Elephant kills 2 female tourists from the UK and New Zealand in Zambian national parkNew Foto - Elephant kills 2 female tourists from the UK and New Zealand in Zambian national park

LUSAKA, Zambia (AP) — Two elderly female tourists in Zambia were killed by an elephant Thursday while on a walking safari in a national park, police said. Eastern Province Police Commissioner Robertson Mweemba said the victims — 68-year-old Easton Janet Taylor from the U.K. and 67-year-old Alison Jean Taylor from New Zealand — were attacked by a female elephant that was with a calf. Safari guides who were with the group attempted to stop the elephant from charging at the women by firing shots at it, police said. The elephant was hit and wounded by the gunshots. The guides were unable to prevent the elephant's attack and both women died at the scene, police said. It happened at the South Luangwa National Park in eastern Zambia, around 600 kilometers (370 miles) from the capital, Lusaka. Female elephants are very protective of their calves and can respond aggressively to what they perceive as threats. Last year, two American touristswere killed in separate encounterswith elephants in different parts of Zambia. In both cases, the tourists were also elderly women andwere on a safari vehiclewhen they were attacked. ___ AP Africa news:https://apnews.com/hub/africa

Elephant kills 2 female tourists from the UK and New Zealand in Zambian national park

Elephant kills 2 female tourists from the UK and New Zealand in Zambian national park LUSAKA, Zambia (AP) — Two elderly female tourists in Z...
Los Angeles cancels some July Fourth events amid deportation fearsNew Foto - Los Angeles cancels some July Fourth events amid deportation fears

LOS ANGELES — Some Southern California communities are canceling or rescheduling July Fourth events as immigration arrests spread fear across the region. But organizations that oppose President Donald Trump'simmigration policiesplan to proceed with protests in downtown Los Angeles, wherelarge demonstrationslast month sometimes turned violent, prompting Trump to call in the state National Guard and U.S. Marines over the governor's objections. The city said it would postpone its annual Fourth of July block party "in light of recent events affecting a portion of Downtown Los Angeles and the ongoing circumstances impacting the region." The event is held each year in Gloria Molina Grand Park near City Hall and several federal buildings, including one now being used as a detention center that has been a focal point for demonstrations against raids by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. During a "No Kings" march on June 14, protesters fled from tear gas, pepper spray and less-lethal munitions fired by law enforcement officers, and large crowds were pushed away from federal buildings and into Grand Park, where demonstrators scrambled up a small hill to safety. More than 1,618 people in Los Angeles have been arrested by the federal government since it began clamping down on residents without citizenship last month, according to the Department of Homeland Security. The detentions have spread fear across Southern California, where some 1.4 million people are estimated to live without full legal authorization, according to the nonpartisan Migration Policy Institute. Several L.A.-based organizations said they will launch another round of protests Thursday near Grand Park, and a coalition of multifaith organizations, labor unions, activists and artists will hold a "freedom" car cruise and rally outside City Hall. Later, activists with the group Centro CSO will hold a march outside the federal courthouse, calling for charges to be dropped against Alejandro Orellana, who was arrested in connection with distributing face shields to "suspected rioters." He faces charges of conspiracy to commit civil disorder and aiding and abetting civil disorders. He was released on bond last month and has a preliminary hearing scheduled for Thursday afternoon. On Friday, the local chapter of 50501, which organized the "No Kings" rally, will hold an all-day demonstration outside City Hall to demand an "end to the occupation" of Los Angeles by ICE, the National Guard and the Marines. "This isn't a celebration," the group said in a statement. "It's a stand." Smaller communities throughout Los Angeles County with large immigrant populations are also rethinking Fourth of July celebrations. In East Los Angeles, a historically Latino area, the neighborhoods of Boyle Heights, Lincoln Heights and El Sereno have postponed July Fourth festivities after several high-profile immigration arrests. Federal agents last month rammed and trapped a car carrying four U.S. citizens, including a man, woman and two children, in Boyle Heights. The Department of Homeland Security said its target was Christian Damian Cerno-Camacho, who was arrested in connection with punching an immigration officer. A lawyer representing Cerno-Camacho's family said he is planning to file a lawsuit against the federal government. This week, Boyle Heights activists shut down a bridge that links downtown Los Angeles to the small enclave and marched with mariachis to the site of another recent arrest. Demands for the National Guard to return to normal duties were answered in part this week when 150 members were reassigned to wildfire season preparation. Some 4,000 National Guard members and 700 Marines remain at federal buildings in Los Angeles while a lawsuit filed by the state against the Trump administration is pending in court. A three-judge appeals court panel has said that the White House likely lawfully exercised its authority when Trump federalized the National Guard without Gov. Gavin Newsom's consent. The ruling halted a lower court's decision, which found the Trump administration had illegally activated the troops. Newsom said last month that he will pursue legal action to regain control of the guard. Lawmakers and legal organizations are waging their own court battles ahead of the holiday weekend. On Wednesday, immigrant rights groups filed a lawsuit against the Trump administration, seeking to block an "ongoing pattern and practice of flouting the Constitution and federal law" during immigration raids in Los Angeles. "Since June 6th, marauding, masked goons have descended upon Los Angeles, terrorizing our brown communities and tearing up the Constitution in the process," said Mohammad Tajsar, senior staff attorney with the ACLU Foundation of Southern California. "No matter their status or the color of their skin," he added, "everyone is guaranteed Constitutional rights to protect them from illegal stops. We will hold DHS accountable." The Department of Homeland Security said in a statement that the claims are false. This week, county supervisors approved a motion to pursue legal action against the Trump administration. The vote came after U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi filed a lawsuit against Los Angeles over its sanctuary city policies, which prevent local police agencies from voluntarily cooperating with federal immigration enforcement. The U.S. government claims sanctuary city ordinances discriminate against federal law enforcement agencies by treating them differently from other policing authorities.

Los Angeles cancels some July Fourth events amid deportation fears

Los Angeles cancels some July Fourth events amid deportation fears LOS ANGELES — Some Southern California communities are canceling or resch...
Takeaways from the verdict in Sean 'Diddy' Combs' federal sex trafficking trialNew Foto - Takeaways from the verdict in Sean 'Diddy' Combs' federal sex trafficking trial

Sean "Diddy" Combs was denied bail on Wednesday after the jury in his federal sex trafficking trial returned its verdict, convicting him on two lesser charges of transportation to engage in prostitution but clearing the hip-hop mogul of the most serious charges. The verdict is, to some extent, a win for Combs, who will avoid the worst case scenario: If he had been convicted of the more serious charges of racketeering conspiracy or sex trafficking, Combs could have faced up to life in prison. Instead, he faces a maximum sentence of 20 years – though could serve a shorter sentence. "It's a bit of a paradox, because here we have Sean Combs, who has just been convicted of two federal felonies," said CNN Senior Legal Analyst Elie Honig. "And for all practical purposes, he has won. He has defeated the Southern District of New York." Prosecutors accused Combs of leading a criminal enterprise made up of some of his closest employees, alleging they used threats, violence, forced labor, bribery and other crimes to force Casandra "Cassie" Ventura and another woman, "Jane," to engage in drug-fueled sex acts with male escorts called "Freak Offs" or "hotel nights." Combs pleaded not guilty to one count of racketeering conspiracy, two counts of sex trafficking and two counts of transportation for prostitution. His lawyers argued the sex acts were consensual and merely preferences, while trying to undermine the hip-hop mogul's accusers by contending they were trying to gain a monetary benefit from Combs. Here are takeaways from the jury's verdict. Combs and his defense team surely hoped he would be acquitted on all counts. But the verdict Wednesday is something of a boon for a star defendant who hasseen his reputation diminishin the face of repeated accusations of wrongdoing. His acquittals on racketeering conspiracy and two counts of sex trafficking are striking when looked at within the context of the defendant's fall from grace: Two years ago, Ventura filed a lawsuit claiming Combs had raped and physically and emotionally abused her. Combs agreed to settle the lawsuit a day later; his attorney said it was "in no way an admission of wrongdoing." Ventura's lawsuit was only the beginning: More accusers came forward with allegations against Combs, and in March 2024, heavily armed federal agents searched the producer's homes in Los Angeles and Florida. Two months later, CNN published hotel surveillance video captured eight years earlier showing Combs physically assaulting Ventura in an elevator lobby at a Los Angeles hotel – footage included as part of the prosecution's case for sex trafficking as to Ventura. Now, while the verdict is mixed, Combs can claim some vindication on being cleared of the most serious charges. "Regardless of what anyone thinks of Sean Combs … the simple fact is, as of right now, in the eyes of the law, he has not been convicted of a crime of violence," said CNN Legal Analyst Elliot Williams. "He has not been convicted of the far more serious, life-eligible crimes that he was charged with." The verdict shows prosecutors failed to prove racketeering conspiracy; and while the jury's reasoning is not known, experts told CNN prior to deliberations thatprosecutors' greatest challengewould be securing a conviction on this charge. That jurors found Combs not guilty shows they were unconvinced, either of the existence of a so-called "enterprise" – a key piece of any racketeering case – or that he and others committed the underlying crimes that would support a conviction. The charge comes from the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, or RICO, which was passed by Congress in 1970 to prosecute organized crime. Racketeering is not a single, specific crime, but a framework for prosecuting many different crimes; in a RICO case, these are called "predicate acts." In Combs' case, prosecutors specifically argued the defendant and members of his inner circle had engaged in crimes involving kidnapping, arson, forced labor, bribery and sex trafficking. To convict, jurors would have needed to find Combs and at least one other person committed at least two predicate acts within a ten-year window. The use of RICO in Combs' case, while not entirely novel, was unusual in that he was charged alone. Jurors did not hear direct testimony from many of the people who would have been members of the alleged enterprise – namely his closest employees, like his chief of staff or some of his security guards. And legal analysts had wondered whether the evidence presented at trial had clearly linked Combs' alleged criminal acts to an enterprise. In their closing argument, the government offered jurors a roadmap, outlining the charge, the elements needed to prove it and the parts of their case that would support a conviction. Still, the argument did not persuade jurors. Combs' acquittal on sex trafficking charges is a big blow to the prosecutors for the Southern District of New York – and to his accusers, Ventura and a woman who testified under the pseudonym "Jane," each of whom spent days testifying, recounting years of abuse they said they suffered from Combs. While prosecutors accused Combs of sex trafficking as a predicate act under the umbrella of racketeering conspiracy, they also charged him with two separate counts of sex trafficking, one each for Ventura and Jane. To prove sex trafficking, prosecutors needed to prove Combs compelled the women to participate in commercial sex acts through force, fraud or coercion. And jurors were presented with myriad examples of alleged physical violence and financial control. Regarding Ventura, prosecutors contended physical force was illustrated in one instance by the InterContinental Hotel surveillance footage showing Combs assault Ventura in 2016 – first published by CNN. Testimony by both women suggested some level of financial or professional control; Ventura signed to Combs' record label at just 19, and prosecutors agued he controlled her career. Jane, meanwhile, testified she and Combs entered into a "love contract" where he agreed to pay her $10,000 rent, but that he threatened to cut her off financially if she stopped participating in "hotel nights." Combs' attorneys had acknowledged physical abuse, but argued throughout the trial that domestic violence did not amount to sex trafficking. Prosecutors also told the jury they weren't suggesting every "Freak Off" and "hotel night" were instances of sex trafficking. Both Ventura and Jane testified they were willing to try the sexual encounters in the beginning of their relationships with Combs. The jury's verdict suggests prosecutors did not prove the elements needed to convict – like the force, fraud and coercion. "My heart in this moment is going out to Cassie," said Dream Hampton, the executive producer of "Surviving R. Kelly." "I can't imagine what she's feeling." "I'm afraid that with Puff walking from the more serious charges that he's – not only him, the whole entire discourse – I just wonder what we're going to learn from this," Hampton added. Combs was convicted, however, on two charges of transportation to engage in prostitution, each of which pertained to Ventura or Jane and the men Combs paid to have sex with them. Those charges were more straightforward than the other, and prosecutors merely needed to prove that people crossed state lines to engage in prostitution. Both women testified to having "Freak Offs" or "hotel nights" in a variety of locales, and prosecutors presented documents to bolster that testimony, including flight records, American Express charges and hotel invoices for Combs' former girlfriends and the men. "What was clearer throughout this trial was acts of prostitution that were supported by airplane records, payments and so on – information that would just be hard to deny," said Williams. "There were sex acts, no one disputes that, and they were paid for. And there's a paper trail linking the defendant to them. That was far more straightforward for the prosecution to prove compared to some of the other things." Prior to trial, Combs' defense unsuccessfully lobbied for the transportation to engage in prostitution charges,which stem from the Mann Act, to be dismissed, citing the statute's "racist origins." Attorneys for Combs have previously accused the government of racism, allegations the government denied. Doug Wigdor, Ventura's attorney, acknowledged Wednesday's verdict was "not the exact outcome we wanted' in an interview with CNN. "Cassie prompted this investigation…and now Sean Combs stands before the court as a convicted felon of two federal crimes. He faces significant incarceration," he said. While the verdict marks the beginning of the end of one legal chapter for Combs, he still faces legal trouble. Most immediately, he'll face sentencing for the prostitution charges for which he was convicted Wednesday. Each carries up to ten years, but CNN legal analysts indicated it's possible he serves less. "Certainly very few people are ever sentenced to the top of the statutory maximum," Williams said. "So we should get the ten year or 20 year figure out of our heads. But he will go to jail for some time." Sentencing will be scheduled at a later date. Judge Arun Subramanian said in court Wednesday he denied Combs' bail when it wasn't mandatory before the trial and "sees no reason to reach the opposite conclusion now." The judge quoted the defense at different instances when Combs' lawyers acknowledged his violence toward his former girlfriends. "At trial, the defense conceded defendant's violence in personal relationships saying 'it happened' in relation to Cassie Ventura and Jane," Subramanian said. Subramanian said there was also violence and illegal conduct after the searches on Combs' homes, when he was aware he was under investigation. "This highlights a disregard for the rule of law and a propensity of violence," he said. Prosecutor Maurene Comey said the judge is correct in his decision to keep Combs in detention, saying the music mogul is "an extremely violent man with an extraordinarily dangerous temper who has shown no remorse and no regret for his multiple victims." Subramanian had asked the defense attorneys and prosecutors to submit letters on their positions about the possibility of releasing Combs ahead of the bail hearing. "Mr. Combs has been given his life by this jury," defense attorney Marc Agnifilo said in court earlier Wednesday, as he argued for the judge to allow his client to return home. Prosecutors in their letter to the judge said Combs faces a minimum range of 51 to 63 months in prison, according to their preliminary calculation, but it may be higher at sentencing. "The possibility of a substantial sentence such as this is a significant factor in assessing the risk of flight," the letter says. Earlier, an attorney for central witness Ventura had requested the court keep Combs detained until he is sentenced on the transportation to engage in prostitution charges. "Ms. Ventura believes that Mr. Combs is likely to pose a danger to the victims who testified in this case, including herself, as well as to the community," Ventura's attorney Wigdor wrote in a letter. At the bail hearing, Agnifilo said the jury has acquitted Combs of the most serious charges and that Combs has been a model prisoner since he was detained and has done everything his lawyers asked of him. "He came here, he faced the court, he's been decent with the court each and every day, and he just deserves the chance," Agnifilo said. Teny Geragos, another one of Combs' attorneys, made comments outside the New York courthouse, thanking the jury for "putting such great care into this case." "I also have been saying this since the beginning of this case: Sean Combs has not sexually assaulted anybody. I've been saying this for months," Geragos said. "We've said it with each lawsuit that came out and today that was proven true." The attorney added: "He has not sexually assaulted anybody, certainly hasn't sex trafficked anybody and the jury found that today." Combs still faces araft of civil lawsuits– nearly 70 have been filed so far, with several as recent as last week – accusing Combs of further wrongdoing, including sexual assault. Combs has denied all the allegations. Notably, civil claims carry a lower burden of proof. In the criminal trial, jurors needed to find Combs guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. But in a civil case, the proof only needs to meet what's called a "preponderance of the evidence," or more likely than not. This story has been updated with additional developments. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Takeaways from the verdict in Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ federal sex trafficking trial

Takeaways from the verdict in Sean 'Diddy' Combs' federal sex trafficking trial Sean "Diddy" Combs was denied bail on ...
Maureen Hingert, Former Miss Universe Runner-Up and "The King and I" Actress, Dies at 88

ANL/Shutterstock Sri Lankan actress and former Miss Universe contestant Maureen Hingert died at the age of 88 Hingert death was first reported by a fellow actress and pageant alum on July 1 and was confirmed by her daughter Marisa Zamparelli the following day As an actress, HIngert was credited with 11 roles before stepping back from the industry in the '60s Maureen Hingert, a Sri Lankan actress and former Miss Universe contestant who appeared in movies likeThe King and IandGunmen from Laredo, has died. She was 88. Hingert's death was first announced onFacebookby another Sri Lankan actress and former pageant contestant, Angela Seneviratne, on Tuesday, July 1. As Seneviratne wrote in her post, Hingert won the Miss Ceylon pageant in 1955 and went on to represent Sri Lanka — then known as Ceylon — at the Miss Universe pageant in 1955, where she was a second runner up. "May her soul rest in peace," Seneviratne added in her post, which featured a black-and-white photo of Hingert. The Hollywood Reporterreported news of Hingert's death on Wednesday, July 2, noting that her daughter Marisa Zamparelli confirmed that Hingert died of liver failure at Huntington Hospital in Pasadena, Calif., on Sunday, June 30. "It was a beautiful and peaceful passing," Zamparelli told the outlet. ANL/Shutterstock Hingert made her first appearances on the screen in 1954 with uncredited roles inCircus GirlandElephant Walk, which were produced in her home country, according toTHR. She competed in the first-ever Miss Universe pageant that was broadcast on television — Sweden's Hillivi Rombin won the title that year — and was noted for winning "the crowd with her long, black hair and wide smiles" inThe Pittsburgh Gazette's reporting on the event back in 1955. According toTHR, Hingert remained in California after the Miss Universe pageant and picked up more uncredited roles inPillars of the Skyand in 1956'sThe King and I, an adaptation of the musical of the same name that starred Deborah Kerr,Rita Morenoand Yul Brynner. Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. TV Guide / Courtesy Everett Collection Hingert is onlycreditedwith 11 acting roles throughout the 1950s. She made her first credited appearance in a 1957 episode ofThe Adventures of Hiram Hollidayand appeared in six more roles under the name Jana Davi, including in the moviesGun Fever,The Rawhide Tail,Fort Bowie,Gunmen from Laredoand last appeared on the screen in an episode of the seriesCaptain David Grief.According toTHR, Hingert retired from acting in the early 1960s after she welcomed the first of her three daughters, Gina. She was married to American artist Mario Zamparelli from 1958 until they divorced in 1970. Mario himselfdied in September 2012at 91 years old; the couple's oldest daughter Gina died in 2018 at age 59 of a brain tumor, and another daughter, Andrea, died in 2009 at 42, asTHRreported. Read the original article onPeople

Maureen Hingert, Former Miss Universe Runner-Up and “The King and I” Actress, Dies at 88

Maureen Hingert, Former Miss Universe Runner-Up and "The King and I" Actress, Dies at 88 ANL/Shutterstock Sri Lankan actress and f...
Police say a man injured 4 with a hammer on a German train before he was detainedNew Foto - Police say a man injured 4 with a hammer on a German train before he was detained

BERLIN (AP) — A man on a long-distance train in southern Germany attacked and slightly injured four people with a hammer Thursday before he was detained by police, authorities said. Police in Straubing said the attack happened on an ICE express train headed from the northern Germany city of Hamburg to the Austrian capital of Vienna while it was between Straubing and Plattling in the southern state of Bavaria. About 500 people were on board when the attack happened, police said. About 150 police officers, firefighters and emergency personnel were deployed to the scene, police added. The railway line was closed down. Police initially said the perpetrator used an axe in the attack but later said he allegedly used a hammer and likely other weapons which they did not further name. They identified the suspect as a 20-year-old Syrian national. Three of the four injured passengers also were Syrians, a boy of 15 and two men aged 24 and 51. The fourth victim was a 38-year-old passenger whose nationality was not yet known, police said. All four injured passengers were taken to nearby hospitals. Police did not provide further details on the identity of the attacker or his motive, but later said that he was overpowered by fellow passengers and had also been injured. The perpetrator "is probably somewhat more seriously injured," a police spokesperson told German news agency dpa. He was in police custody and receiving medical treatment. According to the Bavarian Red Cross, the emergency services were alerted at around 2 p.m. local time, after passengers pulled the emergency brakes. The train came to a halt near the village of Straßkirchen, dpa reported. The Red Cross said a special care center was set up nearby to take care of passengers. In addition to numerous rescue services and two helicopters, psychological caregivers were deployed to help those who were not injured but might have been traumatized. German rail operator Deutsche Bahn said in a statement that "our thoughts and sympathy are with the injured and all those who now have to come to terms with what they have experienced," and thanked emergency services for the quick arrest of the suspect. Germany has seen several violent attacks in public spaces in recent months. In May,a woman stabbed and injured more than a dozenpeople at Hamburg's central station. In February,a driver plowed into a demonstration in Munich, killing two and injuring more than 20. In December,a man killed six and injured more than 200when he drove a car through a Christmas market in Magdeburg.

Police say a man injured 4 with a hammer on a German train before he was detained

Police say a man injured 4 with a hammer on a German train before he was detained BERLIN (AP) — A man on a long-distance train in southern G...

 

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