Kiev surrounded Satellite images show hundreds of Russian soldiers around

Kiev surrounded: Satellite images show hundreds of Russian soldiers around the Ukrainian capital

Satellite images taken today show a large deployment of Russian ground forces moving in the direction of the Ukrainian capital Kiev from approximately 40 miles (64 km), a private US company said.

Images published by Maxar Technologies show a deployment of hundreds of military vehicles spanning more than 3.25 miles (5 km).

The images published by Maxar, which have been tracking the accumulation of Russian forces for weeks, cannot be verified independently.

As Russian troops approach the Ukrainian capital, the mayor of Kiev is proud of the spirit of his citizens, but remains worried about how long they can last.

After a grueling night of Russian attacks on the outskirts of the city, Mayor Vitali Klitschko was silent for a few seconds when asked if there were any plans to evacuate civilians if Russian troops managed to take Kiev.

Satellite image provided by Maxar Technologies shows Russian ground forces in a convoy near Ivankov, Ukraine, today

Satellite image provided by Maxar Technologies shows Russian ground forces in a convoy near Ivankov, Ukraine, today

“We can’t do that because all the roads are blocked,” he said at last. We are surrounded at the moment.

When Russian troops invaded Ukraine on Thursday, the city of 2.8 million people initially reacted with concern, but also a measure of self-control. However, nerves began to fall apart as grocery stores began to close and the city’s famous deep subway station turned its stations into bomb shelters.

The mayor confirmed to the AP that nine civilians have been killed in Kiev so far, including one child.

Klitschko’s curfew began around sunset on Saturday and will last until at least 8 a.m. Monday. His order clearly states that any unauthorized person from outside can be considered a saboteur.

“We are persecuting these people and it will be much easier if no one is on the street,” Klitschko said, adding that six Russian “saboteurs” had been killed on Saturday night.

The advance of Russian troops on the city is slower than many military experts expected.

After a grueling night of Russian attacks on the outskirts of the city, Mayor Vitali Klitschko was silent for a few seconds when asked if there were any plans to evacuate civilians if Russian troops managed to take Kiev

After a grueling night of Russian attacks on the outskirts of the city, Mayor Vitali Klitschko was silent for a few seconds when asked if there were any plans to evacuate civilians if Russian troops managed to take Kiev

The photos show convoys of Russian troops heading to the Ukrainian capital Kiev

The photos show convoys of Russian troops heading to the Ukrainian capital Kiev

The citizens of Kiev resorted to armament amid fears of an impending invasion of Russian troops.  (Pictured: satellite image showing the Russian army heading for the Ukrainian capital)

The citizens of Kiev resorted to armament amid fears of an impending invasion of Russian troops. (Pictured: satellite image showing the Russian army heading for the Ukrainian capital)

“I just talked to the president [Volodymyr Zelenskyy]. Not everyone is feeling so well, “Klitschko said, adding that Ukrainian city officials were shocked but not depressed. “We show our character, our knowledge, our values.”

Over the past few days, long lines of people – men and women – have been spotted waiting to take up arms across the capital after authorities decided to distribute weapons freely to anyone willing to defend the city. However, there are concerns about arming nervous civilians with little military experience amid warnings from Russian saboteurs disguised as Ukrainian police or journalists.

“Honestly, we don’t have 100% control,” Klitschko said. “We built this territorial defense in a short time, but these are patriotic people.”

“Right now, the most important issue is to defend our country,” he added.

However, when asked about the city’s ability to replenish declining food and medicine supplies, Klico’s eyes darkened.

“We are on the verge of a humanitarian catastrophe,” he said. “We currently have electricity, we currently have water and heating in our houses. But the infrastructure for food and medicine was destroyed.

Russian troops entered Ukraine on February 24, prompting the country's president to declare martial law and sparking a series of reports by Western countries calling for heavy economic sanctions on Russia.

Russian troops entered Ukraine on February 24, prompting the country’s president to declare martial law and sparking a series of reports by Western countries calling for heavy economic sanctions on Russia.

Ukrainian forces in Kiev destroyed a convoy of Russian vehicles in the northwestern part of the city after surviving a “brutal” night of shelling.

Volunteers, including the former Miss Ukraine Anastasia Lena, they took up arms to fight Vladimir PutinRussia’s army, with “long queues” of citizens waiting to be issued weapons at Kiev’s recruitment centers.

Ukrainian forces managed to stop the Russian offensive in the capital by blowing up bridges in the city to prevent an offensive by Moscow troops.

Russian forces were killed Sunday afternoon in Bucha, near Gostomel Air Base in northwestern Kiev, after falling into a trap when the Irpin bridge to the city was destroyed.

Footage published online allegedly shows the dire consequences of what military experts said was probably a drone strike on a column of Russian airborne forces, with parts of vehicles scattered on the road in a distorted, fire pile.

Earlier on Sunday, Ukrainian servicemen were filmed wandering downtown Kiev to impose a 39-hour curfew to keep people away from the streets.

Mayor Klitschko said Russian troops had failed to enter the city despite the bombing.

He also warned those outside after 5 pm and would be considered part of “enemy sabotage and intelligence groups” before 8 am – he later said there were no Russian troops in the city.

But he said at least nine civilians had been “lost or killed” in the capital, including one child, since the invasion.

Two clouds of smoke were filmed over the city this morning, although at least one was reportedly caused by Ukrainian forces blowing up a bridge to the capital.

A second was reportedly fired by a Russian cruise missile in Troyeschina, a northeastern suburb of the city.

And by Sunday afternoon, the Ukrainian military had warned that Belarusian special forces were preparing for airstrikes in the capital, a sign that Alexander Lukashenko had officially joined Russia’s war.

Kiev surrounded: Satellite images show hundreds of Russian soldiers around the Ukrainian capital Read More »

Barr chimes Trump for going off the rails in new

Barr chimes Trump for ‘going off the rails’ in new memoir

WASHINGTON. Former Attorney General William P. Barr writes in a new memoir that former President Donald J. Trump’s “self-indulgence and lack of self-control” cost him the 2020 election and says that “he got absurdly far in his ‘stolen election’.” This statement led to riots on Capitol Hill.”

In the book, “One Damn Thing After Another: The Attorney General’s MemoirsMr. Barr is also urging his fellow Republicans to choose someone else as the party’s nominee in the 2024 election, calling the prospect of Mr. Trump’s new presidency “worrisome.”

“Donald Trump has shown that he has neither the temperament nor the power of persuasion to provide the necessary positive leadership,” writes Mr. Barr.

The memoir – an account of Mr. Barr’s time as Attorney General under President George W. Bush and then again under Mr. Trump – defends his own actions in the Trump administration that led to heavy criticism of the Justice Department. giving up their independence succumb to pressure from the White House.

Mr. Barr has long been seen as a close ally of Mr. Trump. But the two fell out near the end of the Trump administration, when Mr. Barr refused to accept Mr. Trump’s baseless claims that the 2020 election had been stolen.

In a statement last June, Mr. Trump denounced his former attorney general, calling him a “swamp creature” and a “RINO” — meaning a Republican in name only — who “was scared, weak and outspoken, now that I see what he really is”. saying sorry.

For his part, Mr. Barr portrays Mr. Trump as a president who – despite sometimes displaying the “menacing manner” of a strong ruler as a “chip” to create an image of power – acted within the fences set by his advisers and achieved many goals of conservative policy. But Mr. Trump “lost his grip” after the election, he writes.

“He stopped listening to his advisers, became manic and unintelligent, and lost his way,” writes Mr. Barr. “He surrounded himself with sycophants, including a host of fools from outside the government who fed him a constant diet of comforting but unsubstantiated conspiracy theories.”

Throughout the book, Mr. Barr despises the media, accusing them of “corruption” and “active support for progressive ideology.” He writes that the political left became radicalized during Barack Obama’s second term. He compares his support for social justice issues to “the same revolutionary and totalitarian ideas that propelled the French Revolution, the communists of the Russian Revolution, and the fascists of Europe in the 20th century.”

He also denounces the investigation by the FBI and later by Special Counsel Robert S. Mueller III into ties between Russia and Trump campaign aides in 2016. Let’s get started, and why did the FBI management handle this issue so inexplicably and clumsily?

Mr. Barr dismisses as “nonsense” criticism that his summary of the special counsel’s report, which he released before the report went public, was distorted in the way that favored Mr. Trump. Mr Barr insists his description, including his claim that Mr Trump did not obstruct justice, was “entirely accurate.”

In defense of this conclusion, Mr. Barr writes that it was “the simple fact that the President never did anything to interfere with the Special Counsel’s investigation.”

But his book does not address any of the specific incidents that Mr. Muller’s report outlines as capacity-building. obstruction of justice issuesfor example, the fact that Mr. Trump hung out but forgive from his former campaign chairman, Paul J. Manaforturging Mr. Manafort not to cooperate with the investigation.

In a chapter titled “For justice even for the bad guys,” Mr. Barr defends his handling of two other cases related to the Mueller investigation. Mr Barr writes that it was “reasonable” for him abolish line prosecutors as well as seek a lighter sentence for Mr Trump ally Roger J. Stone Jr..

And appeal his decision to drop the charge Mr. Trump’s former national security adviser Michael T. Flynn for lying to the FBI – although Mr. Flynn has already pleaded guilty – he writes that there was not enough evidence to handle the FBI case was “malpractice.” authority,” and Mr. Muller’s accusations against him were not “fair.”

As he did during his tenure, Mr. Barr laments that Mr. Trump’s public comments about the Justice Department have undermined his ability to do his job.

“Despite the fact that I based my decisions on what I believed to be correct in terms of law and facts, if my decisions turned out to be the same as the opinion expressed by the president, this made it easier to attack my actions as politically motivated,” he writes.

Mr. Barr also describes how, on some occasions, he resisted Mr. Trump’s proposals. He declined to file charges against former FBI Director James B. Comey, Jr. for allegedly leaking classified information; insisted that the administration did not have enough time to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census; and rejected Mr. Trump’s “bad” idea that he could use an executive order to remove birthright citizenship for children born in the United States to undocumented immigrants.

White House and Justice Department lawyers should have talked Trump out of these ideas, which could be “bruising” and tantamount to “eating grenades,” he writes.

On the scandal that led to Mr. Trump’s first impeachment, in which Mr. Trump withdrew aid to Ukraine as leverage to try to get the President of Ukraine to announce an investigation into Joseph R. Biden Jr., Mr. Barr spoke out harshly.

Mr. Barr calls it “another mess – this time by itself and the result of extreme stupidity”, “a reckless gambit” and “incredible idiocy”. But while he describes Mr. Trump’s conversation with the Ukrainian president on the subject as “unseemly and unreasonable,” he maintains that it did not rise to the level of a “criminal offence.”

Similarly, Mr. Barr writes that he did not consider Mr. Trump’s actions prior to the January 6 Capitol attack, which he denounced in a statement the next day, as “organizing a mob to pressure Congress” and “betraying him office and its supporters” – met the legal standard for the crime of incitement, even though it was “wrong”.

The book begins with a December 1, 2020 meeting with Mr. Trump, hours after Mr. Barr. gave an interview contrary to the president’s allegations of a stolen election, stating that the Justice Department “did not see fraud on a scale that could have affected a different outcome of the election.”

Mr. Trump was furious, he writes, accusing Mr. Barr of “knocking the rug out from under me” and saying he should “hate Trump.” After Mr. Barr said he explained why the allegations of various scams were unfounded, he offered to resign, with Mr. Trump slamming the table and yelling “Accepted!” Mr. Trump changed his mind when Mr. Barr left the White House, but Mr. Barr resigned before the end of the month.

His book expands on this theme by looking at the specific “substantiated allegations of fraud” that Trump made and explaining why the Justice Department found them to be unsubstantiated. He lists several reasons, such as why claims of allegedly hacked Dominion voting machines were “absolute rubbish” and “nonsensical chatter”.

“The election was not ‘stolen’,” writes Mr. Barr. “Trump lost.”

Barr chimes Trump for ‘going off the rails’ in new memoir Read More »

Acacia Jail Riot Shocking Footage of Prisoners in Western Australia

Acacia Jail Riot: Shocking Footage of Prisoners in Western Australia

Anti-riot squads have been called to the infamous prison as fires break out and armed prisoners go wild – climbing on the roof of the facility

  • Authorities are trying to contain a riot that erupted in a WA prison
  • Ambulance crews rushed to Acacia Prison in Wooroloo at 4.30pm (AWST) on Sunday
  • Dozens of prisoners have been seen throwing objects and climbing on the roof

Prisoners in a private prison east of Perth revolted, climbed onto the roof of a section of the medium-security prison and set fire to cells.

The Western Australian Ministry of Justice says officers from the Correctional Services Special Operations Group have been sent to quell unrest at Acacia Prison in Wooroloo, on the outskirts of Perth.

“There are a number of prisoners on the roof of one block of the facility and prisoners in the same block are causing damage, including setting fire to objects in their cells,” the department said in a statement on Sunday.

Ambulance crews rushed to Acacia Prison in Wooroloo at 4.30pm (AWST) on Sunday after reports of multiple fires in the facility

Ambulance crews rushed to Acacia Prison in Wooroloo at 4.30pm (AWST) on Sunday after reports of multiple fires in the facility

Police and firefighters are said to be on the scene and no injuries have been reported.

“A command center has been set up in the prison to coordinate the reaction. There is no threat to the wider community. “

The WA Prisoners’ Union says it believes the riot broke out when COVID-19 prisoners were transferred to another unit.

The union criticized Serco, who runs the prison, blaming the lack of staff for the incident.

“Acacia is the largest prison in the WA and there are no longer enough staff. But Serco has not yet called in non-duty prison officials to increase numbers during the riot, union secretary Andy Smith said in a statement.

“This situation was completely predictable due to the shocking levels of staff and poor morale and has now reached its boiling point.

“Serco must stop putting profits ahead of safety and ensure that there are enough staff to control the number of prisoners.”

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Trump Jr Putin behaved when Dad was in office because

Trump Jr.: Putin behaved when Dad was in office because he had “balls”

Donald Trump Jr. says Putin did not invade Ukraine under his father’s supervision because “people understand strength, they understand determination, they understand balls.”

  • Donald Trump Jr. says Russian President Vladimir Putin did not invade Ukraine under his father’s supervision because former President Donald Trump had “balls”
  • “People understand strength, they understand determination, they understand balls,” Trump Jr. said as he delivered CPAC’s last speech on Sunday.
  • The younger Trump used his appeal to the CPAC to persecute President Joe Biden, but also to hit his first son, fellow Hunter Biden.

Donald Trump Junior said the Russian president Vladimir Putin did not invade Ukraine under his father’s supervision because former President Donald Trump had “balls”.

“There’s a reason it didn’t happen with Trump: people understand strength, they understand determination, they understand balls,” Trump Jr. said as he delivered his closing remarks at the four-day Conservative Political Action Conference in Orlando, Florida.

The younger Trump used his CPAC address to persecute the president Joe Biden – but also to fuck his first blue double, Hunter Biden.

Donald Trump Jr. says Russian President Vladimir Putin did not invade Ukraine under his father's supervision because former President Donald Trump had

Donald Trump Jr. says Russian President Vladimir Putin did not invade Ukraine under his father’s supervision because former President Donald Trump had “balls”

Trump Jr. began his speech by telling the crowd that he was happy to hear that a fishing trip to Alaska with him and his girlfriend Kimberly Guilfoil had been sold at auction for $ 75,000 during a live auction at CPAC’s dinner. Friday night Ronald Reagan.

“I heard that fishing … went for a lot of money,” Trump Jr. said. “You see, if I were Hunter Biden, I’d put it in my pocket instead of going to a good cause, wouldn’t I?” It would be a little different. But can’t we do that?

Trump Jr., then broke up in the current administration.

“Think about how things are going right now,” he said. “That the administration that is currently in charge wanted to draw up a program for distributing cracks.”

“Because you have to be on your feet to think they’re doing a good job, aren’t you?” he said.

Donald Trump Jr. jokes about Hunter Biden's cocaine addiction earlier in Sunday's CPAC speech

Donald Trump Jr. jokes about Hunter Biden’s cocaine addiction earlier in Sunday’s CPAC speech

“At least they have a program that Hunter can be responsible for,” he added with a laugh.

The former first son then repeated words his father made during his address to the CPAC on Saturday night – that Putin remains in the queue because of President Trump’s power.

“Do you know the first thing a bully does?” He is taking advantage of the weak and weak, “Trump Jr. said, pointing to Biden.

“All you have to do is watch him climb the stairs,” Trump Jr. added.

He argues that the Americans should step in and condemn Biden’s confused withdrawal from Afghanistan.

“What we can’t disagree with is the disgrace that has occurred in Afghanistan,” Trump Jr. suggested.

He said this encouraged Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping.

“You think Vladimir Putin didn’t see that and said ‘Excellent.’ You don’t think Xi from China said, “Hey, whatever my schedule is for taking over Taiwan: speed it up,” Trump Jr. said.

After listing strength, determination and “balls” as necessary elements, Jr. added: “At the moment, our leadership does not have any of these things.”

But in response to an audience member, the former first son added that the administration does have Depends, a brand of adult diapers.

“They have addicts. No doubt. “Keep going with these actions for a long time,” Trump Jr. said. “You know Nancy Pelosi invested that way before things did.”

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Refugees flee Putins advancing army with cats and dogs after

Refugees flee Putin’s advancing army with cats and dogs after neighboring nations ease rules

Ukrainian refugees fleeing the war in their country are bringing their favorite pets with them as neighboring nations Romania, Poland and Hungary ease restrictions on the cross-border movement of animals.

According to the organization for the protection of animals People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (FIFTH), peacetime restrictions on the movement of pets across borders require cats and dogs to be vaccinated and chipped and to have a negative blood test for rabies.

However, testing for rabies antibodies through a blood test alone can take days or even weeks.

Three Eastern European nations that receive the majority of fleeing Ukrainians – Romania, Poland and Hungary – make exceptions for pets transported to safety in a safe place with their owners.

In Romania, the main veterinary authority in Bucharest has introduced an emergency exemption, suspending vaccination, microchip and documentation requirements – instead asking owners to fill out a form for their fluffy friends.

The border countries of Romania, Poland and Hungary have eased entry requirements for pets escorted by Ukrainians fleeing the Russian invasion.  Pictured: A woman holding a dog in her coat while waiting for a bus in front of a train station in Lviv

The border countries of Romania, Poland and Hungary have eased entry requirements for pets escorted by Ukrainians fleeing the Russian invasion. Pictured: A woman holding a dog in her coat while waiting for a bus in front of a train station in Lviv

Two young Ukrainian women manage to reach Tisabets, Hungary after crossing the border in a safe place with a dog companion

Two young Ukrainian women manage to reach Tisabets, Hungary after crossing the border in a safe place with a dog companion

Pictured: Moroccan medical student flees Russia's invasion of Ukraine, bringing his cats Stella and Santa Claus with him as he moves to Poland

Pictured: Moroccan medical student flees Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, bringing his cats Stella and Santa Claus with him as he moves to Poland

Abdullah Elkobi, 21, said:

Abdullah Elkobi, 21, said: “I love this country. I am so sad that it will be destroyed “while he and his cat companions headed for the Ukrainian border with Poland.

In Romania, however, there is a limit of five pets per person, and PETA Germany says it has received reports of pet owners refusing with their canine and feline accomplices, despite official statements.

The Polish and Hungarian authorities have followed suit in liberalizing the rules governing the entry of pets into their countries, temporarily removing strict vaccination, microchip and documentation requirements and replacing them with a single “transition form” to be completed by participants.

Abdullah Elkobi, 21, of Morocco, is studying medicine at a university in Ukraine, although he was forced to join the thousands of Ukrainians fleeing the nation as the Kremlin’s invasion of Ukraine heats up.

The 21-year-old future doctor was accompanied by his two cats, Stella and Santa Claus, as he waited in line to reach the Shehini border checkpoint for Poland.

Mr Elkoby told Reuters: “I love this country. I am so sad that it will be destroyed.

A Ukrainian refugee - among 200,000 who were forced to flee the country after the Russian invasion - carries a small dog under his arm when he arrives in Siret, Romania

A Ukrainian refugee – among 200,000 who were forced to flee the country after the Russian invasion – carries a small dog under his arm when he arrives in Siret, Romania

A small dog accompanies a Ukrainian refugee as they arrive at the border crossing in Siret, Romania today

A small dog accompanies a Ukrainian refugee as they arrive at the border crossing in Siret, Romania today

PETA Germany is coordinating the supply of 20,000 kg of dog and cat food to Ukraine, as well as blankets for pet owners and their companions who are still trapped in the military zone.

The PETA branch in the United Kingdom wrote a letter to George Justis, Secretary of State for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, on 25 February, asking for a relaxation of UK rules for Ukrainian refugees entering with pets.

The letter reads: “Border countries, including Hungary, Poland and Romania, are loosening their restrictions to make the process of adopting pets less bureaucratic, and we call on the United Kingdom to follow suit.

“A test for rabies antibodies through a blood test, which would be necessary for these animals to cross the border in accordance with all legal regulations, can take days or even weeks.

“As a result, many vulnerable animals are left without their guardians or other caring people, which will lead to a horrific and prolonged death.

“Please stand up for the animals in these exceptional circumstances and ensure that they can be taken to safety. They also need to be granted asylum and are vital to comfort fleeing, traumatized people in these terrible times.

“The people of the United Kingdom will be devastated if they are forced to abandon their beloved members of the animal family, and we must ensure that Ukrainians do not have to make this devastating choice either.”

Refugees flee Putin’s advancing army with cats and dogs after neighboring nations ease rules Read More »

One 38 year old man was shot dead and another 24 was

One 38-year-old man was shot dead and another, 24, was injured in his car in East Harlem

A 38-year-old man was shot dead and a 24-year-old man was injured while the two were sitting in a Mercedes-Benz in East Harlem on Sunday morning as gun violence continued to rise in new York.

The two men were driving on Fifth Avenue near 138th East Street when the suspect “shot the car several times,” police said.

The 38-year-old man was hit in the head by a bullet and was found dead on the spot by the ambulance crews. The younger victim walked to Haarlem Hospital, where she was being treated for a gunshot wound to the arm. Pos. in New Yorkt reports.

Details of the suspect have not yet been released and no arrests have been made since Sunday afternoon. It is unclear whether the attack was accidental and the sequence of events that led to the shooting.

A 38-year-old man was shot dead and a 24-year-old man was injured in a shooting Sunday morning in East Harlem

A 38-year-old man was shot dead and a 24-year-old man was injured in a shooting Sunday morning in East Harlem

The two men were driving on Fifth Avenue near 138th East Street when a suspect

The two men were driving on Fifth Avenue near East 138th Street when the suspect “shot at the car several times,” police said.

Details of the suspect have not yet been released and it is unclear whether the attack was accidental

Details of the suspect have not yet been released and it is unclear whether the attack was accidental

The shooting comes two days after East Harlem saw another deadly shooting of a 25-year-old man identified by police as Shaquel Ganey, who lived one block from the shooting on Second Avenue.

Gaine was shot in the chest in front of a liquor store and ran into Kanan Deli & Grocery, where he fell around 11pm on Friday, according to Fox 5.

Someone on the scene called the emergency services and the first responders found Gainer lying on the floor covered in blood. They rushed him to Haarlem Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

No arrests have been made yet and the motive for the shooting is unclear. Police are still investigating and did not provide details about the suspect.

Shooting in New York has risen 30 percent since last year, with 174 reported incidents in the last seven weeks ending Feb. 20, according to the latest NYPD figures. For the same period last year there were 133 shootings.

Crime has also increased by more than 20 percent, according to NYPD data, with 2,994 incidents reported this year, compared with 2,477 in 2021.

Murders have also risen slightly, with New York City police up 3.8 percent from 2021.

Meanwhile, rape and robbery have risen by 42 and 32 percent, respectively.

A recent report released earlier this month by New York City police showed that almost every New York City police station has seen jumps in crime this year – including five, which have doubled, according to data from the New York City Police Department. New York.

Shooting in New York has increased by 30 percent compared to last year, with 174 incidents this year compared to 133 last year.

Shooting in New York has increased by 30 percent compared to last year, with 174 incidents this year compared to 133 last year.

Queens was particularly hard hit by the influx of incidents, with an almost 150% increase in overall crime.

Last Tuesday, Queens police tracked a career criminal with 19 previous arrests and three convictions for assault, accused of shooting a mother of four walking her dog to a Brooklyn shop window.

Namel Colon, 36, was arrested at a Chinese restaurant in Queens after evading capture for nearly two months after the January 2 shooting at the Salim Smoke Shop in Bedford-Stuyvesant, during which Jennifer Inoa, 36, was walking, and her annual pet pit bulls were dead.

Colon, who lives on Manhattan’s Lower East Side, according to public records, was later handcuffed and taken to the 79th district of the neighborhood, where he is accused of murder and criminal possession of weapons, police said.

It is unclear whether Colon was on bail, parole or parole at the time of the attack, and it is not known how he escaped investigators for seven weeks after the shooting.

Last Tuesday, police in Queens tracked down a career criminal in connection with the January 2 shooting at the Salim Smoke Shop in Bedford-Stavesant, which left 36-year-old dog Jennifer Inoa and her annual pet pit bull dead.  The footage shows Inoa and her dog in the store just before the shooting, while a man, although the intended target, seen in the lower right corner of the image, watches eating a bag of chips.

Last Tuesday, police in Queens tracked down a career criminal in connection with the January 2 shooting at the Salim Smoke Shop in Bedford-Stavesant, which left 36-year-old dog Jennifer Inoa and her annual pet pit bull dead. The footage shows Inoa and her dog in the store just before the shooting, while a man, although the intended target, seen in the lower right corner of the image, watches eating a bag of chips.

Jennifer Inoa, 36, a mother of four, was shot dead by a suspect in a Brooklyn deli last month when she opened fire on another customer at the store

Jennifer Inoa, 36, a mother of four, was shot dead by a suspect in a Brooklyn deli last month when she opened fire on another customer at the store

Her one-year-old pit bull Blue was also killed during the January 2 attack

Her one-year-old pit bull Blue was also killed during the January 2 attack

But he had previously been released on parole after being jailed three times for assault as New York State faces questions about his unsecured policy, which critics warn flooded the streets with dangerous criminals, many of them then commit a repeat offense.

Records show that Colon is a serial criminal with 19 previous arrests with 11 serious crimes, including three crimes for which he was serving a sentence and was released on parole or parole.

Conditional release refers to when a prisoner is released early and has similar responsibilities as parole.

Inoa, a mother of four who lived two blocks from the grocery store where she was shot, was walking her dog Blue when she was killed on the night of Jan. 2, her 46-year-old friend Carlton Bush said after the incident.

– I was angry. I’ve been doing a lot of this. I lost my wife and my dog, “Bush told the Daily News on Tuesday after his arrest. “He was my best friend. We had a family and needless to say, [the arrest] is a bit anticlimactic. ‘

Bush told the paper that Colon “will have to think about his own answers” about his alleged role in the assassination. – And fortunately he lives at least with his answers.

“She had children,” he continued. “She had people who loved and cared for her and everything, and now they took her life.

“That will not be punishable.”

Bush said Inoa’s children are now with their aunt.

Chinatown was also rocked by a shocking murder less than two weeks ago when 35-year-old Asian commercial Christina Yuna Lee was cut to death by a homeless serial criminal who followed her home to her apartment after being released on bail. .

Yuna was found by cops in her apartment with several stab wounds in the blood-soaked tub.

Christina Yuna Lee, 35, was stabbed to death in her New York apartment by a

Christina Yuna Lee, 35, was stabbed to death in her New York apartment by a “homeless serial criminal” on February 13

Asamad Nash, 25, was arrested in connection with a murder in Chinatown.  According to court records available from DailyMail.com, Nash has been arrested four times in the last year alone and was released on bail when he allegedly killed Lee.

Asamad Nash, 25, was arrested in connection with a murder in Chinatown. According to court records available from DailyMail.com, Nash has been arrested four times in the last year alone and was released on bail when he allegedly killed Lee.

Asamad Nash, 25, was arrested in connection with the murder. Horrifying footage shows the man the police say slipped into the building behind Lee after she got out of a taxi.

Our homeless man was released on bail after several unsolved crimes, including an attack in September and an arrest for criminal offenses in early January. He was due to stand trial on March 3rd. According to ABC7, he has been arrested at least seven times since 2015, most recently on January 6, 2022.

To tackle the “triggers” and areas known for high shooting rates, New York City police have unveiled a 90-day plan for the first three months of 2022 to make the fight against “crime, fear and riots” a top priority. , according to an NYPD inside note seen by the New York Post.

Those who have been involved in recent or multiple gun incidents are added to the list so that all units are aware of common violators in their areas.

According to the sought-after “Crime Plan 2022”, the Partnership for Strategies to Combat Fire Violence is stepping up the prosecution and investigation of these “high-value criminals”.

Under the new policy, sections that had more than 10 shooting incidents last year were tasked with outlining a plan on how to reduce gun crime in their teams, along with their annual crime reports. Detectives are also required to provide analyzes of conflicts between active criminal groups in their jurisdiction.

“The plan should include an analysis of the people, places and conflicts that have contributed to their gun violence and a site plan to deal with it,” the note said.

“These triggers are responsible for the disproportionate share of violence in the city and are the main drivers of violence in the area,” the note said.

More police patrols are “strongly targeted” at areas with higher gun violence rates, the note said, and the plan calls for “tightly managed saturation patrols” in those areas.

“The department makes an average of less than four targeted patrols / community visits per week in the top 100 gun violence blocs,” it said. “Most of these targeted patrols are not on the appropriate days and hours.”

“While targeted patrols are an imperfect measure of ‘engagement’, they tell us whether we spend our free time in areas prone to violence.”

‘We are not. This must change immediately.

Public transport and densely populated shopping areas also need more attention from New York City police, according to the plan, with the introduction of a specific “City Center Initiative” to reduce attacks and looting in the area.

“The goals should focus on reducing crime and riots in Midtown,” the note said. The tourist area, the note reads, is “emblematic of the city’s success and safety.”

One 38-year-old man was shot dead and another, 24, was injured in his car in East Harlem Read More »

Berkshire Hathaway will require proof of vaccination at its annual

Berkshire Hathaway will require proof of vaccination at its annual shareholder meeting in April.

Berkshire Hathaway will be hosting its AGM in person this April, after the event has been hosted virtually since the start of the coronavirus pandemic, but those who attended will be required to present a certificate of vaccination against coronavirusthe company said in a statement.

The annual meeting, long known as “Woodstock for the Capitalists,” used to bring tens of thousands of Berkshire shareholders to Omaha for hours of direct listening to Warren E. Buffett, the billionaire CEO.

“As part of our commitment to the health and safety of our shareholders, proof of Covid-19 vaccination will be required to attend the 2022 Annual Meeting and the Berkshire Bazaar Deals,” the statement said. the company saidadding that he has partnered with CLEAR Health Pass “to make your participation in the annual meeting hassle-free.”

“For foreign members and shareholders who do not use the CLEAR app, we will have flagged doors so you can provide evidence of Covid-19 vaccinations and proper identification,” the company said in a statement. “A digital or paper copy of your Covid-19 vaccination record will be required.”

The demand was included in Berkshire’s annual report to shareholders released on Saturday, which showed a profit of nearly $90 billion for 2021 and included a letter from Mr Buffett highlighting the powerful role the company has played in the United States economy.

This is Mr. Buffett’s latest attempt to make a name for himself and his $713 billion company as it continues to be one of America’s most successful businesses. Last year was a good one for Berkshire, with the company reporting $89.8 billion in profit, more than double its 2020 earnings.

Mr. Buffett also praised the government’s role in growing his business. “Our shareholders should recognize—and even trumpet—the fact that Berkshire’s prosperity has greatly contributed to the company’s presence in America,” he wrote.

Berkshire Hathaway will require proof of vaccination at its annual shareholder meeting in April. Read More »

Bill Barr says allegations of Trump 2020 fraud led to

Bill Barr says allegations of Trump 2020 fraud “led to Capitol Hill riots” in an ulcer excerpt from a book

Former Attorney General Bill Bar turned to his former boss in his upcoming memoirs, claiming Donald Trump “Lost his grip” when he began to push his baseless theories of electoral fraud in 2020, according to a Sunday report.

Bar said these theories directly led to the riots Capitol Hill ‘on January 6 last year in an excerpt from his new 600-page book, which was shared with Wall Street Journal.

“The election was not stolen. “Trump lost him,” the former Attorney General said in One Damn Thing after another. Long memoirs tell of his time as republican the chief prosecutor of the president.

Relations between Trump and Bar deteriorated after Bar, the country’s top law enforcement official at the time, told the Associated Press on December 1, 2020, that his justice ministry had found no evidence of widespread election fraud. .

Bar left office at the end of the same month, just weeks before Trump supporters stormed the Capitol in a bid to undo the 2020 results.

Trump called Bar “a disappointment in every sense of the word” last June.

In the new excerpt, Barr writes that Trump could win the election fairly if he “just shows a little self-restraint, softening even a little of his pettiness.”

He also spoke in detail about the explosive confrontation with Trump that led to his resignation shortly after the interview with the Associated Press.

“It kills me – it kills me. That pulls the carpet right under me, “Barr said, Trump shouted, just hours after further legitimizing Joe Biden’s election victory.

Former Attorney General Bill Barr is dealing with his old boss Donald Trump in his upcoming memoirs after becoming one of his fiercest critics since the 2020 election.

Former Attorney General Bill Barr is dealing with his old boss Donald Trump in his upcoming memoirs after becoming one of his fiercest critics since the 2020 election.

Bar writes that then Trump told him: “You must hate Trump. You would only do that if you hated Trump.

The experienced veteran of the Justice Department defended himself by writing that he had responded to Trump by saying that he “sacrificed a lot personally to help you when I thought you were wronged.”

He also reiterated that the Justice Department had failed to investigate allegations that the election had been rigged, as Trump’s lawyers such as Rudy Giuliani and Jenna Ellis launched a national tour to promote conspiracy theories at the time.

Trump then embarked on a tirade full of criticism of Barr, the former attorney general recalled, until Barr finally offered to resign.

“Accepted!” Trump reportedly shouted as he slammed his desk.

“Go and don’t go back to your office. You are now ready. Go home!’

Bar’s account claims that White House lawyers responded to Trump by immediately firing the head of the Justice Department.

Until their election rift, Bar was one of Trump’s closest allies and was even criticized by Democrats, who claimed to have armed the Justice Department on behalf of the former president.

Trump said Bar was

Trump said Barr was “a disappointment in every sense of the word” last year, and according to the book, he shouted at the former attorney general for saying there was no widespread election fraud.

But in his memoirs, Bar now urges fellow Republicans to walk past Trump and consider “an impressive array of younger candidates” who share similar conservative goals without Trump’s bombastic and chaotic style.

He claims that Trump “has shown that he has neither the temperament nor the persuasive strength to provide the kind of positive leadership that is needed.”

In particular, it seems, after “losing his grip” and also losing the election.

“The absurd scale to which he came to claim the ‘stolen election’ led to the Capitol Hill riots,” Bar wrote.

The House of Representatives selection committee, which has been investigating the January 6 Capitol riot, is investigating Trump’s actions after leaving Bar and before the uprising, especially the former president’s reported attempts to plant a lower-level loyalist in the Justice Department.

Barr was reportedly in talks with the Democrat-led committee, its chairman, Benny Thompson, said late last month.

After Bar left the Justice Department less than a month before Trump left, Acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen took his place.

But Rosen was soon at the center of a campaign of pressure from former Justice Department attorney Jeffrey Clark. Clark first wanted Rosen to send a letter to Georgia’s secretary of state and officials in other states on the battlefield, claiming that the Justice Department was investigating “serious irregularities” in the presidential vote count and asked to convene the legislature to investigate ” new evidence “and” deliberately a matter consistent with his constitutional obligations “.

- The absurd dimensions he reached "stolen elections" This statement led to the Capitol Hill riots on January 6 last year, writes Bar

The absurd extent to which he reached his claim of “stolen elections” led to the “Capitol Hill riots” on January 6 last year, writes Bar

Rosen reportedly refused, and Trump’s subsequent threat to replace him with Clark was thwarted during a meeting in the Oval Office on January 3, 2021.

For three hours, Trump and Justice Department and White House office officials discussed the possibility of Trump replacing Rosen with Clark and whether Clark was even qualified to do so. Clark is said to have indicated that he will send his letter if he takes over the DOJ.

But Justice Department officials have “made it clear that all assistant attorneys general will resign if Trump replaces Rosen with Clark,” according to a recent report released by Democrats in the Senate.

White House Counselor Pat Chipolon and Deputy Councilor Patrick F. Philbin soon followed, with Chipolon telling Trump that Clark’s letter was a “murder-suicide pact.”

Trump never followed suit. Clark was among the members of Trump’s orbit called by the Capitol Riots Commission.

After voting to refer him to a no-confidence vote in the entire House two months ago, the commission stopped the action against Clark for insisting on pleading the fifth.

He was spotted on February 2 entering a room in the office building of the US House of Representatives, where the selected commission investigating the January 6, 2021 attack is testifying.

Bill Barr says allegations of Trump 2020 fraud “led to Capitol Hill riots” in an ulcer excerpt from a book Read More »