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Spain's Sánchez asks for forgiveness amid fresh corruption scandal

Spain's Sánchez asks for forgiveness amid fresh corruption scandal

Yahoo19 hours ago

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez on Thursday asked his compatriots for forgiveness following fresh allegations of corruption.
"I apologize to the citizens," a visibly shocked Sánchez told journalists in Madrid, admitting that the new revelations filled him with "great indignation and deep sadness."
The 53-year-old announced an external audit of the finances of his Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) and also a reorganization of the party executive.
Just under two hours earlier, the party's number three, Santos Cerdán, resigned as secretary due to his alleged involvement in a corruption scandal.
Cerdán also announced that he would be giving up his seat as a member of parliament.
According to a report by the UCO police unit responsible for corruption offences, he allegedly received bribes over the awarding of public contracts.
The 56-year-old has maintained his innocence, however.
Various corruption scandals have plagued the left-wing minority government in Spain, which has been in power for seven years.
Former transport minister José Luis Ábalos as well as Sánchez's wife Begoña and his brother David Sánchez are among those under investigation.
The revelations are likely to provide further ammunition to the Spanish opposition, which has condemned cronyism and corruption within the PSOE and Sánchez's family.
Alberto Núñez Feijóo, the leader of the conservative People's Party (PP), called for elections on Sunday at a protest rally against the government attended by tens of thousands of people in Madrid.
The demonstration took place under the slogan "Mafia or democracy."
The is also burdened by several corruption scandals.
Sánchez ruled out the possibility of an early general election and said the next vote will take place as planned in 2027.

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Kilmar Abrego Garcia pleads not guilty to human trafficking charges
Kilmar Abrego Garcia pleads not guilty to human trafficking charges

Yahoo

time44 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Kilmar Abrego Garcia pleads not guilty to human trafficking charges

NASHVILLE, Tennessee — Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the Salvadoran national illegally deported by the Trump administration in March, pleaded not guilty Friday to human trafficking charges that federal prosecutors leveled upon his return to the United States. One of Abrego Garcia's defense attorneys, William Allensworth, entered the not guilty plea on his client's behalf at a federal court hearing expected to focus on whether Abrego Garcia should be detained pending trial on the two felony criminal charges he faces related to immigrant smuggling. The not guilty plea came just after Abrego Garcia briefly spoke in court, saying in Spanish that he understood the charges against him. Abrego Garcia, wearing a red jail jumpsuit, entered the courtroom minutes before the hearing began. He got a hug from one of his attorneys, who sat flanking him at the defense table. Two Spanish interpreters were also on hand. The criminal case against Abrego Garcia, lodged secretly through a grand jury indictment last month, preceded Abrego Garcia's abrupt return to the United States last week. That was more than two months after the Supreme Court ordered the Trump administration to facilitate his release from El Salvador's custody. Since then, the administration has resisted efforts by federal courts to provide updates about its efforts to bring him back, cloaking them in assertions of 'state secrets' privilege and assailing judicial demands for more information. While prosecutors and the defense are expected to joust fiercely Friday about whether Abrego Garcia should be detained as he awaits trial, he's unlikely to be released immediately even if U.S. Magistrate Judge Barbara Holmes rules in his favor. Prosecutors could appeal such a ruling and have indicated they would seek to detain him on immigration grounds regardless of his status in the criminal case. The first witness at the detention hearing Friday was Homeland Security Investigations Special Agent Peter Joseph, who detailed a traffic stop of Abrego Garcia on Interstate 40 in 2022 that is the centerpiece of the immigrant-smuggling charges he faces. Joseph was not at the scene that night but as interim U.S. Attorney Robert McGuire played video from a Tennessee Highway Patrol officer's body-worn camera, the federal agent detailed why the episode appeared to involve human trafficking. Abrego Garcia can be heard in the video saying that the people in the Chevrolet Suburban were working construction in St. Louis and were headed for Maryland, but Joseph said there were nine passengers in the vehicle but no construction tools. The state officers asked the men in the vehicle to put their names and birth dates on a piece of paper passed around the van. McGuire asked Joseph how many of the passengers Abrego Garcia was driving were in the U.S. illegally. 'Right now, we're at six of the nine,' the agent said. Abrego Garcia's deportation case emerged as the most prominent early example of the perceived excesses of Trump's mass-deportation policies and of his administration's resistance to complying with court orders it disagrees with. Abrego Garcia entered the United States illegally in 2012 and sought asylum in 2019 after he was detained and faced deportation proceedings. Though his claim was denied, an immigration judge at the time barred ICE from sending him back to El Salvador because of the potential that he might be targeted for violence by a local gang. Despite the court order, which remains in effect, he was abruptly arrested on March 15 and loaded aboard one of a controversial trio of flights that ferried more than 230 foreigners from the U.S. to El Salvador, where they were immediately frog-marched into a notoriously harsh anti-terrorism prison. Many of those men were expelled from the U.S. under the Alien Enemies Act, a wartime authority Trump invoked against a Venezuela gang, Tren de Aragua. While the White House and prosecutors have claimed that Abrego Garcia is a member of MS-13, which his lawyers have denied, Trump's proclamation covered only Venezuelan citizens and Abrego Garcia is Salvadoran. Trump administration officials, including Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, initially described his deportation as an administrative error because it violated the immigration judge's order. However, the White House quickly retreated from acknowledging any mistake. About 100 protesters rallied outside the courthouse as the hearing got underway, carrying signs with slogans such as 'Free Kilmar: Support Due Process and Human Rights' and 'Resist ICE.'

F. Dennis Alvarez, former Hillsborough chief judge, dies at 79
F. Dennis Alvarez, former Hillsborough chief judge, dies at 79

Yahoo

time44 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

F. Dennis Alvarez, former Hillsborough chief judge, dies at 79

TAMPA — Frank Dennis Alvarez, who as Hillsborough County's longtime chief judge championed reforms that became staples of the local criminal justice system and helped the careers of many prominent lawyers, died Thursday at home in Tampa. His close friend, Simon Canasi, said Alvarez had been in hospice care. He'd received a heart transplant about 15 years ago and had experienced declining health in recent years. He was 79. 'He was an icon in the courthouse and a great friend,' Canasi said. 'There wasn't a place he could go that people didn't know who he was.' He was a man once said to know politics like a jeweler knows stones, an always smiling, always-hand-shaking statesman who genuinely loved people and the city that made him. Alvarez was born in 1945 in Ybor City. A son of cigar workers with Spanish and Italian roots, he grew up in West Tampa. He dabbled in politics as a kid, putting bumper stickers on cars in support of Sam Gibbons, the late Tampa lawmaker. He mused that he one day wanted to be mayor of his hometown. E.J. Salcines, a former Hillsborough state attorney and appellate judge, got to know Alvarez in childhood. They remained friends their entire lives. 'I'm sure that he looked up to me,' Salcines said. 'He always called me 'boss.'' Alvarez attended Jesuit High School and the University of South Florida. He was in his senior year of college when Salcines campaigned to be elected Hillsborough County's top prosecutor. At a North Tampa campaign stop, Alvarez chatted with his old friend, who asked what he planned to do after graduation. Alvarez said he'd thought about law school. Salcines encouraged him to take the admissions exam and apply. Alvarez became among the first in a long line of future Tampa lawyers to attend Salcines' alma mater, the South Texas College of Law. He began his legal career in 1974 as an assistant state attorney in Salcines' office. He later worked in private practice before running unopposed in 1980 to become a county judge. Four years later, he again ran unopposed for a seat on the circuit bench. In 1988, his fellow jurists elected him chief judge. 'He was an exemplary judge and lawyer because he took his oaths very, very seriously,' Salcines said. Alvarez led the judiciary as the county's population blossomed and its court system became more complex. Colleagues credited his ambition for the successes he had in the dozen years that followed. He helped create the first adult and juvenile drug courts, which aim to address the roots of substance abuse and allow defendants to avoid criminal convictions for low-level drug crimes if they complete a treatment program. It was a novel concept at the time. Drug court's success in Tampa drew national attention and set the mold for future problem-solving courts, like veterans treatment and mental health court. Alvarez also established a special division to address domestic violence cases and a 'rocket docket' to clear a backlog of juvenile cases. As a powerful judge, he occasionally turned up at the center of high-profile cases. He had a minuscule role in the O.J. Simpson saga, when a man in Tampa was subpoenaed to testify in the former football star's murder trial. Alvarez presided over a hearing on the subpoena. He also managed the hotly contested lawsuit over the estate of former Tampa Bay Buccaneers owner Hugh Culverhouse. As the face of the local judiciary, he administered oaths to countless lawyers and fellow judges. He swore into office local legal giants State Attorneys Harry Lee Coe III and Mark Ober. As construction on a new court building began in 2000, Alvarez was among those who pushed to name the new facility for the late George Edgecomb, Hillsborough County's first African American judge. Four years later, the county dedicated the building at the corner of Twiggs and Jefferson streets the George Edgecomb Courthouse. His widow, Doretha Edgecomb, said she knew Alvarez as someone who understood fairness but also stood for what he believed, even if it meant standing alone. 'He was approachable. He loved the law. And I considered him a friend,' she said. Fellow public servants and politicians described Alvarez as man of steadfast loyalty, a confidant whose counsel was in high demand. 'If you are in a war, you want him in the foxhole with you,' former Hillsborough Tax Collector Doug Belden said of Alvarez in 2001. Though he enjoyed a good reputation, Alvarez's last years running the local courthouse became sullied as some fellow judges were mired in scandal. Controversies included allegations of judges raising campaign money for politicians, having affairs with bailiffs and snooping around colleagues' offices after hours. Amid the fallout, a state commission probed his handling of the misconduct, and a grand jury criticized his leadership. He was 55 when he announced he would retire after 21 years on the bench. He emphatically denied that his departure had anything to do with the courthouse controversies, saying he'd long planned to return to private life. A year later, he launched a brief campaign be Tampa's mayor, but the prospect that the court scandals would make for nasty attacks spurred advice to bow out. But there were other factors, too. He'd dealt with heart problems most of his life, undergoing bypass surgery when he was just 34. As he became a senior citizen, he needed a new heart. From a hospital bed in 2010, he told the Tampa Bay Times his health troubles made politics seems less important. 'You get here and you think, man, that doesn't even come into play anymore,' he said. A transplant that year gave him another decade and a half. He worked until the end. Alvarez's robust legal background and influence made him in his later career a much-sought mediator for civil disputes. He remained active in the community. He served as chairperson of the foundation for the Boys and Girls Clubs of Tampa Bay. He was an esteemed member of the Krewe of the Knights of Sant Yago, which seeks to preserve Tampa's Latin heritage. 'The city of Tampa has lost a wonderful person,' said Richard Gonzmart, the restaurateur whose family helped found the Krewe. 'There's so many young attorneys who will go on and practice because of his guidance and leadership.' 'He was one of my role models,' said Ronald Ficarrotta, who served as Hillsborough's chief judge from 2015 to 2023. 'He was definitely a mentor and someone I would call on from time to time for advice.' Chief Judge Christopher Sabella became acquainted with Alvarez in meetings of local government entities in his early career as a lawyer for the Hillsborough sheriff's office. The collaboration between local offices and the courts was something that Sabella said Alvarez engineered. 'I just hope all the judges are able to keep the 13th Circuit where Dennis took it,' Sabella said. Former Mayor Bob Buckhorn said Alvarez embodied, with his blue-collar roots, the values of the city's immigrant families and enduring loyalty to those who knew him. 'He rose to the highest ranks of the legal profession in Tampa, and his imprint on the many young lawyers that he mentored will ensure that his contributions will live on for decades,' Buckhorn said. 'He was my friend and I will miss him.'

Garment Workers Are at Risk. Fashion Can't Afford to Look Away.
Garment Workers Are at Risk. Fashion Can't Afford to Look Away.

Business of Fashion

time44 minutes ago

  • Business of Fashion

Garment Workers Are at Risk. Fashion Can't Afford to Look Away.

From the very start, the fashion industry has been swept up in the increasingly tense showdown between the Trump administration and immigration activists. The first protests in Los Angeles were triggered by a June 6 raid on workplaces in the city, including a garment warehouse. The Garment Worker Center, which advocates for the Fashion District's workforce of mostly Spanish-speaking immigrants, has been working in overdrive to support its members in crisis. 'We heard a number of workers saying, 'I'm going to avoid going to work' or 'I'm worried about public transportation,'' said Marissa Nuncio, the organisation's executive director. 'Fear is so widespread because we've seen not only undocumented individuals being picked up but also people with various legal immigration statuses and peaceful protesters being arrested.' Nuncio spoke to The Business of Fashion Thursday night, in between driving members home from consultations at the Center's legal clinic. The Garment Worker Center is actively raising legal defense funds and can take donations on its website. 'It feels to me after 25 years of community organisation like an unprecedented time,' she said. As protests erupt across Los Angeles and other cities in response to President Donald Trump's escalating immigration raids, fashion finds itself uncomfortably close to the picket lines. While the bulk of apparel manufacturing takes place overseas, existing facilities in the US all rely deeply on immigrant labour. In LA alone, there are 45,000 workers who cut, sew and finish apparel products in local facilities, according to the Garment Worker Center. 'Our industry has a rich history that is interwoven with diverse immigrant communities,' American Apparel & Footwear Association president Steve Lamar said in a statement. 'For generations, immigrants from Europe, Asia, Africa, and Latin America have powered our industry in manufacturing, design, and retail.' That workforce is now threatened with deportation. Trump has ordered Immigration and Customs Enforcement to rapidly increase the number of workplace inspections it conducts, a precursor to roundups of undocumented workers such as the ones seen in LA and other cities in recent weeks. He has also deployed the National Guard and US Marines to support these efforts, an unprecedented move that opponents say has inflamed protests. With more protests planned across the US over the weekend, the industry's stake in the matter means it cannot for much longer hold off on taking a stance. 'It's very important for the world to know that the protests in Los Angeles (and nationwide) have been peaceful protests against the horrific attacks on innocent men, women and children working to support the US economy,' designer Willy Chavarria said in a written statement. Still, save for a few isolated voices like Chavarria, fashion has largely kept silent. In recent months, designers, industry organisations and corporations have pulled back from championing causes such as diversity, inclusion and LGBTQ visibility, after going all-in on social advocacy (or more cynically in some cases, advocacy-themed marketing) in the wake of George Floyd's murder in 2020. Nuncio said the lack of industry voices comes as no surprise. 'We didn't expect any kind of [institutional] support,' said Nuncio. 'It's on brand for fashion. We never found that the large brands expressed that level of concern for their workforce.' Silence, in Trump's America, is partially a survival mechanism. The fear of backlash from the president and his loyal base has created a chilling effect across the industry; anti-woke sentiment, right-wing activism and Trump's explicit vow to 'end the tyranny of DEI' have convinced brands and retailers that there is more risk than reward in speaking out. 'Everyone from independent designers to larger brands are trying to tread as cautiously as possible and not upset anything or cause ripples in the water and just try to make it to another season,' said one executive of an American label based in New York. 'It's not just the fear of retribution, it's all the uncertainty in the industry right now, from tariffs to challenges in wholesale.' Others call into question the efficacy of taking a public stance on matters that can be addressed internally. 'At the end of the day, what does speaking out get us?' said the CEO of a Los Angeles-brand that operates its own manufacturing facility in the city. 'The best thing we can do is recognise what's happening and try to protect the people who are most dramatically affected.' The brand closed its showroom and warehouse Monday, the CEO said, out of concern for employee safety. Protestors don't need the 2025 equivalent of black squares on Instagram. As raids continue across the US, American brands, retailers and even fashion schools, where immigrants make up a substantial fraction of the student population, must recognise the growing risks. While speaking out publicly may not be the right move for everyone, staying silent does not mean staying unprepared. Industry leaders have a responsibility to confront this climate of fear, and take meaningful steps behind the scenes to support their employees. Ultimately, the most meaningful action fashion employers and stakeholders can take against immigration raids is to support their workforce and safeguard their wellbeing, said Nuncio. First and foremost, there needs to be a plan in case of a workplace raid or audit by ICE, she explained. Businesses can protect job sites as a private space, demanding a judicial warrant from federal authorities and training their employees to exercise their rights to stay silent. 'Businesses should feel a sense of responsibility in how to protect their workforce,' Nuncio said. 'This is a moment where everyone should think about their sphere of influence … and reach out to community organisations and [seek] legal advice.' Companies can pursue their own internal compliance audits to make sure they have the right documentation on file for their employees, according to Susan Scafidi, director of the Fashion Law Institute. 'Fashion companies can also seek out local immigration law resources, pro bono and otherwise, and share that information with their employees before rather than after a raid or an arrest,' she said. 'Education and preparation may not stop disruptive government action, but they can limit potential harm to both employers and employees.' And where possible, the industry should speak up. 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Zara owner Inditex posted slowing growth. Inditex's revenue rose 6 percent in the five weeks to June 9, a weaker start to the summer season than last year. Stock fell 6.4 percent in early Madrid trading. Victoria's Secret's turnaround took a hit on a quarterly forecast miss. The lingerie retailer projected profit for the current quarter below analyst expectations and reduced full-year adjusted operating income forecast. CEO Hillary Super's reversal strategy has been hampered by US tariffs and weakening consumer spending. A former Expedia CEO bought troubled luxury lingerie brand La Perla. Peter Kern purchased the Italian brand for €25 million and won the Italian Enterprise Ministry's approval by promising to keep production and product development in Bologna. The French Senate backed a law to curb ultra-fast fashion. If implemented, the law would ban advertising for fast-growing Chinese e-commerce platforms including Shein, though the bill would impose less severe restrictions on European fast fashion companies like Zara. The Attico opened its first store, in Ibiza. The Italian fashion label founded in 2016 by Gilda Ambrosio and Giorgia Tordini will open a second location in Seoul later this year, with a Milan flagship also planned. Comme des Garçons opened its first Latin American flagship. The 160-square-metre boutique in São Paulo, Brazil's luxury mall Shopping Iguatemi signals the Japanese brand's expansion into Latin American markets. THE BUSINESS OF BEAUTY (Courtesy) L'Oréal acquired British skincare brand Medik8. Terms were not disclosed, but according to a Financial Times report, Medik8 was valued at approximately $1 billion. Katrina Kaif's Kay Beauty will launch at Space NK. The Indian mass cosmetics brand founded by Bollywood actress Katrina Kaif will launch this summer at UK beauty boutique Space NK. Typology pushed further into the US with a hair care launch. Building off its success in skincare, French label Typology launched five scalp-focussed hair-care products in the US on its direct-to-consumer website, including two shampoos, a conditioner, hair mask and scalp scrub. PEOPLE (Courtesy) Mark Guiducci was named global editorial director of Vanity Fair. Guiducci, most recently the creative editorial director of Vogue, will join Vanity Fair on June 30 as the inaugural global editorial director, succeeding former editor-in-chief Radhika Jones, who stepped down in April. Elizabeth Paton will succeed Lauren Indvik as the Financial Times' fashion editor. Paton, who worked at the FT from 2011 to 2015 and was most recently the international styles correspondent at The New York Times, will rejoin the FT in August. She will oversee the publication's fashion and style coverage, and its annual Business of Luxury Summit. MEDIA AND TECHNOLOGY (Valerie Sadoun) The Independents acquired culinary studio We Are Ona. Under The Independents, We Are Ona, which produces immersive dinners for the likes of Chanel and Balenciaga, will continue to expand in the US, the Middle East and Asia. This is the fashion PR giant's third acquisition this year and first ever in the culinary space. Outdoor Voices' founder raised a Series A for a new start-up. Ty Haney raised an $11 million Series A funding round led by Offline Ventures and Strobe Ventures for her three-year-old rewards platform Try Your Best. TYB currently works with brands including Rare Beauty and Glossier. Compiled by Jessica Kwon.

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