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Baby seal stabbed on Oregon coast prompts search for suspect

Baby seal stabbed on Oregon coast prompts search for suspect

Independent07-05-2025

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is searching for the person who stabbed a baby seal multiple times on a beach in Oregon.
The seal survived the March attack in a cove in the small town of Neskowin, which sits along the Pacific Ocean, NOAA said Monday. The administration's marine stranding team was able to help the animal relocate after monitoring and evaluating it.
The agency's law enforcement office, which is investigating the attack, was searching for a 'person of interest' spotted by a witness. Officials were also looking for the owner of a vehicle seen in a parking lot near the cove behind a condominium building that may be connected with the Sunday evening attack, according to NOAA.
Officials are asking anyone with information on the person of interest, vehicle owner or attack to call NOAA's enforcement hotline.
In the spring and summer, juvenile elephant seals will often drag themselves onto Oregon's beaches to spend weeks shedding their hair and skin, according to Oregon State University 's Marine Mammal Institute. Adult elephant seals are rarely seen in the state.
The federal Marine Mammal Protection Act prohibits harassing, harming, killing or feeding wild elephant seals and other marine mammals. Violators can face criminal penalties of up to $100,000 in fines and up to 1 year in jail.

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Furious Fox host loses it on-air in rant against LA rioters
Furious Fox host loses it on-air in rant against LA rioters

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Furious Fox host loses it on-air in rant against LA rioters

A news anchor in Los Angeles lost his cool live on-air while watching a car burn and seeing rioters hammering out chunks of sidewalk. 'I don't see why it can't be stopped right now,' Fox 11's Elex Michaelson said during the broadcast, as a network helicopter beamed back footage in real time late Monday. 'I mean, you got all these people out there, and we see what's happening, and every station is showing it happening, and they're smashing up rocks and they're setting fires on the street,' he continued 'And yet, everybody is allowed to wander and do their thing.' As Michaelson spoke, protesters in the shot were seen using hammers to break off debris before stuffing it into backpacks. 'And yet, if our parking meter goes two minutes too long, there's a ticket right there,' Michaelson raged. 'How does that happen? I mean, who are we protecting?' The journalist - fresh off an interview with Gov. Gavin Newsom - then asked 'what our priorities are right now as a society.' 'This guy's allowed to hack the sidewalk,' he said. 'But god forbid I'm two minutes late on my parking meter.' #BREAKING Anarchists hammer the sidewalk in L.A. to collect rocks to potentially throw at law enforcement. They set cars on fire & vandalize businesses as officers watch from down the street. It's rare that I lose my cool on the air, but I couldn't contain my frustration. — Elex Michaelson (@Elex_Michaelson) June 10, 2025 Joining him remotely was retired LA police officer Nick Wilson, who now runs the Los Angeles Sheriff's Professional Association. The union boss sat quietly through Michaelson's diatribe before agreeing with him. Wilson singled out two of the city's top cops - LAPD Chief Jim McDonnell and Sheriff Robert G. Luna - as the parties who should be facing such questions. 'This should be ended right now,' he said. 'I would look at the chief of police in Los Angeles, and I would look at the sheriff of LA county. 'And I would ask those two people those very serious questions. Because this could be ended right now. 'It's not being ended right now, and the people deserve better,' he added. 'The people of Los Angeles deserve better.' Michaelson referred to those caught on camera as 'thugs, anarchists, idiots,' expressing disbelief at the scene unfolding before him. The day before, demonstrators were seen hurling debris off on an overpass at California Highway Patrol officers in the same neighborhood. Hours prior, hundreds of federal agents made landfall in the region at the behest of Donald Trump 'Literally, what we were just looking at together was somebody taking a hammer to the sidewalk, to then be able to get rocks in their bag to throw at law enforcement,' he said. 'That's what we're watching. I mean that's what's happening right now live on our cameras.' The day before, demonstrators were seen in the same area hurling debris off on an overpass at California Highway Patrol officers. Hours prior, hundreds of federal agents arrived on the orders of President Donald Trump. 'Look at what you're seeing. This looks like a third-world country right now,' Wilson told Michaelson Monday as the fourth day of protests continued. 'Should this be ended? Can it be ended? Absolutely. Is it? No.' Earlier on Monday, Michaelson welcomed Newsom for an in-person interview, where the politician accused Trump of acting like a dictator. 'He's not for peacemaking. He's here for war,' Newsom said, adding that he plans to sue the Trump administration. The violence escalated with the National Guard deployment Sunday 🚨BREAKING: Rioters are tearing up the side walk & collecting ROCKS to throw at law enforcement. LAPD continues to show incredible restraint despite multiple of their vehicles being destroyed. Graffiti & destruction is widespread with no sign of stopping. — Aldo 🌞 (@AldoButtazzoni) June 9, 2025 'He wants a civil war on the streets of America, not just here.' Violence escalated with the deployment of National Guard on Sunday, with cops later confirming dozens of arrests. By 11:30pm Monday - when Michaelson offered his real-time reaction - protesters were still setting fires and forming barricades with objects they found on the street. CBS News spotted the same agitators breaking the sidewalks and grabbing chunks of broken cement. The LAPD, meanwhile, placed officers across the city on 'tactical alert.'

STEPHEN DAISLEY: A report card to make the SNP squirm. Is this REALLY what 'stronger for Scotland' looks like?
STEPHEN DAISLEY: A report card to make the SNP squirm. Is this REALLY what 'stronger for Scotland' looks like?

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

STEPHEN DAISLEY: A report card to make the SNP squirm. Is this REALLY what 'stronger for Scotland' looks like?

It was a day of reckoning for the SNP, a rendezvous with a governing record 18 years in the making. The pace of revelations was relentless, as one damning report after another rained down thunk, thunk, thunk on ministers' desks. The statistics were bleak and their mounting volume, accumulating by the hour, meant they could not be spun away. It was all there in grim black and white: death by a thousand bar charts. There was the Crime and Justice Survey, in which the former was more in evidence than the latter. Violent offences were up 73 per cent since 2021. How could this be? Ministers have repeatedly assured us that lawbreaking is on the decline. No wonder it seems that way: eight in ten offences are no longer reported to the police. Eight in ten. House-breaking is on the rise, one in ten of us have been defrauded, and criminal violence among children is climbing, too. Hardly surprising, then, that only 45 per cent of Scots rate the job their local bobbies are doing. The figure used to be 61 per cent before the 2013 shotgun wedding of the old constabularies into Police Scotland. No one doubts the hard, usually thankless, work the rank and file do, but the force's reputation has been tainted by constant gaslighting about crime trends, the decision to stop investigating 'low level' criminality, and the perception that the police have become politicised. Too many tweets investigated, too many pronouns shared, and the scandal of a senior officer attending John Swinney 's anti-Reform summit. Yet nothing has debased public trust in the thin blue line like the SNP's complacency over officer numbers. The Scottish Government has hindered Police Scotland's crime-fighting ability and left the constabulary to take the blame for it. SNP ministers have presided over a collapse in public confidence in the justice system, and who could blame the public when judges are told to jail criminals under 25 only as a last resort? When 56 per cent say punishment doesn't fit the crime, they are delivering their verdict on a soft-touch set-up. The SNP's many inadequacies are more than just a political talking point. In some instances, they are a matter of life and death. Another statistical update that landed yesterday was the quarterly release on drugs deaths. At 308, they were up by one-third on the previous quarter, the highest spike since 2019. It is easy to become inured to the scale of lives lost when you live in Europe's drugs death blackspot, but the human toll is not diminished by indifference. This is a social catastrophe that ought to be as unthinkable as it is unconscionable. For ministers, the misery did not end there. Hospital records laid bare the crisis in emergency care: just 65.5 per cent of patients are being seen within four hours at A&E. The target is 95 per cent. The labour market data was next to take a swing. Not only had unemployment leapt by 14,000, but it had done so as the number of taxpayer-funded Scottish Government staff had ticked up higher still. The coup de grace came with the emissions figures. Remember how ministers ditched some of their key climate targets? Lucky for them that they did because yesterday brought the news that they would have missed them anyway. The government's opponents will seize on all these numbers, but it ought to be ministers seizing on them first. When the cabinet sees this litany of failures, its first instinct should not be how to spin the problem, but how to fix it. One day Scotland will have a government that thinks first of solutions rather than PR strategies but it won't be today. The government we're stuck with, at least for now, met an overwhelming body of evidence with an underwhelming series of excuses. Does it not embarrass them that, after 18 years under their control, Scotland's public services are in this state? Do they feel even a skerrick of shame for having promised so much only to deliver so little? Is this what 'stronger for Scotland' looks like? The SNP is accomplished at politics and abject at policy. It knows how to win power but not how to use it, and so asks to be judged on inputs rather than outcomes. What matters is not that ministers consistently miss their targets but that they introduced the targets in the first place. Government by good intentions might give off positive vibes but it is unpardonable vanity, prioritising the feelings of politicians over the material realities face by ordinary people. There is nothing progressive about promising what you cannot or will not deliver. It is a cruel deception that drives cynicism and frustration deeper into the hearts of the electorate. The SNP thoroughly deserved to squirm as it received its report card in real time, but the people who rely on the police, the NHS and other public services do not deserve the outcomes meted out to them. They will continue, however, as long as this feckless, hopeless shower remain in office.

Sex offender fined £1.42 per indecent exposure
Sex offender fined £1.42 per indecent exposure

Telegraph

time3 hours ago

  • Telegraph

Sex offender fined £1.42 per indecent exposure

A sex offender who indecently exposed himself seven times has been handed a £10 fine – equivalent to just £1.42 per offence. Leon Clarke, 49, from Sutton, south London, also received a one-year community order after admitting indecently exposing himself with intent to cause alarm on seven occasions at train stations last year. His 'soft' sentence has sparked demands for police and courts to take a tougher approach, just days after The Telegraph revealed how thousands of sex offenders accused of indecent exposure were avoiding prosecution. It comes despite a crackdown pledge by police after the rape and murder of Sarah Everard. The proportion of indecent exposure offences resulting in a charge has halved since 2014-15 from one in five to just one in 10 (10.2 per cent) despite the number of reported crimes increasing by 160 per cent from 6,000 to 16,000 in the same period. A government-commissioned report found Wayne Couzens, who while serving as a Metropolitan Police officer murdered Sarah, could have been stopped if police had carried out a 'more thorough and committed' investigation into reports of his alleged indecent exposures.

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