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

Search resuls for: "Alan"


25 mentions found


The federal judge overseeing former President Donald J. Trump’s classified documents case said on Thursday that she intended to look anew at a hugely consequential legal victory that prosecutors won last year and that served as a cornerstone of the obstruction charges filed against Mr. Trump. In her ruling, the judge, Aileen M. Cannon, said she would hold a hearing to reconsider another judge’s decision to allow prosecutors to pierce the attorney-client privilege of one of Mr. Trump’s lawyers under what is known as the crime-fraud exception. That provision allows the government to get around the normal protections afforded to a lawyer’s communications with a client if it can prove that legal advice was used to commit a crime. Depending on how Judge Cannon ultimately rules, her decision to redo the fraught and lengthy legal arguments about the crime-fraud exception could deal a serious blow to the obstruction charges in the indictment of Mr. Trump. Even if she ends up confirming the initial judge’s findings, holding yet another hearing on the issue will take more time and play into Mr. Trump’s strategy of delaying the case from going to trial for as long as possible.
Persons: Donald J, Trump’s, Trump, Aileen M, Cannon, Judge Cannon, Mr Organizations: Mr
"Work has changed drastically compared to what it was just 10 years ago," Haney said when he introduced the bill. Workers shouldn't be punished for not being available 24/7 if they're not being paid for 24 hours of work." U.S. business oppositionSome U.S. business interests have argued it's up to workers to set their own work-life balance. Many critics of the bill point to the complexity of establishing non-working hours for salaried employees —the California bill proposes to protect both hourly and salaried workers. Work was life, and life was something that happened on the way to and from work.
Persons: , Matt Haney, Haney, Workers shouldn't, they're, it's, Jason Calacanis, SHRM, Alan Guarino, Korn Ferry Organizations: Assembly, Workers, Washington State, U.S, CNBC Locations: West Coast, California's, Francisco, France, . New York City, Europe, U.S, China, California
Rampant Identity Theft Is Taxing the I.R.S.
  + stars: | 2024-06-26 | by ( Alan Rappeport | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Rampant identity theft has overwhelmed the Internal Revenue Service, resulting in a backlog of 500,000 unresolved fraud cases, leaving taxpayers without refunds and credits that they are due, the agency’s watchdog wrote in a report to Congress on Wednesday. The report by the National Taxpayer Advocate described the slow pace of addressing the identity theft cases as a “blemish” on the performance of the I.R.S., which is in the midst of a sweeping modernization campaign that aims to improve taxpayer services. was criticized by the watchdog for identify theft delays last year, the backlog has gotten only worse. is taking nearly two years to resolve identity theft victims’ assistance cases and has an inventory of approximately 500,000 cases, up from 484,000 cases in September. delays in resolving identity theft victim assistance cases are unconscionable,” Erin Collins, the taxpayer advocate, wrote in the report.
Persons: , ” Erin Collins Organizations: Internal Revenue Service, National Taxpayer
CNN —Two presidential task forces formed to recommend how Harvard can combat antisemitism and anti-Muslim, anti-Arab and anti-Palestinian activity on campus have spoken: Harvard needs to act now. Harvard needs to do more work to promote diversity education and promote multiple perspectives on campus, the task force chairs recommended. The antisemitism task force sought to get Harvard to clarify its values, act against discrimination and hate, improve the university’s disciplinary process, promote dialogue and training on the topic and support Jewish life on campus. Alan Garber, Harvard’s interim president, said he appreciated the recommendations and the task forces’ candor. And the House Education Committee lambasted the university for its response to a subpoena seeking information on how it handled campus protests.
Persons: Harvard’s, , Derek Penslar, Ali Asani, Alan Garber, ’ candor, ” Garber, , Claudine Gay Organizations: CNN, Harvard, ” Harvard, Defamation League Locations: Israel, Gaza
CNN —CNN on Thursday will do something no network has done in more than 35 years – host its own general election presidential debate. Thursday night’s presidential debate, a marketing coup for CNN and its new chief executive, Mark Thompson, will offer the network a bright spot – and expectations of record ratings, even if viewers end up watching the debate on other networks. No matter where viewers tune in to watch the primetime matchup between President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump, it will be clear this is a CNN debate. Rival networks, for example, have agreed to use CNN in the programming title and keep the red CNN logo on screen throughout the debate. For CNN, the branding boost from the debate may provide a much-needed shot in the arm.
Persons: Mark Thompson, Joe Biden, Donald Trump, Chris Licht, Kaitlan Collins, Licht, Thompson, , Biden, It’s, David Chalian, , aren’t, ” Frank Fahrenkopf, “ regrettably, “ The, Harris, George W, Bush, Al Gore, Alan Schroeder, ” Schroeder, Trump, Jake Tapper, Dana Bash, “ Trump, ” Chalian, Jake, Dana, Fahrenkopf, they’ll, Schroeder Organizations: CNN, MSNBC, Fox, Nielsen, Trump, “ The Biden, Harris Campaign, ABC, NBC, Northeastern University, Biden
London CNN —When Elvis Presley’s debut album took the charts by storm in 1956, “Blue Suede Shoes” was its opening track. Now, the King’s very own blue suede shoes have sold for the princely sum of £120,000 (around $152,000) after they went up for grabs at British auction house Henry Aldridge and Son on Friday. The shoes were bought by a client from California, Henry Aldridge and Son told CNN. That night Elvis gave me these blue suede shoes size 10 1/2. According to Henry Aldridge and Son, another iconic piece of music history was sold on the same day as Presley’s shoes.
Persons: Elvis Presley’s, , Henry Aldridge, Son, Presley, Steve Allen, Bush, Alan Fortas, Jimmy Velvet, Elvis Presley, Fortas, Elvis ’, Elvis, Freddie Mercury Organizations: London CNN, CNN, NBCU, Bank, Getty, US Army, Elvis Presley Museum, Son Locations: California, Memphis, Graceland
London CNN —When Elvis Presley’s debut album took the charts by storm in 1956, “Blue Suede Shoes” was its opening track. Now, fans have the opportunity to step into the King’s very own blue suede shoes as they go up for grabs at British auction house Henry Aldridge and Son – for an estimated £100,000 to £120,000 (around $126,000 to $152,000). The shoes have been authenticated by Jimmy Velvet, a close friend of Presley and the founder of the Elvis Presley Museum. “The night before Elvis’ army induction here in Memphis, Elvis had an all night party at Graceland,” the letter says, according to the auction site. That night Elvis gave me these blue suede shoes size 10 1/2.
Persons: Elvis Presley’s, , Henry Aldridge, Son –, Presley, Steve Allen, Bush, Alan Fortas, Jimmy Velvet, Elvis Presley, Fortas, Elvis ’, Elvis Organizations: London CNN, NBCU, Bank, Getty, US Army, Elvis Presley Museum, Son Locations: Memphis, Graceland
The federal judge overseeing former President Donald J. Trump’s classified documents case showed little patience on Tuesday with an argument by his lawyers that the F.B.I.’s search two years ago of Mar-a-Lago, his private club and residence in Florida, was conducted improperly. The judge, Aileen M. Cannon, has granted a serious audience to several far-fetched arguments by Mr. Trump’s lawyers. could search and what items it could seize. “It seems like it is,” Judge Cannon said, disagreeing with Mr. Trump’s lawyers about the question of specificity and all but ruling against them from the bench. “I have a hard time seeing what other language needed to be included.”
Persons: Donald J, Trump’s, Aileen M, Cannon, Judge Cannon, , Organizations: Federal, Court Locations: Mar, Florida, Fort Pierce, Fla
CNN —Is Karen Read a rage-filled cop killer, or the convenient patsy of a vast police cover-up? That’s the question put to a Massachusetts jury on Tuesday in closing arguments of her murder trial in a case that has riveted the Bay State. After closing arguments Tuesday morning, the jury began deliberations at about 1:30 p.m. and continued for about three hours. A drunken Read then struck him with the vehicle and fled, leaving him to die in the snowy cold, prosecutors say. “Lie, obfuscate, manipulate, alter, and when they’re caught, they just excuse it away,” Jackson said in closing arguments.
Persons: CNN —, Karen Read, John O’Keefe, O’Keefe, Adam Lally, , Alan Jackson, ” Read, ” Eva Jenkins, Steven Senne, Michael Proctor, Read, , Proctor, Maura Healey, inexcusable ”, ” Jackson, Chloe –, Firefighters, ” Lally, O’Keefe’s, “ John, they’re, “ That’s, ” Aidan Kearney, Turtleboy, Kearney Organizations: CNN, Boston Police, Boston, Prosecutors, Norfolk Superior Court, Massachusetts State Police, WCVB, WBZ Locations: Massachusetts, State, Canton, Bourne , Massachusetts, Norfolk, Dedham , Massachusetts, Fairview
The federal judge overseeing former President Donald J. Trump’s classified documents case posed tough questions on Monday to prosecutors who have asked her to bar him from making inflammatory statements that might endanger any F.B.I. At a contentious hearing in Federal District Court in Fort Pierce, Fla., the judge, Aileen M. Cannon, seemed disinclined to impose new conditions on Mr. Trump that would limit what he could say about the F.B.I. The court-authorized search was a crucial element of the government’s investigation, leading to the discovery of more than 100 classified documents that Mr. Trump kept after leaving office. The hearing was the latest clash between Mr. Trump’s lawyers and prosecutors in the office of the special counsel, Jack Smith. It centered on a knotty issue that has now cropped up in several of the former president’s legal cases: how to balance Mr. Trump’s right to attack the government — even falsely — against shielding the participants in the cases from threats of violence or harassment inspired by his incendiary remarks.
Persons: Donald J, Trump’s, Aileen M, Cannon, Trump, Prosecutors, Jack Smith, Organizations: Federal, Court Locations: Fort Pierce, Fla, Mar, Florida
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailConsumer staples are 'tough' place to be right now, says Regions Asset's Alan McKnightAlan McKnight, Regions Asset Management CIO, joins 'Money Movers' to discuss market momentum, opportunities in industrial, utilities, and discretionary sectors, and more.
Persons: Asset's Alan McKnight Alan McKnight Organizations: Management
A return to the roots of presidential debates
  + stars: | 2024-06-24 | by ( Zachary B. Wolf | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +10 min
CNN —CNN’s presidential debate will feel like something new for most Americans, but it is actually a return to the roots of presidential debates. J. David Ake/AFP/Getty Images Monica Moorehead, a presidential candidate from the Workers World Party, disrupts a presidential debate in Washington, DC, in 1996. Gerald Herbert/AP Barack Obama, right, and John McCain shake hands at the start of a presidential debate in 2008. Joseph Kaczmarek/AP Obama hugs his wife, Michelle, as Romney kisses his wife, Ann, after their third presidential debate in 2012. Ultimately, the commission was formed to create a nonpartisan framework for presidential debates – something that has been exported to other countries.
Persons: CNN —, Joe Biden, Donald Trump, Jake Tapper, Dana Bash, Sen, John F, Kennedy, Richard Nixon, Nixon, Howard K, Smith, Jimmy Carter, Gerald Ford, Carter, Jerry Mosey, Betty, David Hume Kennerly, John B, Ronald Reagan, Anderson, AP Carter, Reagan, Walter Mondale, George H.W, Bush, Michael Dukakis, Dennis Cook, Ross Perot, Bill Clinton, Clinton, Ron Edmonds, AP Clinton, Bob Dole, J, David Ake, Monica Moorehead, Joe Marquette, Mark Penn, Lorenzo Alvarez, Angelica, George W, Al Gore, Joe Raedle, Jim Lehrer, Gore, John Kerry, Gerald Herbert, Barack Obama, John McCain, Charles Dharapak, Obama, Mary Jackson's, Mitt Romney, Joseph Kaczmarek, Michelle, Romney, Ann, David Goldman, Hillary Clinton, Patrick Semansky, Salwan Georges, Biden, Chip Somodevilla, Alan Schroeder, ” Kennedy, Schroeder, , Ford, John Anderson, sidestep, Trump, ” Schroeder, Abraham Lincoln, Stephen Douglas, Douglas, Read, haven’t, “ They’re, Organizations: CNN, Commission, CNN’s Atlanta, CBS, Getty, State University of New, Ford, Anderson, Cleveland Convention Center, AP, Music, Bettmann, Bushnell, Theater, Workers World Party, AP Workers, Hofstra University, AP Trump, Washington Post, Trump, Northeastern University, House, Republican, Republican National Convention, Biden, Lincoln, White, Illinois Senate, ABC News Locations: Los Angeles, New York, State University of New York, Albany, Cleveland, Hartford , Connecticut, Washington , DC, San Diego, El Paso , Texas, Hempstead , New York, Detroit, Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, Lincoln, Illinois
Pipeline operator Williams Companies offers a way for investors to play rising natural gas prices as demand grows due to the transition away from coal, according to the research firm Argus. "Our upgrade largely reflects our more bullish stance on natural gas prices," analyst Bill Selesky told clients in a research note Thursday. Demand for natural gas should rise due to hot weather conditions and the transition from coal to gas, while supply is constrained and inventories are low, the analyst said. The pipeline operator has rallied as natural gas prices have bounced back 70% over the past two months. "The power-hungry world we live in is rapidly turning to natural gas to generate this power," Armstrong said.
Persons: Williams, Bill Selesky, Selesky, Jenny Harrington, CNBC's, Harrington, Wells, Alan Armstrong, Armstrong Organizations: Williams Companies, Argus, U.S, Energy Information Administration, Williams, Asset Management, Street Locations: U.S, midstream, Tuesday's, Wells
The Biden administration on Friday outlined its plans to curb new American investment in critical Chinese technology industries that could be used to enhance China’s military, further straining economic ties with Beijing at a time when trade tensions are rising. The proposed Treasury Department rules would prohibit certain U.S. investments in Chinese companies that are developing semiconductors, quantum computers and artificial intelligence systems. The Biden administration is trying to restrict American financing from helping China develop advanced technology that could be used for weapons tracking, government intelligence and surveillance. They come nearly a year after President Biden signed an executive order calling for the investment ban, which will largely affect venture capital and private equity firms that do business with Chinese companies. “This proposed rule advances our national security by preventing the many benefits certain U.S. investments provide — beyond just capital — from supporting the development of sensitive technologies in countries that may use them to threaten our national security,” said Paul Rosen, the Treasury Department’s assistant secretary for investment security.
Persons: Biden, , Paul Rosen Organizations: Beijing, Department, Treasury Locations: China
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailVenture capital veteran Alan Patricof: The startup business has never been better than it is nowAlan Patricof, Primetime Partners chairpreson and co-founder, joins 'Power Lunch' to discuss the IPO market, startups and the AI space.
Persons: Alan Patricof Organizations: Email Venture, Partners
Former President Donald J. Trump in Racine, Wis., on Tuesday. His campaign said it raised $53 million online in the 24 hours after he was convicted of 34 felony charges last month. Credit... Doug Mills/The New York Times
Persons: Donald J, Trump, Doug Mills Organizations: New York Locations: Racine, Wis
Some venues have already sold out of original tickets, but verified resellers, including StubHub and Vivid Seats, have many tickets available. Here's what fans need to know about how to buy Alan Jackson concert tour tickets. How to buy tickets for Alan Jackson 2024 concert tourWith ticket sales beginning on June 7, Alan Jackson's Last Call tour still has original tickets remaining for multiple locations. How much are Alan Jackson tickets? With the singer's neurological condition causing a gap in the Last Call Tour dates, it is unknown whether Jackson will announce further dates and locations.
Persons: Alan Jackson, Charcot, Marie, Jackson, We've, Alan Jackson's, StubHub, tacking Organizations: Business, CMT, UT, TicketMaster, CMT Research Foundation Locations: Boston, Rapids, MI, Fayetteville, Kansas City, Salt Lake City, Oklahoma, Fort Worth , TX, Orlando, Tampa, Milwaukee, Fort Worth , Texas
Days before admittedly stabbing and dismembering tech CEO Fahim Saleh, ex-personal assistant Tyrese Haspil admittedly used $750 of his victim's money to buy this 6-by-6-inch cake for his girlfriend. Anything less than unanimity — say if one juror accepts Haspil's EED defense and 11 do not — will cause a mistrial. Killer Tyrese Haspil, left, and Fahim Saleh in the lobby of Saleh's Lower Manhattan condo complex, one minute before the attack. Tyrese Haspil, accused of the 2020 murder-dismemberment of tech CEO Fahim Saleh, in state Supreme Court in Manhattan. Fahim Saleh is facing his killer, Tyrese Haspil, as the elevator doors close on the victim's apartment.
Persons: , They'll, Tyrese, Fahim Saleh, Haspil, Saleh, Tyrese Haspil, Louis Vuitton, Chauveau, Alan Chin, who'd, Barry Rosenfeld, he'd, Linda Ford, He'd, Exed, Tasers, Fahim Saleh's, Joseph Goldstein, Sam Roberts —, Society — Organizations: Service, Business, Attorney, Louis, Manhattan, Home Depot, York Penal Law, Amazon, Buy.Taser.com, New York, Society Locations: Manhattan, France, Lower Manhattan, American, Gokada, Nigeria, Brooklyn, Lagos, New York, balaclava, New
When Judge Aileen M. Cannon presides over a hearing on Friday in former President Donald J. Trump’s classified documents case, she will spend the day considering well-trod arguments about an arcane legal issue in an unorthodox manner. It will be the latest example of how her unusual handling of the case has now become business as usual. Over the past several months, Judge Cannon, who was appointed by Mr. Trump in his final days in office, has made a number of decisions that have prompted second-guessing and criticism among legal scholars following the case. Many of her rulings, on a wide array of topics, have been confounding to them, often evincing her willingness to grant a serious hearing to far-fetched issues that Mr. Trump’s lawyers have raised in his defense. The issue that will be discussed on Friday in Federal District Court in Fort Pierce, Fla., is a motion by the defense to dismiss the charges in the case on the grounds that Jack Smith, the special counsel who filed them last spring, was improperly funded and appointed.
Persons: Aileen M, Cannon, Donald J, Trump’s, Judge Cannon, Trump, Jack Smith Organizations: Mr, Court Locations: Fort Pierce, Fla
If you did, you’d remember him, maybe a little uneasily. His voice could clear a range from excitedly high to a menacing bass that would make you feel like ducking for cover. His turn as the titular private detective opposite Jane Fonda in Alan Pakula’s 1971 “Klute” rides a tricky knife’s edge — is he a good guy? Sutherland worked constantly and, unlike some actors of his generation, never really seemed like he belonged to a single era. In the book, he’s sardonic and contemptuous of all but his oldest two daughters, Jane and Lizzy; the reader doesn’t walk away with particularly warm feelings about him.
Persons: Donald Sutherland, wasn’t, he’d, “ we’ve, Sutherland, Jane Fonda, Alan Pakula’s, Philip Kaufman’s, , X, Oliver Stone’s, Hawkeye Pierce, Robert Altman’s, Vernon, Pinkley, Robert Aldrich’s, Joe Wright’s, Bennet, Jane Austen’s, Jane Organizations: GQ
Shortly after Judge Aileen M. Cannon drew the assignment in June 2023 to oversee former President Donald J. Trump’s classified documents case, two more experienced colleagues on the federal bench in Florida urged her to pass it up and hand it off to another jurist, according to two people briefed on the conversations. The judges who approached Judge Cannon — including the chief judge in the Southern District of Florida, Cecilia M. Altonaga — each asked her to consider whether it would be better if she were to decline the high-profile case, allowing it to go to another judge, the two people said. But Judge Cannon, who was appointed by Mr. Trump, wanted to keep the case and refused the judges’ entreaties. Her assignment drew attention because she has scant trial experience and had previously shown unusual favor to Mr. Trump by intervening in a way that helped him in the criminal investigation that led to his indictment, only to be reversed in a sharply critical rebuke by a conservative appeals court panel. The extraordinary and previously undisclosed effort by Judge Cannon’s colleagues to persuade her to step aside adds another dimension to the increasing criticism of how she has gone on to handle the case.
Persons: Aileen M, Cannon, Donald J, Trump’s, Judge Cannon —, Cecilia M, Altonaga —, Judge Cannon, Trump, Judge Cannon’s Organizations: Southern District of, Mr Locations: Florida, Southern District, Southern District of Florida
The Internal Revenue Service is expanding its efforts to crack down on fraud in a pandemic-era tax credit program following an internal analysis that found a majority of outstanding claims appeared to be improper. The original program, which was expanded in 2021, was projected to cost the federal government $55 billion over a decade. had received nearly four million applications and had paid out $230 billion in employee retention refunds. It currently has a backlog of 1.4 million claims. commissioner, warned that the agency’s enforcement teams are scrutinizing claims closely and investigating illicit tax preparation companies that have been encouraging ineligible taxpayers to apply.
Persons: Daniel Werfel Organizations: Internal Revenue Service
Boris Epshteyn, who is scheduled to be arraigned Tuesday on election interference charges in Arizona, has played many roles for former President Donald J. Trump. A college friend of Mr. Trump’s son Eric at Georgetown University, he would become a swaggering TV surrogate for the 2016 Trump campaign before eventually serving as Mr. Trump’s unofficial chief fixer and legal strategist. When Mr. Trump was convicted in New York last month on 34 felony counts, Mr. Epshteyn (pronounced EP-stine) was at his side, huddling with the former president and other aides after the verdict. His indictment there stems from work he did behind the scenes to try to keep Mr. Trump in power after his 2020 election loss. Shepherding a small group of advisers, he helped oversee a plan to deploy fake electors in seven battleground states lost by Mr. Trump, documents show.
Persons: Boris Epshteyn, Donald J, Trump, Mr, Trump’s, Eric, Epshteyn, stine Organizations: Georgetown University, Trump, Mr, Locations: Arizona, New York, Trump, Georgia, Wisconsin
The United States is on a pace to add trillions of dollars to its national debt over the next decade, borrowing money more quickly than previously expected, at a time when big legislative fights loom over taxes and spending. The Congressional Budget Office said on Tuesday that the U.S. national debt is poised to top $56 trillion by 2034, as rising spending and interest expenses outpace tax revenues. The budget deficit in 2024 is projected to be $1.9 trillion, up from a forecast earlier this year of $1.6 trillion. The United States will also again have to deal with a statutory cap on how much it can borrow. Congress agreed last year to suspend the debt limit and allow the federal government to keep borrowing until next January.
Organizations: Congressional, U.S, Social Security, America Locations: States, United States
CNN —Many celebrities will be well-versed in the power of the statement heel to complete a red carpet look, but at the Tony Awards on Sunday night in New York, Brooke Shields stole the spotlight in a statement flat. Even as far back as 2015, actor Alan Cumming sported Crocs to the Emmys with his Vivienne Westwood ensemble. Founded in Boulder, Colorado by three friends in 2002, Crocs were an immediate success when they first hit the market. Alan Cumming attends the 67th Primetime Emmy Awards in a Vivienne Westwood suit and black Crocs. These efforts may be paying off: Crocs reported a record year of earnings in 2023, with total revenue reaching nearly $4 billion dollars.
Persons: Brooke Shields, Monique Lhuillier, “ I’ve, , Shields, Calvin Klein, , Questlove, Chris Pizzello, Justin Bieber, Drew, Alan Cumming, Vivienne Westwood, Crocs, Jason Merritt, Bad Bunny, Balenciaga that’s Organizations: CNN, Associated Press, Broadway, CBS, Getty, Puerto Locations: New York, Chicago, Boulder , Colorado, Puerto Rican
Total: 25