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El Paso Shooter May Face Hate Crime Charges

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A new report on the proceedings against the El Paso shooter, Patrick Crusius, claim that he is being charged with a federal hate crime as well as the obvious murder charges. The Texas native surrendered to police on scene after slaughtering 22 people at a Walmart in El Paso, Texas last August. Since then, a manifesto has been uncovered stating that the intent of the shooting was to encourage Mexicans to leave the US. This coupled with a statment at the time of the shooting, “I was targeting Mexicans,” has kept him in custody since the shooting. Crusius has since pled not guilty to state capital murder charges.

Read more about the original shooting here

Source wants to remain anonymous

See how the medical personnel working that day were honored

Federal prosecuters may seek death penalty

Police report from this time last year

Prosecution Rests in Harvey Weinstein Trial

Two weeks, 28 testimonies and multiple graphic accounts of unwanted and aggressive sexual advances and the prosecution rests on the case against Producer Harvey Weinstein. The charges against Weinstein are five counts of rape, criminal sexual act and predatory sexual assault are on based on the testimony of Miriam Haley who claims that he forced oral sex on her in 2006. Four other accusers have come forward and have now all testified, with some cross examinations take more than three days. The defense began calling witnesses for the defense on Thursday, athough Weinstein is not slated to be called to the stand at any point during the trial.

Read more details of the cross-examinations here

Read a re-cap of the trial here

First witness for the defense claims Harvey Weinstein is a sex addict

Witness makes disparaging remarks about accusers, calling them a “dogpile of women.”

Writer with connection to the case writes SVU episode based on the Weinstein case

 

 

 

 

Jeff Bezos Rakes in the Dough, Selling over 2 Billion Dollars Worth of Amazon Stock

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Jeff Bezos has stated in the past that he intentionally, and on a schedule, sells around 1 billion dollars worth of Amazon stock a year in order to fund other projects, such as Blue Origin, the space program. In the last year, however, he has garnered around $6 billion from stock sales. In August of 2019 he sold $2.8 billion worth of stock, and so far this week another $3.4 billion has been sold. This is much higher than his usual, and supposedly preferred, $1 billion a year. Is this money going to Blue Origin or some other Amazon holding? Neither Bezos nor Blue origin has made any comment, and speculation is wild.

More on the stock sales here

Amazon passes $1 trillion market worth

How wealthy is Jeff Bezos, really?

Jeff Bezos is very active on Instagram

Is Bezos in a feud with a White House Economist?

 

Elizabeth Smart Was Sexually Assaulted on Delta Flight

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Elizabeth Smart, known for her time as a kidnap and rape victim in the early 2000’s, has just revealed that she was sexually assaulted while on a Delta flight. During the flight, between Philadelphia and Atlanta last July, a man reached into her seat and began to rub her inner thigh while she was asleep. She woke up and realized what was happening but din’t say anything to the man.

“The last time someone touched me without my say-so was when I was kidnapped, and I froze,” she said.

She also reported that the man didn’t make any excuses or even speak, simply went back to sitting there like nothing had happened. She reported the assault to Delta employees and authorities as soon as she exited the plane, and both the FBI and Delta are investigating.

Read more on the full story here

“I don’t blame Delta for the assault.” 

FBI is working on finding the man implicated in the assault

Think Elizabeth Smart is a victim? Well she’s “sick of it” and has started a self-defense program

Elizabeth Smart on how self-defense could have helped her when she was kidnapped

 

 

 

Jeff Wilpon Is Trying To Outfox A Wolf and It Won’t Work

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Is the Steve Cohen deal to buy 80% of the New York Mets dead? Is it on life support? Is Cohen walking away from the table a negotiating tactic? Or is it a last-ditch effort on the part of Jeff Wilpon to maintain control of the team out of sheer desperation and a grifter’s skill at survival?

No one seems to know with any certainty, so anything is possible.

The idea of a Twitter poll was floated to use in conjunction with an assessment of the latest embarrassing moment in the history of the Mets since they have been under the stewardship of the Wilpons. The poll, had it been used, would have asked whether the fans want Wilpon to stay on as owner. Even with the inherent lunacy of Twitter in general and #MetsTwitter in particular, there was no point. The results would look similar to a poll held by Pravda under Josef Stalin in the Soviet Union with the sole difference being that said results of any Mets poll are an accurate gauge as to Jeff’s standing among Mets fans.

Miraculously, as a byproduct of the Mets having had some success over the Wilpon’s tenure and the failures of other franchise ownerships in New York, it could be argued that Jim Dolan has been worse at running the New York Knicks and Woody Johnson has been worse at running the New York Jets. The New York Giants have been in such disarray that John Mara and Robert Tisch are working their way up the ladder as well.

Still, the epitome of perception of ownership ineptitude in New York has been the Wilpons. Some of it is unfair. It’s not as if the Mets do not spend money at all – they currently have the eighth highest payroll in Major League Baseball; they do try to please the fans and run the team the “right” way, whatever that means. The combination of off-field scandal and allegations of multiple financial misdeeds cast a shadow over anything they have done correctly.

Now, just when the fans and media thought they would be done with the Wilpons, the snag came about. As understandable as it is for the skeptics who were just waiting for the deal to come undone and who expect the Wilpons to have control of the organization forever (and ever, and ever, and ever) the reality of them moving forward with a sale at all indicates that there is no going back.

They must sell.

This is just another example of not knowing when it’s time to leave and that the final, desperate attempt to attach themselves to the business like a barnacle will ultimately fail. They will be scraped off and dragged out, eventually. That could be – and presumably will be – by Cohen. If not, it will be done by another billionaire.

Since co-owner Saul Katz wants the money from the sale; Fred Wilpon went along with the sale; the heirs all seem to want out to avoid an extended battle over their cut; and Jeff being the only one who is holding out, the sale is inevitable.

The problem is that Jeff is returning to his playbook to change the terms, remain in charge and use Cohen’s money to do it. It’s a familiar trick and one that the seasoned financial professional Cohen is wise to. If Jeff thinks he’ll bully Cohen, he’s wrong.

Regarding the five-year window in which Jeff will stay on as chief operating officer, who in their right mind thought a financial titan like Cohen would sit quietly by and allow Jeff to use his massive cash infusion as finance? Add in that when an embattled individual in any area of life requests a finite amount of time and wants to “stay just until…” they have no intention of abiding by the agreement and leaving. They’re staying. It’s a method of kicking the relevant issues down the road; trying to find another source of cash; figuring out later, later.

To their grudging credit, the Wilpons have managed it for more than a decade after Bernie Madoff and scores of other scandals. This time, however, Jeff is standing alone and trying to outfox a wolf. It won’t work.

Erykah Badu Wants You to Smell Her Vagina (Seriously)

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Erykah Badu wants you to smell her vagina.

No, really.

The 48-year-old musician and Lifetime Achievement Award recipient spoke to Ten magazine and revealed that she is producing incense that smells like her vagina. The product has a scheduled release date of February 20 and will launch on her online store, Badu World Market.

What did Badu name the new product?

Well, “Badu’s Pussy” obviously.

“I took lots of pairs of my panties, cut them up into little pieces and burned them,” she said. “Even the ash is part of it.”

According to Badu, there’s an urban legend that her “pussy changes men”.

Whether that’s entirely accurate or not doesn’t really matter as the public will now have an opportunity to determine for themselves if Badu’s pussy really is the magical experience it’s been purported to be.

California Woman Impersonates Walgreens Pharmacist for 11 years

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From 2006 to 2017 Kim Thien Le worked at Walgreens as a pharmacist by using the license numbers of registered pharmacists to order and dispense prescriptions. She has pled not guilty on felony impersonation charges. During her employment at the popular pharmacy she filled over 745,000 prescriptions. This includes over 100,000 prescriptions of fentanyl, morphine, codeine and other opioids. A suit has been filed against Walgreens for, allegedly, failing to vet Le properly when they gave her the position. She did not ever possess the proper license and she was repeatedly able to bypass re-certifications and the internal systems for over a decade.

Read more about the lawsuit here

What is Walgreens doing to combat fraudulent licensure?

Who is getting the settlement money?

Read full account of the story here

TCS acquires Walgreens

Mookie Betts: Trade Explosive Player, Get Explosive Reaction

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The inevitable trade of Mookie Betts was finally completed as the Boston Red Sox sent him and David Price to the Los Angeles Dodgers for outfielder Alex Verdugo. The Minnesota Twins sent their top pitching prospect, Brudstar Graterol to Boston. Kenta Maeda went from Los Angeles to Minnesota.

This deal has elicited over-the-top reactions with some fans and media entities going so far as to compare it to the sale of Babe Ruth to the New York Yankees a century ago.

That catastrophic deal aside, let’s take an objective look at this trade.

Boston Red Sox

The Red Sox are punting the 2020 season.

Is this news?

They’ve been telegraphing their decision to do so since they fired Dave Dombrowski, made clear they were not spending big to fill glaring holes, were intent on reallocating funds and getting their payroll under control.

Aesthetically, trading Betts might not be preferable, but it was necessary when accounting for the various moving parts. What good does he do them in 2020 when they have done nothing to improve from their disappointing 2019 campaign; have a new head of baseball operations in Chaim Bloom whose sensibilities trend more to spreading money out and holding onto prospects, draft picks and international spending money; needed to fire their manager because of his role in the Houston Astros and Red Sox sign-stealing; and had a bloated payroll with a declining farm system?

When a club is trading a star the magnitude of Betts, it’s next-to-impossible to get a return the fans and media will be happy with. When that star is set to be a free agent at the end of the season and will cost as much as $400 million to re-sign, getting even an acceptable return is difficult.

If he was not going to sign an extension and the Red Sox – trapped in the American League East with the loaded Yankees and talented Tampa Bay Rays – knew that a championship run was unrealistic, why bother? Betts starting the season with a compromised Red Sox team was a risky distraction. Sure, they could trade him at midseason, but would probably get less than the offer on the table. The attachment of Price’s contract was a financial windfall for an aging pitcher with a lot of wear on his tires who was not well-liked in Boston. They could have held onto Betts and hoped he would return after testing free agency, but that could leave them with nothing.

Rather than hold out for a package of prospects listed among the best in the arbitrary minor-league rankings, the Red Sox chose to get two well-regarded young players, clear Price’s salary, and get this over and done with so they can deal with the next issue on their list: hiring a manager to replace Alex Cora.

If Betts is dead set on trying free agency, the Red Sox can sign him after 2020 for the same amount of money it would have cost them to get an extension and they’ll also have Verdugo and Graterol.

As for the fan reaction to the trade, the club cannot worry about that. It wasn’t that long ago that the most hardened, jaded and worn down denizens of Fenway Park would have traded anything and anyone to get that elusive World Series win. They won it in 2004; won another one three years later; and suddenly, anything short of a preseason projection for a championship was not good enough. Most non-Yankee fans would be thrilled with one championship in their lifetime. The Red Sox have won four in 15 years. Is it too much for the organization to say they’re retooling and want to get the payroll under control after allowing Dombrowski to spend whatever was needed in money and prospect capital to win another title in 2018?

Betts is one of the top five players in baseball, but he was essentially useless to the Red Sox given the club’s construction and realistic expectations. It was better to settle this now, take the beating and move on. All in all, they did well in getting Verdugo, Graterol and clearing half of Price’s money off their ledger. To insinuate that John Henry and Tom Werner are being “cheap” is preposterous. They’ll spend to get better when the time is right. That time is not now.

Los Angeles Dodgers

After consecutive World Series losses in 2017 and 2018 and then getting bounced by the Washington Nationals in the 2019 National League Division Series, there was an argument for the Dodgers to drop a bomb in the clubhouse and make a dramatic change to shuffle the deck. Instead, they sat by quietly and made no major acquisitions…until trading for one of the best players in baseball and a starting pitcher who should thrive in the Dodgers’ sheltered, laid-back, stat-centric, defense-first environment. Boston always seemed slightly too intense for him. In Los Angeles, he won’t live every day hearing about how he wilts every time he faces the Yankees…at least until October.

As talented as Verdugo is, that he and Maeda were the only pieces the Dodgers surrendered to get Betts is amazing and shows the value of not panicking to quell fan anger. Verdugo was an extra piece on a team loaded with outfielders. In context, it’s a small price to pay. Maeda was versatile and productive for the Dodgers, but they squeezed out about as much as anyone could have reasonably expected from an unheralded signing from Japan. He’s not making a lot of money ($3 million per year through 2023) and he’s replaceable.

Had the Dodgers surrendered a massive prospect haul for Betts and not taken Price, the deal could have been scrutinized further. Did they need Betts? Not desperately. They have sufficient depth and versatility that they would score enough runs to stay in contention through the trade deadline when they can address specific needs with their deep farm system. This, however, was a preseason strike to get the player who would have been on every contender’s list at the deadline. He improves an already superlative defense; he adds power, speed and has postseason experience. Singing for his free agent supper puts the pieces in place for another Most Valuable Player-caliber year. The Dodgers have the money to retain him, but if it doesn’t make sense, they will let him walk without having surrendered the entire farm system to acquire him.

Minnesota Twins

Trading prospects – even the “top” prospect in an organization – is rarely done without reason. The Twins, under president of baseball operations Derek Falvey, do not make moves haphazardly. Rest assured, there is a reason they traded Graterol for a middling arm like Maeda. It’s just hard to see what that reason is.

There is an assessment floating around that Graterol is better suited to the bullpen. He throws in the triple-digits, averaging 99-mph on his fastball and sinker. Still, it’s not out of line to ask why the Twins would trade him for Maeda. They certainly had a need for another arm, but the best pitching prospect in the organization is an uneven return for someone like Maeda. It’s not crazy to compare this move to one the Twins made at the 2010 trade deadline trading top catching prospect Wilson Ramos to the Washington Nationals for reliever Matt Capps. This failed deal was a main reason then-GM Bill Smith got fired. The explanation that they already had a star catcher in Joe Mauer did not justify trading their best prospect at a difficult-to-fill position for a mediocre relief pitcher.

Even well-regarded prospects have concerns. It’s important to remember that the prospect assessments are not from the clubs themselves, but from outside entities who are not privy to all the information that a club has on its own talent.

The decision to trade such a key young player for Maeda is the most puzzling part of a deal that is understandable from the perspectives of the main cogs: the Red Sox and Dodgers.

Rush Limbaugh Awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom During State of the Union Address

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During the annual State of the Union Address, President Trump broke usual protocol and bestowed the Presidential Medal of Freedom on Rush Limbaugh. The medal can be given to anyone, in fact prior recipients have been Meryl Streep, Tom Hanks, as well as other famous entertainers in the past. The breach in protocol was not the bestowing of the medal, but the timing. Usually there is a ceremony at the white house, and usually the recipient knows what is about to happen. This honor comes a day after Rush Limbaugh announced on his show that he has been diagnosed with “advanced” lung cancer and will be taking time off for treatment.

See the SOTU Adress here

Read more about the event here

Many are unhappy with Rush Limbaugh being honored.

Jimmy Kimmel vents about Medal of Freedom and Rush Limbaugh

Highlights from the State of the Union Address