Tag Archives: Jan

JAN MOIR: I’m relieved Harry and Meghan’s carousel of caressing has halted. But it does make me fear for them… – Daily Mail

  1. JAN MOIR: I’m relieved Harry and Meghan’s carousel of caressing has halted. But it does make me fear for them… Daily Mail
  2. Meghan Markle and Prince Harry’s Obstacles to Success in Hollywood: ‘House with No Foundation’ PEOPLE
  3. ‘She’s A Professional Actress!” Kinsey Schofield Reacts To Harry And Meghan’s ‘Gushing’ New Video TalkTV
  4. A New Source Reveals What Went Wrong in Meghan Markle & Prince Harry’s Spotify Deal & It’s Not What You’d Expect Yahoo Entertainment
  5. Spotify to blame for Meghan Markle and Prince Harry’s podcast debacle: insider New York Post

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Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes sentenced to 18 years in prison on Jan. 6 charges – CBS News

  1. Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes sentenced to 18 years in prison on Jan. 6 charges CBS News
  2. BREAKING: Oath Keepers founder sentenced to 18 years in prison for Jan. 6 attack MSNBC
  3. 5 PM ET: Oath Keepers leader sentenced, GOP debt ceiling demands, Petito family lawsuit & more – CNN 5 Things – Podcast on CNN Audio CNN
  4. Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes sentenced to 18 years for seditious conspiracy in Jan. 6 attack WGN News
  5. Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes sentenced to 18 years for role in Jan. 6 insurrection: What we know Yahoo News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Tucker Carlson texted ‘I hate (Trump) passionately’ as outrage grows over Jan. 6 whitewash – New York Daily News

  1. Tucker Carlson texted ‘I hate (Trump) passionately’ as outrage grows over Jan. 6 whitewash New York Daily News
  2. ‘I hate him passionately’: Tucker Carlson was fed up with Trump after the 2020 election Yahoo News
  3. Tucker Carlson’s Private Contempt for Trump: ‘I Hate Him Passionately’ The New York Times
  4. Tucker Carlson ‘passionately’ hates Donald Trump. But that’s not all The Independent
  5. Analysis | Carlson hates Trump but needs his base — like the rest of the right The Washington Post
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Judge rejected Perry’s bid to shield thousands of emails from Jan. 6 investigators – POLITICO

  1. Judge rejected Perry’s bid to shield thousands of emails from Jan. 6 investigators POLITICO
  2. Rep. Scott Perry was ‘persistent’ in contacting executive branch around 2020 election, court documents reveal CNN
  3. Judge reveals Rep. Perry has withheld 2,200 records from Jan. 6 DOJ probe The Washington Post
  4. Appeals court considers constitutionality of Justice Department’s intent to search Rep. Scott Perry’s phone WGAL Susquehanna Valley Pa.
  5. US court skeptical of bid to access congressman’s phone in January 6 inquiry The Guardian US
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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What Timothy J. Heaphy Learned From the Jan. 6 House Investigation – The New York Times

  1. What Timothy J. Heaphy Learned From the Jan. 6 House Investigation The New York Times
  2. The top investigator for the House Jan. 6 committee said it was hard to interview witnesses when ’30 minutes later’ their cooperation would leak Yahoo News
  3. Top Jan 6 committee investigator says former Trump aides could be charged The Independent
  4. House Jan. 6 investigator said DOJ could charge 4 Trump allies Business Insider
  5. The top investigator for the House Jan. 6 committee said the Justice Department could charge these 4 Trump allies Yahoo News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Watch SpaceX launch 49 Starlink internet satellites to orbit on Jan. 30

Update for 11 am ET: SpaceX has delayed the launch of its next Starlink mission to Jan. 30, a one-day delay, to allow extra time for prelaunch checks. Liftoff is now set for Monday, Jan. 30, at 11:34 a.m. EST (8:34 a.m. PST, 1634 GMT).


SpaceX plans to launch another set of its Starlink broadband satellites to orbit on Monday (Jan. 30), and you can watch the action live.

A Falcon 9 rocket topped with 49 Starlink spacecraft is scheduled to lift off Monday from California’s Vandenberg Space Force Base at 11:34 a.m. EST (1634 GMT; 8:34 a.m. local California time). 

Watch it live here at Space.com, courtesy of SpaceX, or directly via the company (opens in new tab). Coverage is expected to start about five minutes before launch.

Related: 10 weird things about SpaceX’s Starlink internet satellites

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launches for a record 15th time from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center Pad 39A on Dec. 17, 2022. (Image credit: SpaceX)

If all goes according to plan, the Falcon 9’s first stage will come back to Earth 8.5 minutes after liftoff for a touchdown on SpaceX’s Of Course I Still Love You droneship, which will be stationed in the Pacific Ocean off the California coast.

It will be the seventh launch and landing for this particular booster, according to a SpaceX mission description (opens in new tab).

The rocket’s upper stage will continue carrying the 49 Starlink spacecraft to low Earth orbit, deploying all of them one hour and 17 minutes after launch.

SpaceX has already launched nearly 3,800 Starlink satellites (opens in new tab), and the huge constellation will continue to grow for quite some time: The company has permission to loft 12,000 of the internet spacecraft and has applied for approval to deploy about 30,000 more on top of that.

Monday’s liftoff will be the seventh of the year already for SpaceX, and the third Starlink mission of 2023. Though it’s still very early, Elon Musk’s company is on pace to break its single-year record of 61 orbital launches, which it set last year. 

Editor’s note: This story was updated at 11:10 a.m. ET on Jan. 29 with the new launch date of Jan. 30. Liftoff had been scheduled for Jan. 29, but SpaceX pushed things back a day to finish prelaunch checkouts (opens in new tab).

Mike Wall is the author of “Out There (opens in new tab)” (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate), a book about the search for alien life. Follow him on Twitter @michaeldwall (opens in new tab). Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom (opens in new tab) or Facebook (opens in new tab).



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Jan. 6 rioter who maced Brian Sicknick sentenced to 80 months

Dozens of members of the Capitol Police turned out to witness Khater’s sentencing and remained for the entire four-hour hearing. Among them: Caroline Edwards, who was sprayed by Khater moments after Sicknick. Edwards delivered a courtroom statement describing “survivor’s guilt” for being unable to assist Sicknick because she, too, was incapacitated. Members of Sicknick’s family, including his longtime partner Sandra Garza, delivered scathing victim impact statements directed at Khater.

A medical examiner found that Sicknick’s death was the result of natural causes — two strokes that occurred in the evening of Jan. 6 resulting in his death the next day. But Sicknick’s family made clear they viewed Khater as culpable for his death, combined with the stress of the riot.

The hearing also laid bare how a series of mace attacks on Capitol Police officers early in the riot that day helped lead to the collapse of the police line and the breach of the Capitol building.

Prosecutors played footage showing that Khater’s attack caused not only the three injured officers to flee the outnumbered police line but several others to help guide them to safety while they were blinded by the spray. Prosecutors showed video of Sicknick pacing alone on a Capitol terrace, struggling to regain his sight and his balance. While he paces, a slew of other officers, also maced by the mob, joined him on the terrace, also struggling to return to action.

Five minutes after Khater’s spray attack, prosecutors noted, the police line collapsed and rioters reached the foot of the Capitol.

Hogan’s sentence was one of the harshest handed down to Jan. 6 defendants — far more than the sentence of time served sought by Khater, who has already served 22 months in pretrial detention – but it fell short of the 90 months sought by the government. Hogan said that was partly to account for what he described as inhumane conditions of the Washington, D.C., jail, which Hogan called a “disgrace.” The jail has been plagued by allegations of substandard living conditions and a pattern of mistreatment by corrections officials that have, at times, drawn rebukes from federal judges.

Hogan faulted Khater for refusing to directly apologize to Edwards or for the injuries he caused to Sicknick and others that day. Khater responded that he hadn’t made a more direct apology following the advice of his lawyers, and because he had recently been served with a civil lawsuit related to his actions.

Khater’s codefendant, George Tanios, was sentenced Friday to five months time served for his actions. He purchased and carried the spray used by Khater but took no part in the assaults.

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Jan. 6 rioter who assaulted Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick sentenced to over 6 years in jail



CNN
 — 

A man who assaulted United States Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick with pepper spray on January 6, 2021, was sentenced on Friday to 80 months behind bars.

Julian Khater pleaded guilty in September to two counts of assaulting, resisting or impeding officers with a dangerous weapon. His co-defendant, George Tanios, pleaded guilty last summer to disorderly conduct and entering and remaining in a restricted building. Khater was also ordered to pay a $10,000 fine and $2,000 in restitution.

Tanios was sentenced to time served and one year of supervised release. He previously spent more than five months behind bars.

The day after the attack, Sicknick died after suffering several strokes. Washington, DC’s chief medical examiner, Francisco Diaz, determined that the officer died of natural causes and told The Washington Post that the riot and “all that transpired played a role in his condition.”

Sicknick’s family and partner were present for the sentencing and law enforcement officers dressed in uniform filled the courtroom.

According to the plea agreements, Tanios bought two cans of bear spray in preparation for his trip with Khater to Washington on January 6. During the Capitol attack, when the two men arrived near a line of police officers by the steps of the Capitol, Khater said to Tanios, “Give me that bear s**t,” according to the plea.

Khater took a white can of bear spray from Tanios’s backpack, walked up to the line of officers and, as rioters started pulling on the bike rack barrier separating them and the police, Khater sprayed multiple officers – including Sicknick – who had to retreat from the line.

One of those officers, Caroline Edwards, gave a witness impact statement before DC District Judge Thomas Hogan during the sentencing hearing.

“I felt like the absolute worst kind of officer, someone who didn’t help – couldn’t help – their friend,” she said of not being able to help Sicknick after being sprayed herself seconds later by Khater. “Sometimes when I close my eyes I can still see his face, white as a sheet.”

Hogan called Khater’s actions that day “inexcusable,” adding that “three officers (who) were doing their duty … are suddenly sprayed directly in the face.”

“I’m not going to give a lecture on the riot,” Hogan said, adding that “every time you see the video you’re shocked over again” and that “something has come out of this country that is very, very serious.”

After recovering from the bear spray attack, Sicknick continued to help protect the Capitol that day, according to court documents, remaining on duty until late into the evening.

“Just before approximately 10:00 p.m., Officer Sicknick began slurring his speech while talking to fellow officers,” court documents state. “He slumped backwards and lost consciousness, and emergency medical technicians were summoned for assistance. He was transported to the George Washington University Hospital where he remained on life support for nearly 24 hours and was pronounced dead at 8:51 p.m. the following day.”

Khater’s defense attorney said that Hogan should not sentence his client for the death of Sicknick, which the attorney noted was determined to be of natural causes. The judge agreed, noting he “can’t sentence Mr. Khater (for) causing officer Sicknick’s death.”

Calling his client “sheepish” and “sweet and gentle,” Khater’s attorney said his actions that day amounted to seconds of “emotionally charged conduct” from a man who suffered from anxiety.

In his statement to the judge, Khater began by highlighting how long he had already served behind bars and how it had “taken a huge toll” on him. “I wish I could take it all back,” he said. “It’s not who I am.”

Hogan pressed Khater on why he did not expressly apologize to the officers in the courtroom and Sicknick’s family. “Somewhere along the lines we lost the sense of responsibility,” the judge said.

“It’s the elephant in the room,” Khater said, adding that “there’s a civil thing going on” – in reference to a civil lawsuit from Sicknick’s estate – and that his lawyer had warned him about what to say in court Friday.

“You should be afraid,” Hogan said of the lawsuit.

Sicknick’s partner, Sandra Garza, had asked the judge to impose the maximum sentence for both men.

“I realize it will not bring back Brian, nor give him peace in his last moments on earth, but it will give some sense of justice in my universe,” Garza wrote to the judge.

“The only thing that surpasses my anger is my sadness,” Sicknick’s brother, Kenneth, wrote in his statement to the judge. “Sadness that the only time I can communicate with Brian is to speak into the nothingness and hope that he is listening.”

Kenneth continued, “Brian was never one for the spotlight. He preferred to go about his business, not bringing attention to himself. My family and I quietly smile at each other when we attend an event honoring and remembering Brian and the weather turns bad. We know it’s Brian telling us that it is OK, he is OK, please don’t make a big deal about me, take care of the others that need it. That’s what he would have done.”

This story has been updated with additional details.

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Truck-Size Asteroid Will Come Super Close to Earth on Jan 26

2023 BU will pass over the southern tip of South America on January 26.
Illustration: NASA/JPL-Caltech

An asteroid is on its way to Earth, but don’t worry—the end is not here. The asteroid, dubbed 2023 BU, is about the size of a box truck and is not projected to impact our planet during its flyby on Thursday. However, it will be “one of the closest approaches by a known near-Earth object ever recorded,” according to a NASA scientist.

NASA’s Jet Propulsion Lab said in a release on Wednesday that 2023 BU is about 11.5 to 28 feet (3.5 to 8.5 meters) wide, which is small enough to mostly burn up in our atmosphere if it were to hit us. But NASA doesn’t expect 2023 BU to slam into the planet; instead the asteroid will pass about 2,200 miles (3,600 kilometers) above the southern tip of South America on Thursday, January 26, at 4:32 p.m. PST. NASA was able to calculate the position and trajectory of the asteroid using Near Earth Asteroid Scout, a hazard assessment system.

“Scout quickly ruled out 2023 BU as an impactor, but despite the very few observations, it was nonetheless able to predict that the asteroid would make an extraordinarily close approach with Earth,” said Davide Farnocchia, a navigation engineer at NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory who developed Scout. “In fact, this is one of the closest approaches by a known near-Earth object ever recorded.”

2023 BU is passing closer to us then some of the satellites orbiting our planet, and Earth’s gravity is changing the asteroid’s path around the Sun from circular to more elongated. The asteroid was discovered by Gennadiy Borisov at the MARGO observatory in Nauchnyi, Crimea on January 21. Since then, observatories across the planet have also detected 2023 BU, leading to robust models of the asteroid’s path and potential hazard.

Astronomers’ detection of and prompt study of 2023 BU shows how robust humanity’s asteroid detection workflow is becoming. Our ability to eventually defend our planet is advancing, too, after the successful DART test mission to deflect asteroid last October.

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Overwatch 2 Jan. 24 full patch notes and updates

As Overwatch 2’s second competitive season comes to a close, the developers have released a small balance patch that goes into effect on Tuesday, Jan. 24 at 1pm CT.

This patch focuses on smaller tweaks to a few heroes and specific mechanics that have been receiving complaints from the game’s player base. Roadhog, Sojourn, and Kiriko are the main targets for this small update.

Overwatch 2’s third competitive season should start in early February and will likely come with another much larger patch to accompany it. The developers have already hinted at some big overall changes coming next month.

Here are all of the changes coming with the Jan. 24 Overwatch 2 patch.

Overwatch 2 Jan. 24 patch notes

Roadhog

  • Chain Hook – Impact damage reduced from 30 to five. The enemy’s final position after being pulled by the hook is now four meters away from Roadhog instead of three.
  • Scrap Gun – Damage per pellet reduced from 6.6 to six, recovery time reduced from 0.85 to 0.8 seconds, reload time reduced from two to 1.75 seconds, and maximum ammo increased from five to six.

These changes to Roadhog will majorly nerf the hero’s one-shot kill potential after hooking an enemy. Before this patch, the Chain Hook damage plus immediate follow-up with the Scrap Gun meant most non-tank heroes would get one shot after being hooked.

Now, the damage done by the actual hook has been decreased to just five HP, and the target will end up a bit farther away from Roadhog.

This means enemies have more of a fighting chance of being able to escape from Roadhog after being hooked. Heroes with high mobility might be able to move in time to avoid a follow-up shot and will likely not die from the Chain Hook itself.

To compensate for this major nerf to the infamous hook combo, Roadhog’s main weapon got a few small buffs. Though the damage per pellet has been reduced, the buffs to the reload and recovery time mean Roadhog can now fire a bit faster. The ammo increase is a slight buff as well.

Orisa

  • Fortify – Health bonus reduced from 125 to 75.

Orisa is just getting one very small tweak in this patch to her Fortify ability. The ability has been deemed too powerful with a 125 HP bonus in addition to its other benefits, so Orisa is receiving a slight nerf. This won’t be a huge change, but Orisa players might want to keep a closer eye on their HP bars when using Fortify.

Sojourn

  • Railgun – Energy gain is no longer based on damage done by primary fine, but instead, each primary fire hit on an enemy now grants five energy. Primary fire damage per projectile is reduced from 10 to nine.

Players have been calling for nerfs to Sojourn’s railgun for a long time. This nerf will reduce the charge time for her railgun in almost all circumstances.

Damage boost on Sojourn or armor on enemies both become nullified with this change. Damage-boosted shots will still only grant five energy, and even if she hits targets with armor or discord orb, for example, she still gets five energy per shot. This transforms her railgun into a bit of a unique weapon.

Something to note from this is the patch notes specify energy will now only be given for hitting enemy players, not enemy shields or other utility. OW2 players might still be able to charge their railgun quickly, but this forces them into tighter situations where they are actually confronting enemies face-to-face.

Kiriko

  • Healing Ofuda – Recovery time increased from 0.85 to one second.

This is a big nerf for Kiriko’s overall healing output and transforms her playstyle even more toward a dual-purpose support hero.

Each Ofuda still carries the same amount of healing, but players now have to think more carefully about how they are using the papers instead of spamming their primary fire. Since it takes longer to recover after use, Kiriko players have to think more carefully about how they are directing their healing and have the opportunity to use secondary fire more often.

Kiriko has been a top support pick since her release, largely due to her incredible damage output, but her healing has also been borderline broken. The skill ceiling for Kiriko should become a bit higher with this change and players should be even more focused on using damage.

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