Bars from a prison jail cast a shadow on the floro.

PATERSON, NJ – On Tuesday, June 15, Julio Largo-Veletanga, 67, of Paterson, New Jersey, was sentenced to an aggregate term of 44 years in New Jersey State Prison.

The sentencing was presided over by the Honorable Joseph A. Portelli, J.S.C. following Largo-Veletanga’s conviction for multiple counts of sexual abuse against a 10-year-old child. The abuse took place between February 2020 and May 2020 at the child’s home in Paterson.

Upon release, Largo-Veletanga will face Parole Supervision for Life and Megan’s Law registration requirements.

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By Daniel Trotta, Brad Brooks

(Reuters) -Experts raised safety concerns in 2018 about the submersible vessel that has been missing since Sunday, when it descended with tourists on a deep ocean journey to view the wreckage of the Titanic.

The pilot and four passengers are aboard and the available oxygen on the vehicle has been forecast to run out by Thursday morning.

The Titan submersible is a 22-foot (6.7-meter)-long vessel operated by Everett, Washington-based OceanGate Expeditions. It first made a voyage dive to 4,000 meters (13,100 feet) in December of 2018, according to the company’s website, and first dove to the site of the Titanic – about 3,800 meters beneath the Atlantic – in 2021. It planned to make 18 such dives this year.

But some industry experts and a whistle-blowing employee had worried about its safety, expressing concern that OceanGate opted against certifying the Titan through third parties such as the American Bureau of Shipping, a leading classifier of submersibles, or the European group DNV, an independent quality assurance and risk management company that sets standards for the design safety of underwater vehicles.

Will Kohnen, chairman of peer-review group Marine Technology Society’s (MTS) committee on manned submersibles, addressed a letter dated March 27, 2018, to OceanGate founder and CEO Stockton Rush, who is piloting the missing vehicle. In the letter, Kohnen expressed what he said were widespread concerns about the Titan, and Kohnen said he later discussed the letter with Rush.

“There was a frank conversation. It was an adult conversation. And we agreed to disagree,” Kohnen told Reuters on Wednesday interview, regarding his call with Rush.

The issue was not any single design flaw, but that OceanGate chose not to pursue the industry’s recognized certification process for the submersible’s design, fabrication and testing.

“Our apprehension is that the current experimental approach adopted by OceanGate could result in negative outcomes (from minor to catastrophic) that would have serious consequences for everyone in the industry,” read the letter.

The letter came about after many submersible experts voiced concerns over the Titan during a three-day annual symposium, Kohnen said. He said he asked the MTS board to send the letter on behalf of the entire society, but the board declined.

“I stand by the letter and all the sentiments of our members that were worried,” Kohnen said. “There’s no joy in saying, ‘Boy, we were hoping this wasn’t going to happen.'”

OceanGate, ABS and DNV did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for comment.

Kohnen credited OceanGate with notifying passengers about Titan’s experimental nature. In November, CBS News aired a report from a journalist who read the waiver he had to sign before going on Titan that identified it as “an experimental submersible vessel that has not been approved or certified by any regulatory body which could result in physical injury, emotional trauma or death.”

EMPLOYEE BLOWS WHISTLE

On Jan. 18, 2018, OceanGate employee David Lochridge forwarded to the company’s leaders an engineering report he had authored that was critical of OceanGate’s research and development process for the Titan, according to lawsuits Lochridge and OceanGate filed against one another that year.

In particular, Lochridge was concerned about the materials used in the hull and a lack of testing performed on the hull to measure its ability to withstand the intense pressures of deep waters.

The company called a meeting the next day to discuss Lochridge’s concerns, according to the lawsuits. At the conclusion of the meeting, Lochridge stated he could not accept OceanGate’s design decisions and would not authorize any crewed voyage without further testing. He was then fired.

OceanGate filed a lawsuit against Lochridge in June and July of 2018 alleging he had discussed confidential information with at least two other people. Lochridge countersued in August 2018, denying that and claiming that OceanGate’s lawsuit was an effort to discourage “whistleblowers from coming forth with quality control issues and safety concerns that threaten the safety of innocent passengers.”

OceanGate did not respond to requests for comment. Lochridge, through his lawyer, said he had no comment. Kohnen said his letter was not based on Lochridge’s complaints.

(Reporting by Daniel Trotta in Carlsbad, California, Brad Brooks in Lubbock, Texas, and Rollo Ross in Rancho Cucamonga, California; Editing by Donna Bryson, Rosalba O’Brien and Muralikumar Anantharaman)

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(Reuters) -U.S. semiconductor toolmaker Applied Materials will invest $400 million over four years in a new engineering center in India, the company said on Thursday.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi had met with the company’s CEO Gary Dickerson in Washington on Wednesday and invited Applied to strengthen the chip industry in the country.

Applied’s investment is among a flurry of announcements this week including General Electric’s deal to jointly produce jet engines for the military with state-owned Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd and data storage chipmaker Micron’s $825 million investment to build a new factory in India.

Modi also met Tesla CEO Elon Musk after which the automaker’s top boss said the company will try to be in India “as soon as humanly possible.”

The new center is expected to be located near the company’s existing facility in Bengaluru and is likely to support more than $2 billion of planned investments and create 500 new advanced engineering jobs, the company said.

Applied currently operates across six sites in India and works closely with Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore and the Indian Institute of Technology in Mumbai, two of the country’s prestigious institutions.

(Reporting by Akash Sriram in Bengaluru; Editing by Anil D’Silva, Sriraj Kalluvila and Shailesh Kuber)

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LONDON (Reuters) – Two creditors of France’s Orpea have filed an application in a U.S. court against another creditor and the creditor’s financial adviser to obtain and use documentation related to the care home operator’s French legal proceedings, a source close to the situation said.

Orpea creditors Kyma Capital and LMR Partners lodged on Tuesday an application against Anchorage and PJT Partners in the U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware, the source said.

Anchorage is a member of Orpea’s steering committee, a group of unsecured creditors that is supporting a proposal to restructure the French group’s debt. PJT Partners are advisors to the steering committee.

Kyma Capital and LMR Partners argue that the restructuring deal benefits the steering committee at the expense of other creditors, and that the documents would back up their view.

Anchorage, PJT Partners and Orpea did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Orpea, which was hit by allegations of malpractice at its care homes and a sharp drop in valuation, in February announced an agreement in principle with state financial institution Caisse des Depots & Consignations (CDC) and other investors to restructure its debt.

(Reporting by Chiara Elisei, editing by Kirsten Donovan)

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LONDON (Reuters) -The Bank of England raised interest rates more than expected by half a percentage point on Thursday after it said there had been “significant” news suggesting British inflation would take longer to fall.

The BoE’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) voted 7-2 to raise its main interest rate to 5% from 4.5%, its highest since 2008 and its largest rate increase since February, following stickier inflation and wage growth since policymakers last met in May.

In choppy trading, the pound seesawed, as did gilt yields. Traders scrambled to price in a peak to UK rates of as much 6% and its implications for the risk of recession, and rate-sensitive stocks like banks and homebuilders slid.

MARKET REACTION:

FOREX: Sterling was last up 0.1% against the dollar at $1.27830, having bounced off a low of $1.2740.

STOCKS: The FTSE 100 was down 1.2% on the day, compared with a loss of 0.9% prior to the decision.

MONEY MARKETS: UK 2-year gilts dropped sharply, then rose after the decision but were last unchanged at 5.04%. An inversion of the two- to 10-year yield curve, often a sign that investors expect a recession, deepened further.

COMMENTS:

JAMIE NIVEN, SENIOR FUND MANAGER, CANDRIAM, LONDON:

“Ultimately, while a hawkish surprise, it may result in a return of credibility to the bank and result in a recovery of some cross-market underperformance seen recently.”

“If base rates are to remain at these levels (or indeed move to levels priced by the market of around 6%) we fully expect the consumer to be hit hard, with the housing market a particular channel for potential stresses. The reaction of sterling is quite telling in this regard given a small sell-off, at this stage, despite the hawkish surprise.”

JAMES SMITH, DEVELOPED MARKETS ECONOMIST, ING, LONDON:

“Unsurprisingly, the bank hasn’t offered up many – or really any – hints on what might come next, though of course markets think subsequent hikes could take rates above 6% from today’s 5% level.

It was always quite unlikely that the bank would pre-commit to any particular course, or push back against market pricing, given the recent tendency of inflation to overshoot expectations.

But even if the bank hasn’t offered up any new guidance, the rate decision itself is revealing. BoE policymakers are always keen to stress they don’t take decisions on future rate hikes in advance, but they will be acutely aware that the decision to hike by 50 bps today will be read by investors as an implicit endorsement of market pricing for the rest of this year.”

SEEMA SHAH, CHIEF GLOBAL STRATEGIST, PRINCIPAL ASSET MANAGEMENT, LONDON:

“For the bank, there is no space for dithering or confusing messages now. The UK has the unenviable title of highest core inflation rate in the G7, and by quite some margin. It requires the central bank to adopt a clearly hawkish attitude that signals further sizeable moves over the coming months, emphasising the severity of the situation.

A sharper slowdown of the UK economy will be an unfortunate, but necessary, fallout from monetary policy.”

CHRIS BEAUCHAMP, CHIEF MARKET ANALYST, IG GROUP, LONDON:

“The BoE has come down on the side of a 50 bps hike, in a move that seems to set the tone for the next few meetings. The fight against inflation clearly has to step up a gear, and the task now for the BoE is to get ahead of the curve once again. A nod to ‘persistent inflation’ should put everyone on notice that Bailey and co have overcome their reticence about more aggressive hiking.”

PAUL OBERSCHNEIDER, CEO, HILLTOP CREDIT PARTNERS, LONDON:

“The BOE continues to get it very wrong. Raising the cost of money when growth is at virtually zero, and inflation is being caused by factors outside of consumption control, is a recipe for disaster. The focus should be on addressing the underlying causes of today’s inflation, including a lack of housing supply caused by a broken planning system and out of date mortgage products, and fiscal measures that don’t cause more consumer pain. The UK economy is precariously positioned, with real-term UK wages at 2005 levels and the impact of the government’s 400 billion-pound COVID bailout now finally catching up with the Treasury.”

ROBERT JEFFREE, CHIEF EXECUTIVE OF OMNIS INVESTMENTS, LONDON:

“After May’s hot inflation report, the Bank of England faced a dilemma when it came to its interest rate decision today. They can’t risk letting inflation expectations get higher and the worrisome acceleration of prices in the service sector risks just that, even if goods prices are falling.”

“Having said that, their policy is now more data dependent, the bank had to deliver a rate increase. A greater step change – 50 bp rather than 25 bp suggests a more discernible hawkish tilt which is bad news for borrowers and good news for savers.”

GARY SMITH, PARTNER IN FINANCIAL PLANNING, EVELYN PARTNERS, LONDON:

“Expect more mortgage market mayhem after this big bazooka rate hike. Lenders were probably already pricing in a 25 basis point move, but the repricing of home loans looks like it will now be more dramatic and protracted.”

“With the benchmark interest rate undergoing a step-change to a level not seen since September 2008, the coming weeks are likely to see a procession of raised loan rates – and a succession of eye-watering estimates of how much monthly and annual loan payments will increase as borrowers come off their cheap fixed deals.”

(Reporting by EMEA Markets Team; Editing by Yoruk Bahceli)

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By Borja Suarez

ARGUINEGUIN, Spain (Reuters) – A total of 168 migrants were rescued on Thursday near Spain’s Canary Islands, emergency services said, one day after migrant charities said they feared more than 30 migrants had died after their inflatable dinghy sank on the same route.

The Canary Islands off the coast of West Africa have become the main destination for migrants trying to reach Spain, with a much smaller number also seeking to cross the Mediterranean Sea to the Spanish mainland. Summer is the busiest period for all attempted crossings.

Spanish officials said on Wednesday that the bodies of a child and a man had been recovered and a Moroccan patrol boat had previously rescued 24 people on a dinghy that was sinking.

Migration-focused organisations said 59 people had been on the vessel and at least 30 were missing, and criticised Spain and Morocco for not intervening earlier.

Canary Islands officials said on Thursday that during the night emergency services had assisted 114 migrants in two boats.

A total of 53 people were taken to Lanzarote, while 61 migrants, including a baby and his mother who were taken to hospital, went to Gran Canaria.

TV footage showed some of the migrants covered in red blankets arriving at Arguineguin port in Gran Canaria and rescuers helping a toddler and other arrivals to disembark.

On Thursday morning a third boat was spotted by the coastguards and taken to Lanzarote with 54 people on board. They were in good health, the emergency services added.

Meanwhile in Italian waters in the Mediterranean, the Spanish rescue ship Aita Mari, belonging to the NGO Salvamento Maritimo Humanitario (SMH), said it took part in the rescue of 294 people from a migrant ship off the Italian island of Lampedusa on Thursday.

SMH said a joint operation took place with the Nadir rescue vessel belonging to the NGO ResQship and the Italian Coast Guard to recover everyone onboard.

The Atlantic migration route, one of the deadliest in the world, is typically used by migrants from sub-Saharan Africa. At least 559 people – including 22 children – died in 2022 in attempts to reach the Canary Islands, according to data from the U.N.’s International Organisation for Migration.

JUNE SURGE

There has been a rise in arrivals in the Canary Islands this month.

“Numbers were falling so far this year, but there was an increase this month that surprised everybody. Only in June, close to 2,000 people have arrived,” said Canary Islands migration lawyer Loueila Mint El Mamy.

A source working in a migrant camp on one of the Canary Islands told Reuters they had received around 1,000 new arrivals in the past few days, compared with 100 in the same period last year.

Better weather conditions during the early summer could have brought forward the migration season that has previously taken place later in the year, a Spanish government source said.

Spanish government data showed 5,914 people arrived in the Canary Islands between January and mid-June this year, a 31.5% drop compared to the same period last year.

(Reporting by Emma Pinedo, Corina Rodriguez and Inti Landauro; Writing by Emma Pinedo; Editing by Aislinn Laing and Frances Kerry)

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By John Revill

ZURICH (Reuters) -The Swiss National Bank raised its policy interest rate by 25 basis points on Thursday as the central bank pressed ahead with its campaign to dampen stubborn inflation and signalled that more tightening was likely to come.

Chairman Thomas Jordan pointed to rising inflationary pressures and the danger of price increases becoming entrenched as the SNB hiked Swiss rates for the fifth time in succession.

Although Swiss inflation ebbed to 2.2% in May from 2.6% in April, there was still more work to be done to tackle rising prices, Jordan told reporters.

“The marked decline in recent months is very welcome,” Jordan said. “Nevertheless the underlying inflationary pressure has risen further.

“That means most likely that tighter monetary policy is necessary to bring inflation sustainably below 2%,” he said, “But we can also afford the more gradual approach.”

While inflation globally has been coming down from its multi-decade peaks, central banks around the world are not quite done yet with their monetary tightening campaigns to bring price rises under control.

Although modest by international standards, Swiss inflation has remained above the SNB’s 0-2% target range since February 2022.

On Thursday, the SNB increased its policy rate and the rate it charges on sight deposits to 1.75% from the 1.5% level set in March. The increase, in line with forecasts in a Reuters poll, meant Swiss interest rates were now at their highest level since October 2008.

Still, the Swiss franc fell 0.2% against the dollar after the decision, which disappointed some market players who bet on a bigger 50 basis point move.

The latest SNB hike followed an increase by the European Central Bank, which last week raised euro zone borrowing costs to their highest level in 22 years.

Although the U.S. Federal Reserve left interest rates unchanged last week, it signalled further hikes by the end of the year.

Even with the Thursday’s rate increase, the SNB forecast Swiss inflation would remain above its 0-2% target by 2026.

The central bank also raised its inflation forecasts for 2024 and 2025. The projected above-target inflation can be seen as indicating further tightening in the future.

The SNB said it also remained ready to intervene in currency markets.

In recent months the central bank has been selling foreign currencies to boost the value of the Swiss franc, whose strength has reduced the effect of more expensive imports.

Jordan said that although Switzerland had lower inflation than other countries, it was dangerous to sit back and accept the current level of price increases.

“Inflation would most likely not stabilize but would rather go up again and we would have to fight inflation further down the road with more rate increases,” he said.

Analysts said they expected another hike at the SNB’s next meeting in September, especially following latest rise and Jordan’s comments.

“The message is that the job is not done,” said Gero Jung, an economist at Mirabaud. “In sum, quite a hawkish hike.”

Charlotte de Montpellier at ING said Thursday’s action made her change her outlook.

“Before today’s meeting, I thought that this rate hike was going to be the last of the cycle,” she said. “However, in view of the inflation forecasts and the message, I am going to revise my forecast and anticipate a further rate hike in September.”

(Reporting by John Revill, Additional reporting by Noele IllienEditing by Maria Sheahan and Tomasz Janowski)

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PARIS (Reuters) – Following are highlights of what world leaders said at a summit in Paris on Thursday to boost crisis financing for poor countries, reform post-war financial systems and free up funds to tackle climate change.

ON REFORM

“Even with the capital that the World Bank and the MDBs (multinational development banks) have, there is clearly potential …to increase financing capacity,” said U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, whose country is the World Bank’s biggest shareholder.

Yellen said an additional 200 billion dollars could be unlocked over a decade.

“We are certainly not ruling out at some later stage a capital increase. But I think that these banks need to function better individually and as a system first, expand their mission to address global challenges, better utilize the capital they have.”

ON NATURAL DISASTER CLAUSES

“We would also like to see the World Bank offer borrowers the option to add climate resilient debt clauses to their loan agreements. These clauses would help ease pressures on countries if a natural disaster strikes,” Yellen said.

ON UNLOCKING PRIVATE SECTOR FINANCING

“We need to mobilise the private sector a lot more, there is a lot of liquidity, a lot of money in that world,” said French President Emmanuel Macron.

ON FAILURE OF INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL ARCHITECTURE

“It is clear that the international financial architecture has failed in its mission to provide a global safety net for developing countries,” said U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres.

(Reporting by Leigh Thomas, John Irish, Elizabeth Pineau, Silvia Aloisi; Editing by Christina Fincher)

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LONDON (Reuters) – Turkey’s new central bank governor Hafize Gaye Erkan delivered a smaller-than-expected interest rate hike at her first rate meeting on Thursday, sending the lira and the country’s dollar-denominated sovereign bonds sharply lower.

The bank lifted its key rate 650 basis points to 15% compared to the median of 21% expected in a Reuters poll.

Below are comments from analysts:

PIOTR MATYS, SENIOR FX ANALYST, IN TOUCH CAPITAL MARKETS

“Many market participants are likely to interpret today’s decision as an indication that Governor Erkan has limited room for manoeuvre in restoring orthodoxy in monetary policy.”

“One could argue that it will take time to restore shattered confidence, but it would be more efficient to exceed expectations if Governor Erkan wants to convince investors that she is in charge of monetary policy and not President Erdogan.”

PETER KISLER, EM PORTFOLIO MANAGER, TRIUM CAPITAL

“It is slightly disappointing because they telegraphed 16%-18% so I would have thought it would have been in that sort of range.”

“On the other hand they are promising more tightening ahead… so you have to give them the benefit of the doubt.”

“It would have been better if it was a bit higher but it’s going in the right direction.”

JON HARRISON, MANAGING DIRECTOR EMERGING MARKET MACRO STRATEGY, TS LOMBARD

“It seems many in the market were already prepared for a lower than expected rate hike, so while there was a sharp knee jerk reaction the market seems to have calmed down now.”

“I am more worried about the medium-term outlook which is likely to see further lira depreciation. The central bank has promised a gradual approach to tightening, but the high level of inflation and the need to rebuild lost credibility really warrants more robust action.”

TIM ASH, EM SENIOR SOVEREIGN STRATEGIST, BLUEBAY ASSET MANAGEMENT

“Ouch – disappointing. Not enough. They needed to front load hikes. Market won’t like that. I thought they would have learned from the Cetinkaya period.”

(Reporting by Amruta Khandekar, Ali Kucukgocmen, Marc Jones and Libby George; Compiled by Karin Strohecker, Editing by Hugh Lawson)

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By Andrew Osborn and Olzhas Auyezov

(Reuters) -Ukrainian missiles struck the Chonhar road bridge connecting Crimea with Russian-held parts of the southern Kherson region overnight, forcing traffic to be diverted to a different route, Russian-appointed officials said on Thursday.

The so-called “gate to Crimea”, known by Russians with a different spelling as the Chongar Bridge, is one of a handful of links between Crimea – which Moscow annexed from Ukraine in 2014 – and mainland Ukraine.

It is on a route used by the Russian military to move between Crimea and other parts of Ukraine under its control.

Kyiv says it wants to retake Crimea and drive all Russian forces from its territory. Yuriy Sobolevsky, a Ukrainian official on the governing body for the Kherson region, said the strike was “a blow to the military logistics of the occupiers”.

“The psychological impact on the occupiers and the occupying power is even more important. There is no place on the territory of Kherson region where they can feel safe,” he said via the Telegram messaging application.

Russian investigators said four missiles had been fired by Ukrainian forces at the bridge, the RIA news agency reported. It quoted a spokesman for military investigators as saying that markings found on the remains of one of the missiles suggested it had been made in France.

LARGE HOLE

Vladimir Saldo, the Russian-appointed governor of Kherson, parts of which Russian forces have captured during what Moscow calls its “special military operation”, said the road bridge had been damaged but that there were no casualties.

One picture Saldo posted on Telegram showed a large hole in the bridge’s surface with water visible beneath it and debris scattered nearby. Saldo suggested Ukraine may have used British-supplied Storm Shadow cruise missiles for the strike.

“The Kyiv terrorists want to intimidate Kherson residents and sow panic among the population, but they will not succeed. We know how to repair bridges quickly: vehicle passage will be restored in the very near future,” he said.

“We have an answer to every move by the enemy. A link between the Kherson region and Crimea continues to operate – a reserve route has been temporarily organised for vehicular traffic.”

Sergei Aksyonov, Crimea’s Russian-appointed governor, told people to stay calm and said specialists were examining the site to determine when traffic over the bridge could resume.

(Additiona reporting by Aleksandar VasovicEditing by Simon Cameron-Moore, Andrew Cawthorne and Gareth Jones)

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Staten Island, NY – Authorities responded to a distressing incident on Wednesday, June 21, 2023, at around 10:06 p.m. following a 911 call requesting a wellness check at 371 Van Name Avenue in Staten Island.

Upon their arrival, law enforcement officers discovered the lifeless body of a 23-year-old female. She had sustained multiple stab wounds. Tragically, emergency medical services pronounced her deceased at the scene. A knife, believed to be the weapon used, was recovered by the police.

No arrests have been made, and the investigation remains ongoing.

As authorities work to gather all pertinent facts surrounding this incident, the identity of the deceased victim is being withheld pending notification of her family.

Law enforcement agencies are urging anyone with any information regarding this incident to come forward and assist in the ongoing investigation.

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Albemarle County, VA – The Albemarle County Police Department has released the identity of the deceased victim in the recent homicide incident that took place on Tuesday in the 1600 block of Rio Hill Drive. The victim has been identified as 46-year-old Laura DeLapp.

Albemarle County Police Department has officially categorized the shots fired incident in the 1600 block of Rio Hill Drive as a homicide.

Preliminary information provided by the police suggests that this incident may be linked to a domestic-related matter.

At approximately 4:36 pm on Tuesday, officers from the Albemarle County Police Department were dispatched to the 1600 block of Rio Hill Drive following reports of shots being fired.

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Two sets of handcuffs.

BOSTON, MA – At around 12:22 PM on Monday, officers from the District D-4 Drug Control Unit (South End) and District E-5 Drug Control Unit (West Roxbury) executed arrest and search warrants. Ronald Geddes, 55, of Boston and Dynell Osorio, 41, of Roxbury were apprehended.

In the course of the search at 35 Northampton Street, officers found a Taurus G2S 9mm Luger Firearm with an obliterated serial number, loaded with seven rounds of ammunition, four cell phones, multiple bags of Fentanyl, crack cocaine, a bag of crystal methamphetamine, 42 Xanax pills, a digital scale, and $9,387 in cash.

Osorio was charged with possession with intent to distribute Class B drugs (crack cocaine), possession with intent to distribute Class A drugs (Fentanyl), unlawful possession of a firearm, and unlawful possession of a firearm with altered serial numbers.

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PATERSON, NJ – On Tuesday, Antonio Moore, 39, of Newark, New Jersey, was recently arrested by the Passaic County Prosecutor’s Office Public Integrity Unit in Totowa.

Moore, an employee of the Paterson Fire Department, was charged with one count of third-degree Theft.

The theft took place on August 21, 2022, when a gold chain and arrest warrant paperwork, placed into a property bag, went missing. Surveillance footage identified the man removing the bag from an unattended gurney as Moore.

Further information is withheld to ensure the safety of those involved and the ongoing investigation. Moore is set for Central Judicial Processing on July 5, 2023.

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LANCASTER, PA – Carlos Montalvo-Rivera, 55, formerly residing on the 500 block of Dauphin Street, has been recently sentenced to life in prison, in addition to 20 years. This verdict came on Wednesday for his heinous crimes committed in 2010, which involved setting fire to his own home, subsequently leading to the death of his wife.

Following a three-week trial that concluded on April 6, 2023, a jury found Montalvo-Rivera guilty of first-degree murder, arson, risking catastrophe, and three counts of attempted criminal homicide.

Lancaster County Judge Dennis Reinaker imposed the mandatory life sentence for first-degree homicide plus an additional 20 to 40 years. Montalvo-Rivera also owes $116,975.28 in restitution.

Assistant District Attorneys Christine Wilson, Jennifer Ponessa, and former Lancaster City Bureau of Police Detective Nathan Nickel were instrumental in the nearly nine-year investigation that led to charges filed in 2019.

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QUAKERTOWN, PA – Camryn Leigh Taylor, a 19-year-old resident of Quakertown, turned herself in on an arrest warrant on Friday, June 16, for charges of indecent assault, endangering the welfare of a child, and corruption of a minor.

The charges followed a complaint by a resident regarding the sexual abuse of their sensitive-aged child.

After being interviewed by detectives, Taylor admitted to the activities.

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BOSTON, MA – On Thursday, a residential breaking and entering occurred at 47 Roxbury Street. Several new pairs of brand name sneakers and multiple baseball caps were taken.

Detectives from District B-2 (Roxbury) are seeking the public’s help to identify the individuals seen in surveillance footage.

The Boston Police Department encourages anyone with information to contact District B-2 Detectives at (617) 343-4275 or anonymously via the CrimeStoppers Tip Line at 1 (800) 494-TIPS.

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Police lights

PITTSBURGH, PA – An investigation is underway following a shooting incident in Pittsburgh’s Troy Hill neighborhood that happened on Wednesday. Pittsburgh police officers were dispatched to Hatteras Street at approximately 12:15 a.m.

They located a man with a gunshot wound to the leg. Officers applied a tourniquet to mitigate the bleeding until paramedics arrived to transport the victim to a local hospital.

The victim is in stable condition, according to public safety officials. Pittsburgh police detectives are spearheading the ongoing investigation.

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ALBEMARLE COUNTY, VA – The Albemarle County Police Department reported a homicide on Tuesday. Officers were called to the vicinity of Rio Hills Drive at about 4:30 p.m. following reports of gunshots.

The ACPD believes the victim was shot by an acquaintance.

The victim was pronounced dead at the scene, while the suspect remains at large. Preliminary investigations suggest a domestic motive.

Individuals with information about the incident are requested to contact the ACPD at 434-296-5807.

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AMITYVILLE, NY – A man identified as Jayvon Bell, 21, was shot and injured by police while attempting to flee in North Amityville. According to Suffolk County Police Commissioner Rodney Harrison, the incident occurred on Wednesday around 11:45 a.m.

Bell, who was wanted for a previous taxi robbery and a missing firearm, fired at least one round at an officer who returned fire, striking Bell.

He was subsequently arrested and taken to Stony Brook University Hospital for non-life threatening injuries. The officers were treated for tinnitus at a local hospital.

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COLUMBUS, OH – Two teenagers were rushed to the hospital following a shooting in north Columbus. According to the local police, the incident took place on the 4000 block of Le Marie Court just before 8 p.m. on Tuesday.

Both victims were found shot and were immediately transported to Nationwide Children’s Hospital. One victim is in critical condition while the other is stable.

At this time, no suspect has been identified and no arrests have been made.

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COLUMBUS, OH – Two men were shot early Tuesday morning in the Weinland Park area of Columbus. The incident, reported near the 1300 block of North 4th Street shortly before 1 a.m., resulted in injuries to both victims who are now recovering in local hospitals.

Police collected 22 shell casings at the scene but have not yet identified a motive or suspects.

This comes on the heels of another shooting incident, where a man’s body was found near a dumpster on North 4th Street and East 3rd Avenue in Italian Village.

Detectives are investigating both incidents, though no connection has been confirmed.

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MOSCOW (Reuters) -The Russian chapter of the global environmental campaign group WWF on Thursday said it had cut ties with WWF International after Russia designated WWF as an “undesirable organisation”.

The label is equivalent to a ban on the group’s activities in Russia.

On Wednesday, the prosecutor-general had accused WWF-Russia of presenting “security threats in the economic sphere”. It said WWF had waged “tendentious” campaigns against the energy, oil and natural gas industries, which it said were aimed at “shackling” Russia’s economic development.

WWF-Russia had already been labelled a “foreign agent”, a designation that carries connotations of spying. The tag has been applied widely to civil society groups, with the effect of further crushing citizen-led activism, already under broad pressure from authorities.

WWF International said its Russian branch had operated as a “non-partisan national organisation, fully governed and managed by Russian citizens working towards the preservation of the biological diversity of the planet”.

WWF began working in Russia in 1989 and has been involved in major projects to protect endangered species such as Siberian (Amur) tigers, polar bears and European bison.

The organisation said it regretted being accused of posing a security threat, and that “conservation of our natural world is vital, particularly as the climate and biodiversity crises accelerate around the world”.

WWF’s fellow environmental group Greenpeace was banned in Russia last month. WWF Russia said it would no longer use the WWF acronym or panda logo.

(Reporting by Reuters; Writing by Alexander Marrow; Editing by Kevin Liffey and Mark Trevelyan)

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DAVID BLACKMON: Another Silly Outburst From The ‘Green’ Globalists

David Blackmon on June 21, 2023

In a new set of remarks attacking the global oil and gas industry last week, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres raised the hyperbole level one more time, attacking oil company investments in carbon capture and storage projects (CCS) as “proposals to become more efficient planet wreckers.”

The Financial Times, AP and other outlets reported that Guterres further stated, “Let’s face facts. The problem is not simply fossil fuel emissions. It’s fossil fuels — period. We are hurtling towards disaster, eyes wide open, with far too many willing to bet it all on wishful thinking, unproven technologies and silver bullet solutions.” Later in his comments, he also said, “Trading the future for thirty pieces of silver is immoral.”

The allusion to fossil fuel emissions apparently targeted United Arab Emirates COP28 president-designate Sultan al-Jaber, who is also the head of the state oil company Adnoc. Mr. al-Jaber has rejected attacks on the future license to operate of the industry itself, like those from Mr. Guterres, reasoning that the focus should be on the control of emissions instead. The UAE will play host to the 2023 COP28 conference in Dubai from November 30 through December 12, a reality that has provoked concern from the global climate alarmist movement.

Secretary Guterres has made a habit of using hyperbolic, bombastic rhetoric in his periodic attacks on the oil and gas industry, at one point in August 2022 claiming the industry was responsible for putting the world on a “highway to climate hell,” so his latest outburst is really no surprise. What is notable from this current bit of bombast, though, is the irony of a consistent proponent of an “energy transition” that schemes to displace highly energy-dense fuels like oil, gas and coal with low energy-density wind, solar and lithium-ion batteries accusing anyone else of being willing to rely on “wishful thinking, unproven technologies and silver bullet solutions.”

For decades now, since at least the early 1990s, we have been treated to claim after claim of a step-change in battery technology that would enable weather-reliant wind and solar to suddenly become 24/7 providers of energy being just around the corner. Yet, though billions have been invested in research and development of new technologies, this silver bullet remains unproven, still just around the corner, where it has supposedly resided for 30 years or more.

We have been consistently told by much of our legacy media, invariably quoting from renewables boosters, that wind energy is now extremely cheap and supposedly out-competing coal and natural gas. Yet, just Monday, the CEO of Big Wind developer Orsted, Mads Nipper, urged the British government to provide even more subsidization to offshore wind projects struggling to obtain private financing. This plea came despite the many billions of pounds in subsidies and tax breaks already provided by the UK to the wind industry, and despite the fact that Orsted itself enjoyed record profits in 2022.

Given that, perhaps UK officials should be pursuing to levy a windfall profit tax on Big Wind instead. After all, if “trading the future for 30 pieces of silver is immoral,” what then is trading the future for hundreds of billions in debt-funded subsidies?

The point here, though, is that wind energy remains exactly the kind of “unproven technology” Sec. Guterres accuses oil companies of pursuing. So, too, are the electric vehicles Guterres and other global elites promote as the “silver bullet” that can and will displace internal combustion engine (ICE) automobiles. Yet, despite 20 years of heavy subsidization, Teslas and other EVs remain pricey luxury items affordable only to the higher classes of people in most nations, including the United States and Europe.

The impulse Sec. Guterres apparently feels to ramp up the hyperbolic attacks on oil and gas in support of an energy transition that is increasingly failing to progress as he hopes is unhelpful, and frankly silly. Global leaders should be engaged in a serious debate about the future of energy and energy security, but doing that requires having serious people engaged in the discussions.

It is unfortunate that Mr. Guterres so frequently demonstrates he does not qualify as such a person.

David Blackmon is an energy writer and consultant based in Texas. He spent 40 years in the oil and gas business, where he specialized in public policy and communications.

The views and opinions expressed in this commentary are those of the author and do not reflect the official position of the Daily Caller News Foundation.

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].

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Middle School Math Scores See Biggest Drop In 50 Years

Reagan Reese on June 21, 2023

Math test scores for 13-year-old students have plummeted by the largest drop ever recorded in 50 years, according to a Wednesday report.

Between 2020 and 2023, 13-year-old students’ math scores dropped nine points and the students’ reading scores dropped four points, according to test data from the National Center for Education Statistics, better known as the “Nation’s Report Card.” The latest set of data demonstrates the learning loss students have suffered as a result of education disruptions, such as remote schooling, during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Students’ basic skills were disrupted in a way that we would not have thought before,” Peggy G. Carr, commissioner of the National Center for Education Statistics, said in a statement. “These data are clear on that point.”

The math test scores have dropped to their lowest level since 1990, according to the New York Times; the test has been administered since 1973. The 13-year-old students’ reading scores are at their lowest since 2004.

The decline in math scores was the largest in 50 years, according to an Axios analysis.

“The ‘green shoots’ of academic recovery that we had hoped to see have not materialized,” Carr said in a statement.

In 2022, civics scores saw their first ever decline in the area while just 13% of eighth graders tested proficiently in U.S. history, according to the Nation’s Report Card. From 2020 to 2022, K-12 reading levels fell back to levels last seen in the 1990s while math scores took their first ever dip.

School districts that stayed remote the longest during the COVID-19 pandemic, rather than returning to in-person learning, suffered the largest learning losses. Some school districts are expected to spend millions of dollars trying to make up for the learning loss.

The test used to gauge the students’ math and reading scores was administered to 8,700 students through November and December of 2022.

“The strongest advice I have is that we need to keep at it,” Carr said in a statement. “It is a long road ahead of us.”

All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact [email protected].

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