
Epstein accomplice Maxwell opposes unsealing grand jury transcripts

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Chinese man pleads guilty in US to smuggling protected turtles worth US$1 million
A Chinese man faces up to five years in prison for trying to smuggle protected turtles worth more than US$1 million from the United States to Hong Kong. Wei Qiang Lin, of Brooklyn, pleaded guilty on Monday in a federal district court in New York to exporting more than 220 parcels containing around 850 eastern box turtles and three-toed box turtles. The Justice Department said the live turtles had been wrapped in socks for the weeks-long journey and the boxes with the reptiles had been labelled as containing 'plastic animal toys'. The turtles, which had a market value of US$1.4 million, were intercepted by police at a border inspection, it said. Eastern box turtles and three-toed box turtles feature colourful markings and are a 'prized feature in the domestic and foreign pet market, particularly in China and Hong Kong', the Justice Department said in a statement. It said they are protected by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).


South China Morning Post
2 days ago
- South China Morning Post
China mum, 90, self-learns law to defend accused son in US$16 million extortion case
The 90-year-old mother of a defendant in a 117 million yuan (US$16 million) extortion case in China was so devoted to her son that she self-learned the law and appeared in court to defend him. The case was heard at Zhoushan Municipal Intermediate Court in Zhejiang province, eastern China, on July 30, the Huashang News reported. The defendant, a 57-year-old man known as Lin, was arrested in April 2023 for blackmailing a local entrepreneur surnamed Huang out of 117 million yuan, according to prosecutors. Nonagenarian He pours over legal documents so that she can defend her son in court. Photo: Weibo Huang was among the top 100 richest people in China in 2009, with a net worth of eight billion yuan (US$1.1 billion) at that time. Lin and Huang cooperated in the gas production business, but Huang often failed to pay on time, leading to the suspension of production at Lin's factory and severe losses. From 2014 to 2017, Lin and his accountant forced Huang to pay a total of 117 million yuan by threatening to tip the tax authorities off about his irregular practices. At the beginning of 2023, Huang reported Lin to the police for extortion.


South China Morning Post
5 days ago
- South China Morning Post
Will TSMC tech leak and Trump's demands threaten Taiwan's top chipmaker status?
The unprecedented leak of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC)'s most advanced technology in a major commercial espionage case has sparked concern on the island over whether the incident could undermine its global standing in chipmaking. Advertisement Adding to the company's growing headache, pressure is mounting from US demands, including US President Donald Trump's claim on Tuesday that the firm would invest US$300 billion in the United States in exchange for better tariff terms for Taiwan, according to observers. The dual blows have intensified worries over Taiwan's shrinking leverage in global 'semiconductor diplomacy' and the vulnerability of its most prized company – whose cutting-edge fabrication capabilities sit at the heart of global supply chains, national security strategies, and the escalating US-China tech rivalry. Taiwanese prosecutors on Tuesday confirmed they had arrested six engineers late last month suspected of stealing trade secrets related to TSMC's two-nanometre (2nm) process – a technology not yet in mass production and widely regarded as the most advanced in the world. According to the Taiwan High Prosecutors Office, after searching the homes of the six and questioning them, they detained three suspects – two current and one former employee – alleging they accessed sensitive files remotely using a company-issued laptop while working from home. Advertisement The former employee, whose surname is Chen, is accused of photographing the confidential documents with his mobile phone while the two others accessed the files.