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Cambridge 'Women's Campaign' student group requests burden of proof in sex assault cases be lowered

The University of Cambridge
© Gustavo Valiente / Global Look Press
The University of Cambridge.
The University of Cambridge may lower the standard of proof in sexual assault cases after a women's union complained that the current requirement of beyond reasonable doubt, as is the law - is too tough on victims.

Cambridge University admitted in February that it has a serious problem with on-campus sexual misconduct, after the university received nearly 180 complaints in nine months under its newly launched anonymous reporting system.

Over 800 students have penned an open letter to Cambridge's Vice-Chancellor Stephen Toope, demanding a change in how sexual misconduct cases are handled by the university. The letter argued that requiring the same standard of proof as criminal law puts victims off coming forward.

Yoda

Capitol police drag former CIA analyst Ray McGovern from Haspel hearing after anti-torture protest

McGovern protest Haspel hearing
© Kevin Lamarque / Reuters
Former CIA analyst Ray McGovern is removed during acting CIA Director Gina Haspel's testimony at her Senate Intelligence Committee confirmation hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., May 9, 2018.
Former CIA analyst and anti-war activist Ray McGovern was forcibly removed from the US Senate hearing where Gina Haspel, President Donald Trump's nominee for CIA director, was answering questions about her record on torture.

McGovern was dragged from the room by Capitol Police after demanding that Haspel answer questions put to her about the waterboarding of terror suspects at a CIA "black site" in Thailand.

Comment: Look at the smug expressions of the bureaucratic flunkies as Mr. McGovern is violently hustled out of the hearing room. Hannah Arendt's banality of evil is alive and well.


X

Senate Intel Committee: 'Russian hackers' could have affected 2016 election in a few states, but didn't

CartoonCornerstone
© Adam Zyglis/The Buffalo News
The first interim report by the US Senate Intelligence Committee on alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election found no evidence of votes being manipulated by Russia's alleged 'malicious' activity.

In its preliminary report released on Tuesday, the committee claims that the so-called "actors affiliated with the Russian government" interfered with voting systems in at least 18 states, and probably in three more. The report is a result of more than a year-long investigation into the alleged Russian effort to "sow discord" within American society and erode trust in its democratic institutions.

"Almost all of the states" that the report says were targeted by a Russia-masterminded cyber operation were subjected to "vulnerability scanning directed at their Secretary of State websites or voter registration infrastructure," the report states.

In six of the states, which were not specified in the report, the supposed "Russian actors" tried to gain access to voting-related websites. In a few states, according to the report, they succeeded at the task, breaking cybersecurity defenses. Additionally, "in a small number of states," the alleged perpetrators "were in position to, at a minimum, alter or delete voter registration data."

However, this malicious cyber activity, supposedly orchestrated by the Kremlin, did little to no damage to the integrity of the US elections, as the Committee says "it has not seen any evidence that vote tallies were manipulated or that voter registration information was deleted or modified."

Comment: In other words, the alleged Russian hackers had no effect on the election as that was not their intent. See also:


Handcuffs

Former CIA agent charged with conspiring to commit espionage for China

CIA emblem
© Unknown
A former CIA operative, Jerry Chun Shing Lee, has been charged with conspiring to commit espionage on behalf of the Chinese government, the US department of justice said.

Lee, 53, was charged with one count of conspiracy to gather or deliver national defence information to aid a foreign government and two counts of unlawfully retaining documents related to national defence, according to a statement from the department of justice. If convicted he faces life in prison.

Lee, a naturalised US citizen and former CIA case officer, is suspected of revealing the names of CIA assets and undercover operatives in China, enabling Chinese authorities to cripple American intelligence operations. Between 2010 and 2012, more than a dozen US sources in China were killed or imprisoned, the New York Times reported last year.

Lee was arrested in January after arriving at New York's JFK airport. At the time, he was charged with unlawful retention of national defence information but not espionage.

Comment: See also:


Bad Guys

Distressing video shows terrified Yemeni children dragged from rubble after Saudi-led bombing

Yemeni child trapped under piles of rubble
© Ruptly
Distressing video footage has captured the moment rescuers scrambled to help Yemeni children trapped under piles of rubble following an airstrike. The agonizing scenes are the latest grim chapter in a war ignored by MSM.

The children are victims of an attack on the Hamdan district of Sanaa, which Yemeni officials have blamed on the Saudi-led coalition that has been carrying out a military campaign for the last three years.

Children are seen crying for help and clambering to escape from under tons of concrete and twisted steel. Frantic adults are desperately trying to comfort and assist them as they scramble to free themselves from the wreckage of the destroyed buildings.

V

30,000 protest as German police granted sweeping new surveillance powers under new laws

Protesters in Germany
© Michael Dalder
Thousands of people have gathered in the center of Munich to protest against the introduction of sweeping new surveillance powers, including the opening of mail, for German police.

Police now estimate that 30,000 people have turned out for the protest - a figure far in excess of the 7,000 expected by event organizers. Emergency services are on hand to offer water to protesters stuck in the stationary march, according to police.

Plans for a pre-rally speech at Marienplatz, the city's central square and transport hub, were ditched due to overcrowding in the square, according to Munich-based tabloid TZ. There have also been reports of overcrowding at nearby Odeonsplatz and traffic congestion around the route of the march.

Arrow Up

EU imports of Russian gas have hit a record high despite the Skripals, election meddling & all that jazz

oil pipeline
© spooh / Getty Images
European countries boosted imports of Russian gas to unprecedented levels in April with overall supplies in 2018 expected to climb above 200 billion cubic meters for the first time ever, ignoring the impact of strained relations.

In the first quarter of this year, Gazprom's gas deliveries to Europe reportedly increased by 6.6 percent against the same quarter a year ago. The deliveries to European countries kept on growing last month, even after the winter heating season ended.

In April, the Russian energy giant shipped some 15.9 billion cubic meters of gas to non-CIS countries, reports RIA Novosti. The number is seen as record-breaking with shipments reportedly soaring to rates that are unusual for warmer months.

Sales of the Russian gas to Europe reached 70 billion cubic meters from January to April. The high demand for the fuel was triggered by an extreme cold spell as the European states passed through one of the coldest winters over the past decade. Europe continued purchasing higher volumes, even after the winter, to refill gas storage that had been drained during cold months.

Handcuffs

Doctor for sex trafficking ring NXIVM finally arrested, charged for conducting illegal human experiments

Brandon Porter, NXIVM sex trafficking
Dr. Brandon Porter, a physician described as the resident doctor to the NXIVM sex trafficking cult, has been charged with conducting illegal human experiments by the New York medical oversight board.

The decision by the New York Department of Health comes after they initially refused to act on a complaint from former cult member Jennifer Kobelt, who claimed that she was forced to watch graphic dismemberment and rape videos as part of an alleged "fright study" Porter was conducting.

Kobelt, in her August 2017 complaint, alleged that Porter may have conducted his "fright study" on as many as 100 people.

Comment: Inside the New York sex cult where young women are branded and brainwashed with snuff movies


Briefcase

McDonald's in North Korea? Kim reportedly seeking investments from US following historic peace summit

McDonald's Kim Jong-un
The historic summit between the leaders of North and South Korea has whetted the former's appetite for investments from the US, according to a South Korean official, as quoted by the Daily Express.

After the two Koreas gave the go-ahead for a new era of peace, Chung-in Moon, special adviser to South Korean President Moon Jae-in, even suggested outlets of US fast food giant McDonalds could be opened in Pyongyang as soon as long-term tensions between North Korea and the West ease.

"They want American investment coming to North Korea. They welcome American sponsors and multilateral consortiums coming into North Korea," he said in an interview with the media.

Comment: Pompeo meets Kim Jong-Un: Sets date and place for Trump meeting, returns to US with three hostages


Bad Guys

Venezuelan soldiers deserting in droves ahead of presidential election

Venezuelan soldiers training

Venezuelan soldiers training
Military officers are joining the exodus of Venezuelans to Colombia and Brazil, fleeing barracks and forcing President Nicolas Maduro's government to call upon retirees and militia to fill the void.

High desertion rates at bases in Caracas and the countryside are complicating security plans for the presidential election in 13 days, which by law require military custody of electoral materials and machinery at voting centers.

"The number is unknown because it used to be published in the Official Gazette. Now, it is not," said Rocio San Miguel, director of Control Ciudadano, a military watchdog group in Caracas. She said soldiers are fleeing for the same reason citizens are: "Wages are low, the quality of food and clothing isn't good."

Last week, officers who rank as high as general were called in and quartered for several days at their units. Retired officials and militia members were also contacted by their superiors, according to one retired officer who asked not to be named for fear of angering the regime. Government officials are training these fill-in personnel for the election, said a second retired officer.

Comment: Venezuela is suffering many problems, but they have been induced either externally, or with the help of Western-aligned oligarchs within the country. And why: