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Khashoggi family denies receiving 'settlement' from Saudi regime that murdered journalist

Jamal Khashoggi protest demonstration
© Reuters / Osman Orsal
A demonstrator holds a picture of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi outside the Saudi Aconsulate in Istanbul
The family of Jamal Khashoggi has said they have not discussed a settlement with the Saudi regime over the columnist's murder, refuting claims made in the mainstream press that a major payout had been granted by Riyadh.

Speaking on behalf of the family, Khashoggi's son Salah denied that any "settlement discussion" had taken place or is currently being discussed, in an English language statement published to Twitter on Wednesday. He added that those charged with committing the brutal murder were currently on trial and that they would "all be brought to justice and face punishment."

Earlier in April the deceased journalist's former employers at the Washington Post alleged that Khashoggi's children, including Salah, had received homes worth millions of dollars in the months following their father's murder, and were also in receipt of monthly stipends from Saudi authorities worth thousands of dollars.

Handcuffs

58 arrested in undercover child-sex sting during Final Four tournament

Final Four Tournament
Minnesota authorities conducted an undercover child-sex sting during the NCAA Final Four tournament last weekend that resulted in a total of 58 people being arrested, according to state authorities on Wednesday.

The undercover operation, run by the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) in several Twin Cities communities, arrested 47 people for probable cause of felony solicitation of a minor and 11 people for probable cause of sex trafficking and promotion of prostitution.

Eight of those arrested were from out-of-state and 28 victims, including one minor, were rescued from trafficking situations, according to BCA Superintendent Drew Evans.

NPC

How Conservatives took me in after SJW friends dropped me for not being 'PC enough'

npc meme
Recently, I went to have a beer with one of my friends from my former life as a social justice crusader. He's one of the few left-leaning friends I have left since I was mobbed and shamed out of my lefty, social justice community for "toxic behavior" on Twitter (in a straight-up Justine Sacco-style event). He's a great guy, and he's still friends with my old friends, so when we meet, it's a secretive thing.

As I was on my way, I started thinking about just how many people I had lost in my life over the last year or two. It's got to be in the hundreds. People who have known me for 20 years or more, who said they loved me, who took care of me and let me take care of them, are all mostly gone now. For many, it's a matter of their own social survival. Guilt by association is a h-ll of a thing.

As I was starting to tally the people I have lost touch with, another thought occurred to me: I probably have more conservative friends than liberal friends now. For a lifelong "bleeding heart" liberal, this is quite the unexpected life development. I decided to tweet something to that effect.

People 2

Sex is a biological variable, in the brain too

male female boy girl sex gender
© Yukipon
We are concerned that Lise Eliot's review of Gina Rippon's book The Gendered Brain (Nature 566, 453-454; 2019) undermines the premise that sex is a biological variable with respect to many medical conditions and drug responses (see J. A. Clayton and F. S. Collins Nature 509, 282-283; 2014).

As president-elect and president, respectively, of the Organization for the Study of Sex Differences, we disagree with Eliot's claim that the brain is "no more gendered than the liver or kidneys or heart". We also disagree that sex differences in behaviour are due to cultural effects on newborns, not to biological effects. In our view, these are not mutually exclusive. Sex disparities occur in animal models that are not subject to cultural bias.

The brain, like many organs, shows differences attributable to sex, both during health (see, for example, E. Luders et al. J. Neurosci. 29, 14265-14270; 2009) and during disease. Two-thirds of people with Alzheimer's disease are women; twice as many men as women have Parkinson's disease (see, for example, L. J. Young and D. W. Pfaff Front. Neuroendocrinol. 35, 253-254; 2014). And multiple sclerosis affects three times more women than men, although men with the condition develop neurological disability more quickly (see, for example, R. R. Voskuhl and S. M. Gold Nature Rev. Neurol. 8, 255-263; 2012). Sex is a modifier of disease risk and progression.

Studying the effects of sex differences in health and disease will lead to new treatments that target sex hormone and sex-chromosome effects. These will ultimately help people irrespective of their sex.

Nature 568, 171 (2019)

doi: 10.1038/d41586-019-01141-6

Comment: See also:


HAL9000

What privacy? Amazon is listening to what you tell Alexa, even if you 'opt out'

Amazon Bucharest
© Irina Vilcu/Bloomberg
Amazon has offices in this Bucharest building.
Tens of millions of people use smart speakers and their voice software to play games, find music or trawl for trivia. Millions more are reluctant to invite the devices and their powerful microphones into their homes out of concern that someone might be listening.

Sometimes, someone is.

Amazon.com Inc. employs thousands of people around the world to help improve the Alexa digital assistant powering its line of Echo speakers. The team listens to voice recordings captured in Echo owners' homes and offices. The recordings are transcribed, annotated and then fed back into the software as part of an effort to eliminate gaps in Alexa's understanding of human speech and help it better respond to commands.

The Alexa voice review process, described by seven people who have worked on the program, highlights the often-overlooked human role in training software algorithms. In marketing materials Amazon says Alexa "lives in the cloud and is always getting smarter." But like many software tools built to learn from experience, humans are doing some of the teaching.

The team comprises a mix of contractors and full-time Amazon employees who work in outposts from Boston to Costa Rica, India and Romania, according to the people, who signed nondisclosure agreements barring them from speaking publicly about the program. They work nine hours a day, with each reviewer parsing as many as 1,000 audio clips per shift, according to two workers based at Amazon's Bucharest office, which takes up the top three floors of the Globalworth building in the Romanian capital's up-and-coming Pipera district. The modern facility stands out amid the crumbling infrastructure and bears no exterior sign advertising Amazon's presence.

Comment: See also:


Newspaper

Texas abortion bill aims to charge women who have them and doctors who perform them with homicide

pro-life
© Jose Luis Magana / AP file
Anti-abortion activists protest outside the Supreme Court during the March for Life on Jan. 18.
Texas lawmakers are considering a bill that would ban abortion in the state and charge women who have abortions with homicide, which can carry the death penalty in the state.

Rep. Tony Tinderholt, a Republican, introduced the "Abolition of Abortion in Texas Act," or House Bill 896, in January to "protect the rights of an unborn child" but it was granted its first committee hearing on Monday and Tuesday.

Nearly 500 people testified, with 54 people testifying against the bill, according to The Washington Post.

"A living human child, from the moment of fertilization on fusion of a human spermatozoon with a human ovum, is entitled to the same rights, powers, and privileges as are secured or granted by the laws of this state to any other human child," the text of the bill reads.

Republican Rep. Matt Krause, who sits on the Texas House Committee on Judiciary and Civil Jurisprudence, which heard the bill, said in a statement on Facebook before the hearing that it was "the first legislative hearing since 1973 on this topic."

Comment:


Heart - Black

Teacher who had sex with a 13 y.o. schoolboy casts him as 'the real predator'

Justine Nelson
© Twitter
Teacher Justine Nelson’s lawyer Roger Nuttall has said the 13 year-old boy she is accused of sexually abusing is ‘the real predator’.
A teacher who had sex with a schoolboy aged as young as 13 has branded him 'the real predator' in a dramatic courtroom broadside.

Justine Nelson's defense attorney Roger Nuttall made the stinging attack on the teen in court Monday after highlighting testimony from a psychologist who claims Nelson is not a sexual predator.

Nuttall said that meant the unidentified boy, who says he was 13 when Nelson began targeting him at Tenaya Middle School in Merced, California, during 2016.

The attorney went on to tell jurors: 'You can't find someone guilty if they're mentally or physically coerced to do something.

'She wasn't the aggressor. He was the aggressor.'

Light Saber

Assange champion Cassandra Fairbanks on lead up to arrest - watching the watchers

assange arrest
© Ruptly
As UK police were waiting for the go-ahead to arrest WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, undercover officers loitering around the Ecuadorian embassy were not doing a very good job evading attention.

Supporters of Assange gathered near the embassy in London in the days prior to his arrest after WikiLeaks, citing a source in Ecuador's government, said on Twitter that they were expecting Assange to be expelled from the building imminently.

The supporters began to notice some peculiar activity and some of the faces hanging around the area became familiar. So familiar in fact that they were able to recognize them when they popped up in footage of the 47-year-old's arrest on Thursday.

Speaking to RT, journalist Cassandra Fairbanks recounted the peculiar activity she saw while staking out the stakeout.

Comment: Ms. Fairbanks has been a support of Julian Assange from the beginning of his confinement.


Bullseye

Whistleblowers and journalists decry flimsy US Assange charges: '5 years for ATTEMPT to crack a password?' - no chance for fair trial

assange protest sign free press
© Agence France-Presse / Daniel Leal-Olivas
Journalists and whistleblowers have weighed in on the indictment brought by the US against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, calling the current password-cracking charge "weak," but setting a dangerous precedent for press freedom.

A statement from the Department of Justice on Wednesday said Assange had been charged for engaging in a conspiracy to crack a password on a Department of Defense computer in order to release classified information. If found guilty, he could face up to five years in prison.

Fellow whistleblower and former CIA employee Edward Snowden said on Twitter that the "weakness of the US charge against Assange is shocking" in that the allegation that Assange and Manning had "tried" to crack the password had been public knowledge for "nearly a decade," and that the Obama administration's DOJ had concluded that prosecuting Assange would pose a threat to press freedom.

Comment: The hope of a fair trial is nil according to CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou. He should know:
Kiriakou was the first person to be sentenced in the US for leaking classified material to a journalist as part of President Barack Obama's crackdown on whistleblowers. His case was heard by the District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia. He took a plea bargain in October 2012 and was sentenced to 30 months in prison.

The same court is handling the case against Julian Assange, who is alleged to have conspired with WikiLeaks source Chelsea Manning as part of her leaking the damning classified materials. Assange was arrested by the UK authorities on Thursday after Ecuador allowed British police into its embassy in London to drag the whistleblower out.

Kiriakou believes that once in US custody, Assange would face additional charges and may spend the rest of his life in jail.


"I think that there are many more charges to be considered for Julian. I would expect a superseding indictment, possibly to include espionage charges," he told RT.
I don't think Julian is looking at five years in prison. He is probably looking at 50 years in prison.

The US court that would try Assange will not give him a fair trial, Kiriakou believes. "They don't call EDVA the 'Espionage Court' for nothing," he tweeted earlier in the day. He told RT he was speaking from his personal experience.
"Judge Leonie Brinkema is a Reagan appointee to the federal bench and she was promoted to District Court bench by Bill Clinton in the mid-1990s. She reserves all national security cases for herself. She handled my case, the Jeffrey Sterling case [over leaking details of a CIA op to journalist James Risen], she is Julian's judge, she has reserved the [NSA whistleblower] Ed Snowden case for herself."

"No national security defendant has ever won a case in the EDVA. In my case, I asked Judge Brinkema to declassify 70 documents that I needed to defend myself. She denied all 70 documents. And so I had literally no defense for myself and was forced to take a plea."
Kiriakou said he hopes that the way Assange is being treated by the US justice will galvanize the US public and result in more documents being leaked to expose the misdeeds of the US government.
[The prosecution of Assange] was only theoretical until this morning. Now it is a reality that we have to face. This is an assault on our civil liberties here in the United States. It's an assault on our constitutionally guaranteed right of freedom of the press and freedom of speech.
Critics of the US case against Assange, like Kiriakou, say all he has been doing was publishing material of public interest, which was also embarrassing to the US government. This is exactly what journalists in the US have been doing before him when they reported major scandals in cases like Watergate, Pentagon Papers or Iran-Contra.

"If Julian Assange as publisher and journalist is prosecuted, then there is literally nothing to stop the government from prosecuting journalists at the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times and anywhere else," he warned.



Handcuffs

Resistance hero Michael Avenatti to be indicted on 36 counts, including fraud, perjury, tax-evasion, and embezzlement

avenatti nike extortion
© Stephanie Keith/Getty Images
Michael Avenatti speaks to the media after being arrested for allegedly trying to extort Nike for $15-$25 million on March 25, 2019 in New York City.
A federal grand jury has brought a 36-count indictment against celebrity attorney Michael Avenatti, charging him with embezzlement, fraud, perjury, and more.

The Los Angeles Times reported Thursday morning that charges stem from Avenatti's dealings with multiple clients, including Geoffrey Ernest Johnson, who is mentally ill and a paraplegic. Johnson won a $4 million settlement from Los Angeles County, but Avenatti hid the money from him for years. He allegedly also hid $2.75 million from another client. The day after he received that money, he allegedly purchased a $2.5 million private jet for a company he owned. The jet has since been seized by federal agents

"Avenatti stole millions of dollars from five clients and used a tangled web of shell companies and bank accounts to cover up the theft, the Santa Ana grand jury alleged in an indictment that prosecutors will make public Thursday," the Times reported.