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Cutremur cu magnitudinea de peste 4 grade pe scara Richter, produs în această seară în România

Un cutremur cu magnitudinea 4,1 s-a produs, marți seară, în județul Buzău, la o adâncime de 140 de kilometri, potrivit Institutului Național pentru Fizica Pământului (INFP).
Read full article on: radiochisinau.md
Rabbi Sharon Kleinbaum retiring from world’s largest LGBTQ synagogue after 32 years
Rabbi Sharon Kleinbaum is retiring after leading Congregation Beit Simchat Torah for 32 years.
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nypost.com
Albany’s push to close legal loophole that let Harvey Weinstein off the hook appears to be in limbo
Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie hasn't said whether the lower chamber will take up the measure.
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nypost.com
Airline passenger irate over ‘rip-off’ $76 luggage fee exacts swift and hilarious revenge
He was wheely mad.
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nypost.com
Proud San Diego Pup Starts Her First Day as New Fire Station Dog
The 5-year-old dog walked into her new job full of confidence and happy tail wags.
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newsweek.com
Scarlett Johansson’s fight against OpenAI exposes the absolute arrogance of Silicon Valley
We've seen over and over again that Silicon Valley's tech overlords are greedy pirates who don't respect anyone else's creations.
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nypost.com
Fani Willis Quickly Wins Primary Election
Willis has faced criticism from many Republicans for her indictment of former President Donald Trump.
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newsweek.com
UPS driver was stalked and killed by childhood friend and co-worker, D.A. says
The Orange County District Attorney's office said that the man who killed a UPS driver last week was a childhood friend and coworker.
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latimes.com
Stabbing on Metro bus in Lynwood is latest violence connected to L.A.'s mass transit system
A person was injured Tuesday in a stabbing on a Los Angeles Metro bus, the latest in a recent string of violent incidents for the transit system.
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latimes.com
NYC development near Seaport stuck in legal limbo is finally greenlit in latest blow to Engoron
The victory for Howard Hughes Holdings also marked another stinging slap in the face to Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron, who presided over Donald Trump’s civil trial earlier this year. 
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nypost.com
Jennifer Garner ‘is encouraging’ Ben Affleck work things out with Jennifer Lopez: report
Last week, the "Gone Girl" star and the "Can't Get Enough" singer sparked divorce rumors amid reports the actor had been living separately from his wife.
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nypost.com
Fani Willis, top prosecutor in Georgia Trump case, wins primary
Willis now proceeds to November’s general election, where she will face Courtney Kramer, a Republican lawyer who interned in the Trump White House.
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washingtonpost.com
Josh Hart wants Tom Thibodeau to get Knicks contract extension he ‘deserves’
Josh Hart made it clear he wants Thibodeau around for a long time.
nypost.com
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs sued by model who claims she was drugged, sexually assaulted by mogul in 2003
Sean “Diddy” Combs has been hit by another damning lawsuit, this time from a model who claimed he drugged her and then forced her to perform oral sex on him during a visit to his NYC studio two decades ago when she was 22-years-old
nypost.com
Defensa de Trump concluye argumentos; no declaró como testigo
Tras más de cuatro semanas de testimonios, el jurado podría empezar a deliberar la próxima semana para decidir si el expresidente es culpable de 34 cargos de falsificar documentos empresariales.
latimes.com
Will There Be A Season 7 Of ‘The Rookie’? ‘The Rookie’ On ABC Return Date
Sgt. Grey helps the team prepare for their biggest mission yet in the season finale of The Rookie.
nypost.com
Aaron Rodgers is back with Jets and still the man for the job
The Jets don’t need Aaron Rodgers to be their VP. They need him to be their president. And he accepts the nomination.
nypost.com
Exalcalde de Nueva York Rudy Giuliani se declara inocente de interferencia electoral en Arizona
El exalcalde de la ciudad de Nueva York Rudy Giuliani se declaró inocente el martes de nueve cargos de delito grave derivados de su papel en un plan para anular la derrota electoral de Donald Trump en las elecciones de 2020 en Arizona .
latimes.com
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs sued by former model who claims she was drugged and sexually assaulted
McKinney claimed she was blacklisted from the modeling industry and dealt with severe depression in the years after the alleged assault.
nypost.com
Rams move training camp to LMU; Matthew Stafford's contract situation is unmoved
After years training at UC Irvine, the Rams have moved the camp this summer to Loyola Marymount. Meanwhile, Matthew Stafford's contract is still a topic.
latimes.com
Giuliani, 10 others, plead not guilty in Arizona fake electors case
Rudy Giuliani and ten other allies of former President Donald Trump pleaded not guilty Tuesday to charges stemming from the alleged fake electors scheme in Arizona. Ed O'Keefe reports.
cbsnews.com
Jamaal Bowman is a pathetic excuse for a congressman
Rep. Jamaal Bowman just can't quit it with the phony fire alarms.
nypost.com
Powerful storms spawn more tornadoes, flooding in Midwest
At least three wind turbines that were toppled by an apparent tornado in southwest Iowa, and at least one was in flames with black smoke pluming from the bent structure.
cbsnews.com
Cariuma Goes for the Gold With New Olympics Skating Uniforms
Cariuma.Scouted selects products independently. If you purchase something from our posts, we may earn a small commission.There’s much to love about Cariuma sneakers, whether it be the brand’s razor-sharp focus on sustainability or the unparalleled comfort of its style-forward kicks. The celebrity-favorite brand (Pete Davidson, John Hamm, and Naomi Watts have all been spotted sporting Cariuma sneakers) is no stranger to the skateboard market, but now the footwear brand is expanding its skate-oriented offerings ahead of the Paris 2024 Olympics. Cariuma is dropping down into the halfpipe (literally) at the hotly anticipated global sporting event (July 26 to August 11) by working with a trio of Olympic Skateboarding Federations on “better-for-the-planet” uniforms that also exude patriotism and flair.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Timberwolves vs. Mavericks series odds: Minnesota opens as favorites in Western Conference Finals
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nypost.com
Sean Combs Accused of Sexual Assault in New Lawsuit
A former model sued the hip-hop mogul and accused him of forcing her to perform oral sex in 2003 at his recording studio. Mr. Combs has not yet responded.
nytimes.com
Survey reveals how female small business owners measure success
One in four female small business owners has taken a pay cut in the past year, according to new research.
nypost.com
Glenelg girls’ lacrosse returns to championship form, wins Maryland 2A title
The Gladiators cap a cathartic postseason run with their first state title since 2018.
washingtonpost.com
Grandma braves sharks, jellyfish in 17-hour swim to remote island
Pacifica, California, resident Amy Appelhans Gubser became the first person to ever swim from the Golden Gate Bridge to the Farallon Islands without a wetsuit earlier in May.
foxnews.com
Biden administration authorized 'Use of Deadly Force' in Mar-a-Lago raid
The Biden administration authorized the use of deadly force during the FBI’s raid on former President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in August 2022 as part of its investigation into classified records, court documents revealed.
foxnews.com
Bird Flu Update as CDC Issues New Recommendations
The CDC is encouraging local and state health officials to use "enhanced levels" of monitoring for flu cases to track possible bird flu inflections.
newsweek.com
WATCH: Hearing goes off the rails as Ted Cruz accuses Biden official of funding Hamas attack on Israel
Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz clashed in a heated Senate hearing, with Cruz accusing the Biden administration of funding the Oct. 7 attack on Israel.
foxnews.com
Michael Cohen’s Credibility Paradox
Are jurors prepared to believe the testimony of an admitted liar?
theatlantic.com
Former NBA ref calls Chris Paul 'one of the biggest a--holes I ever dealt with'
NBA All-Star Chris Paul admitted he had a personal issue with official Scott Foster, but one former ref claims the veteran guard is "one of the biggest a---holes I ever dealt with."
foxnews.com
Biden administration sues Oklahoma over new law allowing arrest of illegal migrants
The new law against “impermissible occupation” goes into effect July 1.
nypost.com
Ex-boyfriend arrested for butchering NYC woman, 29, after she ID’s him with dying breath: ‘Ty did this’
“We have video of the perpetrator slashing, stabbing, punching and dragging the victim, and during the whole time, which is about a minute and 10 seconds, she's fighting back."
nypost.com
Rapper and tech investor Nas snags swank Tribeca pad
Legendary Brooklyn-born rapper-turned-financier Nas has rented a Tribeca apartment asking $16,500 a month. The two-bedroom, two-and-a-half bath spread is at the Enrique Norten-designed One York, which boasts the city’s first automated robo parking garage. Nas — born Nasir Jones — co-founded tech-investment firm QueensBridge Venture Partners with his manager, Anthony Saleh. Rapper and investor Nas....
nypost.com
German author Jenny Erpenbeck wins International Booker Prize for tale of tangled love affair
Author Jenny Erpenbeck and translator Michael Hofmann have been awarded the International Booker Prize for fiction for the novel 'Kairos,' beating out five other finalists.
foxnews.com
I was inside the court when the judge closed the Trump trial, what I saw shocked me: Alan Dershowitz
Alan Dershowitz was allowed to stay in the courtroom during former President Donald Trump’s trial while Judge Juan Merchan scolded witness Robert Costello.
foxnews.com
Why ICC arrest warrants matter, even if Israel and Hamas leaders evade them
17 April 2024, Israel, Jerusalem: Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel's Prime Minister, arrives for a joint meeting with Annalena Baerbock (not pictured), Germany's Foreign Minister. Photo: Ilia Yefimovich/dpa (Photo by Ilia Yefimovich/picture alliance via Getty Images) As the US continues to stand by Israel amid its widening offensive in Gaza’s southernmost city of Rafah, the International Criminal Court (ICC) is considering arrest warrants for Israeli and Hamas leaders accused of grave crimes in the course of the war. The ICC’s top prosecutor, Karim Khan, announced Monday that he is seeking arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, and the leaders of the group’s military and political wings, Mohammed Diab Ibrahim Al-Masri and Ismail Haniyeh. Though met with strong rebukes from the US and Israel, which accuse the court of antisemitism and deny an equivalence between the Israeli government and Hamas, international law advocates and nations like Australia and South Africa have praised the move as important to the fair application of international law. A panel of judges at the ICC still has to rule on the request, which involves considering whether there is sufficient evidence that Israeli and Hamas leadership have committed war crimes during and after Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel.  But even if the ICC issues warrants, it’s not certain these leaders will ever actually be arrested. Nor is it clear that issuing warrants would meaningfully alter the course of the war in Gaza, which was set off by the October 7 attacks on Israel by Hamas, and which has now killed about 35,000 and displaced about a million in more than seven months of fighting. That’s because the ICC’s effectiveness in prosecuting war crimes rests upon the cooperation of its member states – which do not include Israel or its closest ally, the US.  “When the court is able to do its work and not able to do its work is not so much a reflection of the court, but a function of its members and non-members,” said Kelebogile Zvobgo, a professor of government at the College of William & Mary. “It’s only as effective as countries allow it to be.” In that sense, the ICC has often been accused of being toothless. But that has less to do with the institution itself than the willingness of the world’s superpowers to see international law equitably enforced, even when it might implicate them or their allies. How the ICC works Since its inception in 2002, the ICC has been charged with prosecuting war crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide, and crimes of aggression, collectively referred to as atrocity crimes.  Based in the Hague, the Netherlands, it’s the body with the capability and authority to step in and prosecute these kinds of crimes at the highest levels. It can go after heads of state and military leaders who may have directed or otherwise served as intellectual architects of the crimes. It’s different from the International Court of Justice, where states settle disputes and where there is currently a case against Israel for the crime of genocide — a charge the ICC did not levy against either the Hamas or Israeli leaders.  US and Israeli officials have argued that the ICC lacks jurisdiction in this case, but as Palestine is a signatory to the ICC, crimes committed on its territory or by its nationals are in fact under the court’s jurisdiction.  “Absolutely, there’s jurisdiction in this case because any crime that occurred in the state of Palestine — because the court decided, for its purposes, that Palestine is a state — anything that occurred there is within the jurisdiction of the ICC if there’s no domestic tribunal or domestic body that is willing or able to investigate the crimes that occurred in Israel on October 7 and after,” Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum, director of the Benjamin B. Ferencz Human Rights and Atrocity Prevention Clinic at Cardozo Law School, told Vox. (Palestine officially signed on to the Rome Statute in 2015.) There are many occasions when a national tribunal is the right venue for trying war or atrocity crimes, like in the former Yugoslavia, Rwanda, or Cambodia, where the UN has previously supported national tribunals. But such a mechanism often only occurs following a regime or governmental change; it is unlikely to happen either in Israel or Palestine.  “The ICC is based on the principle of complementarity, which means that national prosecutions take priority,” Juliette McIntyre, a lecturer in law at the University of South Australia, told Vox. “States should investigate [or] prosecute the same suspects wanted for the same conduct. In this case, Israel could raise a complementarity challenge and the ICC would decide if Israel was doing enough through its own courts such that the ICC doesn’t need to step in.” The ICC does go after people at the highest levels but doesn’t try people unless they are present in the court. It also doesn’t have its own police force or enforcement mechanisms, relying on Rome Statute signatories to fulfill those duties. That can feel like the court is ineffective and chances for justice fleeting, and it exposes the limitations of international law particularly when powerful actors like the US refuse to abide by it and its institutions.  The ICC’s prosecution record The challenges to holding Israel’s and Hamas’s leaders accountable notwithstanding, the ICC has not been completely ineffectual in its brief history.  The ICC has issued a total of 46 arrest warrants since its founding. Just under half of them were ever brought into ICC custody and appeared before the court; seven people, including deposed Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, died before the ICC had the chance to try them.  There are currently 17 people subject to ICC arrest warrants who have remained at large, some for years. That includes Russian President Vladimir Putin, whose warrant for arrest was issued in March 2023 for alleged war crimes. The 124 states that are party to the ICC’s founding document, known as the Rome Statute, are legally obligated to turn over to the court anyone on their soil with an outstanding arrest warrant. Party states, however, haven’t always complied with their legal obligations. South Africa, for instance, shirked its duty in failing to arrest Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir during his 2015 visit to the country.  Of the 10 people who have ultimately been convicted by the court, none have been heads of state. Zvobgo said that the court’s conviction record is stronger with respect to non-state actors — such as Dominic Ongwen, former commander of the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) in Uganda  — and that’s because a state might be more willing to cooperate with the ICC in those instances. But even if it’s unlikely that a head of state will ever be arrested or convicted, issuing warrants for their arrest can place limits on their power. McIntyre told Vox that “states that purport to uphold the rule of law will be very hesitant to trade arms with or offer backing to a head of state that has a warrant out for his arrest.” That would be more than just inconvenient for someone like Netanyahu if the court ultimately issues his arrest warrant. “You’re a pariah forever,” Zvobgo said. “Even if Netanyahu never steps on Dutch soil, he will be a fugitive of the court for the rest of his life.” The ICC’s case against Israeli and Hamas leadership Khan announced Monday that the prosecutor’s office has reason to believe Israeli and Hamas leadership “bear criminal responsibility” for war crimes and crimes against humanity in carrying out the seven-month war.  For Gallant and Netanyahu, those potential crimes include starvation and siege-like deprivation directed toward the civilian population, as well as unlawful killing. These are ongoing, amounting to “a widespread and systematic attack against the Palestinian civilian population pursuant to State policy.” The Hamas leadership, according to the prosecutor’s office, is alleged to be responsible for kidnapping, murder, sexual violence, and torture.  In Putin’s case, it took about a month for the ICC to issue an arrest warrant after the top prosecutor requested it. That might be a guidepost for how long it might take for the court to rule on arrest warrants for Israeli and Hamas leadership, though there’s no hard deadline. The US poses a potentially complicating factor. As a non-member of the ICC, the US has had a “hot and cold relationship” with the court over the years, Zvobgo said.  Under former President Donald Trump, the US went as far as to impose economic and diplomatic sanctions against court personnel. President Joe Biden seemed to want to change that dynamic, expressing support for the ICC prosecution of Putin and cooperating with the court’s investigation by sharing information about alleged Russian war crimes in Ukraine. Now, however, he seems to be reversing course. He called the request for arrest warrants against Israeli leaders “outrageous” and suggested that it drew a false “equivalence” between Israel and Hamas. Secretary of State Antony Blinken also expressed interest Tuesday in working with Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) to sanction the ICC. “The Biden administration’s condemnation of the ICC prosecutor is likely to be music to the ears of Vladimir Putin and any other serial human rights violators under investigation,” said Michael Becker, a law professor at Trinity College Dublin. “US statements in support of human rights, anti-impunity, and the rule-of-law are undermined, if not eviscerated, when the US attacks an independent and impartial judicial process simply because it disagrees with a prosecutor’s decisions or because individuals who are the leaders of a US ally may face charges.”
vox.com
Former Arizona grad student convicted of killing professor
Expelled University of Arizona graduate student Murad Dervish, 48, was convicted Tuesday of the fatal 2022 shooting hydrology professor Thomas Meixner.
foxnews.com
White House makes nine brutal corrections to Biden’s NAACP Detroit speech
White House officials were thrust into cleanup mode following President Biden's gaffe-ridden speech to the NAACP Sunday and issued a whopping nine corrections to the official transcript.
nypost.com
Tank Dell practicing with Texans three weeks after being struck in nightclub shooting
Tank Dell is participating in Texans drills just three weeks after he got caught up in a nightclub shooting in Florida. Dell got struck by a stray bullet amid crossfire during a dispute at Cabana Live in Sanford. late last month.
nypost.com
Boeing whistleblower John Barnett's lawyers blame suicide on company as note revealed
Boeing whistleblower John Barnett's expletive-laden suicide note had some harsh words for the former employer he was suing at the time of his suicide.
foxnews.com
Trading spaces: HGTV star Ty Pennington lists High Line home in NYC
Ty Pennington and his wife, Kellee Merrell, are asking $2.65 million for their chic condo in NYC.
nypost.com
Bodies of murdered Kansas moms found buried in freezer as gruesome details emerge in court docs
Newly-filed court documents are revealing new gruesome details surrounding the investigation into the murders of two Kansas women who went missing after a trip to Oklahoma.
foxnews.com
Patriots’ Keion White misses ‘hard-ass’ Bill Belichick ‘cursing us out’
Patriots defensive lineman Keion White has already noticed a big difference between Jerod Mayo and Bill Belichick.
nypost.com
Donald Trump Wants Joe Biden Removed From the White House
The former president was reacting to reports that federal law enforcement was permitted to use "deadly" action in the raid on Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate in 2022.
newsweek.com
The average person enjoys over 100 ‘extraordinary’ days a year
A third of your month is bound to be ‘extraordinary,’ according to a new study.
nypost.com