Tag Archives: US news

Graceland Live Stream: Watch Lisa Marie Presley’s funeral and family’s final farewell

The funeral of Lisa Marie Presley, the only child of rock legend Elvis Presley, takes place on Sunday, January 22, which you can follow on our stream above.

The terrible news of the passing of Lisa Marie hit the world on January 12, as the musician died suddenly from a heart attack at age 54.

Lisa Marie suffered from drug addiction at various stages of her life and it is said that she was finding it very difficult to cope following the premature death of her 27-year-old son in 2020.

Cardiac arrest

According to the New York Post, Sgt. Sean Maloney of the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Office said they responded to a call in the 5900 block of Normandy Drive in Calabasas around 10:40 a.m. Thursday at the request of the Los Angeles County Fire Department.

Firefighters arrived on scene, administered CPR and she was transported to West Hills Hospital around 11:17 am. Lisa Marie’s mother, Priscilla (77), confirmed her daughter’s health status via a social media post a couple of hours before her death.

She will be buried alongside her father and her son

Presley will be buried at Graceland, just like her father and grandparents, while her son is also buried on the same site.

The family appealed to those who wish to send a donation to the Elvis Presley Charitable Foundation, an organisation which provides support to various charities related to the arts and education



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The Twitter layoffs were handled terribly, says Big Tech’s Alex Kantrowitz – CNBC Television

  1. The Twitter layoffs were handled terribly, says Big Tech’s Alex Kantrowitz CNBC Television
  2. Twitter employees panicking with no communication from Musk Business Insider
  3. Twitter Employees Start To Learn About Layoffs NBC News
  4. Latest Stock Market News: October jobs report strong, Musk to begin mass Twitter layoffs, Starbucks shares jump on record sales, inflation tops voters’ concerns | November 04, 2022 | Live Updates from Fox Business Fox Business
  5. Twitter Employees Informed Via Email that Mass Layoffs Will Start Friday | THR News The Hollywood Reporter
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Jefffrey Dahmer survivor Tracy Edwards ran in trouble with law 20 years after escaping serial killer

Jeffrey Dahmer survivor Tracy Edwards is known for playing a key role in the arrest of the prolific serial killer, having been one of the fortunate victims who was able to escape. 

Dahmer – who is the subject of chilling new Netflix series Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story was convicted of killing 17 men and boys between the late 70s and early 90s, often drugging and sexually assaulting those who fell into his trap. 

His murderous spree eventually came to an end on 22 July 1991, after approaching three men and offering them money to pose for nude photographs. 

Edwards was one of those to agree, following Dahmer back to his apartment to ‘drink beer and watch The Exorcist‘ – only to be held hostage as his captor told him he intended to eat his heart. 

Shaun J. Brown as Tracey Edwards in Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story. Credit: Netflix

Thankfully, Edwards managed to punch Dahmer, knocking him to the ground to allow him to run away and flag down two Milwaukee police officers, who were led back to Dahmer’s home. 

Edwards later told police he managed to escape by gaining Dahmer’s trust. “He underestimated me,” Edwards said, “God sent me there to take care of the situation.”

Edwards, who is played by Shaun J. Brown in the new true crime drama, explained during court testimony that Dahmer was ‘not the same person’ he met at the bar when he had been taken into the bedroom. 

“His face structure seemed different…It was like, it wasn’t him anymore,” he recalled. 

But after being hailed a hero for his role in taking Dahmer down, Edwards’ story took a turn of its own when he was arrested on 26 July 2011 – almost 20 years to the day after Dahmer’s capture. 

Edwards, who was homeless and aged 52 at the time of the arrest, was accused of throwing a man off a Milwaukee bridge to his death. 

Tracy Edwards’ mugshot. Credit: Police handout

According to ABC News, Edwards was seen standing on the bridge with two other homeless men, Timothy Carr and Jonny Jordan, with a witness saying they saw Edwards and Carr push Jordan into the river below – supposedly after an argument. 

Edwards’ defense attorney Paul Ksicinsk said Edwards’ post-Dahmer life had been understandably tumultuous. 

“It’s like Humpty Dumpty,” he said. 

“It’s like he was never able to put the pieces back together again.” 

In 2012, Edwards pleaded guilty and was convicted to one-and-a-half years in prison, and two years of extended supervision, for his involvement in the row that ended in Jordan’s death. 

Watch Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story on Netflix now. 

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If the Fed wants 2% inflation, we’re going to have a calamitous recession, says Clocktower’s Papic – CNBC Television

  1. If the Fed wants 2% inflation, we’re going to have a calamitous recession, says Clocktower’s Papic CNBC Television
  2. Fed Inflation Battle to Spur Greater Economic Harm Than Realized Bloomberg
  3. Inflation conditions ‘are morphing,’ strategist says Yahoo Finance
  4. Bill Clinton’s Treasury secretary says he has no idea where inflation will go. ‘Who the hell knows,’ and making predictions is a ‘fool’s game’ Fortune
  5. Fed rate hikes are mistake as inflation turns into deflation: Cathie Wood Markets Insider
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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What’s at stake in the extradition of Julian Assange? – podcast | News

Few public figures are harder to categorise than the WikiLeaks founder, Julian Assange. To his fans, he is a fearless truth-teller, exposing state wrongdoing; to many governments, he’s a dangerous fanatic akin to a “digital terrorist”.

But almost everyone will have read journalism based on leaks his organisation has published, whether it was the secrets files he revealed from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, the decades of top-secret US diplomatic cables, details of the CIA’s hacking tools or the emails of the Democratic National Committee.

Over the past few years, Assange’s many enemies – chief among them, the US government – have started closing in. Now the UK’s home secretary, Priti Patel, has given the green light for his extradition to face charges of violating the Espionage Act, alleging that material he released endangered lives. He has 14 days to appeal against the decision, a move his team have said they would make.

The case is bigger than Assange. Civil liberties activists argue that the decision to extradite him is a grave threat to public interest journalism.



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GoFundMe Shuts Down $1 Million Amber Heard Fundraiser Set Up To Help Pay Johnny Depp

GoFundMe has shut down a fundraiser claiming to raise money to help Amber Heard pay Johnny Depp some of the money she owes him following their defamation trial.

A jury in Fairfax, Virginia, determined this week Depp should receive more than $10 million (£8m) in damages after Heard wrote an op-ed in which she described herself as a victim of abuse.

Heard herself was awarded $2m (£1.6m) in damages for comments made by Depp’s former lawyer, meaning in total she owes her ex-husband $8.35m (£6.68m). In the wake of the result, a fundraiser titled ‘Justice for Amber Heard’ was established on GoFundMe.

The GoFundMe page had a goal of $1 million. Credit: GoFundMe

With a goal of $1m (£800,000), the GoFundMe page claimed to want to ‘help’ Heard and said the Aquaman actor would have ‘direct access’ to the money raised by supporters.

The page’s description explained: “I believe Amber, and social media protected the abuser. The judgment exceeds her net worth. It’s so sad that he was able to get away with the abuse. The judgment furthers that abuse. If you can please help her. She will have direct access to the money. I also contacted her attorney so they can loop her in.”

It’s unclear exactly how long the fundraiser was live for, but it was shut down after GoFundMe determined neither Heard nor anyone on her team had created the page.

A spokesperson for the fundraising site told TMZ they were able to flag the profile before a substantial amount of money was raised. The platform also plans to continue to look for fake pages and act accordingly.

The lawyer alleged Heard had been ‘demonised’ throughout the trial, and claimed: “A number of things were allowed in this court that should not have been allowed, and it caused the jury to be confused.”

Bredehoft confirmed Heard’s plans to appeal the jury’s decision, saying the actor has ‘excellent grounds’ on which to do so.

Heard herself has made clear she is disappointed with the verdict, saying in a statement following the result that it indicated a set back in the idea ‘that violence against women should be taken seriously’.

“I’m sad I lost this case. But I am sadder still that I seemed to have lost a right I thought I had as an American – to speak freely and openly,” she added.

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Russia-Ukraine war: Lviv hit by missiles as cities targeted; Mariupol fighters ignore surrender demand – live | World news










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Five missiles strike Lviv, mayor reports

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Delay in weapons from west gives Russia ‘permission to take the lives of Ukrainians’: Zelenskiy










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Charred houses, cratered lawns and an epic clean-up. This is the scene described by Guardian correspondent, Luke Harding, reporting to us from Chernihiv, about 150km north-east of Kyiv.

Russian forces advancing from Belarus bombarded the city during a traumatic 25-day siege. Several hundred people died. A couple of shells landed in front of Chernihiv’s gold-domed St Catherine’s church, one of an ensemble of ancient buildings dating back to Kyivan Rus, Ukraine’s original medieval dynasty.

Across swathes of territory vacated by Russia’s armed forces a great clean-up is under way. Homeowners are now tidying up and counting the cost of a devastating month-long occupation. Ukrainian army sappers collected left-behind munitions and defused mines – a vast ongoing job.

Read the full story below.










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Ukraine begins process to join EU










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Mariupol fighters ignore surrender demand

Ukraine has vowed that its forces will “fight to the end” in the besieged port city of Mariupol, after a Russian ultimatum for the remaining Ukrainian troops there to surrender expired.

Moscow is edging closer to full control of the city in what would be its biggest prize since it invaded Ukraine in February. Relentless bombardment and street fighting have left much of the city pulverised, killing at least 21,000 people by Ukrainian estimates.

“The city still has not fallen,” the prime minister, Denys Shmyhal, said hours after Moscow’s deadline for fighters holed up and surrounded in a sprawling, fortress-like steelworks to surrender passed. “There’s still our military forces, our soldiers. So they will fight to the end,” he told ABC.

The Azovstal iron and steelworks has become a redoubt for Ukrainian forces in Mariupol
The Azovstal iron and steelworks has become a redoubt for Ukrainian forces in Mariupol

The fall of Mariupol, the largest trading port in the Sea of Azov – from which Ukraine exports grain, iron, steel and heavy machinery – would be an economic blow to Kyiv and a symbolic and strategic victory for Russia, connecting territory it holds in Donbas with the Crimea region it annexed in 2014.

The situation is “very difficult” in Mariupol, Zelenskiy told the Ukrayinska Pravda news portal. “Our soldiers are blocked; the wounded are blocked. There is a humanitarian crisis … Nevertheless, the guys are defending themselves.”

Russia gave remaining Ukrainian soldiers a 6am Moscow time (3am GMT) deadline to lay down their arms and a 1pm (10am GMT) deadline to evacuate, which passed without any sign of compliance by Ukrainian fighters holed up in the smouldering Azovstal steelworks.










05:39

Russian forces to close Mariupol and introduce pass system for entry and exit, mayor’s adviser says

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Luhansk residents urged to evacuate immediately










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Summary and welcome



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Trump’s ex-adviser Stephen Miller to reportedly testify to Capitol attack panel today – live | US news

Joe Biden is looking to sign off for the Easter break on an upbeat note with today’s trip to an engineering research complex in North Carolina to plug his “building a better America” plans.

The president will tout the Bipartisan Innovation Act, a bill designed to boost American manufacturing and global technological leadership, but his remarks are sure to cover wider issues of the US economy and jobs growth.

Inflation, immigration and the Ukraine war are all weighing on his administration, and Biden is seeking to kickstart his stalled domestic agenda with the appearance in Greensboro before heading off to Camp David to spend the Easter holiday.

The president, however, will board Air Force One shortly with more bad news ringing in his ears – a new Quinnipiac poll puts Biden’s approval rating at only 33%, matching his previous low from January, with 54% disapproving of the job he’s doing.

Biden has struggled with his domestic agenda: his flagship $2tn Build Back Better initiative boosting social spending and addressing the climate crisis was opposed by Republicans and ultimately killed by the moderate Democratic senator Joe Manchin, whose vote would have been crucial in the divided 50-50 chamber.

While progress at home has stalled, inflation has soared to 8.5%, a 41-year high, with analysts saying the president is failing with his messaging. That’s why he’ll be talking up the bipartisan nature of the innovation act, which has Republican support in both the House and Senate.

White House experts are shifting blame for the country’s economic woes, including soaring inflation, away from Biden. The council of economic advisers’ annual report published this morning says the Ukraine war and climate crisis are contributory. We’ll have more on that shortly.

Meanwhile, Karine Jean-Pierre, the deputy White House press secretary, will conduct the final briefing of the week, a so-called gaggle aboard Air Force One as Biden heads for North Carolina.

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Ketanji Brown Jackson confirmed as first Black woman on US supreme court – as it happened | US news

Supreme court scholars are weighing in with analysis on the Jackson confirmation, calling her a “worthy successor” to the retiring liberal justice Stephen Breyer.

“She possesses all of the attributes that the US expects of supreme court justices, she has substantial relevant experience as a judge at the district and appellate levels of the federal judiciary, is highly intelligent, diligent and independent, and enjoys balanced judicial temperament. She amply displayed all of these phenomena throughout three grueling days of questioning,” Carl Tobias, Williams chair in law at the University of Richmond said.

“Her confirmation will enhance the supreme court and the nation in many critical ways. Of course, her appointment is historic, as she is the first Black woman to serve, she will improve court diversity in terms of ethnicity, gender, ideology and experience.

“Jackson [also] promises to be a mainstream justice, which is important, because the Court is more ideologically conservative than it has been in the last 80 years and may not reflect the will of the people. Her diverse experiences are also critical, as Justice Sotomayor is the only justice who served as a district judge and no present justice has engaged in criminal defense work, which Jackson did and which improves her decision making.”

Professor Tobias added he was hopeful Jackson’s torrid confirmation process would lead to improvements in how future supreme court justices are seated.

“Many Americans, including members of the judiciary committee, believe that the confirmation process has been deteriorating. The process has become overly politicized and partisan and senators asked Jackson too many questions that lacked relevance, seemed calculated to score political points ahead of the 2022 midterm elections, or were even improper or insulting.

“I am cautiously optimistic that committee members and other senators will work on improvements in the process, which now can reflect poorly on the committee, the Senate, and the president and may erode public confidence in all three branches of federal government, but especially the court.”

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Obama returns to White House for first time to promote Affordable Care Act with Biden – live | US news










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Ivanka Trump will testify before the January 6 committee this afternoon.

The Guardian confirmed that former president Donald Trump’s oldest daughter, and former senior White House adviser, will speak to the panel virtually.

Her testimony will come after that of her husband and fellow former presidential adviser, Jared Kushner, who spoke to the panel for more than six hours last week.

After Kushner’s testimony, Jamie Raskin, a Maryland Democrat and a member of the committee, told the Guardian: “There’s a momentum to this process when there’s cooperation. When people see that others are doing the right thing, it gives them the courage to do the right thing.”

Full story:










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Donald Trump has admitted he did not win the 2020 election.

“I didn’t win the election,” he said.

The admission came in a video interview with a panel of historians convened by Julian Zelizer, a Princeton professor and editor of The Presidency of Donald Trump: A First Historical Assessment. The interview was published on Monday by the Atlantic.

Describing his attempts to make South Korea pay more for US military assistance, Trump said Moon Jae-in, the South Korean president, was among the “happiest” world leaders after the 2020 US election put Joe Biden in the White House.

“By not winning the election,” Trump said, “he was the happiest man – I would say, in order, China was – no, Iran was the happiest.

“[Moon] was going to pay $5bn, $5bn a year. But when I didn’t win the election, he had to be the happiest – I would rate, probably, South Korea third- or fourth-happiest.”

Trump also said “the election was rigged and lost”.

Full story here:

Review of The Presidency of Donald Trump here:










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Fred Upton, moderate Republican who voted for Trump impeachment, retiring










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Ivanka Trump to meet with January 6 committee today










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Barack Obama returns to White House to celebrate ACA



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