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Kia Jam, founder and President of the independent film production company K. Jam Media, breaks down how the movie biz has changed and what has remained the same in the era of streamers.
At the Make It Monday Forum hosted by the Chamber of Commerce, Anchorage Police Chief Sean Case discussed how a safer community can boost the city’s economy, emphasizing the impact
NOW TO COMMITMENT 2024. MINNESOTA GOVERNOR AND DEMOCRATIC V.P. NOMINE IS COMING TO WISCONSIN THIS FRIDAY. WALZ IS STOPPING IN WISCONSIN AND MICHIGAN A HARRIS CAMPAIGNS POST-DEBATE TOUR THIS WEEK. MEANWHILE, V.P. KAMALA HARRIS WILL STOP IN NORTH CAROLINA AFTER TUESDAY NI AGAINST FORMER PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP. AND YOU CAN WATCH THAT DEBATE BETWEEN TRUMP AND HARRIS RIGHT HERE ON WISN 12. ITS THE FIRST, AND POSSIBLY ONLY, DEBATE BEFORE THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECT
After some patchy fog to start our weekend, daytime temperatures will start to come down slightly. Cinthia Pimentel has the Microclimate Forecast.
The defense team for Bryan Kohberger, the man charged in the 2022 killings of four University of Idaho students, is seeking to remove the death penalty from his case.Kohberger faces four counts of first-degree murder and one count of burglary in the November 13 killings of students Kaylee Goncalves, 21; Madison Mogen, 21; Xana Kernodle, 20; and Ethan Chapin, 20.Related video above: Idaho residents relieved after suspect’s arrestIn 13 motions made public Thursday evening, Kohberger’s lawyers argued myriad reasons why the state’s intent to seek the death penalty is unconstitutional.Among the various arguments, Kohberger’s attorneys wrote, “Idaho’s system of obtaining death convictions is unconstitutional at this time” and that the state’s “guarantee to a speedy trial prevents effective assistance of counsel in death penalty cases.” They go on to argue that capital cases “must be subjected to heightened constitutional scrutiny” and cannot be prepared in 10 months. Kohberger’s trial is scheduled to start in June 2025.One motion focuses on what Kohberger’s defense team calls an “ideological shift” and “evolving standards” in the way Americans view the death penalty.”The lack of an active death penalty in the majority of states within the United States indicates that there has been an ideological shift and that the punishment now violates our contemporary standards of decency,” they wrote, noting that five US states have abolished the practice in recent years. Other motions argued the state’s death penalty statute constitutes a violation of international law and the fundamental precepts of international human rights. They also contend Idaho’s methods of execution, lethal injection and firing squad, are cruel and unusual punishment and therefore a violation of the Constitution of the United States.In 2023, Idaho Gov. Brad Little signed a bill into law that allows the state’s department of corrections to perform execution by firing squad if lethal injections drugs are not available.The 13 filings were made Thursday to meet a court-set deadline for any motions challenging the death penalty. The court has set Oct. 10 as the deadline for the state’s response and scheduled a hearing on the matter for Nov. 7.Last year the prosecution in the case stated their intention to pursue the death penalty, stating in a filing it had “not identified or been provided with any mitigating circumstances” to stop it from considering capital punishment.
The idea of slowing down and retiring “sounds awful” to Bill Gates, who stepped down as Microsoft CEO but stays busy with philanthropy and investments.
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) California Gov. Gavin Newsom has vetoed a bill that would have made some immigrants without legal status eligible for loans under a state program offering assistance to first-time homebuyers. The bill drew staunch opposition from Republicans. Some opponents say the state should prioritize housing assistance for Californians who are in the
Barling police chased an SUV at more than 100 mph, resulting in a crash on Thursday.Law enforcement spotted a reportedly stolen SUV out of Crawford County. They didn’t know three boys were inside the vehicle when they started the pursuit.”We have no idea who’s in the vehicle,” Capt. Nathan Mayhugh, with the Barling police department, said. “We don’t know what they did to obtain that vehicle or if they’re highly dangerous if they have weapons.”The SUV crashed into another vehicle in Greenwood, sending two people inside to the hospital. They were released without serious injuries.The three people inside the SUV ran off into the woods. The nearby elementary and middle schools were put on lockdown.Police found two 14-year-old boys and one 15-year-old boy. One was barefoot and ran into a briar patch. He had to be carried out.They went to the hospital before being taken to the juvenile detention center.
A South Carolina business owner has confessed to crimes in a multimillion dollar scheme involving his company that makes gun accessories, officials said Friday.(Above video is the Friday morning headlines for Sept. 6, 2024.)Officials from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for South Carolina said Lawrencium Germaine Martin, 47, of Chester, pleaded guilty to tax evasion, being a felon in possession of a firearm, and making false statements to federal investigators.Officials said evidence was presented during the plea hearing that dated from at least 2019 through 2021.That’s when Martin operated a business known as Lancaster Tactical Supply (LTS) through the website LTacticalSupply.com. More news: Teen accused of killing 4 at his Georgia high school appears in court”LTS appeared to customers to be a legitimate business that sold firearm accessories and parts, including Glock and Sig Sauer build kits, slides, imitation suppressors, optics, and body armor,” officials said in a release. “However, at least 380 customers from 43 states lodged complaints with the Better Business Bureau and the S.C. Department of Consumer Affairs, generally alleging that LTS took their money and failed to ship the products, ultimately leaving the customer without their money or the products they paid for.”After an investigation involving the FBI, U.S. Postal Inspection Service, and IRS Criminal Investigation, officials called the revenue generated by LTS “significant.”One LTS transaction alone in 2020 generated more than $2,000,000 in revenue, officials said. They said those proceeds were deposited into Martins personal bank accounts.Investigators determined that LTS was operated out of Martins residence and Martins business location.The investigation also revealed Martin failed to pay state or federal income tax for any year from 2015 through 2022, officials said.More news: Deputies: Father accused of killing man who made inappropriate comments to teen daughterThey said Martin admitted to investigators that he evaded federal income tax. An IRS Criminal Investigation has determined that figure is more than $800,000 for 2020 alone, but Martin did not admit to a specific figure, according to officials.They said Martin admitted that he obtained the personal identifying information of another person through a legitimate employment relationship, and then operated LTS in that persons name without authorization so that revenue was reported to the IRS as attributable to that person rather than Martin.When agents searched Martins home and business in Chester with a federal search warrant, they found Martin had a 9 mm handgun despite multiple felony convictions.Those previous convictions included theft by deception, possession of stolen property, obtaining property under false pretenses, fraudulent check, larceny after breaking and entering, possession of implements used in a crime, burglary, and larceny of a motor vehicle. Agents also found shipping labels and material associated with LTS during that search, officials said.More news: New restaurant and wine bar to open in Greenville’s Judson Mill DistrictMartin admitted that when the FBI and the U.S. Attorneys Office interviewed Martin, he claimed to have never heard of LTS, to have never received money from LTS or its customers, and to not know how his name became associated with LTS. Investigators found those statements were false and material to the investigation.Martin faces up to 10 years in federal prison, mandatory restitution, a fine of up to $250,000, and up to three years of court-ordered supervision following any time in prison.Martin was placed on bond by U.S. Magistrate Judge Paige J. Gossett. U.S. District Judge Joseph F. Anderson accepted the guilty plea and will sentence Martin at a later date.
This vibrant bookshop in Baltimore is filled with great reads and surrounded by beautiful gardens.
Recently Departed WWE Star MVP Calls Triple H A Coward & A Liar – HHH rejected the idea of reuniting The Hurt Business | WWF Old School