Harvey Weinstein due back in court for hearing ahead of retrial

Harvey Weinstein due back in court for hearing ahead of retrial
Weinstein’s original conviction was overturned after an appeals court found there was too much evidence not directly related to the charges allowed in the trial. (Photo by POOL / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / AFP)
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Harvey Weinstein due back in court for hearing ahead of retrial

Harvey Weinstein due back in court for hearing ahead of retrial
  • Weinstein was convicted on charges — since overturned — that he forcibly performed oral sex on a TV and film production assistant in 2006, and rape in the third degree for an attack on an aspiring actor in 2013

NEW YORK: Harvey Weinstein is due back in court in New York on Wednesday for a hearing ahead of his retrial on sex crimes charges stemming from his landmark #MeToo case.
Among other things, Judge Curtis Farber is expected to address a request from prosecutors to consolidate that case with a newer charge into a single trial.
The former movie mogul was already facing retrial on two sex crime charges after the state’s highest court overturned his 2020 conviction earlier this year. Then in September, he was hit with a new charge accusing him of another assault. He has pleaded not guilty.
Weinstein was convicted on charges — since overturned — that he forcibly performed oral sex on a TV and film production assistant in 2006, and rape in the third degree for an attack on an aspiring actor in 2013. In the new charge, prosecutors say he forced oral sex on a different woman in a Manhattan hotel in the spring of 2006.
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office has argued in court filings that holding separate trials would be “extraordinarily inefficient” and waste judicial resources. Prosecutors said the cases have significant overlap as they involve similar criminal statutes, witnesses, expert testimony and documentary evidence.
Weinstein’s lawyers have argued in court filings that the cases should remain separate. They said prosecutors are attempting to “expand the scope” of the court-ordered retrial and transform it into “an entirely new proceeding” by including the new charges.
There’s also the question of when Weinstein’s retrial is expected to actually begin.
Faber had tentatively scheduled Weinstein’s trial to open on Nov. 12, but both defense lawyers and prosecutors have voiced concerns that the date won’t give their side enough time to prepare.
Weinstein has been in custody at the city’s Rikers Island jail complex and has faced numerous health complications while behind bars.
He was also convicted of rape in Los Angeles in 2022, though his lawyers have appealed.
The sexual assault and harassment allegations against Weinstein turbocharged the #MeToo movement in 2017.
The 72-year-old former producer co-founded the film and television production companies Miramax and The Weinstein Company. He produced such films as “Shakespeare in Love” and “The Crying Game.”


King Charles III’s Commonwealth visit to Samoa will highlight climate change ... and dance

King Charles III’s Commonwealth visit to Samoa will highlight climate change ... and dance
Updated 34 sec ago
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King Charles III’s Commonwealth visit to Samoa will highlight climate change ... and dance

King Charles III’s Commonwealth visit to Samoa will highlight climate change ... and dance
LONDON: King Charles III should be prepared to dance when he visits Samoa this week.
Freddie Tuilagi made sure of that when he visited St. James’ Palace recently wearing nothing but a bark cloth wrap and a necklace historically worn by orator chiefs. Charles, in a blue suit and carefully knotted tie, grinned while gamely trying to follow along as Samoa’s honorary consul to the UK moved through the steps of a traditional dance.
“He loves it. He said he wants to learn the dance,” Tuilagi said afterward, showing off his moves once again.
Tuilagi, who moved to Britain to play professional rugby, said the 75-year-old king can expect more of the same when he arrives in the South Pacific island nation on Wednesday. Villagers throughout the country of 220,000 people have taken steps to decorate and show how much they appreciate Charles’ visit, he said.
Charles, the symbolic head of the Commonwealth, is traveling to Samoa for a meeting of top government officials from each of the 56 independent nations that make up the organization. At the top of the agenda is the fight against climate change, an issue Charles has championed for decades.
The king can count on Samoans to be receptive. Its islands are at the forefront of the climate emergency, facing increasing threats from rising sea levels, warming ocean temperatures and more intense storms.
The royal visit is attracting global media attention. Many Samoans hope that images of the king and Queen Camilla strolling on the islands’ breathtaking beaches will help attract European tourists and boost the economy.
“It’s an opportunity to showcase our culture, showcase our heritage and how ... proud (of) that we are as a country,’’ Tuilagi told The Associated Press. “To host the king and the leaders of the Pacific, you know, the Commonwealth coming to Samoa is something special for us.’’
Before his Samoa trip, Charles visited Australia, where not everyone welcomed him. On Monday, Sen. Lidia Thorpe, shouted “you are not my king,” at a parliamentary reception for the king to protest the former British Empire’s treatment of Indigenous peoples and to call on Australia to sever ties with the monarchy.
But Samoa has a different relationship with the monarchy. Unlike Australia, Samoa is not one of the 14 independent countries outside the United Kingdom where the British monarch remains the head of state.
Tuilagi said he hopes his demonstration of Samoan dance and song will help the king when he arrives. He particularly hoped that he would make an impression since he wore national dress, which includes leaving the shirt at home.
Think joy. That’s Tuilagi’s point.
“It’s not every day the king will see a chief from Samoa topless ... at the palace,’’ he said, chuckling.

Pakistani parliamentary panel picks a judge third on seniority list to head Supreme Court

Pakistani parliamentary panel picks a judge third on seniority list to head Supreme Court
Updated 4 min 29 sec ago
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Pakistani parliamentary panel picks a judge third on seniority list to head Supreme Court

Pakistani parliamentary panel picks a judge third on seniority list to head Supreme Court
  • Under the constitution, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s government overnight sent a summary to President Asif Ali Zardari

ISLAMABAD: A parliamentary panel on Tuesday recommended a judge who was third on the seniority list of a panel of judges to head the Supreme Court of Pakistan, government officials said, a move which virtually blocked the elevation of the senior-most judge and is likely to further deepen a lingering political crisis.
Under the constitution, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s government overnight sent a summary to President Asif Ali Zardari, who approved the appointment of Yahya Afridi as the chief justice of the Supreme Court.
Afridi’s name was third on the list of a three-judge panel that was considered by a committee.
The government issued no clarification for ignoring two other judges, Mansoor Ali Shah and Munib Akhtar, for the office of the chief justice.
Azam Nazeer Tarar, the minister for Law and Justice, told reporters that the committee has sent the name of Afridi “with a two-third majority” to the premier.
The party of Pakistan’s imprisoned former Prime Minister Imran Khan, which is part of the parliamentary committee, boycotted Tuesday’s meeting that was held in Islamabad to pick the top judge.
Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party, or PTI, was in favor of Shah’s appointment as the chief justice.
Tuesday’s government move comes days before the Chief Justice Qazi Faez Esa retires after completing his term. It also came a day after the parliament approved controversial changes to the constitution, empowering a 12-member parliamentary panel to pick a senior judge to replace the outgoing chief justice.
The new amendments to the government have been criticized by Khan’s popular opposition party and many lawyers, who have in recent days had vowed that they would protest if Shah wasn’t appointed as the chief justice.
Ahsan Iqbal, a Cabinet minister who is part of the parliamentary committee that finally picked Afridi, defended the decision. He said the parliamentary committee with a majority vote had decided to appoint Afridi as the chief justice.
But Afridi’s appointment is expected to further deepen a political turmoil, which began in 2022 after Khan was ousted from the power through a no-confidence vote in parliament.
He has been behind bars since 2023 after his conviction in a graft case.
Khan has so far been embroiled in more than 150 cases and has been sentenced in several, including to three years, 10 years, 14 years and seven years to be served concurrently under Pakistani law. Khan’s convictions were later overturned in appeals, but he can’t be freed because of other pending cases against him.


Harris says US ready for woman president

Harris says US ready for woman president
Updated 18 min 52 sec ago
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Harris says US ready for woman president

Harris says US ready for woman president
  • The race is overshadowed by extraordinary tensions and fears of violence or a refusal by Trump to recognize the results if he loses
  • Harris, 60, is also deploying two of her party’s most popular emissaries onto the campaign trail: Barack and Michelle Obama

Washington: Kamala Harris said Tuesday that America is “absolutely” ready to elect its first woman president but downplayed her historic bid, saying she simply wants to turn the page for a nation “exhausted” by Donald Trump.
With two weeks to Election Day, Harris and Trump are saturating swing states with rallies and taking to the airwaves and podcasts on the hunt for an advantage in a race that polls suggest is effectively tied.
Speaking on the national NBC network, Harris responded “absolutely” when asked if America was ready to elect its first woman — but also noted her candidacy was about “turning the page.”
“People are exhausted with Donald Trump and his approach, because it’s all about himself,” she said.
Trump, speaking to supporters in North Carolina, pitched a very different message.
“This election is a choice between whether we will have four more years of incompetence, failure and disaster, or whether we’ll begin the four greatest years in the history of our country,” he said to cheers.
He repeatedly called Harris and her running mate Tim Walz stupid during the rally.
The race is overshadowed by extraordinary tensions and fears of violence or a refusal by Trump to recognize the results if he loses, as he continues to do over his 2020 loss to Joe Biden.
Harris told NBC that her campaign was “of course” ready for a scenario where Trump prematurely claims victory during a vote-counting process that could take days to complete.
Biden, who has been an infrequent presence in Harris’s campaign, took a shot at Trump Tuesday by re-wording the ex-president’s notorious anti-Hillary Clinton chant of “Lock her up.”
On a visit to New Hampshire, Biden told a small crowd that “we got to lock” Trump up — adding quickly, “politically lock him up.”
With Trump facing multiple pending criminal charges as he competes against Harris to succeed Biden, the White House has been very careful not to weigh in on the Republican’s legal problems.
The Trump campaign responded that Biden and Harris had a “plan all along... to politically persecute their opponent.”
About 18 million Americans have already voted by mail or in person — representing more than 10 percent of the total in 2020.
Some polls appear to be giving the Republican, who at 78 is the oldest nominee from a major party in US history, a slight edge recently — but all within the margin of error.
Whatever the result, US voters will make history on November 5: they will either elect the country’s first woman president, or they will put the first convicted felon into the White House.
Harris, 60, is also deploying two of her party’s most popular emissaries onto the campaign trail: Barack and Michelle Obama.
The former president, speaking at a rally in Madison on Tuesday, rolled back the years with fiery attacks on Trump.
“Don’t boo, vote!” he implored people after his jibes.
Laster in the day, Rapper Eminem upped the star factor when he introduced Obama at a major Harris campaign event in Detroit, drawing a rapped reply from the ex-president.
“I don’t usually get nervous, but I was feeling some kinda way following Eminem,” Obama said before launching into a recitation of the lyrics to the rapper’s hit “Lose Yourself.”
At the same time, Trump has increasingly repeated conspiracy theories on the campaign trail, often taking aim at migrants and his political opponents.
While speaking to Latino leaders Tuesday in Florida he said: “As president, you have tremendous — it’s called extreme power. You have extreme power.”
“You can, just by the fact, you say, ‘Close the border,’ and the border’s closed,” he added.
The Harris campaign has begun to hammer at his mental and physical fitness to occupy the Oval Office while trying to woo moderate Republican voters.
One of Trump’s top aides as president, former Marine general John Kelly, confirmed Tuesday to The New York Times previous reports that he considered the Republican to be a fascist.
“Certainly the former president is in the far-right area, he’s certainly an authoritarian, admires people who are dictators — he has said that. So he certainly falls into the general definition of fascist, for sure.”
Joe Rogan, host of one of the most listened to podcasts in America, said his interview with Trump is due out Friday.
Non-traditional media, including podcasts, have played a key role in the campaign in targeting specific audiences like young women and Black men.


Tropical Storm Trami tracks toward Philippines, schools shut

Tropical Storm Trami tracks toward Philippines, schools shut
Updated 27 min 45 sec ago
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Tropical Storm Trami tracks toward Philippines, schools shut

Tropical Storm Trami tracks toward Philippines, schools shut
  • Marcos ordered government agencies to closely monitor the volume of rainfall in the coming days

MANILA: The Philippines suspended government work and shut schools as Tropical Storm Trami barrelled toward the country’s eastern coast, with President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. on Wednesday ordering responders to prepare ahead of its landfall.
State weather forecaster Pag-asa said in its 11 a.m. (0300 GMT) bulletin Trami’s center was last estimated at 200 km (124 miles) off the eastern town of Casiguran in Aurora province. The storm is forecast to make landfall between Wednesday evening and early Thursday morning.
Marcos ordered government agencies to closely monitor the volume of rainfall in the coming days, preposition government resources and anticipate people’s needs.
“The worst is yet to come, I’m afraid. Let’s all prepare,” Marcos told a situation briefing.
“The volumes of water are unprecedented. We should closely monitor that.”
Ahead of the storm’s landfall, Trami dumped heavy rain in the central region of Bicol on Tuesday, forcing residents to flee their homes as floodwaters reached as high as the roofs of bungalow houses. Rivers overflowed and triggered flash floods, a disaster official said.
“We got almost two months’ worth of rainfall in just 24 hours,” Albay provincial disaster chief Cedric Daep said by phone.
The civil defense office said at least one person was reported dead in Palanas town in Masbate province after being hit by a falling branch. Five others were injured and seven were reported missing.
Pag-asa warned of strong winds, heavy rain and storm surges in coastal towns within the typhoon’s path.
The storm, which was packing winds of 85 kph (53 mph), also shut down government work and schools across the main island of Luzon.
The Philippine central bank on Wednesday suspended currency trading and monetary operations for the day. Stock market trading operated as normal.
Agencies involved in disaster response and vital services remained open, the office of the president said.


UK warns Russian strikes on Black Sea delay grain supplies to Palestinians, global south

UK warns Russian strikes on Black Sea delay grain supplies to Palestinians, global south
Updated 23 October 2024
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UK warns Russian strikes on Black Sea delay grain supplies to Palestinians, global south

UK warns Russian strikes on Black Sea delay grain supplies to Palestinians, global south
  • According to British Defense Intelligence, Starmer said, at least four merchant vessels have been struck by Russian munitions in the Black Sea between Oct. 5-14

Russia’s increased attacks on the Black Sea ports in Ukraine are delaying vital aid reaching Palestinians and stopping crucial grain supplies from being delivered to the global south, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said late on Tuesday.
“Russia’s indiscriminate strikes on ports in the Black Sea underscore that (Russian President Vladimir) Putin is willing to gamble on global food security in his attempts to force Ukraine into submission,” Starmer said in a statement issued by his press office.
The United Nations said on Monday that Russian attacks on Ukrainian Black Sea ports have damaged six civilian vessels as well as grain infrastructure since Sept. 1, calling the ramp-up in strikes “distressing.”
According to British Defense Intelligence, Starmer said, at least four merchant vessels have been struck by Russian munitions in the Black Sea between Oct. 5-14.
“(Putin) is harming millions of vulnerable people across Africa, Asia and the Middle East, to try and gain the upper hand in his barbaric war,” Starmer said.
The Russian strikes are believed to have delayed a ship from departing Ukraine while carrying vegetable oil destined for the World Food Programme in Palestine, according to Starmer’s statement, as well as vessels with grain destined for Egypt and World Food Programme shipments bound for southern Africa.
Ukraine is a major global wheat and corn grower and before Russia’s invasion in 2022 the country exported about six million tons of grain alone per month via the Black Sea. Despite the ongoing war, grains sales remain a crucial revenue source for the country.
After the collapse last year of a UN-backed Black Sea grain export initiative that involved Russia and had ensured safe passage of grain ships, Ukraine has managed to create a shipping corridor in the Black Sea.