
How feet can reveal if someone is lying to you
López suggests that when a person's words and body language don't align, it indicates a potential deception. For example, a tense posture while claiming to be relaxed can be a tell.
He emphasises that feet are often overlooked when people try to control their body language, making them a reliable indicator of true intentions. Feet pointing towards the door might signal a desire to leave, regardless of the stated reason.
López acknowledges that individuals can manipulate body language to deceive others, using tactics like mirroring to create a false sense of connection.
This insight comes after retired FBI agent Steve Lazarus warned against home DNA tests due to privacy concerns, citing potential misuse by law enforcement, health insurance companies, and the risk of data breaches.
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Daily Mail
24 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Elon Musk joins outrage over man and woman being beaten to a pulp after Cincinnati jazz festival
Elon Musk joined the outpouring of outrage after a man and woman were beaten to a pulp by an unruly mob after an Ohio jazz festival. The victims were brutally attacked Friday night in downtown Cincinnati after being swarmed by the violent crowd, video of the horrific attack showed. A man in a white t-shirt is apparently shoved to ground by two men and repeatedly beaten as other members of the crowd jeer and join in. The gang batters the man for nearly a minute as he lay in the middle of the street, seemingly stepping on his head multiple times. When the barrage of attacks temporarily stops, he is seen attempting to stand - but immediately fell over in apparent disorientation. One attacker yelled out 'my man's drunk'. A woman in a black dress rushes to his aid, but is attacked by the crowd, suffering two blows to the face. The impact caused her to fall, with her head slamming the pavement. She became unconscious as blood spewed from her mouth. Musk, apparently frustrated by the heinous act of violence, took to his social media platform X to question what he suggested was a lack of response to the incident. 'Why zero stories?' the Tesla CEO asked Sunday, retweeting a post from the End Wokeness X account alleging that the attack wasn't being covered by America's major news outlets. Elon Musk is sounding alarms of outrage after a man and woman were beaten to the pulp by an unruly mob at an Ohio jazz festival End Wokeness posted a tweet early Sunday afternoon claiming CNN, ABC, NBC, Fox News, The New York Times and The Washington Post, among others, had failed to cover the attack. By late Sunday evening the terrifying assault had been covered by several local and national media outlets, including the Daily Mail and Fox News. Musk reshared the tweet Sunday evening, prompting a wave of criticisms from other X users who also alleged the story was being ignored because it 'doesn't fit the woke narrative'. 'The funded media knows it doesn't match the typical narrative,' one X user replied. 'Thank you Elon for shining our light on the legacy media's bias,' echoed another. Another added: 'I'm asking the same question. I think we all know the answer.' 'It doesn't fit the narrative Elon,' one wrote. Many X users attributed the alleged lack of coverage to racial bias by the media outlets, although there is no actual evidence to support these claims. Some users suggested that maybe there 'weren't enough reporters' working over the weekend to cover the story. Others simply raised concern for the victims. 'It really is concerning. This should be on every news story for weeks. These poor people,' one wrote. 'So scary,' echoed another. Musk reshared the tweet Sunday evening, prompting a wave of criticisms from other X users who also alleged the story was being ignored because it 'doesn't fit the woke narrative' The Friday night assault at the intersection of Fourth and Elm Streets started with a verbal dispute between at least two men, according to police. The carnage left at least two people, the unidentified male and female victim, injured. A good Samaritan rushed them to a local hospital in the aftermath, WKRC reported. Their conditions remain unclear as cops work to identify and arrest all of those involved. Video obtained by WKRC appears to show the moments leading up to the attack. The man in the white t-shirt appears to be talking with the group, when he suddenly slaps a man in a red t-shirt. It also shows another man being targeted by the unruly mob. Investigators have already identified four to five suspects believed to have participated in the 'savage attack', police union president Ken Kober told The Cincinnati Enquirer. He said officers are continuing investigate tips as they try to identify the remaining suspects. Police have not yet announced any arrests in connection to the fight, but Kober insists officials are 'doing everything they can'. 'These investigators have been working around the clock to identify everybody that's involved, to be able to locate these people, to be able to interview them, to be able to get a true picture of exactly what occurred,' he told WKRC. Investigators have also received tips on some of the attackers' identities, Kober said. 'I would ask... that the public play a part in this, because stuff like this shouldn't happen in our city, but when it does, we need people to step forward, that way we can bring these people to justice.' Kober argued there is 'no place in society' for the violence displayed Friday night and, in separate remarks to WLWT, called the brawl 'disgusting'. 'What's equally disgusting is those who chose to watch and record instead of calling 911, attempting to defuse the situation or render aid.' The central business district and riverfront area where the assault took place has seen a 25 percent increase in violence compared to last year, according to Cincinnati police data published July 21. The data also shows that there were 12 aggravated assaults in the city between January 1 through July 21, compared to 16 during the same time period last year. 'I am in complete disgust waking up to the viral video many of you have now seen,' Cincinnati police Chief Teresa Theetge said on Saturday, after mayoral candidate and Vice President JD Vance's half brother reposted the video - arguing that the current administration is not doing enough to address crime in the city. 'The behavior is nothing short of cruel and absolutely unacceptable,' she continued, vowing that investigators will work 'diligently to identify every individual involved in causing harm.'


The Guardian
24 minutes ago
- The Guardian
John Oliver on police gang databases: ‘Get rid of them'
After an extended summer holiday, John Oliver returned to his desk at Last Week Tonight to dissect US law enforcement's overreliance on faulty and unregulated gang databases. Such databases – as Oliver put it, 'basically lists the police keep of people they say are involved in gangs' – have been used to justify numerous deportations under the Trump administration, including the deportation and detention of Kilmar Ábrego García, a Salvadorian immigrant from Maryland whom Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) illegally deported due to what they later admitted was an 'administrative error'. The deportation stemmed from a wrongful inclusion on a gang database – in 2019, officers apparently observed Ábrego at a Home Depot and filed a report that he belonged to a gang, based on the fact that he wore a Chicago Bulls hat and a hoodie with 'rolls of money covering the eyes, ears and mouth of the presidents' and that they 'know such clothing to be indicative of the Hispanic gang culture'. According to the report, 'wearing the Chicago Bulls hat represents [that] they are in good standing with the MS-13.' 'Which is already a little bit weird, because it implies that somehow, if you're not up to date on your monthly MS-13 dues, your Bulls hat privileges get revoked,' Oliver joked. The officer who filed that report also cited an anonymous tip that Ábrego was a member of MS-13; the officer was also suspended a week later for unrelated misconduct and ultimately fired. 'Nevertheless, that gang allegation meant that Ábrego García was denied bond and spent months locked up in Ice detention,' Oliver explained, an outcome that was 'ridiculous. A person's clothing shouldn't be criteria for locking them up for eight months. As we all know, the worst consequence of fashion choices should be getting roasted by teens on TikTok.' Ábrego's saga is one of many stories that bring the government's use of so-called 'gang databases' into question. Around the country, many local and state police departments keep these databases, often without disclosing them, despite investigations finding them to be 'notoriously inconsistent and opaque', 'riddled with questionable entries and errors' and 'rife with unreliable intelligence', to quote several reports cited by Oliver. When it comes to what constitutes a 'gang', there's 'a lot of variability here', said Oliver. 'Not all gang members may even be engaged in crime.' As one researcher put it: 'Not all gang members are criminals, and not all criminals are gang members.' 'Unfortunately, none of that nuance is on display in these databases,' said Oliver, and none of these lists have oversight from any other branch of government or other law enforcement. The criteria for inclusion are police observations and 'self-admissions', which basically means, according to Oliver, 'We found something on your social media that we decided constitutes you admitting that you're in a gang.' That could include posts with the word 'gang', such as a post from a teenager with the caption 'happy birthday. gang', added to a database on the grounds of self-admission. 'And if the bar is that low, anything is basically a confession,' said Oliver. 'A pic of you holding a diploma with the caption 'killed it?' Congratulations grad, but now you're wanted for murder. 'And while so far I've been saying anyone can be added to these lists, those who end up on them are heavily people of color,' he continued. At one point, Washington DC's database had only one white person on its list. 'Do you know how few lists there are with only one white guy on them?' Oliver joked. 'It's basically this database and the cast of Hamilton. That is it.' Additions can also be motivated by spite; in 2020, a cop in Phoenix registered 17 Black Lives Matter protesters as 'ACAB gang members' in retaliation. Most states also do not require states to notify people if they put them on a gang database. 'And when it comes to immigrants, the designation of gang member can be truly life-altering,' said Oliver. 'It can be the reason that someone is denied various pathways to remain in the US, and it can make someone a higher priority for deportation and the target of a raid.' Oliver relayed the story of a Hispanic teen in Long Island named Alex, who was added to a gang database by a school resource officer after he was seen wearing bright blue sneakers, which school security guards told him was associated with the gang MS-13. He had also doodled '504' on his backpack, which is the country code for Honduras, his country of origin. A few months later, Ice agents arrested him, saying they heard he was a gang member, and eventually deported him. When a police commissioner in Alex's county was asked why he felt local law enforcement needed to partner with Ice, he answered: 'If we have intelligence that they are a gang member, that's not necessarily a crime … the intel that we have may not indicate a state crime. The intel may be small on them, but nothing that is going to keep them in jail. So if we perceive someone as a public safety threat, we utilize all of our tools, which again includes immigration tools, so we'll partner with the Department of Homeland Security to target them for detention.' Oliver fumed in response: 'If someone is on your list of big bad criminals, and you can't find any big bad crime to arrest them for, that suggests the issue might be your fucking list. 'It is pretty clear that gang databases are way too easy to get on, way too hard to get off, and can turn people's lives upside down,' he added. 'So what do we do? Well, I'd argue we get rid of them. And if you think, 'Well hold on, how will police then stop gang violence?' I'd say, with police work. They could and should do actual police work focusing on where violence is concentrated, instead of fixating on labels. 'I'm not saying that violence associated with gangs isn't real or isn't a problem,' he concluded. 'I'm just saying the answer needs to go beyond policing and way beyond these databases.'


The Sun
24 minutes ago
- The Sun
Rotting corpses, rapes & gun-wielding gangs… how 30,000 Hurricane Katrina survivors fought for life in ‘human cauldron'
CRADLING her three-week-old son as shots rang out in the dark, Taffany Smith was told to scrape off his dirty nappies and use them again. "We pee on the floor," she sobbed. "We are like animals." Hurricane Katrina had already killed almost 2000 people and thousands more were battling to survive among decomposing corpses, excrement and the overwhelming stench of misery and human suffering. 23 23 After the deadly storm swept away their homes, the sweltering Superdome was supposed to be an emergency refuge for desperate displaced people with nowhere else to go, for just a few hours. Instead they were plunged into a terrifying hellscape where guns, knives and drugs were rife, fighting for survival for days. Two people - including a child - were raped, blood stained the walls and used crack pipes littered the fetid floor. Riots erupted as starving children screamed day and night, waiting for salvation that took days to come. At the time petrified 11-year-old Stacey Bodden told reporters: 'People started shooting last night." Her uncle, David Rodriguez said he heard at least seven shots and saw a man running with a gun. 'Don't shoot,' he pleaded. Amid the crime and constant threat of violence there were terrifying reports of stabbings, looting, murder and suicide. One man leapt 50 feet to his death, saying he had nothing left to live for. 'We're not even dealing with dead bodies. They're just pushing them on the side," said New Orleans mayor Ray Nagin. More than 30,000 exhausted and traumatised people were crammed into the dank arena with no power or water for almost a week. Brad Pitt suffers huge blow in messy $20.5m legal fight with Hurricane Katrina victims after star sued over shoddy homes Out of sheer desperation, humiliated survivors were left with no choice but to use the hallways and bins as toilets. 'There is faeces on the walls,' said survivor Bryan Hebert. 'There is faeces all over the place.' 'This is a nuthouse,' added April Thomas who fled to the arena with her 11 children but was too afraid to sleep. 'You have to fend people off constantly,' she said. 'You have to fight for your life. I wake up in the morning, and the first thing I say is: 'Where are my babies? Is everyone here?'" Evacuee Iiesha Rousell said at the time: "They're housing us like animals." High winds tore off the roof of the stadium, and as filthy water seeped in, temperatures soared, food rotted and all access to the outside world was cut. Crowds pressed against the metal barricades that stopped them leaving, crying out for help as they waited for buses to evacuate them to safety. 23 23 23 "People said they felt abandoned by humanity," said local reporter Thanh Truong. "The only way I can describe it is the smell of human suffering.' Now an unflinching new National Geographic documentary, Hurricane Katrina: Race Against Time, recalls the horror and chaos that unfolded as terrified residents struggled to survive not only the havoc wreaked by the brutal storm but then its tragic aftermath. The gripping five part series exposes how a natural disaster two decades ago rapidly descended into a gut wrenching man-made national disgrace leaving an enduring legacy that shattered millions of lives. Former marine Shelton Alexander was among those who believed they would shelter in the Superdome for hours - not days. He said: "The National Guard was there, but nobody really was in charge. 'There were so many breakdowns of communication—it was chaos. "It started getting real crazy with the bathrooms getting backed up and everything. "Everybody was on edge. That's when it started getting a little chaotic. 'To watch the elders suffering, patients sitting in the corner all day, unattended, it was just really bad. "We are right here in the city and we're about to starve to death or get dehydrated. Shots were fired "Not knowing if they would just hold us in there against our will and starve us to death crossed our mind. "We went to each gate, one by one, to see if they would let us out and they wouldn't. They were really holding us back.' But, along with 18 others, Shelton was able to flee from the dire conditions Superdome in his Ford truck which was parked nearby. Ray Nagin, the then-mayor of New Orleans recalled: "I was among the people in the Superdome. I knew what was going on every minute. I did not have air conditioning nor shower facilities." Superdome manager Doug Thornton added: "We're not a hospital, we're not a hotel. We can't house people for five or six days." 23 23 But still today, many struggling to rebuild their lives blame government failure for the slow response and lack of aid - likening the widespread chaos that followed the storm to a war zone. Due to a series of systematic blunders, authorities struggled to work out a plan to evacuate them to safety. Prior to the storm, mandatory evacuation orders were issued but cops had struggled to move the poorest residents, who simply had no choice but to stay in their homes and hope for the best. Hurricanes are common in that part of Louisiana, and Lynette Boute was among those who ignored the extreme weather warnings, preferring to stay and prepare for the city's iconic Mardi Gras festivities. 23 23 23 'Every time this happens they try to make me leave,' she insisted. 'I said I'm not leaving my property.' But as the storm loomed the warnings became more severe and many attempting to flee had to turn back when traffic became gridlocked as the rain became torrential. Community organiser Malik Rahim added: 'Katrina hit at the worst time to be poor in America, by the end of the month you ain't got no money. 'What makes a disaster a tragedy? A tragedy is when we fail to do what we should be doing. "And the first tragedy of Katrina was not being prepared, not having an exit strategy for the 100,000 people that we knew didn't have no means of escaping.' But even after the Category Five hurricane had passed over the city, flood water continued to rise at a terrifying rate and conditions quickly deteriorated. New Orleans is surrounded by a series of walls known as levees built to reduce the risk of flooding from lakes, canals and the Mississippi River - but the intensity of the storm smashed through the defences. While President Bush flew over in Air Force One and declared the situation a natural disaster, locals believed the situation was man made and could have been avoided. They put the crisis down to the shoddy design and construction of the levees in the wake of Hurricane Betsy in the 1960s. As the levee walls collapsed, parts of the city flooded at an alarming rate, sweeping away hundreds of houses, and leaving thousands of terrified people trapped in theirs. 23 23 23 Resident Lucrece Philips said: 'Everything changed that day. 'We heard something that sounded like an explosion. That's when the water went from the bottom of the tyre of a car to the second floor of a house within twenty minutes.' The force of the water rushing through the levees was so intense it even knocked houses off their foundations, leaving them teetering on their edges. Residents frantically scrambling onto their rooftops and balconies in a desperate bid to reach higher ground. 23 23 Emergency services rushed to rescue as many as possible from dire situations by boat and helicopter. But soon dead bodies were floating in the filthy water, which rose to more than 15 feet deep within hours. Police officer Bobby Norton said: 'Until you see it you can't imagine it.' Meanwhile in the Superdome the situation was deteriorating fast - a second wave of more wounded and terrified people who had survived the worst night of their lives tried to cram inside. With their houses in ruins, they had no choice. Police officer Ed Bush said: 'When the levees broke everything changed. 'They were brought to the Superdome because there was nowhere else to go. 'It was desperation - but they were coming to another hell.' By day three 30,000 desperate people were crammed into the stadium - and armed guards were stationed at the doors to prevent people trying to fight their way out. 23 23 23 Critical situation In the surrounding streets, the city descended into lawlessness as starving people gathered on motorway bridges and flyovers, while others resorted to looting shops and supermarkets as they waited for fleets of buses and ships which had been promised to evacuate the city. Medical facilities were overloaded, there was no phone signal and the situation was declared critical. 23 23 23 It appeared that the police had lost control as violence broke out - and when police, helicopter pilots and SWAT teams were shot at, all rescue operations were abandoned. After five days, tens of thousands were still waiting, struggling for survival and sharing what scraps of food they could find until the armed National Guard relief convoy finally rumbled into town in tanks and armoured vehicles. Slowly elderly people and children were evacuated by school buses and sent to the airport, but main roads leading out of the city were blocked, and desperate families trying to leave on foot were stopped. Malik Rahim added: 'I'm not a naive person but nothing prepared me for what happened after Katrina.' They were brought to the Superdome because there was nowhere else to go. It was desperation - but they were coming to another hell Police officer Ed Bush Over the following months almost a million displaced refugees were rehoused in 30 different states, in the largest mass migration the US had seen since the 1930s. When the water eventually receded, many attempted to return to New Orleans but were heartbroken to find their homes vandalised and in ruins among the wreckage. In October the search for survivors ended and the official death toll stood at 1,392. Over the following years money was poured into rebuilding the levees and returning people to their communities. A government scheme called The Road Home was set up to cover the cost of relocating, repairs and rebuilding the hardest hit areas - but thousands were told they were not eligible for payouts and found themselves caught up in overwhelming red tape. One of the worst affected neighbourhoods, the Lower Ninth Ward is still a ghost town - before the hurricane the population was over 14,000, now it is just 4,630. And, twenty years after the disaster that devastated New Orleans, experts fear that global warming and rising sea levels may mean that another natural disaster could turn into a tragedy again. 23 23