Society's Child
The individual, suing as a "John Doe," filed claims in September 2018 with the allegation of being forced to grab the actor's genitals twice during a massage two years earlier at a private residence in Malibu. In May, a federal judge in California allowed the case to move forward despite Spacey's objection that the plaintiff's identity was being shielded.
Now, just a month after the parties came to a plan for proceeding in the suit that detailed prospective discovery and envisioned a seven- to 11-day trial, the plaintiff's attorney has informed Spacey that the client "recently passed."
No further detail is provided, and a request to the plaintiff's attorney for more information has not been answered.
There is perhaps no better example of watchdog journalism that holds the powerful to account and exposes their corruption than that of WikiLeaks, which exposed to the world evidence of widespread war crimes the U.S. military was committing in Iraq, including the killing of two Reuters journalists; showed that the U.S. government and large corporations were using private intelligence agencies to spy on activists and protesters; and revealed how the military hid tortured Guantanamo Bay prisoners from Red Cross inspectors.
It's this kind of real journalism that our First Amendment was meant to protect but engaging in it has instead made WikiLeaks publisher Julian Assange the target of a massive smear campaign for the last several years — including false claims that Assange is working with Vladimir Putin and the Russians and hackers, as well as open calls by corporate media pundits for him to be assassinated.
Anyone concerned about their failure to "do their part" in "preventing climate change" can confess their sins to NBC in one of six categories: plastics, meat, energy, transportation, paper and food waste. Previous visitors' climate "sins" are posted anonymously, in case you need inspiration or can't remember how you last violated the trust of Mother Nature.
But NBC's audience doesn't seem to be falling for it. "I run my AC 24/7. I'm not going to sweat to appease this climate religion," reads one confession posted on the site. "I think the climate has always been changing, and I'm not going to stop eating meat because of cult-like manipulation by the left," reads another.
School District 11 tells 11 News they are investigating this, but they're not saying much else because it is a personnel matter.
Seventeen-year-old Jesse Boling and his mother Cynthia are both furious. Cynthia Boling met with the Mitchell High School principal Monday morning and says she wants the employee fired.
According to Jesse, he was talking to two of his friends who were vaping in the locker room at Mitchell. He says a school employee saw them and took them to the office.
Backpacks and pockets were searched, but Jesse -- who says he was the only one without vaping tools -- received an extended search.
"This is where it kind of gets weird."
Comment: Totalitarianism at its finest!
Responding to a reader who joked that buying Snowden's book Permanent Record might have put him on a list of people to be spied on, the exiled former intelligence contractor said in all seriousness that everyone is being spied on regardless.
"Systems of mass surveillance strive to record all people, in all places, at all times. The question is no longer 'Am I on the list?' it is 'What's my rank on the list?'," Snowden tweeted on Wednesday.
Comment: Snowden's book deserves to be a best-seller. He still has a voice for those willing to hear, unlike Julian Assange.
- US government files lawsuit against Snowden over book, 'violates CIA & NSA non-disclosure agreements'
- John Kiriakou: US lawsuit against Edward Snowden is a warning to whistleblowers to keep mouths shut
- Snowden's lawyer: Upon close review, Trump's team will understand whistleblower 'acted in interests of US citizens'
- Edward Snowden talks COINTELPRO, MK-ULTRA & "Black Lives Matter" (VIDEO)
As activist groups around the world prepare to stage a global 'climate strike' on Friday, eco-warriors in Washington DC have been staging smaller rallies and outreach events all summer. Behind the drum circles, yoga classes and hacky-sacking that accompanied such events, a cauldron of anxiety bubbled.
According to the Daily Beast, millennial activists -though striving for the same goals as concerned climate scientists worldwide- are losing their minds. Convinced that the world is ending, they're turning to group therapy sessions to deal with "their feelings of despair, depression, and anxiety."
Lewandowski testified in front of the House Judiciary Committee the day before. While Democrats attempted to get him to shed light on one of the 10 instances Robert Mueller identified as potential obstruction of justice on the part of President Trump, Lewandowski appeared confrontational and refused to answer most questions.
The former Trump campaign manager appeared on CNN's New Day and got into a heated back-and-forth with Camerota.
Camerota repeatedly asked Lewandowski about a specific interaction he had during his testimony with House Judiciary Counsel Barry Berke, in which he was asked about lying to reporters. He responded to the questions saying, "I have no obligation to have a candid conversation with the media whatsoever, just like they have no obligation to cover me honestly, and they do it inaccurately all the time."
Wholesome images of children touting their favorite new-school-year accessory quickly give way to kids repurposing those accessories to try to survive while under attack from a shooter in a new commercial from Sandy Hook Promise. The ad, released on Wednesday, is being alternately embraced by gun control proponents and reviled by gun rights groups - and parents distressed at the rise of sensationalist "fear porn."
Rather than the usual gun-control narratives centered on ripping guns out of the hands of Second Amendment-loving citizens or "cracking down" on the nonviolent mentally ill, Sandy Hook Promise's stated goal is educating families on the warning signs that a person might be planning a violent attack. Its website claims that "in 4 out of 5 school shootings, at least one other person had knowledge of the attacker's plan but failed to report it."
Comment: See also: The best explanation for mass shootings: Social contagion
And check out SOTT radio's:
- Behind the Headlines: Florida School Mass Shooting: Gun Control, Mental Illness and the Criminal Mind
- The Truth Perspective: The Strange Contagion: How Viral Thoughts and Emotions Secretly Control Us
Announced on Wednesday, the new feature activates when a user says, "Alexa, donate to [candidate name]." Candidates signed up to the program will be able to receive donations of up to $200, starting next month, according to Amazon's blog.
Though Alexa users can already donate to charity through their monitoring device - sorry, "virtual assistant" - the new foray into campaign financing is slightly more controversial. Some Twitter commenters joked that the devices might strategically "mishear" requests to donate to President Donald Trump's re-election campaign.

Baltimore defense attorney Kenneth Ravenell is facing federal charges of racketeering conspiracy, conspiracy to commit money laundering, and narcotics conspiracy.
According to the indictment, Ravenell violated the "legitimate and lawful purpose of the law firm where he worked," in order to enrich himself and another by getting payments from a drug trafficker client and his associates in exchange for telling the client and his associates how to evade law enforcement and continue their trafficking.
Ravenell allegedly would protect and assist co-conspirators by "coaching" them about ways to avoid the law and evade law enforcement while trafficking narcotics.















Comment: Let them sail yachts: Why Greta Thunberg and the environmental elite hate you: See also: