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Russell Brand Pleads Not Guilty To Rape, Indecent Assault & Sexual Assault; Trial Set For June 2026

Russell Brand Pleads Not Guilty To Rape, Indecent Assault & Sexual Assault; Trial Set For June 2026

Yahooa day ago

Russell Brand has pled not guilty to charges of rape, indecent assault and sexual assault. His trial will begin on June 3 2026.
The TV presenter-turned MAGA outrider appeared in London's Southwark Crown Court earlier this morning and pled not guilty to all charges, according to the BBC. He faces one allegation of rape, one of indecent assault, one of oral rape and two further counts of sexual assault. The offences are alleged to have taken place between 1999 and 2005, and relate to four women.
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Brand faces allegations including that he raped a woman at the Labour Party conference in Bournemouth in 1999, dragged a TV worker into a toilet and sexually assaulted a woman when he was a presenter on Big Brother's Big Mouth.
He was charged in April by London's Metropolitan Police and was granted bail a month later. Today was the second time he's been seen in a UK court since returning from the U.S.
The BBC reported that 49-year-old Brand did not speak to reporters and looked straight ahead as he entered the court building wearing a dark suit and unbuttoned shirt. He will now wait more than a year for his trial, which has been scheduled for June 3 2026. A pre-trial review has been scheduled for May 20 2026.
Upon the charges being announced, the one-time Forgetting Sarah Marshall star, whose resident address is in Oxfordshire, said he was a 'drug addict, sex addict and an imbecile' during his youth, but he was never a rapist. 'I've never engaged in non-consensual activity. I pray that you can see that by looking in my eyes,' he told his social media followers last month.
He had spent many months in the U.S. and was pictured several times at Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.
The 2023 revelations about Brand led to much anger and entertainment industry introspection. Since then, the BBC, Channel 4 and Big Brother producer Banijay have all led internal probes, having worked with Brand on shows up until late last decade. All these probes have led to apologies and further revelations. The most recent report from the BBC found that staff at the UK broadcaster's L.A. bureau had 'joked about' an incident in which the star was alleged to have exposed himself to a woman in a bathroom. Channel 4's report, published almost exactly a year ago, unearthed 'two new worrying allegations' against Brand, who had worked on Celebrity Bake Off as recently as 2018.
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Billie Piper is the new Doctor as Ncuti Gatwa regenerates in Doctor Who finale
Billie Piper is the new Doctor as Ncuti Gatwa regenerates in Doctor Who finale

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time37 minutes ago

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Billie Piper is the new Doctor as Ncuti Gatwa regenerates in Doctor Who finale

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MAGA hits limits in its global ambitions
MAGA hits limits in its global ambitions

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timean hour ago

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MAGA hits limits in its global ambitions

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It gave Trump's allies hopes of putting like-minded leaders into positions of power, boosting parties that share his priorities and spreading his populist, hard-right politics beyond the U.S. Meanwhile, conservative politicians in other countries yoked themselves directly or stylistically to his brand. In the months since, far-right parties have performed strongly in European elections, including in Poland, Romania and Portugal, overperforming expectations and elevating their vote shares with electorates shifting to the right on issues like immigration. The hard-right in Europe, by most accounts, is surging. But they're not vaulting into government like some Trump allies had predicted. 'I wouldn't say the right has ascended, I'd say it's a mixed package,' said Kurt Volker, who served as Trump's envoy for Ukraine during his first administration and ambassador to NATO under George W. Bush. 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Disappointed that Newhouse caved on supporting energy tax credits
Disappointed that Newhouse caved on supporting energy tax credits

Yahoo

timean hour ago

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Disappointed that Newhouse caved on supporting energy tax credits

I had high hopes that our Representative Dan Newhouse would leverage the narrow Republican majority to retain continuation of the energy tax credits that are powering $5.5 billion in energy projects in our district. He was not alone in his appeal to U.S. House leadership for continuation, for which I am thankful. However, I am deeply disappointed in his vote for the budget reconciliation bill that requires energy projects to 'commence construction' within 60 days of the bill's enactment and phases out the energy tax credits by 2028. Rep. Newhouse did not fold alone. Indeed, all of those Republican representatives who appealed to House leadership went along with the crowd. The pain of losing the energy tax credits, and the pain of losing Medicaid funding for so many people, is being driven by the Republican insistence on extension of the tax cuts first passed by Congress in 2017. That's a fine deal for those getting big tax cuts. But what about the rest of us? I'm sure there were multiple considerations in his vote. Rep. Newhouse owes his constituents an explanation, and not just one written for his MAGA constituents. Democrats made the difference in Newhouse's two re-elections over MAGA candidates. Their patience with him is wearing very thin. Without a vote for at least one of their priorities, he cannot count on their continued support. While the reconciliation bill will damage most of the clean energy and transportation industries, it does keep energy tax credits for advanced nuclear energy and restores 'transferability' of a nuclear production tax credit. That's important, because nuclear energy provides reliable carbon-free energy. Wind and solar energy are inexpensive when the wind blows and the sun shines, but are not when energy must be stored or transmitted for when and where they don't. Attention now shifts to the Senate, which also has Republican support for energy tax credits and other differences with the House. We can expect the Senate version of the budget reconciliation bill to differ from the House version, so the House will be called to negotiate with the Senate and vote on a final version. I urge Rep. Newhouse to leverage the narrow Republican majority to restore continuation of energy tax credits in the negotiated bill. Climate scientist Steve Ghan leads the Tri-Cities chapter of Citizens Climate Lobby.

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