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ERNA Stock Hits 52-Week Low at $0.52 Amid Market ChallengesIQOS: A Decade of Innovation Toward a Smoke-Free FutureA Turkish transportation app that connects users with taxis, e-bikes and electric scooters has named the attorney representing Mayor Eric Adams in his federal corruption case to its board of directors. The Istanbul-based Marti Technologies announced late last week that its board elected Alex Spiro as a director during its 2024 annual shareholder meeting. In New York, Spiro is representing Adams in a federal case alleging that the mayor accepted bribes from Turkish nationals in exchange for pressuring FDNY officials to fast-track the opening of a skyscraper known as the Turkish House, which holds a new Turkish consulate. Spiro did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment Wednesday morning. In a press release, he said that he’s worked with “some of the greatest entrepreneurs and CEOs in the world,” but Marti’s CEO and his team “are among the best I’ve ever seen.” “I am pleased to support them and the company as we reach scale and achieve profitability in 2025,” he added. The U.S. attorney’s office for the Southern District of New York unsealed an indictment against Adams in September, accusing him of accepting more than $100,000 worth of flight upgrades on Turkish Airlines, as well as lavish accommodations during his frequent visits to Istanbul. In return, prosecutors say, Adams asked fire officials to allow the Turkish House to open before before it could pass a fire inspection, agreed not to make statements about the Armenian Genocide on a 2022 memorial day and appointed a Turkish Airlines manager to his transition team. “You are a true friend of Turkey,” a Turkish official texted the then-Brooklyn Borough President after Adams allegedly told him the FDNY was drafting a letter to expedite the opening of the Turkish House, according to the indictment. “Yes even more a true friend of yours. You are my brother,” Adams allegedly responded. Earlier this week, Turkish-born businessman Erden Arkan agreed to plead guilty to a conspiracy charge in connection with the case against Adams. Prosecutors say Arkan — identified in Adams’ indictment as “Businessman-5” — illegally made campaign contributions under another name to get public matching funds, according to a letter the U.S. attorney’s office filed earlier this week. Adams has denied any wrongdoing, and Spiro has pledged to fiercely defend his client. The mayor’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Spiro’s election to Marti’s board. Spiro is known for his aggressive legal defense and roster of high-profile clients, including Brooklyn rappers Jay-Z and Bobby Shmurda, former Knicks player Charles Oakley, actor Alec Baldwin and tech mogul Elon Musk. “His experience with a broad range of clients across the fields of business and politics in the U.S., and, most notably, with leading global technology entrepreneurs, gives me confidence that he will contribute to our Company and mission,” Marti founder and CEO Oguz Alper Oktem said in a press release.
Will Trump still be in legal trouble next year when he enters the White House? READ MORE: Sign up for DailyMail.com's daily political email By GEOFF EARLE, DEPUTY U.S. POLITICAL EDITOR Published: 18:26 GMT, 26 December 2024 | Updated: 18:30 GMT, 26 December 2024 e-mail 21 View comments It was a legal triumph that nearly matched his political one. One by one, the criminal cases that had former President Donald Trump potentially facing years of jail time imploded after his election win in November. Trump's long legal saga of the past few years might not be entirely wrapped up by the time he raises his hand to take the Oath of Office on January 20th, but each will be well on its way to being resolved. The latest stunning legal win for Team Trump came when a Georgia appeals court ruled that Fulton County DA Fani Willis should be disqualified from his election interference case in Georgia. But even that decision didn't end the case entirely. The court in its 2-1 decision that it did not dismiss the case, even as legal experts said the prosecution was likely dead. Willis could appeal the case to the state Supreme Court . Or, even if the ruling stands, there could be prosecutors from another jurisdiction willing to take on the unenviable task of picking up the pieces of the complex racketeering case against Trump and 18 codefendants. The case exploded over Wills's affair with special prosecutor Nathan Wade, culminating in the ruling that it created an appearance of conflict and Willis couldn't try the case. As a state matter, the Georgia case is one that Trump would not be able to try to resolve through a pardon process, although that issue appears to be moot. Meanwhile, Trump's January 6 election interference case in Washington, D.C., fell apart just days after his election win, when Special Counsel Jack Smith put it on ice . He asked for a one-month delay for his team to 'assess this unprecedented circumstance and determine the appropriate course going forward consistent with Department of Justice policy.' The latest stunning legal win for Team Trump came when a Georgia appeals court ruled that Fulton County DA Fani Willis should be disqualified from his election interference case in Georgia A Georgia appeals court ruled that Fulton County DA Fani Willis is disqualified from Trump's election interference case in the state. Experts said it likely killed the prosecution Longtime guidance from the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel bar prosecuting a sitting president, and the case had already dragged on for months while the Supreme Court waited and finally issued a ruling setting up the outlines of presidential immunity from prosecution for official acts. Read More BREAKING NEWS Fani Willis suffers ultimate humiliation after her affair scandal rocked Trump prosecution In late November, Trump asked Judge Tanya Chutkan to dismiss the case 'without prejudice,' which she did. That came days after New York judge Juan Merchan moved to indefinitely delay Trump's hush money case following his conviction on 34 counts of falsifying business records. An existing Justice Department policy disallows prosecution of a sitting president. 'Just as a sitting President is completely immune from any criminal process, so too is President Trump as President-elect,' wrote lawyer Todd Blanche and lawyer Emil Bove in a filing to Judge Merchan. Trump has now nominated both of them to top DOJ posts. In a separate hush money case, where Trump was convicted on 34 counts, Judge Juan Merchan has ruled that Trump does not have presidential immunity . Special counsel Jack Smith has moved to have the federal election subversion charges against Donald Trump dropped in Washington, D.C. Once viewed as potentially the most damaging prosecution facing Trump, the classified documents case against him in Florida was the first to fall apart Merchan ruled the evidence presented in the case earlier this year was related 'entirely to unofficial conduct' and therefore were not official actions as president. Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg's office has argued the law doesn't require dismissing the case following Trump's election. That leaves another key decision for Merchan: whether to essentially pause the case for the duration of Trump's presidency, or take some other action in light of Trump lawyers' motion to dismiss the case. Once viewed as potentially the most damaging prosecution facing Trump, the classified documents case against him in Florida was the first to fall apart, after a Trump-appointed federal judge dismissed it. His office was in the process of appealing when Trump won the election. An appeal to the 11th Circuit argued that Judge Aileen Cannon was wrong when she said Smith's own appointment was unconstitutional and dismissed the case. In late November, the Appeals Court granted Smith's motion to dismiss the case. Trump transition spokesman Steven Cheung took a victory lap at the time. 'Today's decision by the DOJ ends the unconstitutional federal cases against President Trump and is a major victory for the rule of law,' he said. With the criminal cases against Trump all shattered in one form or another after his election win, the live cases on the docket are those Trump has filed demanding damages for what he calls media bias and 'witch hunts' against him. The criminal cases against Trump all shattered in one form or another after his election win Trump is suing CBS and other entities over what he considers unfair and impermissible treatment He is suing the DOJ for $100 million over the FBI's search of Mar-a-Lago in the classified documents case. And he is suing CBS and other entities over what he considers unfair and impermissible treatment. Trump may be emboldened by winning $15 million from ABC News and $1 million in legal fees over a George Stephanopoulos interview where the host inaccurately called him liable for rape, when a New York jury had in fact found him liable for sexual abuse of writer E. Jean Carroll. Trump is appealing the outcome of the Carroll case in New York City. Politics Georgia Share or comment on this article: Will Trump still be in legal trouble next year when he enters the White House? e-mail Add comment
Parents are furious after school officials in Maryland informed them that their special education students were denied service by a Cracker Barrel restaurant during an educational outing. The outing was a part of community-based instruction programs that serve students with autism and significant cognitive disabilities at the Charles County Public Schools District's Dr. James Craik Elementary School. Though Cracker Barrel issued an apology in a statement, parents have previously told USA TODAY that they "saw red" after being informed of the incident, with one parent organizing a protest at the location. "I can't put into words how I felt − anger, sadness and worry," Dustin Reed, whose 7-year-old daughter Madelynn attended the community-based instruction outing, previously told USA TODAY. "I've spent more time crying over her and praying she never has to experience this again." Here's what we know. Parents say Cracker Barrel refused to serve special education students On Tuesday, a group of 11 students and seven staff members from Charles County Public Schools District were "refused service" at the Cracker Barrel restaurant in Waldorf, Maryland, Superintendent Maria Navarro said in a statement. In her statement , Navarro said Charles County Public Schools staff notified the Waldorf Cracker Barrel of the group's size and purpose of its visit, but they were told reservations were unnecessary. Students in the school district's ACHIEVE and SOAR programs attend community-based instruction outings once a month between November and May that allow students to perform practical skills and socialize with the public. The group did not dine in as the restaurant's general manager told the group that he restaurant "cannot accommodate to your group" and that the restaurant should be removed from the approved list of restaurants for community-based instruction, Charles County Public Schools special education teacher Katie Schneider told parents in an email. The group placed a to-go order but Schneider said in her email to parents that the students were treated rudely by staff while waiting for the order. "Refusing to serve them, (staff) did not even ask if our students wanted a drink or anything. Our students were so well behaved and sat at the tables patiently, which you know can be hard, waiting for their food and drinks to-go," Schneider wrote. After about an hour of waiting, Schneider said the students were moved to wait outside on the school bus then ate lunch at the elementary school. In the email Schneider notes that the group was willing to split into different tables and that they witnessed other parties be seated and leave in the time it took them to receive their food. Cracker Barrel said in a statement previously provided to USA TODAY that a "staffing challenge" led to the closure of the restaurant's second dining room and caused "confusion" in handling the group's request. "At Cracker Barrel, we strive to create a welcoming environment for all our guests, and we understand that a recent visit by this group to our Waldorf location fell short of those expectations," Cracker Barrel said in the statement. "We take this matter seriously and are working directly with the group’s leadership to better understand what happened, extend our apologies and make things right." Protest planned at Cracker Barrel A protest, organized by Reed, is scheduled for Sunday, Dec. 15, at the Waldorf Cracker Barrel. Forty-five people have responded on the protest's Facebook page − titled #CanWeEatNow − as of Sunday. Reed said he hopes the protest sheds light on the fact that just because some children have different abilities, it doesn't make them less than anyone else. "I've battled wanting to protect (and) shield her from the world but not forgetting why we're doing this," Reed said.Traders Take Advantage of Lightchain AI's Presale As Cardano and Dogecoin Lose Steam
Lately, when I find myself feeling a little too calm about things, I’ve taken to reading the Reddit subreddit r/singularity to help swing my equilibrium back to its natural state of intense panic. This is a place where activity has flourished in recent months, as community members feverishly discuss the day’s ever-increasing developments in artificial intelligence and casually argue about the date they expect computers to officially exceed all human control. “AGI by the end of 2025” predicted a top ranking post on the subreddit this week, referencing the stage of singularity when “artificial general intelligence” – the point at which computers can perform any intellectual task that a human can – is reached. The excitement was caused by OpenAI’s announcement that its o3 system can now reason through maths, science and computer programming problems, which are three things I definitely can’t do. We had the chance to give computers less control, and instead we gave them more. Credit: iStock It got me thinking: we should have just let the Y2K bug win, hey? There we were, exactly 25 years ago, gifted with a date glitch that would’ve sent us warmly back to the 1900s, when life was simple and butter was churned in the backyard. But instead we panicked, worried that nuclear plants would melt down, planes would fall out of the sky, ATMs would erase all our savings, and like Bill Pullman in Independence Day we chose to fight. Now, 25 years on and with robot overlords breathing down our necks, it feels like a fork-in-the-road moment where we Robert Frosted the wrong way. We had the chance to give computers less control, and instead we gave them more. Dummy move! Perhaps because I’d just turned legal drinking age, or perhaps because I was watching Buffy religiously instead of following the news, I don’t remember feeling too concerned about the Y2K bug. What did I care if computers thought it was 1900 instead of 2000? Life across those 100 years wasn’t that different. In 1999, I still walked everywhere; I still did school exams in pencil; I still developed 35mm film negatives for my day job like Thomas Edison in his laboratory. Computers might’ve been around, but they weren’t such a part of our lives as they are now. I’d go whole days without touching one sometimes, except to play Grim Fandango . We were so close, as this archival shot from the film Time Bomb Y2K shows. Not to get all John Lennon, but imagine there were no computers. I wouldn’t miss them. I’d be sitting by a river bank right now, writing this column in salmon blood with my index finger. We’d all be so close to nature we could taste it, like the kid from Into the Wild . Maybe we’d die eating berries, but we’d live eating berries, too. If computers had died in 1999, we wouldn’t have social media either, the worst experiment in humankind since lobotomies. Instead we’d just have polite conversation with whoever was in our vicinity and/or crushing loneliness, both preferable options. If Y2K had happened, industry would be thriving too. No computers means no factory closures means no Donald Trump, it’s a simple equation. And not just manual industries, but creative ones too. If computers had died, music might still be a viable artistic career. I know this because in 1999 it would take me four days to download one Talib Kweli song, whereas today I just skimmed through his full life’s work during a toilet break. No one should have such carefree access to an artist’s entire life work, especially during a bowel movement. It’s not right. Maps. Street directories. The Yellow Pages. Privacy. Look at all the things we lost because, 25 years ago, we chose to save computers instead. A worthwhile exchange? I don’t know, maps were fun to fold. You can’t fold a GPS, you can just yell at its ignorant directions. “But what about the hospitals?” you’re probably saying. “Hospitals need computers.” Yes, I’m sure computers have saved more lives than the cast of Bondi Rescue , and the result is overpopulation. To paraphrase Paris Hilton, sometimes you just have to leave the party. The people of 1900, aprons splattered in freshly churned butter, understood this. As you can see, the Y2K bug got an unnecessarily bad rap in 1999. The good news is that we have another chance to get it right in 2038, when at 03:14:08 UTC on 19 January 2038, computer systems running on Unix time will suddenly revert to 20:45:52 on Friday, 13 December 1901. It’s called the Year 2038 Problem , which isn’t as catchy as Y2K, but it’ll do. Butter churning, here I come. To read more from Spectrum , visit our page here . Get a weekly wrap of views that will challenge, champion and inform your own. Sign up for our Opinion newsletter .
In a dramatic political shift, Uruguay's ruling coalition candidate Alvaro Delgado conceded the presidency to center-left rival Yamandu Orsi after a fiercely contested runoff election. Early official results pointed decisively toward Orsi's victory, reshaping the nation's political landscape. Addressing his supporters, Delgado acknowledged the electoral loss but maintained a defiant stance, distinguishing between losing an election and being defeated in spirit. He urged his followers to congratulate Orsi, underscoring the importance of democratic processes and sincerity in defeat. Orsi's win marks a significant moment for the center-left in Uruguay, raising expectations for policy shifts and new directions as the nation anticipates Orsi's upcoming tenure. (With inputs from agencies.)
Question: True or false? Evergreen Memorial Cemetery, located just south of downtown Bloomington, is older than the city. Answer: True. Evergreen’s oldest burial dates back to the 1820s, while Bloomington was officially founded in 1831. Vivian Kong Doctora talks about how to order at Kobe Revolving Sushi Bar Lifelong hockey enthusiast Adam Morris follows the growth of the Bloomington Bison in their first season. The ECHL holiday break is over. As the Bison face the Kalamazoo Wings in a weekend set that includes two home games, here's a look at what to expect. Are there parallels between the Bloomington Bison and their primary NHL affiliate? Columnist Adam Morris checks out the New York Rangers in person. The Bison are in their third month of existence, but their presence in Bloomington-Normal has already started to take root. After their five-game run against the Iowa Heartlanders ended with two consecutive losses, the Bloomington Bison can look forward to a change of scenery — and opponent. As we bask in the glow of holiday decorating and Thanksgiving leftovers, columnist Adam Morris takes stock of his gratitude as a Central Illinois hockey fan. When the Bison and Iowa Heartlanders play, penalties will be a factor. There have been 171 penalty minutes handed out, including 13 roughing calls and nine major penalties. Power plays, leadership and stamina: Three takeaways from the Bloomington Bison's first winning weekend at Grossinger Motors Arena. As the Bloomington Bison lose their top goaltender to a higher league, a grueling schedule in the coming weeks could become the team's proving ground. The Bloomington Bison's owners believe fans will be impressed with the higher level of play at Grossinger Motors Arena — but that only works if they're there to see it. Are you struggling to keep up with the Bison's ever-changing roster? You're not alone. Here's why the new Bloomington hockey team is uniquely positioned in its league — and how it could be an advantage. "Was it a little disappointing that the Bison did not come out of last weekend with a win? Of course. ... What I did see, though, felt just as encouraging." It's always exciting to see the start of something new. That's what fans are getting with the Bloomington Bison — on the ice and behind the glass. When the Bloomington Bison drop the puck in their preseason matchup Saturday, it will represent potentially best chance for sustained professional hockey in the Twin Cities. Catch the latest in Opinion Get opinion pieces, letters and editorials sent directly to your inbox weekly! {{description}} Email notifications are only sent once a day, and only if there are new matching items.
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