Tag Archives: intentional

Israeli report says Hamas sexual violence ‘systematic and intentional’ – BBC.com

  1. Israeli report says Hamas sexual violence ‘systematic and intentional’ BBC.com
  2. Hamas terrorists ‘systematically and intentionally’ committed sexual violence during Oct. 7 attack: report Fox News
  3. Israeli Rape-Crisis Group Report Finds ‘Systematic’ Sexual Violence on and After Oct. 7 The New York Times
  4. Sexual assaults carried out ‘systematically’ during Hamas attack, Israeli report says CNN
  5. Hamas terrorists’ ‘sadistic’ sexual violence included shoving knives inside Israeli rape victims’ genitals before execution: report New York Post

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CFPB Orders Citi to Pay $25.9 Million for Intentional, Illegal Discrimination Against Armenian Americans – Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

  1. CFPB Orders Citi to Pay $25.9 Million for Intentional, Illegal Discrimination Against Armenian Americans Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
  2. Citi (C) to Pay $25.9 Million for Armenian-American Discrimination Bloomberg
  3. Citigroup discriminated against Armenian-Americans, federal regulator says; bank fined $25.9 million Yahoo Finance
  4. Citigroup Fined for Discriminating Against Armenian Americans The Wall Street Journal
  5. Citibank fined $26 million for ‘treating Armenian Americans like criminals,’ US agency says CNN
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Josh Allen on intentional grounding penalty: “I’ve never seen that call in my life” – NBC Sports

  1. Josh Allen on intentional grounding penalty: “I’ve never seen that call in my life” NBC Sports
  2. Josh Allen flagged for questionable taunting, intentional grounding penalties Yahoo Sports
  3. ‘Cincinnati is ROLLING!’ – Tim Hasselbeck praises Joe Burrow, offensive protection | SportsCenter ESPN
  4. Bills report card: Buffalo outcoached and outclassed against Bengals Democrat & Chronicle
  5. Things Get Awkward When Cris Collinsworth & Rules Analyst Terry McAulay Argue Over Intentional Grounding Call On Live TV BroBible
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Jennifer Lawrence admits she ate tuna and garlic before kissing scenes with ‘Hunger Games’ costar Liam Hemsworth, but ‘it was not intentional’ – Yahoo Entertainment

  1. Jennifer Lawrence admits she ate tuna and garlic before kissing scenes with ‘Hunger Games’ costar Liam Hemsworth, but ‘it was not intentional’ Yahoo Entertainment
  2. Seven-time Grammy winner talks painful body-shaming comments, more news Wonderwall
  3. Jennifer Lawrence Reacts To Liam Hemsworth Calling Out Her ‘Hunger Games’ Kissing Breath Access Hollywood
  4. Jennifer Lawrence Hilariously Claps Back at Liam Hemsworth Over Hunger Games Kissing Critique Yahoo Entertainment
  5. Jennifer Lawrence ate garlic before doing kissing scenes with Liam Hemsworth Gulf News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Reports: Twitter’s sudden third-party client lockouts were intentional

Enlarge / Twitter is blocking many third-party clients’ access to its API while continuing to provide no explanation.

Ryan J Lane/Getty Images

Twitter has not yet explained why third-party clients like Twitterific and Tweetbot stopped working late last week. But a new report and testing by one app developer suggest the outages and lack of communication are intentional.

Internal Twitter Slack chat messages viewed by The Information (subscription required) show a senior software engineer writing in a “command center” channel that “third-party app suspensions are intentional.” Another employee, asking about talking points to use when addressing the outages with product partners, was told by a product marketing manager that Twitter had “started to work on comms,” but there was no delivery date, according to The Information’s report.

Some Tweetbot users seemed to briefly regain account access early Sunday, without the ability to post, only to lose access again later. That resulted from Tweetbot co-creator Paul Haddad swapping out the app’s API keys, but all of his keys were later revoked. That result “proves that this was intentional and we and others were specifically targeted,” Haddad wrote on Mastodon Sunday evening, as noticed by The Verge.

“I wouldn’t have swapped out the keys in the first place if there was even a shred of communication,” Haddad wrote.  “Figured if nothing else, this would push the issue. Oh well, on to smaller but greener pastures.”

Neither Twitter nor owner Elon Musk has mentioned the failure of third-party clients to connect. Twitter’s status page early Monday said that all systems were operational, with no past incidents listed as far back as January 2. “Enterprise” clients, such as business-minded apps that monitor Twitter engagement and track topics, appear to be functioning, as do some versions of third-party clients, like Twitterific for Mac.

Twitter has long kept third-party clients, which allow users and small teams to customize how they view, track, and engage with tweets, at arm’s length. Prior to Musk’s ownership, Twitter asked developers not to make them, restricted its API, and took away push notifications and auto-refresh for the clients.

Musk’s ownership, which commenced with large-scale layoffs and has consistently seen the company rapidly changing policy and making its intent hard to decipher, led some industry watchers and tech pundits to wonder if the third-party API shutdown was simply an infrastructure failure that the company couldn’t quickly fix.

But a more likely explanation involves ad revenue. By way of explaining his deep cuts across the company, Musk said in mid-December that Twitter was on track for a “negative cash flow of $3 billion.” The cash crunch largely seems due to the $1.5 billion debt servicing needed for Musk’s takeover debt, as well as drastically declining advertising revenue since his takeover. Twitter has been sued multiple times by landlords for lapsed rent.

Twitter recently changed its iOS app to default to a tab showing an algorithm-based “For You” feed, requiring users to regularly tap over to view a more reverse-chronological “Following” feed. Third-party clients have traditionally offered far more control over how users can sort their feeds—and, most notably, they don’t show Twitter’s “promoted” tweet advertising. The company has recently offered deeply incentivized advertising packages following drastic downturns in its ad sales.

We could not contact Twitter for comment, as its public relations and communications departments reportedly no longer exist. Musk’s latest tweet, just after midnight ET on January 16, is a lightly coded swipe at media as being quietly state-run.



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Moore County: FBI joins investigation into North Carolina power outage caused by ‘intentional’ attacks on substations as officials work to determine a motive and suspect



CNN
 — 

With no suspects or motive announced, the FBI is joining the investigation into power outages in a North Carolina county believed to have been caused by “intentional” and “targeted” attacks on substations that left around 40,000 customers in the dark Saturday night, prompting a curfew and emergency declaration.

The mass outage in Moore County turned into a criminal investigation when responding utility crews found signs of potential vandalism of equipment at different sites – including two substations that had been damaged by gunfire, according to the Moore County Sheriff’s Office.

“The person, or persons, who did this knew exactly what they were doing,” Moore County Sheriff Ronnie Fields said during a Sunday news conference. “We don’t have a clue why Moore County.”

Fields said multiple rounds were fired at the two substations. “It was targeted, it wasn’t random,” he said.

The sheriff would not say whether the criminal activity was domestic terrorism but noted “no group has stepped up to acknowledge or accept they’re the ones who [did] it.”

Authorities announced a mandatory curfew from 9 p.m. until 5 a.m., starting Sunday night, with Fields saying the decision was made to protect residents and businesses.

In addition to the FBI, the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation has joined the investigation, officials said.

More than 33,000 customers were still in the dark across the county Sunday evening, the Duke Energy outage map showed. For some, the outage may stretch into Thursday, officials said, upending life for tens of thousands.

All schools in the county will be closed Monday and authorities have opened a shelter running on a generator.

Traffic lights are also out, and while a few stores with generators were able to open their doors, several businesses and churches in Moore County were closed Sunday, CNN affiliate WRAL reported.

“We were just getting over Covid. And now this,” the sheriff said, adding, “It’s gonna hurt all of our restaurants and businesses.”

Inside people’s homes, it’s become difficult to keep the cold out.

“We have a six-month-old baby in the house. We’re out of heat. We are trying to get heat for her,” Carthage resident Chris Thompson told WRAL.

Chilly temperatures, with lows in the 30s, were expected in the area overnight Sunday with highs in the 50s and a chance of rain expected Monday, according to the National Weather Service. Moore County is in central North Carolina, about 50 miles northwest of Fayetteville.

Mapbox

The estimated cost of the substation damage is in the millions, the sheriff said Sunday.

The damage has been significant and rerouting power isn’t an option, said Jeff Brooks, principal communications manager for Duke Energy.

“Equipment will have to be replaced,” Brooks said. “We’re pursuing multiple paths of restoration so that we can restore as many customers as quickly as possible. Recognizing that, we are looking at pretty sophisticated repair with some fairly large equipment.”

In addition to the gunfire damage at the substations, a gate at one of the locations appears to have been taken off its hinges, Asst. Chief Mike Cameron of the Southern Pines Fire and Rescue Department told CNN.

While it’s unclear what motivated the alleged vandalism, the sheriff on Sunday addressed rumors circulating on social media that the attack was an attempt to thwart a local drag show.

Fields said investigators “have not been able to tie anything back to the drag show,” which was scheduled in the town of Southern Pines at 7 p.m. Saturday, around the time the power went out.

The county declared a state of emergency to protect residents and property and maintain public services, authorities said. The countywide curfew is expected to stay in effect nightly while the emergency declaration is in effect.

“It is going to be very, very dark and it’s going to be chilly tonight, and we don’t need to have anyone out on the streets and that is the reason for our curfew,” North Carolina state Senator Tom McInnis said during the news conference. “Please stay home tonight … the roads are dangerous.”

The emergency order also encourages residents to conserve fuel.

With streets in the dark, the area has seen increased emergency calls and vehicle accidents are being reported because traffic lights are out, Cameron told CNN.

People who rely on oxygen have also placed emergency calls, he added.

A shelter was opened at the Moore County Sports Complex, and trailers with bathroom and shower facilities are being brought in, Moore County Manager Wayne Vest said.

As for schools, it’s unclear how long campuses will stay closed. Moore County Superintendent Tim Locklair said decisions regarding school openings for the remainder of the week will be made on a day-by-day basis.

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Power outage Moore County: Intentional vandalism knocked out multiple substations, leaving 38,000 people without power

Sunday, December 4, 2022 2:17PM

MOORE COUNTY, N.C. (WTVD) — Acts of intentional vandalism caused ten of thousands of people in Moore County to sleep Saturday night without power.

Moore County Sheriff’s Office said the outages began just after 7 p.m. because of damaged caused at multiple substations in the county.

Sheriff Ronnie Fields said the mass outage is currently believed to have been caused by a criminal act. Anyone with information about what happened is asked to contact the Moore County Sheriff’s Office at 910-947-2931.

Approximately 38,000 people lost power and were forced to deal with the overnight freezing temperatures. Duke Energy said it expects to have power restored Sunday night around 10.

Public safety officials in Moore County asked those affected in a tweet to refrain from calling 911 to report an emergency.

Copyright © 2022 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.



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‘Intentional vandalism’ at substations the cause of power outage affecting over 40K residents of Moore County

A massive power outage is being reported in Moore County.

A Duke Energy outage map Saturday evening showed 37,998 customers without power in Moore County; The Randolph Electric Membership Corporation also reported nearly 3,000 customers without power in the southern part of the county.

WRAL viewers began calling in to report outages around 8:00 p.m.

Jeff Brooks with Duke Energy told WRAL News that crews are experiencing “multiple equipment failures” that are affecting substations in Moore County.

“We are also investigating signs of potential vandalism related to the outages,” said Brooks.

Moore County Sheriff Ronnie Fields said just before midnight that the outage was being investigated as a “criminal occurrence.”

“As utility companies began responding to the different substations, evidence was discovered that indicated that intentional vandalism had occurred at multiple sites,” said Fields.

Fields said Moore County sheriff’s deputies and various other law enforcement agencies provided additional site security Saturday as utility crews worked.

Anyone with any information about this act of violence should contact the Moore County Sheriff’s Office at 910-947-2931.

The Village of Pinehurst sent out a police alert Saturday saying, “Additional officers have been called in to assist. Please stay off the roads if you can and treat all intersections as four way stops.”

The Duke Energy website lists the possible time of restoration as 10:00 p.m. Sunday evening, though many viewers have told WRAL News they were given quotes for early Sunday morning.

“We do not yet have an updated estimate on restoration time,” said Brooks. “We will update customers as that information becomes available.”

Saturday night, WRAL News crew arrived at the Walmart in Aberdeen to find a massive police presence; The crew was quickly instructed to leave by authorities who said it wasn’t safe.

Police said they were doing an employee head count.

It’s not currently known if this police response is in relation to the outages.

WRAL News is working to gather more information.

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Darrell Brooks: Man who drove SUV into Waukesha Christmas parade found guilty of intentional homicide



CNN
 — 

Darrell Brooks was found guilty of six counts of first-degree intentional homicide on Wednesday for driving his SUV into a crowd of Christmas parade attendees in Waukesha, Wisconsin, last November, killing six people and wounding dozens more.

He faces a mandatory sentence of life in prison for the convictions.

Brooks, 40, also was convicted of 61 counts of recklessly endangering safety with the use of a dangerous weapon, six counts of fatal hit and run, two counts of felony bail jumping and one count of misdemeanor domestic battery – a clean sweep for the prosecution.

Brooks represented himself in court and has been combative throughout the trial, repeatedly speaking over the judge to make inane and outlandish arguments. Yet as the stream of guilty verdicts were read Wednesday, he looked down, put his head on his hands and sat silently.

The trial comes less than a year after he drove a red SUV through the crowd in Waukesha’s Christmas parade on November 21, killing an 8-year-old boy and several members of the “Dancing Grannies” group.

Brooks had been released from jail less than two weeks prior in a domestic abuse case, on a $1,000 bail that prosecutors later acknowledged was “inappropriately low.” In that case, he allegedly ran over a woman who said she’s the mother of his child, according to court documents.

Prosecutors said in closing arguments Tuesday he intentionally drove through the crowd at significant speeds and hit 68 individual parade-goers, turning a joyous afternoon into a horrific one.

‘It was zooming’: Man marching in parade describes SUV plowing through crowd

“He reached speeds of approximately 30 mph. That’s intentional. He plowed through 68 different people. 68. How can you hit one and keep going? How can you hit two and keep going?” Waukesha County District Attorney Susan Opper said.

“His intent I do have to prove, and I submit without any doubt there’s overwhelming evidence that this was an intentional act by Darrell Brooks and an act of utter disregard for human life.”

In his own closing arguments, Brooks attempted to raise questions about the vehicle and about his intent. He repeatedly said there had been “misconceptions” and “lies” told about him during the trial.

“I’ve never heard of someone trying to intentionally hurt someone while attempting to blow their horn while attempting to alert people of their presence,” Brooks said.

Jurors deliberated on Tuesday night for just under two hours and then resumed again on Wednesday morning.

In court, a series of videos and witnesses detailed the disturbing sights of the SUV ramming through the parade route.

“The band had just passed us, a red SUV … going maybe 30, 40 miles per hour, just went straight over the Waukesha South (high school) band,” said Kyle Jewell, a spectator who tried unsuccessfully to catch up to the SUV to stop it. “And it’s not like it stopped, it went over … it looked like it went in the air, like over a pretty big object, and it was just like a big old speed bump and kept going.”

Nicole White, who prosecutors said was the first person struck by Brooks’ vehicle, testified she sustained injuries to her spine and tailbone and suffered ligament damage to her right knee.

“I just remember being struck by the vehicle from behind on my back and then I fell to my knees and kind of rolled under the vehicle,” White said.

Brooks’ trial has been marked by his unusual decision to represent himself in court and his persistent disruptions. Throughout the trial, he has spoken over prosecutors and the judge, asked vague questions, challenged the court’s jurisdiction and declared “Darrell Brooks” is not his name.

Judge Jennifer Dorow has repeatedly removed Brooks from the court for his outbursts and placed him in a nearby courtroom, where he can communicate via a monitor and microphone which is most often muted.

On Tuesday, after removing him for the prosecution’s closing arguments due to interruptions, she called him “stubbornly defiant.”

“He continues to not respect the fact that a ruling has been made, and he wants to argue and reargue and reargue points that this court has already gone over,” she said.

Brooks previously pleaded not guilty by insanity, but his public defenders withdrew the insanity plea in September. The attorneys later filed a motion to withdraw from the case, and the judge ruled to allow Brooks to represent himself at trial.

Opper, the prosecuting attorney, told jurors in her closing arguments not to be distracted in their deliberations by Brooks’ conduct during the trial.

“You must not, not, not consider anything about Darrell Brooks other than his conduct in downtown Waukesha on the evening of November 21, 2021,” Opper told the jury. “Nothing he’s done before that, nothing he’s done since that. When you go back to that deliberation room, please obey Judge Dorow. Confine your comments to his conduct on November 21.”

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U.S. says Israel gunfire killed Shireen Abu Akleh but not “intentional”

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TEL AVIV — An American-led analysis of forensic and ballistic evidence, as well as the separate Israeli and Palestinian investigations, found that the bullet that killed Palestinian American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh likely originated from an Israeli soldier, but added that there was “no reason to believe this was intentional,” State Department spokesman Ned Price said Monday.

Price said that investigators concluded that the bullet which hit Abu Akleh — a longtime correspondent for Al Jazeera news who was shot on May 11 while covering an Israeli military raid in the West Bank city of Jenin — “was badly damaged,” preventing “a clear conclusion.” The statement sparked angry responses from her family and Palestinian officials.

The Palestinian Authority handed over the bullet to the U.S. Security Coordinator on Saturday, complying with a long-standing demand from Israel. Since the incident, Israel has claimed that without the bullet, it would not be able to determine whether Abu Akleh had been shot by an Israeli gun or by weapons from armed Palestinians in the area at the time of the shooting.

How Shireen Abu Akleh was killed

“The USSC found no reason to believe that this was intentional but rather the result of tragic circumstances during an IDF-led military operation against factions of Palestinian Islamic Jihad on May 11, 2022, in Jenin, which followed a series of terrorist attacks in Israel,” the statement said, referring to a string of Palestinian attacks in Israel in recent months in which a number of the assailants hailed from Jenin and the surrounding area.

Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid said that “the IDF investigation was unable to determine who is responsible for the tragic death of journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, but it was able to determine conclusively that there was no intention to harm her. Israel expresses sorrow over her death.”

IDF spokesman Ran Kochav said on the day of Abu Akleh’s killing that it was “likely” that she was killed by armed Palestinians before the military later backtracked and conceded that it was possible that an Israeli sniper could have been responsible.

The investigation, which the Israeli army said has been stalled due to the Palestinian refusal to transfer the bullet, had been looming over President Biden’s July 13-16 visit to the Middle East, his first as president.

Abu Akleh’s killing has sparked outrage and has shone an international spotlight on what Palestinians and human rights activists have for years called a policy of impunity in Israel’s military.

Slain journalist’s brother seeks U.S. help holding Israel to account

Palestinian officials immediately called Abu Akleh’s killing an “assassination.” Last month, the Palestinian Authority published the results of its own inquiry and said it found that she was killed by a 5.56mm round fired by a Ruger Mini-14 semiautomatic rifle, though it did not say if that model was used by either or both sides — who were exchanging fire the morning of Abu Akleh’s killing.

In response to the State Department announcement, Hussein al-Sheikh, the secretary general of the Executive Committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), told the Palestinian news agency that officials believed the United States was looking to protect Israel. He said that, absent American support, the Palestinian Authority would continue to pursue the case in the International Criminal Court, based in The Hague.

“We will not allow attempts to conceal the truth or to have shy references in pointing the finger of accusation to Israel,” said al-Sheikh.

The Israeli group B’Tselem, which documents Israeli violations in the Palestinian territories, said in a statement that “the odds that those responsible for the killing of Shireen Abu Akleh will be held to account are all but nonexistent.”

U.N. rights body says Israeli soldiers killed American journalist in West Bank

On June 24, the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights said that Israel was the most probable source of the bullet that killed Abu Akleh. The U.N. findings — along with the investigations published by The Post, the New York Times, the Associated Press, CNN and the investigative group Bellingcat — added momentum to a growing calls for the United States to push more publicly for a thorough and transparent probe.

In June, 24 senators called for the United States to be “directly involved in investigating” the case, while Abu Akleh’s brother, Anton, said America should take it over completely from the Israeli military.

“The focus on the bullet has always been misplaced and was an attempt by the Israelis to spin the narrative in its favor,” said a statement from the Abu Akleh family.

The statement said that the family had hoped, and still hopes, that the FBI or another American authority would regard Abu Akleh’s death as grounds for a “murder investigation.”

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