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Hundreds honor security guard killed in New York office tower shooting

Hundreds honor security guard killed in New York office tower shooting

Independent4 days ago
Hundreds turned out to honor the life of Aland Etienne, the security guard who was killed last month at a Manhattan office tower by a gunman targeting the headquarters of the National Football League.
An immigrant from Haiti who came to the U.S. in 2017 with a dream for a new life, Etienne was remembered as a dedicated father and grandfather who was faithfully working at his security post when the gunman suddenly opened fire on July 28.
'My brother will be remembered as a hero. A humble, steady, kind New York hero,' said Smith Etienne, Aland's brother, in a statement. 'Aland made the ultimate sacrifice, choosing bravery and selflessness over fear. In his final moments, he acted to protect others.'
The memorial service was held Saturday in Brooklyn for Etienne, 46, the last of the four shooting victims to be laid to rest. A New York City police officer, an investment firm executive and a real estate firm worker were also killed. The gunman wounded a fifth person before taking his own life.
Like Etienne, slain NYPD Officer Didarul Islam, who was working a department-approved private security detail that day, was an immigrant. Islam was Bangladeshi-American.
Manny Pastreich, president of Etienne's union, 32BJ SEIU, said Etienne represents not only essential workers who are the backbone of New York City, but also immigrants who come to the U.S. to build a better life and contribute in both large and small ways.
'His legacy will serve as a reminder of the contributions of immigrants, and the sacrifices, they make every day,' Pastreich said in a statement.
Security officers from buildings across New York held a vigil last week to honor Etienne.
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Roblox CEO called on to resign after sending cease and desist letter to online ‘predator hunter'
Roblox CEO called on to resign after sending cease and desist letter to online ‘predator hunter'

The Independent

time8 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Roblox CEO called on to resign after sending cease and desist letter to online ‘predator hunter'

Roblox 's chief executive is facing a wave of fury after his company sent a cease and desist letter to a YouTuber known for exposing alleged child predators on the online gaming platform. The Roblox Corporation reportedly issued a legal complaint last week to a 22-year-old content creator known as 'Schlep,' who revealed this in a YouTube video. The chief executive of the platform is founder David Baszucki. Sharing the full cease and desist letter on X, the company's lawyers cited violations such as simulated child endangerment and sharing personal information. They argued that such actions bypassed official moderation channels. Schlep, a self-styled 'predator hunter' who has over 767,000 YouTube subscribers, had all associated Roblox accounts terminated in the high-profile conflict with the company. In return, Schlep, who claims his investigations led to six arrests of individuals attempting to groom minors on Roblox, accused the company of repeatedly ignoring evidence presented by him and other vigilante streamers. In his video, Schlep alleges that his motivations stem from personal experience having been groomed as a child on the platform, which he said led to a suicide attempt. The Independent has approached Schlep for comment and to seek verification of his claims. Schlep also claimed that Baszucki blocked him on X. Democratic Congressman Ro Khanna has launched an online petition against Roblox, accusing the platform of insufficient child safety measures. He hopes to garner one million signatures by Friday. 'Roblox is simply not doing enough to protect our kids, to inform parents, and to go after child predators,' Khanna said in a TikTok video. After Roblox's legal threat, Schlep reached out to Republican Senator Ted Cruz on X and then by email on Monday, advocating for political attention to the company's safety policies. Schlep argued that the platform's alleged negligence toward protecting young players had already been the subject of lawsuits in Texas. It was not immediately clear whether Cruz's office responded. The incident has sparked widespread backlash, reigniting debate over platform moderation versus vigilante actions, with critics accusing Roblox of hypocrisy and placing legal threats above child safety. Campaigns such as '#FreeSchlep' and '#BoycottRoblox' have gained traction, supported by major creators like MoistCr1TiKal and JiDeon. A petition calling for Baszucki to 'fix what he's caused or resign' had more than 48,000 signatures by Thursday morning. Another video citing the petitions for the Roblox CEO's resignation surpassed 1.2 million views on YouTube. After the wave of backlash, Roblox Corporation released a statement on Wednesday explaining why it removed vigilante groups from the platform, without explicitly naming Schlep. 'While seemingly well-intentioned, the vigilantes we've banned have taken actions that are both unacceptable and create an unsafe environment for users,' it said. 'Similar to actual predators, they often impersonated minors, actively approached other users, then tried to lead them to other platforms to have sexually explicit conversations.' Roblox said that while most chats between its more than 111 million daily active users are 'safe and civil,' there are 'bad actors' that attempt to evade its moderation system. The company emphasized that reporting through official channels is safer and more effective than vigilante actions.

Here is Eighties New York, in all its brash, seedy glory
Here is Eighties New York, in all its brash, seedy glory

Telegraph

time9 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Here is Eighties New York, in all its brash, seedy glory

In Jonathan Mahler's vivid and compelling history of New York in the 1980s – The Gods of New York – one incident in particular stands out for its combination of hubris, corruption and grand Guignol horror. It concerns the investigation into Donald Manes, the president of the city's borough of Queens, for his part in a multi-million dollar kickback scheme – an investigation conducted by Rudy Giuliani, then the US Attorney for the Southern District of New York. To get to Manes, Giuliani cut a deal with an underling, Geoffrey Lindenauer – a man whose colourful past included running an unlicensed psychotherapy institute with his mother, where he occasionally prescribed sexual relations with himself as the most efficacious form of treatment, and who had subsequently risen to the august position of deputy director of the parking violations bureau. Faced with 39 counts of extortion, racketeering and mail fraud, 'Lindy', as the tabloid press took to calling him, spilled the beans on his boss. Confronted with a newspaper headline – 'Manes Accused of Extortion' – the borough president took his own life while on the phone to his psychiatrist, cradling the phone between his neck and shoulder, pulling an 8-inch knife out of a kitchen drawer and plunging it into his chest. Jonathan Mahler coins a useful euphemism, 'crisis opportunists', for the cast of this book: a catalogue of crooks, chancers and grifters, firebrand activists, rap stars, politicians scrambling up the greasy pole and falling back down again, people on the make – and Donald Trump. As Mahler puts it, in the 70s, New York, the place 'where you went to make it,' had become 'a place where you got the hell out of if you could'. The city was on its knees, and Washington had refused to help. As the famous Daily News headline put it, '[President] Ford to City: Drop Dead.' But by the 80s, the wheel had turned. Financial deregulation had promoted a soaring stock market, and a corporate takeover craze. As Wall Street boomed, what Mahler calls a 'guilt-free consumerism' blossomed, and skyscrapers grew like mushrooms. The personification of the city was Ed Koch, who governed as mayor between 1978 and 1989. Small and pugnacious, the son of furrier who had arrived at Ellis Island in 1909, Koch was a Second World War veteran who had risen through local politics by a combination of guile, wit and iron-clad self-belief, who boasted, 'I am not the type to get ulcers; I give them.' Cardinal John O'Connor, the Archbishop of New York described Koch as the 'only man I know who speaks to God as an associate'. He needed all the help he could get. Over the course of his 12 years as mayor, Koch would be assailed by a daunting multitude of problems arising from the growing gulf between the ultra-rich and the poor. These included homelessness, a soaring crime rate, a series of gruesome murders, local government corruption, racial strife, a growing crack epidemic and the rising tally of deaths – greater than any other city in America – from the Aids epidemic. The demands from activists for increased funding to deal with the crisis proved particularly problematic for Koch, a closeted homosexual who lived in constant fear of being outed. Mahler's book offers vivid portraits of the characters woven into the chaotic tapestry of the city. There was the legendary tabloid journalist Jimmy Breslin, a 'gruff fire-hydrant of a man', who embodied the tabloid form 'to rumpled shambolic perfection', chronicling the venality of New York's rich and powerful and the desperation and dignity of its poor and powerless, and who described the essence of his job as 'climbing the tenement stairs'. Spike Lee was a struggling film director until his 1989 film, Do The Right Thing, provided a vivid portrait for an international audience of the simmering tension between black and white residents in Brooklyn. (The scene where a policeman chokes the character Radio Raheem to death with his night-stick, sparking a riot, was to prove eerily prophetic of George Floyd's death in 2020.) Then there was the man who came to define the image of New York as a limitless cash-register for those brash and audacious enough to seize the opportunity. Trump's rise to become the most powerful property developer in New York – his unabashed glorification of wealth and shameless self-promotion overshadowed any question marks over his creative accounting practices – had made him catnip for the media. In 1976, the New York Times was lionising him as 'tall, lean and blond, with dazzling white teeth, and he looks ever so much like Robert Redford'. Trump Tower, built in 1983, became the city's tallest residential building. Twenty storeys higher than its original zoning allowed, after Trump had acquired unexploited 'air rights' from the neighbouring Tiffany store, the Tower was a shimmering symbol of New York's economic revival, and a testament to Trump's soaring hubris. To lure buyers, he numbered the floors to make them seem higher than they actually were. The first residential floor, which was 20 storeys above street level, was labelled the 30th floor. Among the eager buyers were a high-ranking member of a Russian crime family, a notorious cocaine dealer and the mob-connected head of a numbers racket. Unfazed by his failed attempts as a casino operator to make Atlantic City a rival to Reno, Trump had fixed his eye on bigger things. While announcing he would not be running for President in 1988, he made no secret of his political ambitions, proposing that America should invade Iran, 'a horrible, horrible country', in order to capture its oil fields. 'It is easy to dismiss Mr Trump's political showboating for the barstool demagoguery it is,' the St Louis Post-Dispatch editorialised, adding, prophetically as it turned out, that 'given [his] money and self-assurance, the odds are that he has not made his last political appearance.' The Rev Al Sharpton, the civil rights activist, was someone whose facility for self-promotion almost rivalled Trump's. Caricatured in Tom Wolfe's satire on Eighties New York, The Bonfire of the Vanities, as the Rev Reggie Bacon, Sharpton was an erstwhile boy preacher and bagman for the soul singer James Brown who, amidst the rising racial tensions in New York, became a confrontational and incendiary presence at the front line of any conflict in a city. His portly figure, pompadour hairstyle and predilection for colourful tracksuits, often worn with a gold medallion bearing the image of Martin Luther King, served as a beacon for reporters and tv crews. In 1987, Tawana Brawley, a 15-year-old black girl who had been missing from her home for four days, was found seemingly unconscious, lying in a garbage bag, her clothing torn, her body smeared in faeces, with the initials KKK scrawled on her body in charcoal. She alleged that she had been kidnapped and sexually abused by a group of white men. Sharpton stepped forward, orchestrating the media coverage, describing Brawley as 'the symbol of the cause' and, as the investigation ground on, inflaming the situation even more by suggesting that the Ku Klux Klan and the Mafia were conspiring with the authorities in a cover-up. After 10 months, a Grand Jury ruled there was no evidence of Brawley being being abducted and abused, and had made up the story of abduction and rape to avoid facing her mother's violent boyfriend. Sharpton simply shrugged his shoulders, brushed the verdict aside as a miscarriage of justice, and moved on to his next agitation. Between crime, corruption, Aids and racial conflict, a beleaguered Koch was fighting on all fronts. But few of the many thorns in his side were more painful than a homeless woman named Joyce Brown, who had taken up residence on the pavement outside an ice-cream parlour in Midtown Manhattan, shouting obscenities at passers-by and responding to the kindness of strangers who gave her dollar bills by urinating on the money. In 1987, Brown became the first person to be incarcerated in Bellevue hospital, under an emergency programme introduced by a desperate Koch to forcibly commit the mentally disturbed homeless to psychiatric hospitals. Her incarceration became a cause célèbre, with thousands of homeless people marching through Midtown, chanting her name and demanding more affordable housing. Released from hospital, she appeared on TV shows, addressed a packed audience at Harvard Law School and taunted Koch in interviews, accusing him of having a 'personality disorder', while her lawyers fielded calls from publishers and movie agents. On a visit to Moscow, President Reagan cited Brown's successful campaign to be released and return to her spot on the pavement as a symbol of America as a free country. 'How far can we go in impinging on the freedom of someone who says this is the way I want to live.' Brown was unimpressed. 'Rather than talking about me', she was quoted as saying, 'why doesn't the President assist me in getting permanent housing?' Being painted as the heartless persecutor of a mentally disturbed homeless person was another dent in Koch's fading reputation. Despite having promised to 'keep my big mouth shut' if he won re-election, in 1989 he lost to David Dinkins, who became the city's first black mayor. That's where Mahler's book ends. But the story continues. Dinkins was to prove a one-term mayor. And waiting in the wings was Rudy Giuliani. A workaholic who subsisted on a diet of cheeseburgers by day and martinis by night, with a complexion so pallid a judge had once urged him to 'sit at Coney Island and get some colour', as US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Giuliani had achieved the apparently impossible. His tenacious pursuit and successful prosecution of the bosses of New York's most powerful Mafia families led Time magazine to describe him as resembling 'a quattrocento fresco of an obscure saint'. Meanwhile in 1986, he aided in the prosecution and imprisonment, on charges of insider trading, of the crooked arbitrageur Ivan Boesky, who had been involved in almost every major takeover of the previous five years, as well as the successful prosecution of the investment bank Drexel Burnham Lambert, which served as a welcome corrective to what Mahler describes as the 'greed-soaked, rule-bending era' on Wall Street. Giuliani had always nursed political ambitions and having run unsuccessfully as a Republican candidate in the 1989 mayoral elections, four years later he succeeded Dinkins as New York's mayor. In 2001, he went one step better, being lauded as 'America's mayor' for his leadership after 9/11. Then came the fall. The man who had made his name rooting out corruption ended up paying fealty to Donald Trump, representing him in the multitude of lawsuits Trump filed following the 2020 election, claiming the election had been rigged from an improvised podium in front of a porn store, hair dye leaking into his eyes. In 2023, Giuliani lost a $148-million defamation lawsuit after accusing two election workers in Georgia of lying to help steal the 2020 presidential contest from Donald Trump. In court, Giuliani pleaded poverty, telling a judge he had no car, credit card or cash. Mahler's account of corruption, riots and fortunes and reputations made and lost will stand as the definitive account of New York in the 80s, and proof that the feet of the gods, or those who believe they are, are indeed made of clay – but that still doesn't stop one of them becoming the most powerful man in the world.

Husband of woman, 32, who died sacrificing herself to push daughter, five, out way of falling branch reveals desperate attempts to save her
Husband of woman, 32, who died sacrificing herself to push daughter, five, out way of falling branch reveals desperate attempts to save her

Daily Mail​

time37 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Husband of woman, 32, who died sacrificing herself to push daughter, five, out way of falling branch reveals desperate attempts to save her

The heartbroken husband of a woman who died sacrificing herself by pushing her young daughter out the way of a falling tree branch has revealed how he desperately tried to save his wife. Madia Kauser, 32, was tragically crushed to death while out on a family walk with her husband Wasim Khan, 33, and their two children near Witton Country Park in Blackburn, Lancashire, on Monday night. It's understood her five-year-old daughter was in a pushchair which Mrs Kauser managed to push away before taking the full force of the falling branch herself - so that her daughter survived unscathed. Mr Khan, 33, was playing football just yards ahead with the couple's nine-year-old son when the branch fell. Speaking of the moment he battled to save his wife as she lay injured, he said: 'I rushed to her. I tried to save her, she was still breathing.' He also revealed his wife's haunting last post on Snapchat - a picture of a tree which she had taken while they were leaving the park. Describing how the tragedy unfolded, Mr Khan told The Sun: 'I was playing football with my son and kicked the ball in the wrong direction and we were going after it. 'I heard a crack and the tree just came down. There was no wind, nothing. 'She was hit by a branch but it had the full weight of the tree behind it and that is why the council had to cut it all down.' Mr Khan described his wife as the 'most beautiful and loyal person'. Relatives told the Mail how Ms Kauser was a devoted mother who adored her children. One told the Daily Mail: 'Madia would have done anything for her children.' On Wednesday, Blackburn council had completely cut down what remained of the tree from which the branch fell as well as lopping off branches from several other nearby trees. The area was littered with sawdust. The accident happened just yards from the park's Big Cover wood where trees form the majority of the habitat. On Wednesday relatives from all over the country were gathering at Blackburn's Madina mosque where the family were hoping a funeral could take place sometime in the evening. Former mayor and still sitting councillor Zamir Khan MBE, an uncle in the tight-knit family, said Madia's body was still with the coroner. He said: 'Her little girl told me her mother pushed her out of the way as the branch fell. 'Madia was a loving, doting mother and a very caring person. 'The older boy was walking with his father in front and could not believe what happened. 'It is very hard for the children. I do not think they will ever walk in that park again. 'It is tarnished for them. Their father is not in a good way either. He and other members of the family have taken it very hard. 'People have come from all over the country - from Sheffield, Bradford, Birmingham, London and other places - to be at her funeral which we hoped to have this afternoon in accordance with Muslim tradition. 'But until her body is released by the coroner, we cannot move forward. We are hoping it will be released today. 'What happened was an act of nature but it is unbelievable.' In a statement, the council said it was 'deeply saddened' after the accident on Monday. The authority's chief executive Denise Park said: 'Our thoughts and heartfelt condolence are with the family and friends of the person who has lost their life at this very difficult time. 'Emergency services including paramedics and the air ambulance attended the scene. Council staff also supported by cordoning off the area to ensure public safety. 'As part of precautionary safety measures, the tree involved was being felled this morning. 'Witton Park is a much-loved community space, and the safety of everyone who visits is of the utmost importance to us. 'Our thoughts remain first and foremost with the family at this very sad time.' A Lancashire Police spokesman said the woman's death was not being treated as suspicious and a file would be prepared for the coroner. A cyclist who rides through the park every day said: 'I have seen loads of fallen branches before but it is mainly because of high winds. 'There wasn't even a breeze when this poor woman was killed. It is utterly heartbreaking. 'I shudder to think what her poor children and husband are going through.' Many people walking there today were unaware of the tragedy and thought the council were carrying out unnecessary tree work. One said: 'I was initially cross that they had cut the tree down until someone told me what had happened. It doesn't bear thinking about.' Local councillor Paul Marrow said: 'There have been concerns about ash dieback disease and the number of dead trees in Witton Park and across the borough.

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