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Eduardo Bolsonaro praises President Trump's tariffs on Brazil

Eduardo Bolsonaro praises President Trump's tariffs on Brazil

BBC News12 hours ago
The son of Brazil's former President Jair Bolsonaro has praised US President Donald Trump for imposing huge tariffs on his home country - and warned more measures could be on the way.Eduardo Bolsonaro - who is an elected Congressman in Brazil - spoke to the BBC in Washington, where he has been on a months-long lobbying campaign to convince the Trump administration to punish the Brazilian authorities for putting his father on trial on coup charges.The congressman said there could be more sanctions on individuals."There's a very significant possibility regarding the application of sanctions and the extension of Magnitsky sanctions to other people. You have on Secretary Marco Rubio's desk, for example, the possibility of withdrawing visas, among other pressure mechanisms, to try to get Brazil out of this institutional crisis we're experiencing."When asked if he was personally involved in this lobby campaign for more, he added:"American intelligence itself has already produced many reports and dozens of reports. So they have a very large opportunity on their desk to push whatever buttons they see fit. And if this is brought to President Trump's desk, he will be the ones to choose what to do."The former president is accused of plotting a coup to prevent the man who beat him in the 2022 presidential election, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, from taking office. Jair Bolsonaro has denied that he led an attempt to overthrow the government but acknowledged taking part in meetings aimed at reversing his election loss.A verdict in the case is expected in the coming weeks. If found guilty, Jair Bolsonaro could face decades in prison.Trump likened the case against Bolsonaro, who has been dubbed "Trump of the Tropics" for his similarities to the US president, to a "witch hunt" and drew parallels with his own legal battles following his refusal to accept defeat in 2020. It has left the two largest democracies in the Americas in a huge confrontation.Trump accuses Brazil of 'witch hunt' against BolsonaroTrump threatens Brazil with 50% tariff and demands Bolsonaro's trial endIn July, Trump announced he would raise tariffs on Brazilian imports to 50%, citing Brazil's treatment of Jair Bolsonaro as a trigger for the hike.In addition to that, the US state department banned eight Brazilian supreme court justices from travelling to the US, including Alexandre de Moraes, the judge overseeing Bolsonaro's trial.Brazil's President Lula said the move constituted an unacceptable interference in his country's justice system and refused to budge, so the 50%-levy came into effect last week.In an interview with the BBC in Washington, Eduardo Bolsonaro would not be drawn on the closeness of his relationship with President Trump or if he influenced the tariff action."I admire President Trump, we've met several times in his first and second term. We fought first to sanction Alexandre de Moraes. But if President Trump starts with tariffs, I do believe that he is right and I do support him because of that."Eduardo Bolsonaro, 41, has been in the US since March - saying he is living in "exile" out of fear of arrest should he return to Brazil.He rejects criticism that he is being unpatriotic by lobbying for sanctions which will see his country suffer economically: "I believe freedom comes first, before the economy."When challenged, he cites a recent poll by the Quaest institute saying that one day after Trump announced the 50%-levy, "four in every 10 Brazilians were in support of the tariffs".We put it to him that the poll actually suggests that 79% of Brazilians believe the tariffs will harm their lives, and among voters who say they have got no political position, 77% believe their imposition is wrong.What tariffs has Trump announced and why?Bolsonaro denies involvement in alleged coup plotSo how worried is he that this could blow back on his family, and boost support for the current president, Lula?"I'm not thinking about the next election, I'm thinking about the next generation," he says before conceding that he knows it is something "people are really concerned about, for sure".He often refers to Brazil as a dictatorship in his answers, despite the fact that major institutions like Freedom House cite the country as having free and fair elections.Eduardo Bolsonaro himself was one of the members of Congress to gain most votes in 2022.He has also said that his father may stand again for president despite being barred from running for public office until 2030 under a ban which predates the coup charges that the older Bolsonaro is currently facing.Eduardo Bolsonaro's anger is very focussed on Alexandre de Moraes, the judge who presided over the electoral court which issued the ban in 2023, and who is also overseeing the current trial on coup charges against Jair Bolsonaro.He is confident that "in the next election … we will have new judges in the electoral court", which he thinks will mean that the restrictions preventing his father from running for office will be lifted."The new judges in the electoral court, they can do a better system. They can improve the system. And I hope this is going to happen," he says.But he adds that in order for that to happen "you need Alexandre de Moraes to be isolated".The BBC asked the supreme court and Mr Moraes for a response but has not received a reply.Mr Moraes, meanwhile, has doubled down despite the US sanctions. He has placed Jair Bolsonaro under house arrest for breaching an order banning him from social media and ordered him to wear an electronic ankle tag.He has also ordered that the finances of Eduardo Bolsonaro be frozen on suspicion that he was using them to bankroll his lobbying on behalf of his father in the US.Son and father have also been banned from seeing each other, accused of trying to get the US to intervene to obstruct the case.Eduardo Bolsonaro argues that what he is doing in the US is shining a light on what he says are wrongdoings committed by "dictators" in his home country: "They think that is an anti-democratic act when you denounce the human rights violations of the abusers in Brazil."He goes on to compare himself to women from Iran who have been critical of their government and face persecution upon their return.While no arrest warrant has been issued for him, Eduardo Bolsonaro has repeatedly expressed fear he would be detained if he were to return to Brazil."What is going to happen with me if I go back to my country because I'm denouncing these dictators? I'm going to jail, it's pretty much the same situation. In Iran, they are a little bit more violent," he told the BBC.While he decries the current Brazilian government as a "dictatorship", in 2019 - when his father was in power - Eduardo Bolsonaro himself proposed passing a new Institutional Act Number 5 (AI-5), a decree passed under Brazil's military rule to suppress dissent.
AI-5 closed down Brazil's Congress and indefinitely outlawed freedom of assembly and freedom of expression.Eduardo Bolsonaro said at the time that if protesters took to the streets against his father's administration, the government could adopt similar measures – thereby invoking one of the darkest moments in the country's history.He told the BBC he now regrets those remarks: "It was a mistake to say that. It was a mistake. I would not do that again."He also condemns the events of 8 January 2023, when hundreds of his father's supporters stormed the buildings in Brasilia that symbolize the country's democracy, a week after Lula had taken office.They vandalized the supreme court, congress and the presidential palace and urged the military to take over.Jair Bolsonaro was in the United States when the storming in Brasilia happened, having left Brazil two days before his presidential term ended. He did not attend his successor's swearing-in and remained in Florida for months before returning to his home country in March 2023. He has always denied having incited his followers and according to his son, he even denounced it."January 8th was a protest that did go too far. I do agree, I do condemn it," he says, adding that "my father condemned it the very first day when it was happening".About 2,000 people were arrested over the Brasilia attack. Most were released but many were convicted by the supreme court on charges of an attempted coup, among other crimes, following ongoing police investigations. Eduardo Bolsonaro thinks the rioters should be granted an amnesty because, he says, the sentences are too long.But we put to him that plenty of people would argue that if you commit a crime to overturn democracy you should be punished for it.He in turn argued that vandalising buildings did not amount to a coup attempt:"Even with the heart angry because of the result of the elections, these people would never bring a dictatorship to Brazil. They would never accomplish a coup d'etat"He says he misses his home country but has no plans to return soon.Is this all just simple, pure revenge by an aggrieved son?"For sure, he is my father, we have a relationship, but this is way bigger than only him. And if we do the right thing and rescue freedom in Brazil, everybody's going to receive the benefits, even him."
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Bryan Kohberger's graphic internet searches revealed in never-before-seen evidence
Bryan Kohberger's graphic internet searches revealed in never-before-seen evidence

Daily Mail​

time10 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Bryan Kohberger's graphic internet searches revealed in never-before-seen evidence

made sickening internet searches focused on attacking and raping sleeping girls before he slaughtered four students. The 30-year-old criminology PhD student was cruising the internet for pornographic content with searches that included appalling terms about non consensual sex acts. It was the early hours of November 13, 2022, when Kohberger broke into an off-campus home in Moscow, Idaho, and stabbed Madison Mogen, Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin to death. Prosecutors have said there was no evidence of a sexual component to the murders, leaving Kohberger's motive and connection to his victims a complete mystery. Now, the Daily Mail can reveal for the first time the exact porn searches made by the killer which may shed some light on his mindset and motivations at the time. The search terms were shared with the Daily Mail by the digital forensics experts hired by state prosecutors to dig into Kohberger's Android cell phone and laptop. Heather Barnhart, Senior Director of Forensic Research at Cellebrite, and Jared Barnhart, Head of CX Strategy and Advocacy at Cellebrite, joined the case back in March 2023 and were set to testify as expert witnesses in Kohberger's capital murder trial. However, just weeks before the trial was slated to begin, Kohberger struck a plea deal with prosecutors to avoid the death penalty. Under the terms of the deal, he pleaded guilty to all charges and waived his right to appeal. On July 23, he was sentenced to life in prison with no possibility of parole. Through their years-long forensic analysis of Kohberger's devices, the Cellebrite team was able to recover his searches. The terms they found included 'sleeping', 'passed out', 'Voyeur', 'Forced 'raped' and 'drugged'. 'The easiest way to say it is that all of his terms were consistently around non-consensual sex acts,' Jared told the Daily Mail. Kohberger's sleeping and rape fetishes raise questions about what he may have planned to do the night of the murders. The 30-year-old killer broke into his victims' home at 1122 King Road at around 4am, when most of the students were sleeping. Prosecutors believe he did not plan to murder all four victims that night and that either Mogen or Goncalves, both 21, was the likely target. Kohberger entered the home through the door leading to the kitchen on the second floor and went straight up the stairs to Mogen's room on the third floor. He found Mogen and Goncalves in the same bed and killed them both. Coming down the stairs, he encountered Kernodle who was still awake, having just received a DoorDash order. He killed her and her boyfriend Chapin, both 20. Latah County Prosecutor Bill Thompson said in an interview with ABC News that it's likely Kohberger did not expect to encounter Kernodle still up and about. But only Kohberger knows what exactly his plan was that night. So far, he has refused to reveal any details about his crimes. When given the opportunity to speak at his sentencing, he told Judge Steven Hippler: 'I respectfully decline'. But Kohberger's digital footprint around the time of the murders paints a picture of his interests - and possible inspirations. As well as the porn searches, the Cellebrite team found a clear obsession with serial killers and home invasions. On Kohberger's laptop, Heather said they found searches for 'serial killers, co-ed killers, home invasions, burglaries and psychopaths before the murders and then up through Christmas Day'. There was one serial killer Kohberger showed a keen interest in that stood out to the team: Danny Rolling. Rolling, known as the Gainesville Ripper, broke into the homes of University of Florida students at night and murdered five - four female and one male - in the fall semester of 1990. He raped the women during his attacks and decapitated one of his victims, posing her head on a mantle in her home. Just like Kohberger, Rolling's murder weapon of choice was also a Ka-Bar knife. The similarities between the crimes are eerie and the Cellebrite team found Kohberger had downloaded a PDF onto his phone about Rolling. He had also watched a YouTube video about a Ka-Bar knife. Kohberger's cell phone also contained many selfies where he was posing shirtless or flexing his muscles, Jared and Heather revealed. There was also the chilling thumbs-up selfie to the camera a few hours after the murders and a creepy hooded selfie days before his arrest. Both Rolling and Kohberger used a Ka-Bar knife (stock image above) as their chosen murder weapons The digital evidence was uncovered despite Kohberger's best efforts to scrub his cell phone and laptop of anything incriminating. In fact, the Cellebrite team found a pattern where Kohberger went to extreme lengths to try to delete and hide his digital footprint using VPNs, incognito modes, and clearing his browsing history. Three days after the murders - on November 16 - he ran an eraser software on his laptop. The software is used to wipe data from a hard drive. Heather explained that the team has been unable to determine if Kohberger actively ran the software to destroy evidence or if the killer innocuously ran it as part of a virus scan. That would have been for the jury to decide. What the digital experts did find was that Kohberger had tried - unsuccessfully - to wipe his disturbing porn searches from his phone. There was no record of them in his search history, which Kohberger had scrubbed. But, he hadn't done a good enough job. 'The searches were in autofill,' Jared explained. 'As a user, you can clear your search history. But when you choose to type text and press search, that text box depending on where you're searching and how, it can keep [the search terms]. 'So the next time you go to the same text box and search for something, it prepopulates and that's where these search terms were found.' Had they testified at trial, the digital experts would have presented both a wealth of data - as well as evidence of Kohberger's cleanup operation. 'He did his best to leave zero digital footprint. He did not want a digital forensic trail available at all,' Heather said. And, while he succeeded in part, she said that this abnormal behavior and the very efforts to hide his digital activities revealed more than he realized about his guilt.

Trump-Putin summit live: Delegations head to Alaska after Trump says Putin ‘will not mess me around' on Ukraine
Trump-Putin summit live: Delegations head to Alaska after Trump says Putin ‘will not mess me around' on Ukraine

The Independent

time11 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Trump-Putin summit live: Delegations head to Alaska after Trump says Putin ‘will not mess me around' on Ukraine

Russian and American delegations have arrived in Alaska ahead of the crucial summit between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin later today. Ahead of the summit, Mr Trump claimed the Russian leader was 'not going to mess around with me', as the US president hopes to seal a Ukraine ceasefire deal. The US president also floated the idea that European leaders could be invited to participate in a second meeting, which would include Volodymyr Zelensky. The main aim of today's meeting is to set up talks between Putin and the Ukrainian president, Mr Trump told Fox News Radio, adding that he has three locations in mind for such a meeting. The US president, who is gearing up to meet his Russian counterpart for the first time since 2018, said that he thinks both leaders 'will make peace'.Friday's talks between the presidents will include a one-on-one meeting, a bilateral lunch with both delegations and a press conference, the White House announced. Earlier on Thursday, the Russian leader praised Mr Trump's 'sincere efforts' towards ending the war in Ukraine, telling Kremlin officials the US is making 'quite energetic and sincere efforts to stop the fighting'. Trump hopeful of reaching Ukraine ceasefire deal Speaking on the eve of today's summit with Vladimir Putin, Donald Trump said that he thought the Russian leader would do a deal on Ukraine – but the US president has blown hot and cold on the chances of a breakthrough in recent days. Mr Trump and Mr Putin hold talks in Alaska today, where the US president hopes to seal a ceasefire agreement on Ukraine. The meeting at a Cold War-era air force base in Alaska comes amid Ukrainian and European fears that Trump might sell Kyiv out. A source close to the Kremlin told Reuters it looked as if the two sides had been able to find some unspecified common ground beforehand. "Apparently, some terms will be agreed upon tomorrow (Friday) because Trump cannot be refused, and we are not in a position to refuse (due to sanctions pressure)," said the source. Mr Putin has set stringent conditions for a full ceasefire, but one compromise could be a phased truce in the air war, although both sides have accused the other of flouting a previous accord. Analysts say Mr Putin could try to look like he's giving Mr Trump what he wants while remaining free to escalate in Ukraine if he wants to. "If they (the Russians) are able to put a deal on the table that creates some kind of a ceasefire but that leaves Russia in control of those escalatory dynamics, does not create any kind of genuine deterrence on the ground or in the skies over Ukraine... that would be a wonderful outcome from Putin's perspective," said Sam Greene, director of Democratic Resilience at the Center for European Policy Analysis. Alisha Rahaman Sarkar15 August 2025 06:30 Ukraine supporters held at rally against Trump-Putin summit in Alaska Alisha Rahaman Sarkar15 August 2025 06:10 Trump to meet Putin at 3pm ET today US president Donald Trump's meeting with Russian president Vladimir Putin will take place at 3pm ET (1900 GMT) in Anchorage, Alaska, the White House said in a press schedule statement. Mr Trump will depart the White House at 6.45am ET (1045 GMT) and leave Anchorage at 5.45pm Alaska Time the same day. He is scheduled to return to the White House early Saturday morning. Alisha Rahaman Sarkar15 August 2025 05:50 Trump says 25% chance that summit with Putin will fail US prresident Donald Trump yesterday said there was only a 25 per cent chance that the summit with Russian leader Vladimir Putin would fail. The US president will meet his Russian counterpart today at the Alaska summit for the first time since 2018. Mr Trump said if the meeting with Mr Putin succeeds, he could bring Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky to Alaska for a subsequent, three-way meeting. In a radio interview with Fox News, Mr Trump also said he might be willing to stay in Alaska longer, depending on what happens with Mr Putin. Alisha Rahaman Sarkar15 August 2025 05:35 Explosions at Russian oil refinery A Russian oil refinery was set ablaze in an overnight drone attack in Samara Oblast, according to reports. There was no official confirmation whether the drone attack was launched by Ukraine. Local residents said they heard at least ten explosions around 4am local time, UNN reported. The drone struck an oil refinery in Syzran, the third-largest city in Samara Oblast, located about 811km from the Ukrainian border. Alisha Rahaman Sarkar15 August 2025 05:21 Can Zelensky the warrior cut it as a peacetime leader? Short, sweet, and largely symbolic' might be a reasonable summary of Volodymyr Zelensky's Downing Street visit on the eve of the US-Russia summit in Alaska. There will be those who take issue with Zelensky's swanning around foreign parts at such a time. There will also be those – some, if not many of them, in Russia – who hope that the coming days will, one way or another, spell the end of Zelensky's power. For all the missteps and failings on the part of his government in Kyiv, Zelensky is likely to be the person who has to try to shepherd Ukraine from war into peace, and he needs to be supported as perhaps the only one who can. Can Zelensky the warrior cut it as a peacetime leader? Whatever the fallout from the US-Russia summit in Alaska, the Ukrainian president – his public image and reputation having been forged in conflict – is the only person to shepherd his country into a new era, says Mary Dejevsky Holly Evans15 August 2025 05:20 Inside Putin's ruthless 'winning' mindset – and the major risk to Trump Understanding how Vladimir Putin thinks in the run-up to the crucial summit with Donald Trump in Alaska is about understanding what the Russian leader is accustomed to: being dominant at home, but seen as a pariah in most of the democratic world. In his view, this Friday's summit is about his grand re-entry onto the international stage and a complex psychological interplay with a US leader who is also fixated on what a 'win' over ending (or rather stalling) the war in Ukraine would do for his personal brand. The dynamics of a summit that has already sidelined Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky – and reduced European leaders to holding their own meeting in Berlin – will be driven by the needs of two men with immense but fragile egos. Read the full analysis here: Inside Putin's ruthless 'winning' mindset – and the major risk to Trump While Donald Trump boasts that he is the master of the deal, it is Putin who has perfected the art of the 'win' – which often includes humiliation through gestures, slights and power moves, writes Anne McElvoy Holly Evans15 August 2025 05:05 Donbas: Why Russia is desperate to capture eastern Ukraine's industrial heartland The future of Ukraine's industrial heartland in the east will almost certainly play a key role in talks between Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump as they prepare to meet in Alaska on Friday. The Russian leader has demanded that Ukrainian forces withdraw from Donetsk as part of any any ceasefire deal, according to Volodymyr Zelensky. The Ukrainian president has said that Mr Putin wants the remaining 30 per cent of the eastern region, which has seen some of the fiercest battles in the three-and-a-half year long war. Donbas: Why Russia is desperate to capture eastern Ukraine's industrial heartland Fully giving up Donbas could have 'catastrophic consequences', according to experts Holly Evans15 August 2025 04:50 Trump 'must be prepared' to meet with Putin, European officials warn ahead of summit European officials insisted to CNN that US President Trump come prepared to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin while the pair discuss Ukraine while the country's president Volodymyr Zelensky is not present. 'He must be prepared because Putin is very, very well prepared,' one European official told the network about Friday's meeting. There is a 'vulnerability' for Trump to be alone in the room with Putin because the Russian president is 'an excellent player,' the official added. Another official acknowledged the US President has been tougher on Russia recently. On Thursday, for example, Mr Trump threatened "severe consequences" if Mr Putin doesn't agree to peace in Ukraine. Still, this official warned: 'It seems Trump doesn't really believe in the possibility of Ukrainian success.' Kelly Rissman15 August 2025 04:35 What has Trump said ahead of the summit with Putin? One day before the two world leaders were scheduled to meet, US President Donald Trump told reporters Thursday that Russian President Vladimir Putin is 'not going to mess around' with him. 'I am president, and he's not going to mess around with me,' he said during a press conference at the White House. 'I'll know within the first two minutes, three minutes, four minutes or five minutes... whether or not we're going to have a good meeting or a bad meeting. And if it's a bad meeting, it'll end very quickly, and if it's a good meeting, we're going to end up getting peace in the pretty near future.' The US president remained cautiously optimistic that the leaders of Russia and Ukraine 'will make peace.' "We're going to see what happens," he said. "And, I think President Putin will make peace. I think President Zelensky will make peace. We'll see if they can get along and if they can, it'll be great." Meanwhile, earlier in the day on Thursday, Mr Putin praised Mr Trump for making "quite an energetic and sincere effort, in my opinion, to stop hostilities, to stop the crisis and to reach an agreement that is of interest to all those involved in this conflict.' Kelly Rissman15 August 2025 04:20

Jack Nicholson's grandson hit with restraining order from ex-girlfriend after brutal alleged assault
Jack Nicholson's grandson hit with restraining order from ex-girlfriend after brutal alleged assault

Daily Mail​

time12 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Jack Nicholson's grandson hit with restraining order from ex-girlfriend after brutal alleged assault

The ex-girlfriend of one of Jack Nicholson 's grandsons has obtained a restraining order against him in the wake of a brutal alleged assault. Elizabeth Lawlor, 28, who had previously dated Nicholson's oldest grandson Sean Norfleet, 29, was granted a temporary restraining order against him on Monday, August 11, according to documents obtained by the Daily Mail. Norfleet, who is the son of Nicholson's daughter Jennifer Nicholson and her ex-husband Mark Norfleet, had been accused of throwing Lawlor into a hard object, which knocked her unconscious and left her bleeding from the mouth with broken teeth. The Daily Mail has contacted Nicholson to request comment. In the order granting Lawlor a temporary restraining order, the judge ordered Nicholson to stay 100 yards away from Lawlor. A hearing to determine if the order should be made permanent is scheduled for September 2. Nicholson, who was arrested on August 5 on a felony charge of domestic violence involving a deadly weapon, is next scheduled to have a hearing in his case on August 26. In her domestic violence restraining order request, Lawlor said that the actor's grandson — who also goes by the name Sean Knight Nicholson — 'threatened to take a full bottle of Valium if I did not come over' on July 23. Once there, she said Nicholson appeared to have taken pills in conjunction with alcohol and cocaine. Lawlor then said she 'read texts saying he had been buying narcotics' and forwarded them to Nicholson's mother Jennifer. She added that she didn't want to be near her ex-boyfriend Lawlor then said she found messages on Nicholson's phone that allegedly showed he had bought narcotics. 'I sent these to his mother as he was supposed to be sober and I did not want to be near him if he were on drugs,' she continued. A police report featuring Lawlor's recollection of the alleged assault that was obtained by People, which first reported on the restraining order, indicated that Nicholson has allegedly been in recovery from drug addiction and had been diagnosed with schizophrenia. She also claimed that he has in the past mixed prescription medications with other illegal drugs. Although Lawlor indicated that Nicholson's mother Jennifer called 911 after after she sent her photos of her injuries, she asked for an extension on the deadline to give notice to Nicholson of the restraining order, because she said she didn't know where he was 'and no one he is close with will help me to figure that out so I can serve him.' Sean posted $50K bond and faces up to four years in state prison if found guilty of the felony charge of corporal injury on a spouse/cohabitant and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon using his 'hands, feet, and teeth.' In the police report obtained by People, Elizabeth said she dated Sean on/off between 2023-2024 and claimed he lured her to his apartment by saying he'd 'taken a full bottle of Valium and threatened to kill himself if she didn't come to see him.' Elizabeth alleged that Norfleet was 'schizophrenic' and 'has a history of mixing prescription medication with illicit substances,' but he claimed he was fresh out of rehab and wanted to reconnect as friends. After Lawlor arrived, she reportedly checked the phone of the musician - whose DJ name is Cutter Mattock - to confirm he lied about being sober as he argued with her about past infidelity. At 5:30pm, Sean allegedly grabbed the Pepperdine psychology student by the neck and head and threw her into an unidentified hard object, and 'she blacked out and when she opened her eyes realized her tooth had broken.' In her restraining order, she claimed that Nicholson put her in 'chokeholds When Lawlor came to she tried to flee the apartment, but she said in her restraining order that Nicholson allegedly took her phone and 'cut my airway off when he put me in a chokehold.' She tried to flee, but he allegedly 'dragged' her back into the apartment, and she claimed she was only allowed to leave when she began screaming. She eventually sent photos of her injuries to his mother Jennifer Nicholson (the 88-year-old movie star's eldest child), who called 911. The Emerson College drop-out — who previously had a clean record — was arrested as Lawlor was rushed by ambulance to Marina Del Rey Hospital after a security guard for Nicholson's building called for help. Lawlor then underwent emergency oral surgery and received stitches for facial injuries. In her restraining order request, Lawlor indicated that she began dating Nicholson in April 2023, and she claimed he had abused her 'almost every day for four years,' with the abuse only recently stopping. She alleged that Nicholson would torment her by 'constantly call on various numbers, including blocked calls, multiple emails over the years [sic].' Lawlor included bills and medical notes documenting her injuries with her restraining order request. One receipt showed she was charged $4,374 for medical care related to treating her broken teeth, and the ambulance trip and initial medical treatment for her injuries allegedly cost an additional $2,000. Lawlor also listed that she had spent $30,000 on therapy over the years related to Nicholson's alleged abuse. She asked the judge to order her ex to pay for all of her medical expenses, which totaled $46,374. Sean publicly goes by Sean Knight Nicholson despite Jennifer marrying his father Mark Norfleet between 1997 and 2003. Norfleet's 26-year-old brother Duke is following in Jack's acting footsteps with roles in Tony Kaye's upcoming comedy The Trainer, Jimmy Giannopoulos' 2022 horror film Alone at Night, and Nicholas Jarecki's 2021 thriller Crisis. Nicholson is also grandfather to three children - Walter, 14; Hank, 8; and Daisy, 13 - through his 44-year-old daughter Honey Hollman with Danish model Winnie Hollman. The retired Hollywood legend has two children - daughter Lorraine, 35; and son Ray, 33 - from his five-year relationship with his Man Trouble co-star Rebecca Broussard, which ended in 1994. Rebecca's first pregnancy was the catalyst to end of Jack's longest romantic relationship, with Oscar winner Anjelica Huston, from 1973–1990. Nicholson has reportedly recognized 54-year-old Caleb Goddard as his son in private following an on-set fling with his Five Easy Pieces co-star Susan Anspach, who raised her son with ex-husband Mark Goddard. Sean (R, seen in 2017) publicly goes by Sean Knight Nicholson despite Jennifer marrying his father Mark Norfleet (L) between 1997 and 2003 Nicholson is also grandfather to three children — Walter, 14; Hank, 8; and Daisy, 13 — through his 44-year-old daughter Honey Hollman (2-R, seen in 2023) with Danish model Winnie Hollman The retired Hollywood legend hasn't been publicly seen since attending SNL50: The Anniversary Special in Manhattan on February 16 alongside his 35-year-old daughter Lorraine (L, with ex Rebecca Broussard) The former lothario is estranged from his 31-year-old daughter Tessa Gourin with waitress Jennine Gourin as he has never publicly acknowledged the paternity. Reclusive Jack (born John) hasn't been publicly seen since attending SNL50: The Anniversary Special in Manhattan on February 16 alongside his daughter Lorraine. Nicholson hasn't graced the silver screen since portraying corporate CEO Charles Madison in James L. Brooks' dismally-reviewed 2010 rom-com How Do You Know, which only earned $48.7M back from its $120M budget. But the LA Lakers superfan has acted in some of the greatest films of all time including Five Easy Pieces, Chinatown, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, The Shining, Terms of Endearment, Batman, A Few Good Men, As Good as It Gets, and About Schmidt.

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