema, Nathan Woodyard and former Aurora officer Jason Rosenblatt, along with Fire Rescue paramedics Jeremy Cooper and Lt. Peter Cichuniec made the plea during a courtroom hearing in Brighton, a Denver suburb.

The officials did not speak except to acknowledge they understood their rights.

McClain died on Aug. 24, 2019, following a clash with police after he left a grocery store in Aurora.

ELIJAH MCCLAIN’S DEATH ATTRIBUTED TO KETAMINE ADMINISTRATED BY PARAMEDICS

Demonstrators carry placards as they walk down Sable Boulevard during a rally and march over the death of Elijah McClain in Aurora, Colo., on June 27, 2020. 
(AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File)

At the time, McClain, a massage therapist, was wearing a ski mask, according to the indictment. He entered the store, purchased an iced tea, and exited. Police then approached him.

He had not been accused of committing any crime but the situation quickly escalated.

The three officers claimed McClain was resisting their instructions and forcibly restrained him.

During their interaction, McClain was handcuffed on the ground, complained he couldn’t breathe and vomited several times, per the indictment.

ELIJAH MCCLAIN DEATH: COLORADO GRAND JURY INDICTS 3 POLICE OFFICERS, 2 PARAMEDICS 

The document said McClain lost consciousness and was injected with ketamine.

Paramedics Jeremy Cooper, left, and Peter Cichuniec, right, at an arraignment in the Adams County district court at the Adams County Justice Center January 20, 2023. 
(Andy Cross/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images)

Paramedics Peter Cichuniec, fourth from left, and Jeremy Cooper, fifth from left, flanked by their attorneys, left, and prosecutors, right, during an arraignment in the Adams County district court at the Adams County Justice Center January 20, 2023. 
(Andy Cross/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images)

McClain’s relatives have since said he wore the mask because his anemia made him cold. “I’m just different,” McClain can be heard explaining in the released body cam footage.

A police accountability law was subsequently passed in Colorado banning chokeholds and put restrictions on the use of ketamine.

A grand jury indicted the five officials who contributed to the arrest and death with 32 counts, including manslaughter, criminally negligent homicide and other charges in 2021. The indictment came after Democratic Gov. Jared Polis ordered Attorney General Phil Weiser to open a criminal investigation into the case.

An Initial autopsy report concluded the dose of ketamine was higher than recommended for someone his size but his manner of death was still listed as undetermined, not a homicide.

AURORA POLICE IN COLORADO QUESTIONED ON USE OF FORCE DURING ELIJAH MCCLAIN PROTEST: REPORT

McClain would most likely have survived if not for the dose, the autopsy also determined, though not specifying it as causing his death.

An amended autopsy report was released in September of last year.

It said McClain died as the result of complications of ketamine administration after he was forcibly restrained.

A man walks past a display showing an image of Elijah McClain outside Laugh Factory during a candlelight vigil for McClain in Los Angeles on Aug. 24, 2020. 
(AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Dr. Stephen Cina, a pathologist, said in the autopsy that he could not rule out that changes in McClain’s blood chemistry due to his exertion while being restrained by police contributed to his death but concluded there was no evidence that injuries inflicted by police caused his death.

ELIJAH MCCLAIN DEATH: AURORA TO PAY $15M TO FAMILY OF BLACK MAN IN FEDERAL CIVIL RIGHTS SUIT SETTLEMENT

Family members and others packed the small courtroom, where they saw the pleas and watched as the judge scheduled three separate trials for the officials.

Officers Roedema and Rosenblatt will stand trial in July. Another trial for Cooper and Cichuniec is scheduled for August ,while Woodyard’s is scheduled for September.

Megan Downing, a lawyer representing Woodyard, declined to comment at the trial, saying any defense she would offer on the allegations would get into grand jury material, which remains sealed.

Colorado attorney general Phil Weiser during a press conference announcing an indictment of the three Aurora police officers and two Aurora fire paramedics in the death of Elijah McClain on Wednesdsay, September 1, 2021. 
(Aaron Ontiveroz/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images)

The other defendants’ attorneys similarly left court without addressing the allegations.

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In 2021, the city of Aurora agreed to settle a lawsuit brought on by McClain’s parents for $15 million.

His death prompted protests against police and law enforcement.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Arizona woman charged with 43 counts of animal cruelty: police

An Arizona woman faces 43 charges of animal cruelty after complaints of animal hoarding at two different homes led police to discover the residences were covered in urine, feces and trash, police said.

The Mohave County Sheriff’s Office Animal Enforcement Division investigated animal hoarding at two different residences in Dolan Springs, both of which were utilized by 77-year-old Betty Lynn Fuchsel.

The department also received complaints that the animals ran around at large and attacked livestock in the area.

The sheriff’s office said in a press release that Fuchsel received several citations for the violations and failed to appear in court or comply, ultimately leading to her being taken into custody on Jan. 11.

Following her arrest, the Sheriff’s office secured and executed search warrants for both of Fuchsel’s residences.

When deputies entered both premises, they reported seeing the floors covered with feces, trash and urine.

Police said several dogs were locked up inside the residence and in vehicles on the property without access to food or water.

In total, the sheriff’s office seized 43 dogs, which were emaciated and in different stages of neglect.

Many dogs were taken to receive emergency veterinarian care, while all animals were handed over to the Mohave County Animal Shelter.

Fuchsel was charged with 43 counts of felony animal cruelty.

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Iowa official’s wife charged with 52 counts of voter fraud

SIOUX CITY, Iowa (AP) — The wife of a northwestern Iowa county supervisor has been charged with 52 counts of voter fraud after she allegedly filled out and cast absentee ballots in her husband’s unsuccessful race for a Republican nomination to run for Congress in 2020, federal prosecutors said.

Kim Phuong Taylor, 49, was arrested Thursday and pleaded not guilty to the charges before being released on a personal recognizance bond, the Sioux City Journal reported. Her trial is scheduled to begin March 20.

Prosecutors allege in an indictment unsealed Thursday that Phuong Taylor filled out voter registration forms or delivered absentee ballots for people in Sioux City’s Vietnamese community who had limited ability to read and understand English.

She filled out “dozens of voter registrations, absentee ballot request forms, and absentee ballots containing false information,” and delivered absentee ballots, sometimes without the knowledge of the people whose names were used, according to the indictment.

Pat Gill, who is Woodbury County’s auditor and election commissioner, said Thursday that he notified the Iowa secretary of state’s office after someone contacted his office because a ballot had been fraudulently cast in their name in November 2020.

He said his office later provided the FBI with suspected fraudulent registration forms and absentee ballots.

Phuong Taylor committed the fraud before the June 2020 primary, in which her husband, Jeremy Taylor, a former Iowa House member, finished a distant third in the race for the Republican nomination to run for Iowa’s 4th District congressional seat, prosecutors allege. The winner of that race, Randy Feenstra, easily won election to Congress that November.

Prosecutors contend that Phuong Taylor committed the same fraud before the November 2020 election in which Jeremy Taylor was elected to the Woodbury County Board, according to the indictment.

Jeremy Taylor is not named in the indictment and is not accused of wrongdoing.

Kim Phuong Taylor’s attorney, John Greer of Spencer, Iowa, declined to comment on the charges, the Journal reported.

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