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Three children charged with murder of 14-year-old boy

Three children charged with murder of 14-year-old boy

Yahooa day ago

Two 14 year-olds and a 16 year-old have been charged with the murder of a 14-year-old boy.
Ibrahima Seck was found with stab wounds after police were called to reports of a serious assault in the New Moston area of Manchester at around 5pm on Sunday.Greater Manchester Police arrested the three boys, who cannot be named for legal reasons. They have been charged with murder and possession of a bladed article.The teenagers are due to appear at Manchester magistrates' court on Wednesday.A 37-year-old woman and a 14-year-old girl who were arrested on suspicion of assisting an offender have been released on bail, pending further enquiries, the force added.In a tribute, 'well-liked' Ibrahima was described by his parents as 'funny, caring, hard working' and their 'best friend'.Det Ch Insp Tony Platten, of the major incident team, said: 'The last 48 hours have seen an extensive amount of police work, which has seen multiple officers working to help get the answers Ibrahima's family deserve.'Now that we have secured three charges, a new level of proceedings is active, and we will continue to work on our investigation as this progresses.'Ibrahima's family remain at the forefront of our minds and we will be remaining in close contact with them throughout the process.'Police asked for anyone with information, doorbell or dashcam footage to come forward.
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Supreme Court of Canada to hear appeal in long-running Facebook privacy case
Supreme Court of Canada to hear appeal in long-running Facebook privacy case

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Supreme Court of Canada to hear appeal in long-running Facebook privacy case

OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada has agreed to review a ruling that concluded Facebook broke federal privacy law by failing to adequately inform users of risks to their data when using the popular social media platform. Last September, the Federal Court of Appeal found Facebook, now known as Meta Platforms, did not obtain the meaningful consent required by the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act between 2013 and 2015. The decision overturned a 2023 Federal Court ruling. The Court of Appeal said Facebook invited millions of apps onto its platform and did not adequately supervise them. It found that the Federal Court's failure to engage with the relevant evidence on this point was an error of law. Privacy commissioner Philippe Dufresne called the Court of Appeal decision an acknowledgment that international firms whose business models rely on users' data must respect Canadian privacy law. Facebook applied for a hearing at the Supreme Court, arguing the Court of Appeal took the wrong approach to consent and security safeguards under the privacy law. It said in a written application that, rather than evaluating Facebook's multi-layered efforts to obtain meaningful consent, the Court of Appeal focused myopically on the platform's privacy policy alone. The Supreme Court, following its usual practice, gave no reasons Thursday for agreeing to hear the case. A 2019 investigation report from then-federal privacy commissioner Daniel Therrien and his British Columbia counterpart cited major shortcomings in Facebook's procedures and called for stronger laws to protect Canadians. The probe followed reports that Facebook let an outside organization use a digital app to access users' personal information, which was then passed to others. The app, at one point known as "This is Your Digital Life," encouraged users to complete a personality quiz but collected information about the people who installed the app and data about their Facebook friends. Recipients of the information included the British consulting firm Cambridge Analytica, which was involved in U.S. political campaigns and targeted messaging. About 300,000 Facebook users worldwide added the app, leading to the potential disclosure of the personal information of approximately 87 million others, including more than 600,000 Canadians, the commissioners' report said. The commissioners concluded that Facebook violated PIPEDA by failing to obtain valid and meaningful consent from installing users and their friends, and that it had "inadequate safeguards" to protect user information. Facebook disputed the investigation's findings. The company has said it tried to work with the privacy commissioner's office and take measures that would go above and beyond what other companies do. In early 2020, Therrien asked the Federal Court to declare Facebook had violated the law. A judge ruled the commissioner failed to establish that Facebook breached the law on meaningful consent. He also agreed with Facebook's argument that once a user authorizes it to disclose information to an app, the social media company's safeguarding duties under PIPEDA come to an end. In its decision, the Court of Appeal noted Facebook's contention that users read privacy policies presented to them when they sign up to social networking websites — something the judges called "a dubious assumption" given such documents can run to thousands of words. "Terms that are on their face superficially clear do not necessarily translate into meaningful consent," Justice Donald Rennie wrote for a three-member panel. "Apparent clarity can be lost or obscured in the length and miasma of the document and the complexity of its terms." In this case, Rennie said, a central question was whether a reasonable person "would have understood that in downloading a personality quiz (or any app), they were consenting to the risk that the app would scrape their data and the data of their friends, to be used in a manner contrary to Facebook's own internal rules (i.e. sold to a corporation to develop metrics to target advertising in advance of the 2016 U.S. election)." This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 12, 2025. Jim Bronskill, The Canadian Press Sign in to access your portfolio

An investigation accused a senior State Department official of having ties to Russia. Here's what we know
An investigation accused a senior State Department official of having ties to Russia. Here's what we know

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An investigation accused a senior State Department official of having ties to Russia. Here's what we know

Rumors that Darren Beattie — a senior official in the U.S. State Department — had personal ties to Russia spread in June 2025. Posts across multiple platforms (archived, archived, archived, archived) claimed that the uncle of Beattie's wife, a Russian woman named Yulia Kirillova, had roles in Russian government and even once received a personal "thank you" message from Russian President Vladimir Putin. The posts pointed to an investigation (archived) published by U.K. news outlet The Telegraph on June 3, claiming that Beattie — whom the investigation asserted shut down the U.S. government's Russian disinformation unit — had links to the Kremlin. Below, we break down Beattie's history, what the investigation alleged, how Beattie's wife responded publicly to the claims and what evidence exists to support them: Beattie is not new to public controversy. He worked in the first administration of President Donald Trump as a policy aide and speechwriter, but left the White House in 2018 after CNN broke the story that he spoke at the 2016 H.L. Mencken Club Conference, an event attended by white nationalists such as Richard Spencer. Less than a year after Beattie's firing from the Trump administration, then-U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz hired him to work as a special adviser for speechwriting (archived). Trump then appointed Beattie in 2020 as a member of the U.S. Commission for the Preservation of America's Heritage Abroad, a position from which the administration of then-President Joe Biden forced him to resign in 2022 after several groups — including the Anti-Defamation League — denounced his appointment given his antisemitic history and the position's responsibility to identify and preserve international heritage sites, including historic sites of the Holocaust. (In his X account's bio, Beattie wrote that he is a "Proud Jew.") In February 2025, Trump appointed Beattie as the under secretary for public diplomacy and public affairs, a top position in the State Department. By April, Beattie had spearheaded the effort to shut down the Counter Foreign Information Manipulation and Disinformation office — a department responsible for combating foreign information interference, particularly regarding claims of Russian interference in U.S. elections, as well as monitoring Iranian and Chinese influence. In an interview with conservative activist Michael Benz, Secretary of State Marco Rubio credited Beattie with leading the effort to shut down the office, saying it had "nearly destroyed America's long free speech history." Before his role in the government, the Telegraph investigation claimed, Beattie was consistently vocal on his social media regarding his pro-Russia views. The Telegraph reported that Beattie's social media showed staunch support for Putin with posts praising him as "brave and strong" and claiming Putin had "done more to advance conservative positions in the US than any Republican." His official government page is, as of this writing, publicly viewable on the State Department website (archived), indicating that he still has a senior position in the department. The Telegraph's investigation made two major claims: that Beattie married a woman from Russia, and that she is the niece of a businessman with close ties to Putin. According to Florida public records The Telegraph acquired, Beattie married Kirillova in 2021 in a ceremony in Broward County. Kirillova's apparent Facebook profile — which matches the profile picture reported by The Telegraph — indicates she moved to Washington, D.C., in January 2025, just a week before Beattie's appointment. She also responded to The Telegraph's allegations after its investigation, speaking on behalf of herself and her uncle. "As for my uncle, who I believe was never even contacted for this piece, he has never held a position in the Kremlin or Russian government, ever," she told The Times in a story published on June 3. The Telegraph's investigation claimed Kirillova studied in Moscow before moving to Canada and eventually the U.S. These claims appear consistent with her Facebook page, which indicates she completed her education in Moscow before studying at the University of Calgary and then receiving a law degree from Georgetown Law School in Washington, D.C., in 2019. The Telegraph reported Kirillova is the niece of Sergei Chernikov, a Russian businessman with part ownership in the Bashkir Soda Co. The Telegraph alleged he had close ties to Putin and that he shared ownership of an apartment with Kirillova's mother. Kirillova legitimated the claim that Chernikov was her uncle when she responded to the assertions in a statement to The Times, saying: Far from being Kremlin-aligned, Putin publicly denounced my uncle and his ownership stake in Bashkir Soda, whereupon the Putin government stole his company from him. He has lived in exile from Russia for five years. I am deeply disappointed that the Telegraph would omit these material and publicly discoverable facts that completely undermine the suggestion that my uncle or I am Kremlin-linked — the narrative backbone of the entire piece. We reached out to Chernikov via his Facebook account for comment, and will update this story if we receive a response. A Russian news outlet published a story in 2023 that claimed Chernikov supported and participated in Putin's 2000 presidential election campaign, "for which he even received gratitude from the president" — echoing the Telegraph's claim that he "received a letter of thanks from Putin for his help in the election campaign which first brought the Russian leader to power." The Telegraph article detailed Chernikov's foray into politics as follows: The same year [2000], Mr Chernikov took his first step into politics, taking a role in the ministry of natural resources, before becoming deputy governor of the Nenets region in Siberia. From 2008 to 2010, he was a member of Russia's civic chamber, which was founded following a proposal by Putin and is notionally meant to scrutinise the activities of the Russian government. When the chamber was set up, critics claimed that it would be staffed by Kremlin allies and used to diminish a rival power base in the Russian State Duma. The claim Chernikov was involved in Russian politics originated before The Telegraph story. The Russian news story above, as translated by Google Translate, reads as follows: According to Chernikov's biography on the website of the Public Chamber of the Russian Federation, of which he became a member in 2008, the businessman participated in Vladimir Putin's 2000 election campaign, for which he even received gratitude from the president. In 2000-2001, he managed to work as the first deputy head of the North-West Department of the Ministry of Natural Resources, and after several months he spent as the first vice-governor of the Nenets Okrug. However, from this experience, in his own words, he concluded that public service was not for him, and returned to business. We were unable, as of this writing, to find Chernikov's official biography on the website of the Civic Chamber of the Russian Federation. However, it was clear that by 2020, Putin publicly intervened in the Bashkir Soda Co., after protests erupted over the company's plans to continue mining limestone from a mountain sacred to local residents for the production of baking soda. A Russian court also determined the 2013 privatization of the company "was carried out with violations," and the vast majority of the company subsequently transferred to federal ownership. Putin then reportedly ordered the return of a portion of the shares to the trust management of the locale's authorities. It's unclear whether Russia officially forced Chernikov into exile and where exactly he lives, but according to the Russian news outlet, his social network profile lists Geneva, Switzerland, as his city of residence. Beattie — a historically vocal supporter of Putin — continues to hold his position in the U.S. State Department, and according to an investigation by The Telegraph, he married the niece of a Russian businessman — Chernikov — with reported links to Putin. A Russian news outlet previously reported several claims about Chernikov, including that he received a personal thank you from Putin for his support in the 2000 election and held some government roles years before The Telegraph's investigation made similar assertions. Reports indicate Putin intervened with Chernikov's chemical company, and Chernikov may be exiled from Russia, as of this writing. However, Snopes has not reviewed primary evidence related to these claims, and therefore cannot substantiate the claims in their entirety. 'Владимир Путин передал половину акций БСК Башкирии'. УФА1.ру, 8 June 2021, 'Следы ведут в Башкирию: разгадываем тайну самого дорогого памятника на Ваганьковском кладбище'. УФА1.ру, 10 May 2023, 'Darren Beattie'. United States Department of State, Accessed 10 June 2025. Kaczynski, Andrew. 'Speechwriter Who Attended Conference with White Nationalists in 2016 Leaves White House | CNN Politics'. CNN, 19 Aug. 2018, 'Как Башкирия отстояла Куштау (и потеряла БСК): хроника громких протестов в защиту шихана'. УФА1.ру, 15 Aug. 2021, Kelly, Caroline. 'Gaetz Hires Ex-WH Staffer Who Attended Conference with White Nationalists | CNN Politics'. CNN, 19 Apr. 2019, 'Long Live Kushtau Mountain and Its Defenders'. Greenpeace International, 4 June 2025, 'Protecting and Championing Free Speech at the State Department'. United States Department of State, Accessed 10 June 2025. Smith, Benedict. 'Trump Official Who Shut down Counter-Russia Agency Has Links to Kremlin'. The Telegraph, Steck, Andrew Kaczynski, Jennifer Hansler, Em. 'Trump Appoints Speechwriter Fired for Attending Conference with White Nationalists to Top State Department Role | CNN Politics'. CNN, 3 Feb. 2025, Taylor, Adam. 'Rubio Shuts State Dept. Foreign Disinformation Office, Citing Censorship'. The Washington Post, Washington, George Grylls. Russian Wife of US Official Denies 'Malicious Claims' of Kremlin Links. 3 June 2025, 'You Searched for Beattie - Page 3 of 81'. Revolver News, Accessed 10 June 2025. - YouTube. Accessed 10 June 2025. 'Путин передал акции "Башкирской содовой компании" фирме бывшего бизнес-партнера Ротенбергов'. УФА1.ру, 13 Apr. 2023,

Laurence Fox wears ‘two tier' cap to court
Laurence Fox wears ‘two tier' cap to court

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timean hour ago

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Laurence Fox wears ‘two tier' cap to court

Laurence Fox wore a 'two tier' cap as he arrived at court over a sexual offence. The former actor, 47, is accused of sharing a compromising photo on social media of TV presenter Narinder Kaur, who regularly appears on Good Morning Britain. The cap was Fox's second apparent reference during his trial to 'two-tier justice' – the claim that the criminal justice system treats different groups of people differently. He had arrived at court in April with a cap that read 'two-tier Britain'. He appeared at Woolwich Crown Court charged with two counts under the Sexual Offences Act 2003, while Ms Kaur, who has waived her right to anonymity, sat in the public gallery. The former actor is accused of sharing a photograph of a person's genitals 'intending that the person or another person would see the genitals, and for the purpose of obtaining sexual gratification, and being reckless as to whether that person would be caused alarm, distress or humiliation' in the first count. The second count alleges he shared a photograph which showed, or appeared to show, 'another person in an intimate state, with the intention of causing that person alarm, distress or humiliation'. The court hearing on Thursday was listed for plea and trial preparation. However, Fox, wearing a white shirt and grey blazer with jeans, was not asked to enter any pleas. A provisional trial, estimated to last four days, was set for Dec 6 2027 at the same court, with Fox granted bail to appear for a further case management hearing on Nov 14 this year. Sarah Forshaw KC, defending, asked the court if it would be possible to look at whether other venues may be able to accommodate an earlier trial because 'December 2027 is a long way ahead'. The police previously said Fox had been 'charged with an offence contrary to section 66A of the Sexual Offences Act 2003' which 'relates to an image that was posted on a social media platform in April 2024'. Section 66A of the Sexual Offences Act relates to 'cyber flashing'. The charge, introduced in 2023, makes it a criminal offence to intentionally share a sexual image of someone without consent, with the aim of causing alarm, distress, humiliation or for sexual gratification. Upskirting, which involves taking pictures of people under their clothes without their permission, became a specific criminal offence in 2019. Offenders can face up to two years in jail and be placed on the sex offenders register. Fox was fired from GB News in October 2023 after an on-air rant about Ava Evans, the political editor of the JOE news platform. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

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