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鵜鶘前鋒Zion Williamson出事了 遭到指控強姦和多年虐待

鵜鶘前鋒Zion Williamson出事了 遭到指控強姦和多年虐待

Yahooa day ago

根據美國時間週四提交給洛杉磯高等法院的訴訟,一名女子指控紐奧良鵜鶘前鋒Zion Williamson在多年的戀愛關係中,強姦以及性虐待、身體虐待、情感虐待和經濟虐待。
Zion Williamson。圖片來源:達志影像
這名女子名叫 Jane Doe,她指控Zion Williamson在與她的交往中持續表現出虐待、控制和威脅行為,這段關係始於Zion Williamson就讀杜克大學1年級,從 2018 年持續到 2023 年。
美媒ESPN 獲得的這份長達 12 頁的民事訴狀,Zion Williamson涉嫌的行為發生在多個州,包括路易斯安那州和加州。
法庭文件詳細描述了 2020 年發生的兩起強暴案,第一起發生在同年 9 月,地點是加州比佛利山莊,該女子告訴Zion Williamson,「她很累,想睡覺。」,但Zion Williamson告訴她,如果不與他發生性關係,她就不能睡,隨後他將她按倒在地,雙手反綁在身後,並強姦了她。
文件中指出,Zion Williamson將該女子的手機扔到房間的另一邊,並掐住了她的脖子。
第二起強暴案發生在 2020 年 10 月,地點也是比佛利山莊,女子稱,表達了去聖地亞哥拜訪朋友的計畫後,她遭到了暴力強姦,在這兩起事件中,該女子都指責Zion Williamson「一段時間內」拿走了她的手機。
除了強姦指控外,訴訟還詳細指控,「他用力過猛,擔心自己的生命受到威脅,並最終多次失去意識」,該女子還指控Zion Williamson未經同意進入她的公寓並偷走了她的財物。
訴訟指控Zion Williamson多次「威脅殺死」女子及其家人。
該名女子因精神損害尋求金錢賠償,包括懲罰性賠償,消息人士透露,該女子的求償金額在 1800 萬美元(合台幣53.7億元)到 5000 萬美元之間。
Zion Williamson的委託律師事務所 Barrasso Usdin Kupperman Freeman & Sarver LLC 在聲明中表示,「我們非常重視這些指控,並堅決否認,投訴中的指控完全是虛假和魯莽的,這似乎是出於經濟動機而非任何合法的不滿,試圖剝削一名職業運動員。」
常客快艇、新興強權雷霆、金塊、灰狼、火箭、灰熊;東區龍頭騎士、衛冕軍塞爾提克、公鹿、溜馬、尼克、魔術以及大驚奇活塞、老八熱火,16支球隊齊聚一堂,就為了爭奪那座象徵年度最高榮譽的歐布萊恩金盃。精彩對戰、場場精彩敬請鎖定緯來體育台現場直播!
✎緯來體育台官方網站 【https://sport.videoland.com.tw/ 】
✎緯來新聞網 【https://news.videoland.com.tw/ 】
✎緯來體育台官方YouTube收看NBA LIVE直播
【https://bit.ly/VLsportsNBALIVE 】
緯來體育台-2024-25NBA美國職籃大賽-賽程轉播表

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How a WMass task force works to give cold case trans victims their names back
How a WMass task force works to give cold case trans victims their names back

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How a WMass task force works to give cold case trans victims their names back

ORANGE — On the morning of Sept. 25, 1988, a man in Lake County, Florida, discovered the remains of a woman's body. Severely decomposed, the woman's skeletal remains were sent to the C. A. Pound Human Identification Laboratory on the University of Florida campus. It would be decades before the involvement of a group in Western Massachusetts helped uncover a key fact in the case: the woman's name. At the time, the laboratory observed that the woman was between 24 and 32 years old and would have stood around 5 feet, 10 inches tall with a robust build. She had silicone breast implants and scarring on her pelvic bone which, at the time, was thought to be an indicator of childbirth. Those remains, however, told investigators nothing about who Jane Doe was. Twenty-seven years later, in 2015, advances in DNA testing led to the discovery that this person had both X and Y chromosomes and was therefore a transgender woman. Jane Doe received a new nickname — Julie Doe, a moniker inspired by the 1995 film about drag queens, 'To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything, Julie Newmar.' A new artistic reconstruction was done. The sketch, released to the public in 2015, depicted a masculine face, someone with a chiseled jaw and prominent Adam's apple. 'The individual, while technically a very skilled artist, had clearly put some kind of bias in here about what he believed trans women would look like,' said Anthony Redgrave, co-founder of The Trans Doe Task Force. Redgrave works with his partner, Lee Bingham Redgrave, out of a third-floor office in Orange, in Franklin County. They founded the task force in early 2018 as part of a larger national nonprofit, the DNA Doe Project. They worked to spread awareness about Julie Doe's story, especially among the LGBTQ community. That meant revisiting what her forensic sketch looked like. 'That's the purpose of forensic art, to make people look longer,' Lee Bingham Redgrave said. 'It's to capture somebody's imagination, to make them think, 'Could I have known this person?'' The task force worked with forensic artist Carl Koppelman and in December 2018 a new sketch was shared to social media in a plea to determine Julie Doe's identity. The new sketch depicted softer, more feminine features. 'Somebody that you could look at and say, 'this is a face I want to keep looking at,'' Anthony Redgrave said. After more than three decades, in March 2025, Julie Doe finally had both her name and identity back: Pamela Leigh Walton. Officials are still investigating how Walton, who was born in Kentucky, ended up in Florida. The one-room office of the Trans Doe Task Force sits in the Orange Innovation Center, past the Orange YMCA, a Pilates studio and a laundromat. Inside, the walls are filled with newspaper clippings and before-and-after forensic sketches of victims — many of which were drawn by Anthony Redgrave himself. Red string connects cases on a wall-sized map. Anthony Redgrave is the team's lead forensic genealogist. He holds a doctorate of education in transformative leadership and has held trainings for the FBI and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, along with international organizations like the Australian Federal Police, Netherlands Forensic Institute and the Brazilian Forensic Identification Institute. The work of the task force comes at a time of uncertainty in the transgender community. President Donald Trump in January signed an executive order that bars federal funding to organizations that support 'gender ideology.' That has forced national databases like the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children to remove mentions in their public records if a person was possibly transgender. The executive order, issued the day Trump took office, declared that it is the policy of the federal government to only 'recognize two sexes, male and female.' However, the task force has continued to track that information. The Redgraves said the task force added 209 unidentified dead and 1,021 missing persons cases to its database in 2024. The cases were from more than 30 countries. Anthony Redgrave said the task force has a team of volunteers from across the country — and a few internationally — working to mine online databases to find missing persons and homicide cases that suggest a person could have been nonbinary or transgender. Those cases are then added to the Trans Doe Task Force's LGBT+ Accountability for Missing and Murdered Persons (LAMMP) database. 'A lot of skeletal remains are ambiguous,' Lee Bingham Redgrave said. 'A lot of cases, especially from the '70s and '80s and early '90s, need updated anthropological analysis and estimates. They need to have their sex estimates reevaluated. Julie Doe's case is a perfect example of why it's important to update your forensic estimates to not close any doors. This is how people fall through cracks.' 'I have no idea what my skeleton looks like,' said Anthony Redgrave. 'I don't even really entirely know what my chromosomes are doing. So, who knows how I would be categorized if I died, became a skeleton, and got lost in the woods.' Anthony and Lee Redgrave are both transgender men. Their volunteers are all transgender individuals, or trusted allies — often the parent or spouse of a transgender person. 'We want to assure our community that our cases are in the hands (of people) that they would trust,' Lee Bingham Redgrave said. 'We don't want them to have to trust us to trust them.' According to the Human Rights Campaign, 56% of violent crimes against transgender individuals in 2024 were targeted towards Black transgender women, and 38% of victims were misgendered or deadnamed by authorities or the press. The Transgender Day of Remembrance website, which tracks the number of instances of violent crimes against transgender individuals, reported 384 crimes in 2024. The number for 2025 is up to about 68. That number doesn't account for all of the people who may be wrongly gendered as male or female in national databases like the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System, according to the couple. When unidentified remains are analyzed, Anthony Redgrave said, the sex is just an estimation, a nuance that is often lost during a law enforcement investigation. In a statement issued to NBC News Washington, a spokesperson for the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children wrote: 'We are responding to this direction in a balanced way, reviewing our publicly facing materials to ensure compliance while not impacting our 40-year mission of child protection.' Similarly, on the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System website, a message on the home page still reads: 'The Department of Justice's Office of Justice Programs is currently reviewing its websites and materials in accordance with recent Executive Orders and related guidance. During this review, some pages and publications will be unavailable.' Meanwhile, Lee Bingham Redgrave said the task force has seen some cases it has been monitoring disappear from the database. 'Some of them were later updated and reuploaded to make it look like they weren't transgender,' he said, 'but that's rolling back to where we started. When we started Trans Task Force, nobody was doing anything about missing transgender cases.' A local attorney said any steps to remove this information from databases poses hazards. Jennifer Levi, who is transgender and senior director of transgender and queer rights at GLAD Law (GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders), is challenging the Trump administration's ban on transgender people serving in the U.S. military for the second time. She was involved with the litigation against the first Trump administration's military ban in 2018. 'By turning transgender people into a political football, the administration is displaying callous cruelty toward some of our most vulnerable neighbors, friends, and loved ones,' Levi said. 'Purging key identifying information from missing persons databases — information that could help find missing children — is part of this broader attack and puts these community members at even greater risk." The Trans Doe Task Force is a nonprofit and is not federally funded, so its work continues largely uninterrupted. It has increased security, however, and the LAMMP database is now accessible only by request from law enforcement agencies and investigators. The couple also co-own Redgrave Research Forensic Services, in which they conduct in-house forensic investigative genetic genealogy testing. They do not directly handle DNA samples or evidence. Rather, they use genetic information from online companies like GEDmatch to help identify victims of violent crimes. 'DNA is the ultimate equalizer. That's a record that doesn't go away, as long as you capture it before everything's degraded,' Anthony Redgrave said. 'The nice thing about the digitizing of DNA is that you're capturing exactly all the information that's there at that moment in time. Even if things continue to deteriorate or just degrade, then you still have that information and it doesn't rot or get lost like paper.' For the couple, what's most important is making sure that nobody slips through the cracks. Lee Bingham Redgrave carries that reminder with him on his body, where all of his tattoos are memento of past cases. A tattoo on one arm reads 'John Doe' and the other, 'Jane Doe.' A double helix strand of DNA with 12 connecting rungs runs down his inner arm. Each of those rungs represent the first 12 cases that the Trans Doe Task Force solved in its first year of operation. The task force hasn't made much headway in partnering with Massachusetts law enforcement agencies, largely because it is a smaller organization, Lee Bingham Redgrave said. 'We have attempted to reach out on a number of occasions, and it seems that Massachusetts primarily wants to go with the much larger companies that are much more well-known,' he said. 'We're quite a bit smaller than some of the really large companies (out there).' That doesn't mean that the occasional Massachusetts case doesn't come across their desk. Such was the case with Benji Palmer, a transgender man who was found unresponsive at his Boston-area apartment in January 2021. Palmer (who used him/them pronouns) was an immigrant who sought asylum in the United States. The state Office of the Chief Medical Examiner was unable to locate his next of kin. 'If the (Massachusetts medical examiner) determines that somebody has been unclaimed for a certain period of time, what happens is a local funeral home will donate their time to come and transport the unknown person to a pauper's section of a graveyard or cemetery somewhere,' Lee Bingham Redgrave said. Pauper's fields are designated areas in graveyards and cemeteries where unclaimed individuals are buried. They are unmarked areas, and those buried in these fields do not have headstones. That's what happened to Palmer, Lee Bingham Redgrave said. He and Anthony Redgrave came across Palmer's case in a database of unclaimed persons, and upon examining his post-mortem photos, thought that he may have been transgender. 'Being transgender ourselves, you can just get a feeling about somebody,' Lee Bingham Redgrave said. '(Looking at them), you think, this person may have been gender variant in some way.' In this case, the task force dug through social media and search engines, and after some time, was able to locate Palmer's social media profiles, identifying their chosen name and their close friends. Lee Bingham Redgrave's efforts to inform the state's medical examiner of the task force's findings didn't go as well, however. 'I asked if she could tell me what cemetery they went to so that their friends could go and visit, and I was told no, that's not information that I can give you,' Lee Bingham Redgrave said. The medical examiner's office told the task force that it could only release that information to a family member, but because Palmer was both transgender and an Irish immigrant, it was possible they were estranged from their birth family. As a result, Lee Bingham Redgrave was unable to find a direct family member. According to Code of Massachusetts Regulations 505 CMR 2.00, an unidentified body is released to the Department of Transitional Assistance only after the medical chief has ensured that 'reasonable efforts have been undertaken to identify the body.' The chief must make a record of the person's characteristics through charting, photography, fingerprints and a dental examination. Instead, after some internet sleuthing, Lee Bingham Redgrave found the funeral home that would have likely handled Palmer's remains. He was able to learn where Palmer was buried — the Mount Benedict Cemetery in West Roxbury. 'We asked (the cemetery) if we would be allowed to use our own funds to place a headstone and we were told, 'no, that's not allowed,'' Lee Bingham Redgrave said. All the task force could do was to create an online memorial for Palmer on its website, which it did, under a new section of their website called community memorials. Palmer's memorial page shares where they are buried, including the GPS coordinates to the pauper's area of the cemetery. His close friends — Lee Bingham Redgrave said these were likely his 'chosen family,' nonbiological family relationships built through close ties and mutual support — came together to write Palmer's obituary. 'Benji was truly a generous, kind soul who wanted the best for everyone, even if it meant them sacrificing things for themself,' his friends wrote. One of Palmer's friends, Sabrina Hewitt, echoed those sentiments in a phone interview with The Republican. 'He made such an impact on my life, and I never actually got to meet him,' said Hewitt, who is transgender. Hewitt met Palmer online through a Facebook group that they co-moderated together, New England Transgender. It's still active today with a goal to provide support and resources for people who identify as transgender. 'He meant so much to me and to a lot of people. He was a really big part of the group, and he helped so much,' she said. 'To this day, I think about them now, and their soul is so pure. They were such a good person,' Hewitt still keeps the Facebook group active in Palmer's honor. 'I want his memory, I want every ounce of what he meant to people to be talked about because he deserves it,' she added. Solving decades-old cold cases isn't all the Trans Doe Task Force does. It has also established a database to help preserve peoples' information — especially that of transgender youth — before something might go wrong. The #IFIGOMISSING project is a self-submit database, where people are able to submit their names, pronouns, basic information and photos so, in the event that they do end up missing, their information would be used accurately. The project was inspired by the social media trend #IFIGOMISSING in 2023, in which thousands of people — especially transgender youth — were making videos on TikTok and other social media platforms using that hashtag. 'The kids started posting videos saying 'I'm not going to kill myself, I'm not suicidal, I'm not going to run away. So if I go missing, I want people to know this is my name. If I go missing, please don't use my dead name, please use this picture of me and not an old picture,'' Lee Bingham Redgrave said. Anthony and Lee are parents themselves. They have a transgender daughter who was a teenager when they first started the task force. 'We could only imagine if we were in a different state where there was this legislation starting to happen saying that parents could be criminalized, kids could be removed from their homes,' Lee Bingham Redgrave said. Because the #IFIGOMISSING database includes so many people under the age of 18, it is secured and cannot be accessed by the public. The information would only be used in the event that a person in the database went missing. On June 5, Anthony Redgrave will give a presentation at the Springfield Museums about LGBTQ+ cold cases. It comes at the start of Pride Month, which is observed in June to commemorate the 1969 Stonewall riots. 'We're here and we're approachable and anyone can ask us anything,' he said. 'If you're in law enforcement, if you have a relative who's in law enforcement, let them know we're here, and if you're a family member or a friend of a trans person, it's good to let them know that we're here. But also, for parents to know that we're basically filling in a gap that exists at the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. If you have a missing trans kid, the NCMEC is not the place to turn right now.' 'We're not sanctuary cities': WMass mayors push back at feds over DHS target list Missing Chicopee kayaker found deceased, DA says; another man from separate Conn. River incident still missing Paper City Clothing Co. opens new location, saving historic Holyoke building OneHolyoke to host event on community challenges amid federal cutbacks Read the original article on MassLive.

NBA/一票之差擊敗哈利伯頓 席亞康勇奪東區冠軍賽MVP
NBA/一票之差擊敗哈利伯頓 席亞康勇奪東區冠軍賽MVP

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NBA/一票之差擊敗哈利伯頓 席亞康勇奪東區冠軍賽MVP

溜馬在今天主場關門戰中展現問鼎總冠軍的氣勢,下半場直接轟垮尼克防線,以4勝2敗淘汰對手,睽違25年再次闖進總冠軍賽。 此戰席亞康(Pascal Siakam)18投10中,繳出31分5籃板3助攻3阻攻的全方位數據,加上系列賽的穩定發揮,以1票之差擊敗隊友哈利伯頓(Tyrese Haliburton),榮獲東區冠軍賽MVP。 PASCAL SIAKAM IS THE EASTERN CONFERENCE FINALS MVP!!!He receives the Larry Bird Trophy 🤩 — NBA (@NBA) 2025年6月1日 席亞康在東區冠軍賽6場比賽場均可拿下24.8分5籃板3.5助攻1.3抄截0.7阻攻,投籃命中率達52%,三分球命中率也有50%的高水準。其中3場拿到至少30分,但另外3場則都低於20分。 Pascal Siakam TOOK OVER in the East Finals.🔥 24.8 points per game🔥 5.0 rebounds per game🔥 52.4% from the floor🔥 ECF MVPThe @Pacers are the 2024-25 East Champions! — NBA (@NBA) 2025年6月1日 席亞康是從溜馬傳奇射手米勒手上接過名為「大鳥柏德(Larry Bird Trophy)」的東區冠軍賽MVP獎盃,這兩人和溜馬有著深厚淵源。在25年前溜馬隊史首度打進總冠軍賽的過程中,柏德正是當時的總教練。 Pascal Siakam received five of the nine votes for Eastern Conference Finals MVP from a media panel covering the series. Tyrese Haliburton received the other four votes. — NBA Communications (@NBAPR) 2025年6月1日 Siakam has been named Eastern Conference Finals MVP and the recipient of the Larry Bird Trophy ⭐️ — Indiana Pacers (@Pacers) 2025年6月1日 "YEAH, THOMAS. YEAHHHH!"Pascal Siakam shouted out Thomas Bryant for his MASSIVE impact off the bench in the @Pacers Finals-clinching win 👏💯 — NBA (@NBA) 2025年6月1日 更多udn報導 中職/魔鷹月底小額刷富邦 2數據追平聯盟史上洋將單月紀錄 MLB/實戰投打29球+4打席累了 大谷翔平睡得像寶寶驚醒瞬間全都錄 NBA/同是60勝賽季的西區第一 SGA可望超越KD時代創造最強雷霆 MLB/大谷翔平、賈吉誰更強?退役三神獸給出答案

Adult Film Star Considering Lawsuit Against Zion Williamson After Recent Allegations Against Him Surface
Adult Film Star Considering Lawsuit Against Zion Williamson After Recent Allegations Against Him Surface

Yahoo

time15 hours ago

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Adult Film Star Considering Lawsuit Against Zion Williamson After Recent Allegations Against Him Surface

An adult film star and influencer, Moriah Mills, is reportedly considering taking legal action against NBA star Zion Williamson, just days after Williamson was sued by another woman alleging he raped her in 2023. According to TMZ, Mills, who reportedly had a relationship with Williamson in 2023, contacted attorney Tony Buzbee about potentially filing a lawsuit against the New Orleans Pelicans player. Buzbee, a lawyer known for handling high-profile cases, including lawsuits against Jay-Z and, more recently, Shannon Sharpe, told the publication that Mills reached out to him about seeking legal action against Williamson "just hours" after another woman's lawsuit against the athlete became public. Details of Mills' potential lawsuit remain unclear; however, Buzbee said he's "evaluating her claims." When TMZ caught up with Mills in Los Angeles on May 30, she declined to comment on any potential legal action. She did, however, offer words of encouragement for Williamson. "I just hope you change your ways because your job and your family and your legacy is on the line," she said. Mills' comments aren't the first time the adult movie star has spoken about Williamson, 24. In 2023, Mills blasted the former Duke University player on X, formerly Twitter, after learning he was having a baby with another woman. According to Complex, Mills and Williamson had a "sneaky link" relationship; however, their feelings for each other developed into something more. Consequently, Mills said her heart was "broken and shattered" by the news of his child and called the baby a "deal breaker." She later mocked the basketball player on TikTok after he exited a game against the Los Angeles Lakers. "They don't play about me, like, that's all I'm gonna say," she said in the video. "Honestly, you'll never beat the GOAT, you're not the GOAT. You're not LeBron James. You'll never beat LeBron James. Goodnight." On May 30, news broke that a woman going by the pseudonym Jane Doe filed a shocking lawsuit against Williamson, claiming he repeatedly raped and assaulted her in September 2020. In the documents, the plaintiff alleged Williamson called her "stuck up" and a "b-tch" during an argument inside his Beverly Hills home. Doe then claimed Williamson told her she couldn't go to sleep "without having sex with him," which allegedly resulted in him forcibly pinning her down while sexually assaulting her. According to Doe, Williamson repeated his actions a month later after she expressed her desire to visit friends in San Diego. The legal documents further allege that after the assault, Williamson then took her phone and laptop, preventing her from contacting help. 'These two incidents were not isolated,' the lawsuit reads. 'Williamson continued to abuse, rape, assault, and batter Plaintiff in California and other states, including Louisiana and Texas, until the relationship ended in 2023.' In a statement, Williamson's attorney fired back at the allegations of sexual assault, calling them "categorically false and reckless." The lawyer continued, "We take these allegations with the utmost seriousness, and we unequivocally deny them. The allegations contained in the complaint are categorically false and reckless. This is the plaintiff's third set of attorneys. This appears to be an attempt to exploit a professional athlete driven by a financial motive rather than any legitimate grievance." Williamson's legal counsel also claimed the basketball player "never dated" Doe; however, the attorney admitted the pair had a "consensual, casual relationship that began more than six years ago when he was 18 years old." "That relationship ended years ago. At no point during or immediately after that relationship did the plaintiff raise any concerns. Only after the friendship ended did she begin demanding millions of dollars," the lawyer added. Elsewhere in the lawyer's statement, they revealed that Williamson reported the "plaintiff's extortion attempts to law enforcement" and that "an arrest warrant" was "issued in connection with that report." They also shared that Williamson plans to "file counterclaims and seek significant damages for this defamatory lawsuit." "While these allegations are false, we recognize the seriousness of the claims and welcome the opportunity to prove the truth in court. We are confident that the legal process will expose the truth and fully vindicate Mr. Williamson," the attorney said.

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