panaloko gaming
He gave both men a two-year sentence but suspended it in its entirety and ordered them to pay €1,000 each to the victim Homeless person. Stock image. Two brothers who set upon a homeless man when they invited him back to their house, with one of them slashing the victim's head repeatedly with a kitchen knife, have avoided a custodial sentence. Denis Burns (42) and Gavin Burns (33) were sentenced by Judge Martin Nolan in Dublin Circuit Criminal Court today for their roles in the attack, which occurred in their home at The Beeches, Grange Road, Donaghmede, Dublin, on June 15, 2023. Denis Burns pleaded guilty to one count of assault causing harm and affray on that date, while Gavin Burns pleaded guilty to assault causing harm. Judge Nolan said it was an unusual story where a homeless man had been enticed back to the house. He said he was not sure why it happened but “it seems it was part of a grudge.” He gave both men a two-year sentence but suspended it in its entirety and ordered them to pay €1,000 each to the victim. Garda Shane Kennedy told Derek Cooney BL, prosecuting, that the victim in the case was sleeping rough in a lane close to the Burns' house. He had previously lived across the road from the brothers before his family was evicted and he had known them all his life, the court heard. On the morning in question, a third man who can't be named as he remains before the courts, went to the lane and invited the man and his partner to the Burns' home. Once there, the man slammed the door, trapping the victim inside the house and locking his partner outside. Gavin and Denis Burns then set upon the man, along with the third accused man, with Denis Burns using a kitchen knife to repeatedly slash the victim to the back and front of the head, the court heard. Two pit bull dogs were also present, although they did not harm the man. The court heard there had previously been a dispute between the man and the Burns brothers in relation to a lawnmower and electronic equipment that went missing from his home in the wake of his eviction, while the Burns brothers alleged the man had threatened their sister. During the attack, the victim's partner managed to push her way into the hall before she fled the house, pursued by the third accused man and the two pit bulls. She made her way to a nearby fire station and the victim also managed to flee the house, the court heard. The pair were taken to hospital by ambulance while the armed garda unit was deployed to the Burns' home. The three men were all arrested at the house. The victim suffered heavy bleeding to the head and required a number of stitches, the court heard. The entire incident lasted about 10 to 15 minutes, Gda Kennedy told the court. Emmet Nolan BL, representing Gavin Burns, said his client was a law-abiding citizen with no previous convictions. “This is something he should never have involved himself in,” Mr Nolan said, adding it was an “appalling attack”. He said Gavin Burns had led a blame-free life up until he got involved in this crime and he was ashamed and remorseful. He has worked with the same employer for 10 years and had €1,000 in court as a token of his remorse, the court heard. Karl Monahan BL, defending Denis Burns, said his client also had €1,000 in court for the victim. The court heard Denis Burns has 12 previous convictions, including robbery, assault, drugs and public order offences. Denis Burns took the stand and apologised to the court for his actions. He asked the judge to delay sentence until January, after his first child is born. His pregnant partner was in court for the hearing. Denis Burns has worked for the same employer for the last six years, the court heard. Sentencing the men Judge Nolan noted Denis Burn’s convictions were quite old. In relation to Gavin Burns, the judge noted he has no history of convictions. Judge Nolan said he was taking account of their guilty pleas and their co-operation with gardaí. The judge also noted they were both working.
No. 5 UCLA snaps No. 1 South Carolina's 43-game win streakFRA chair explores collaboration with Turkish organizations at IOSCO meetings
Rams WR Demarcus Robinson not suspended, will play Sunday after arrest on DUI suspicionThirty years: Renaissance Quebec celebrates its social, economic and environmental missions
Trump expected to offer Loeffler agriculture secretary role, CNN reports
Mohamed Farid, Chairperson of the Financial Regulatory Authority (FRA), held strategic meetings with Turkish financial organizations during the annual Emerging and Developing Markets Committee meetings of the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) in Türkiye. These discussions emphasized opportunities for cooperation, partnership, and expertise sharing, with a focus on financial technology, environmental developments, and the role of financial markets in managing associated risks. As Chair of IOSCO’s Emerging and Developing Markets Committee and Vice President of the organization, Farid’s participation underscored Egypt’s commitment to advancing global financial market standards. The bilateral meetings, organized by the Egyptian Trade Representation Office in Istanbul in coordination with the Egyptian Embassy in Ankara, highlighted the significance of cross-institutional collaboration to promote development and showcase investment opportunities in Egypt. Prominent attendees included Fatma Cinar, Vice President of Turkey’s Union of Takaful Banks, alongside representatives from leading Turkish financial institutions and business associations. During the discussions, Cinar announced plans for the Union’s Secretary General to visit Egypt next month, aiming to strengthen ties with Egyptian financial institutions. Key topics included investment prospects in Egypt’s insurance sector, particularly under the newly introduced Unified Insurance Law. Farid emphasized the law’s potential to enhance the sector’s efficiency and competitiveness, fostering innovation in insurance products, integrating technological advancements, and attracting foreign investment. He highlighted that these efforts align with the FRA’s broader mission to support sustainable growth and improve access to non-banking financial services for all societal segments. Farid also met with representatives from organizations such as the Association of Independent Industrialists and Businessmen (MUSIAD), the FinTech Council, the Union of Chambers of Commerce of Turkey (TOBB), Albaraka Turk Bank, and the ISAS Group. These discussions underscored Egypt’s forward-looking regulatory environment, the pioneering voluntary carbon market, and the immense potential in the insurance and fintech sectors. Turkish institutions expressed significant interest in investing in Egypt, with plans to organize a business delegation’s visit to Egypt next year. Highlighting the voluntary carbon market, Farid described it as a groundbreaking initiative—the first to be regulated and supervised by financial market authorities—designed to support carbon neutrality goals and encourage private sector engagement in combating climate change. He noted that the market fosters sustainable finance products and strengthens the resilience of non-banking financial sectors against climate risks. Regarding financial technology, Farid underscored its transformative role in enhancing the accessibility and efficiency of non-banking financial services. He pointed out that fintech drives financial inclusion, competitiveness, and innovation, making it a cornerstone of modern financial ecosystems. Through these engagements, Farid reaffirmed the FRA’s dedication to fostering strategic partnerships, advancing sustainability practices, and leveraging technology to build a robust, inclusive, and forward-thinking financial sector.Sky News host Peta Credlin has launched a scathing attack on Victorian Opposition Leader John Pesutto following his defamation loss to independent MP Moira Deeming. Justice David O'Callaghan on Thursday found Mr Pesutto defamed Ms Deeming by painting her as a Nazi symathiser in comments following a 2023 women’s rally Ms Deeming attended which was gatecrashed by neo-Nazis. The judge awarded Ms Deeming $300,000 in damages as he delivered his decision in Melbourne's Federal Court. Mr Pesutto refused to resign from the Liberal Party in the aftermath of the case, vowing to “continue in this role, now more than ever”. Credlin has hailed the “massive win” for Ms Deeming, who had been expelled from the Victorian Liberal partyroom in the aftermath of the rally, but said she believes Mr Pesutto's position to be "untenable". Credlin argued the claims against Ms Deeming should “never have been made” and condemned Mr Pesutto for showing himself to be a "weak little man”. “The job of a party leader is not to be easily intimidated by an opponent that peddles lies; it's your job as leader to stand up to those lies, stand up for your team, particularly when your own side is unfairly under attack,” she said. Credlin said Victoria “desperately needs change” of leadership but this would require the Liberal Party to “offer a viable alternative”. She argued Mr Pesutto may have been capable of redemption if he was willing to accept his wrongdoing to Ms Deeming, reinstate her and apologise but said this was unlikely to happen. "It can't happen to a man that's been hit with a slam dunk as he has been by the judge and still thinks he's the bloody messiah,” she said. “If the Liberal Party in Victoria wants to be worthy of the very name, it has to find a new and better leader, if it wants to turn this around, it has to find a new and better leader, If it wants to restore faith, it has to find a new and better leader. “Today, Pesutto denied his position was untenable – but as things stand, it's the Liberal Party's position that's now untenable, with a Leader who makes things up, who damages people; and who won't apologise or make amends, even when he's found out in a court of law." Credlin said if she were on the Liberal frontbench, she would resign because, “my integrity would be worth more than any title that man could offer me”. “In all good conscience I could never serve under any leader who uses the slur of Nazism to try and destroy another Liberal and then is found by courts to have defamed someone using those words." In paragraph 696 of the judgment, Justice David O'Callaghan said Mr Pesutto’s “urgency” to publish claims against Ms Deeming was “driven more by a fear of the political damage that would be inflicted” on his leadership by then premier Daniel Andrews than by his “professed concern that the party and the parliament would be brought into disrepute”. “So, reckons the judge, the Victorian Liberal leader made untrue and highly damaging claims against a colleague in order to save himself from political attack,” Credlin said. “That, and these are my words, he was so spooked by Daniel Andrews – as every Liberal in this bloody state – that he threw Deeming under the bus in order to save his own skin – and in the process, has done vast damage to an innocent woman's reputation.”
- Previous: panaloko download app latest version
- Next: panaloko halobonus