Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Lauren Steussy"


14 mentions found


Among the four charges Donald Trump pleaded not guilty to Thursday was conspiracy against rights. The civil war-era statute was originally passed to stop members of the KKK from terrorizing the formerly enslaved. In this case, it's the right to vote that prosecutors allege Trump threatened by trying to tamper with the 2020 election results in battleground states. The "civil war era statute was used to prosecute folks in the South trying to disenfranchise Black voters," Rahmani added. If convicted of this charge, Trump could face a fine or prison time of up to 10 years, Rahmani said.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Jack Smith, Rahmani Organizations: Capitol, Service, Capitol Riot, Justice, Department of Justice, Ku Klux Klan, Department of Locations: Wall, Silicon, California, Black
Around 30 killer whales were spotted playing in Monterey Bay for more than eight hours on Sunday. Six of the whales were also captured in April attacking adult gray whales in a rare encounter. "It was the best killer whale encounter I've had and I've been studying them for 30 years," Nancy Black, a marine biologist with Monterey Bay Whale Watch and director of the nonprofit California Killer Whale Project, told Insider. Monterey Bay Whale Watch said the gray whales ultimately survived the attack but were badly injured. The unusual playful display comes as killer whales near Spain and Portugal have increasingly been damaging and even sinking boats.
Persons: , I've, Nancy Black, Evan Brodsky, Black, Insider's Joshua Zitser, Daniel Bianchetta, they've Organizations: Service, Sunday, Whale Watch, Whale, grays Locations: Monterey Bay, Monterey, California, Spain, Portugal
Beyoncé kicked off her blockbuster Renaissance tour in Stockholm, Sweden. The shows attracted a surge in hotel stays which impacted the country's inflation, an economist said. Economist Michael Grahn told The Wall Journal he considered it a "Beyoncé blip." On Wednesday, Sweden Statistics, a government agency, said restaurants and hotels added 0.3 percentage points to the rate while recreation and culture metrics contributed 0.2 percentage points, according to The Financial Times. "Beyoncé is responsible for the extra upside surprise this month," Grahn added to The Financial Times.
Persons: Beyoncé, Michael Grahn, , — Bruce Springsteen, Grahn, Taylor Swift's, Swift, didn't Organizations: Service, Danske Bank, Wall Street, Sweden Statistics, Financial Times, Forbes, Parkwood Entertainment Locations: Stockholm, Sweden, Gothenburg
New owners of locations that once housed McDonald's and Starbucks say they got a great deal. In May 2022, McDonald's stopped doing business in Russia, citing the war in Ukraine, and the "unpredictable operating environment." They replaced Big Macs with Big Hits and sold a record 120,000 burgers on the first day in business, the chain's CEO told Reuters at the time. "We have never seen such daily turnover in the whole time McDonald's has worked in Russia," Oleg Paroev told Reuters in June 2022. Starbucks locations in Russia also ceased operations around the same time and became Stars Coffee, a cafe with a familiar green logo of a vaguely seafaring-looking queen.
Persons: , McDonald's, Krispy Kreme, Oleg Paroev, Maxim, Anton Pinskiy, Timati, Vladimir Putin, Pinskiy, Alexander Govor, Vladimir Organizations: Global, Service, Guardian, Reuters, REUTERS, Tass, Starbucks Locations: Russia, Ukraine, Moscow, Russian
Americans are increasingly leaving big cities in states like California for affordable enclaves. Indiana towns are offering cash and other incentives for those willing to leave city life behind. One family shared with The Los Angeles Times the perks they cashed in on in Indiana. Other perks include coffee with the town's mayor Chris Jensen and memberships to a golf club and co-working space. It's too soon to say whether the exoduses away from states like California will stick.
Persons: , Mariah, Chad Zingarelli, Chris Jensen, Mariah Zingarelli, Matt Winters, I'm, It's Organizations: Los Angeles Times, Service, Indiana aren't, Redfin, Times, Economic Development Corp, Indiana — Locations: California, Indiana, City, San Francisco , New York, Los Angeles, Florida, Fresno , California, Noblesville , Indiana, Poplar Bluff , Missouri, Poplar Bluff's, Salt Lake City , Utah
Ukrainian forces have gained ground along the border of the Donetsk and Zaporizhzhia regions. Russian milbloggers reportedly said it's only because rain and fog grounded Russian aircraft. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy acknowledged the rain but said his forces remained strong. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy acknowledged the weather but said his troops did just fine with it. By Monday, the rain cleared, allowing Russian forces to launch a counterattack in western Donetsk Oblast, said former Russian officer and nationalist Igor Girkin, according to the ISW.
Persons: Russian milbloggers, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, , Zelenskyy, Insider's Ryan Pickrell, Igor Girkin, Vladimir Putin, milbloggers Organizations: Service, Russian, Institute for, Kyiv Independent, The New York Times, Associated Press Locations: Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, Russian, Zaporizhia, Kyiv, Donetsk Oblast, Russia, , Ukraine
Along with Ramesh "Sunny" Balwani, Holmes was ordered to pay $452,047,268 in restitution. Elizabeth Holmes won't be able to afford $250 a month restitution payments when she's released from a Texas prison, her attorneys argued. It's common for funds like these to never fully be paid out, experts previously told Insider. This week, prosecutors proposed that Holmes pay it month-by-month upon her release, in $250 increments, Bloomberg reported. According to the original restitution order, Holmes and Balwani will have to pay $40 million to Walgreens, and $14.5 million to Safeway.
Persons: Elizabeth Holmes, Ramesh, Sunny, Balwani, Holmes, she's, Daniel Richman, wasn't, Rupert Murdoch Organizations: Prosecutors, Columbia Law School, Bloomberg, New York Times, Walgreens, Safeway Locations: Texas, Manhattan
Elizabeth Gilbert set her latest novel, "The Snow Forest" in Soviet Russia. "It is not the time for this book to be published," she said in a Twitter video Monday. Elizabeth Gilbert told her fans Monday on Twitter that now "is not the time" for her book, "The Snow Forest," to be published. Gilbert's best-selling memoir "Eat, Pray, Love," about finding love and wanderlust in midlife, was made into a 2010 blockbuster starring Julia Roberts. Readers also took to social media to reach Gilbert and urge her to reconsider publishing the book.
Persons: Elizabeth Gilbert, , Gilbert's, Julia Roberts, Gilbert, Readers, hasn't Organizations: Twitter, Penguin Random, Riverhead Books, Riverhead, New York Times, PEN America, Wall Street Locations: Soviet Russia, Russia, Ukraine, midlife, Siberia, Soviet, russia
A San Francisco housing organization transformed a garage into three small apartments. The affordable housing units cost $600,000 and are seen as a victory in the city's housing crisis. But critics told San Francisco Standard the cost of the units is high considering the square footage. An organization in San Francisco has turned a six-car garage into three 550- to 600-square-foot units, each with a bedroom, bathroom, and small kitchen. According to The San Francisco Standard, the Mission Housing units raised eyebrows among architects and building professionals.
Persons: , Sam Moss, Rebecca Möller, Möller, Moss, I'm Organizations: San Francisco, Service, Housing, London, Mission Housing, San Francisco Standard Locations: Francisco, California's, San Francisco, Mission District
The Supreme Court struck down a ruling over what union members can reasonably do during a strike. A local teamsters union in Washington walked off the job in 2017 with trucks full of wet concrete. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson was the only dissenter, saying the decision jeopardizes union rights. The solo dissent was a first for the outspoken Biden-appointed justice, who wrote that the ruling would "erode the right to strike." "Workers are not indentured servants, bound to continue laboring until any planned work stoppage would be as painless as possible for their master," Jackson wrote.
Persons: Ketanji Brown Jackson, , Biden, Jackson, Amy Coney Barrett, Barrett, Clarence Thomas, Harlan Crow, Samuel Alito, haven't shied, Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor, Andy Warhol, Kagan Organizations: teamsters, Service, Washington Supreme, International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Teamsters, Workers, GOP Locations: Washington, Northwest
The Senate made surprising progress Thursday night on the debt ceiling bill, passing it 63 to 36. The bill now heads to President Joe Biden's desk, where it will be signed into law. Leading up to the votes, a number of Democratic senators were unhappy with a range of provisions in the bill. And while other Democratic lawmakers agreed with Sanders' points, they felt a default on the nations' debt would be worse than passing the bill. Now the legislation heads to Biden's desk, where he will sign the bill into law to suspend the debt ceiling through January 2025.
Persons: Joe Biden's, Monday, , Joe Biden, Kevin, McCarthy, Biden, Chuck Schumer, Sen, Bernie Sanders, Sanders, Elizabeth Warren Organizations: Service, Congressional, SNAP, Twitter, Politico, Republicans
Tucker Carlson was abruptly dropped by Fox News on Monday. Carlson's staff was prepping for the day's show, fellow former Fox News host Bill O'Reilly said. After a decade-plus career at the network, Tucker Carlson was let go just 10 minutes before Fox News released a statement announcing his departure, sources told The Wall Street Journal. The producers of "Tucker Carlson Tonight" were still planning the evening's broadcast, fellow former Fox News host Bill O'Reilly said Monday on his show "No Spin News." "They were in the middle of that," O'Reilly said of the planning, and, "boom: Tucker Carlson is history at the Fox News Channel.
Bill O'Reilly predicts Tucker Carlson's ouster at Fox News will cause trouble for the GOP. "Because the Republican Party, most of it, paid attention to Tucker Carlson," O'Reilly said. "Because the Republican Party, most of it, paid attention to Tucker Carlson," O'Reilly said on Monday on an episode of his show, "No Spin News." Carlson's fiefdom was focused on the Americans on the "committed right," O'Reilly said. Carlson also faces a lawsuit from his ex-producer, Abby Grossberg, who sued him and other Fox executives in March.
Clarence Thomas previously said his friend Harlan Crow had no business before the court. But a case involving Trammell Crow Residential made its way to the Supreme Court in 2005, per Bloomberg. Harlan Crow was CEO of Crow Holdings from 1988 to 2017, and remains chair of its board, per Bloomberg and The Real Deal. "At the time of this case, Trammell Crow Residential operated completely independently of Crow Holdings with a separate management team and its own independent operations," the statement to Bloomberg said. Neither Harlan Crow nor Crow Holdings had knowledge of or involvement in this case, and a search of Crow Holding's legal records reveals no involvement in this case.
Total: 14