Latest news with #48


New Straits Times
2 days ago
- Business
- New Straits Times
Ex-pay TV staff faces 743 charges, faints in court on 30th
KUALA LUMPUR: A former employee of a pay TV company fainted in court after the 30th of 743 charges was read out to her for allegedly tampering with customer account data by converting regular accounts to corporate accounts. Nora Idayu Jaafar,48, collapsed in the dock shortly after entering her non-guilty plea to the 30th charge before Sessions Court judge Norma Ismail. The proceedings had to be halted while the court's security personnel and medical assistants from the Kuala Lumpur Hospital were deployed to the courtroom to provide assistance. After Nora Idayu regained consciousness, Norma released her on a RM10,000 bail in one surety for all 30 charges. The judge ordered her to return to the court on June 26 to face the remaining 713 charges. The court also ordered her to report to the police station once a month and surrender her passport. Nora Idayu, who was an associate of the commercial support unit, is accused of converting the regular clients account to corporate account without authorisation on Astro's Amdocs CRM database. She claimed trial to each of the 30 charges framed under Section 5(1) of the Computer Crimes Act punishable under Section 5(4) of the same act. Each charge carries a maximum fine of RM100,000 or a jail term not exceeding seven years or both upon conviction. She allegedly committed the offences at Astro's office in Menara Icon at Jalan Tun Razak. Deputy public prosecutor Rohaiza Abdul Rahman prosecuted while Nora Idayu had no legal representation.
Yahoo
23-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Who Won Survivor 48 & How Much Did the Winner Get?
The 48 finale has aired on CBS, and fans want to know who won the long-running reality competition series. Created by Charlie Parsons and hosted by Jeff Probst, Survivor premiered on May 31, 2000. The 48th season debuted on February 26, 2025, with 18 contestants split into three tribes of six: Siva, Lagi, and Vula. The five participants who made it to finale night were Mitch Guerra, Kyle Fraser, Kamilla Karthigesu, Joe Hunter, and Eva Erickson—and the winner was one of them. Here's who won Survivor 48 and how much prize money they received. Kyle Fraser, a 30-year-old attorney from Brooklyn, New York, won Survivor 48. As with the past fifteen seasons, Survivor 48 took place in the Mamanuca Islands in Fiji. On finale night, Karthigesu came out on top in the first immunity challenge. During the tribal council, Guerra was eliminated. Erickson had an immunity idol and was safe from votes. Fraser then won the final immunity challenge and secured a spot in the final three. He chose Hunter to join him, leaving Karthigesu and Erickson to compete in a fire-making challenge. Erickson won the showdown, eliminating Karthigesu. The jury for this season included Cedrek McFadden, Chrissy Sarnowsky, David Kinne, Star Toomey, Mary Zheng, Shauhin Davari, Mitch Guerra, and Kamilla Karthigesu. McFadden voted for Hunter, Toomey and Zheng voted for Erickson, and the remaining five jury members—Chrissy, David, Shauhin, Mitch, and Kamilla—voted for Fraser. As a result, Fraser was announced as the winner of Survivor 48. After winning Survivor 48 with a 5-2-1 jury vote, Fraser received the $1 million prize. He began the season as a member of the Siva tribe but later switched to Vula. Fraser is the first Guyanese individual and the sixth contestant of African descent to win Survivor and take home the prize. The post Who Won Survivor 48 & How Much Did the Winner Get? appeared first on - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More.


New York Post
22-05-2025
- Entertainment
- New York Post
‘Survivor 48' winner Kyle Fraser defends his decision to never vote out Joe Hunter
Kyle Fraser is feeling like a million bucks. The 31-year-old attorney exclusively spoke to The Post about winning 'Survivor 48' and defended his decision to never betray his alliance with Joe Hunter — despite the 45-year-old fire captain being the apparent biggest threat all season. 'I felt like that final tribal council was me owning my game and being like, no, no, no, look at what I did,' Fraser explained. 'When I got to the merge I had just played an idol. I was in the majority alliance. I won the challenges. My threat meter was off the roof and I've just seen players like Kaleb get popped, like in my archetype. So I don't wanna do anything.' 7 Kyle Fraser after winning 'Survivor' Season 48. CBS 7 Kyle Fraser in his interview with The Post. New York Post 'People are telling me like, 'Hey, we can all go to the end together.' Yeah, sure. I was really patient and kind of fine until people started telling me, 'Hey, Joe's going to run away with this game.' And I'm like, 'What the hell? What more do you need from me?'' he continued. 'But I'm glad they told me that because I just knew I had to give them one more notch.' 7 Kyle Fraser on 'Survivor' Season 48. CBS 7 Joe Hunter on 'Survivor 48.' CBS Fraser explained that he intentionally 'played both sides' and acted patiently instead of making a big move for the benefit of others. 'I kind have used the analogy of I told everybody, 'Get in the Trojan horse, come on.' And then I'm the guy at the gate. I promise I'll open it for you. But it'll be tomorrow. And then it'll be tomorrow, and then I make a move when I need to, but it's at my discretion. Because I'm not going to let anybody make me the biggest threat out there just because I made a big move to do it. Next thing you know, I'm going home at five because I'm, like, the threat of the season. Absolutely not. I wanted to go with the end and I wanted to plead my case.' 7 Joe Hunter, Eva Erickson and Kyle Fraser in the 'Survivor 48' final three. CBS Watching past seasons of the show influenced how Fraser played the game. 'I saw all the New Era seasons. I saw Jesse, I saw Omar, I saw Ricard,' he explained. 'I've also seen other players who are very threatening. The David Wrights of the world get close to the end, but people want to pop them.' 7 Kyle Fraser on 'Survivor 48.' 'And I had a group of people who said, 'I will go to the end with you.' And I'm very glad that I had that group of people because I felt the same way,' Fraser added. 'And they were just as threatening as I was. But that's the beauty of it. You have to trust it.' 7 The final four of 'Survivor 48.' Furthermore, Fraser expects that the gameplay of Season 48 will affect future seasons. 'Maybe this will make people put more stock in alliances,' he told The Post. 'I think if there's anything, it's alliances work. Maybe people will be looking over their shoulder about if there are these secret alliances popping up. I don't know if that could ever be replicated between Kamilla [Karthigesu] and I. I think that might be the takeaway in a lot of ways.'


UPI
22-05-2025
- Entertainment
- UPI
Brooklyn lawyer Kyle Fraser wins 'Survivor' Season 48
Kyle Fraser won "Survivor" Season 48 on Wednseday night. Photo courtesy of CBS May 22 (UPI) -- Kyle Fraser -- a 31-year-old attorney from Brooklyn -- won Survivor Season 48 in Fiji Wednesday night, taking home the $1 million cash prize. Eva Erickson was the runner-up on this edition of the adventure competition series, which was hosted by Jeff Probst. Joe Hunter came in third. This season premiered in February. CBS also offered a glimpse at the show's upcoming Season 49, but the network did not say when it is expected to debut.


Time of India
18-05-2025
- Time of India
Burglars decamp with valuables worth Rs4.5 lakh
Nagpur: In a major burglary reported in Yashodhara Nagar, burglars broke into a locked house and stole valuables worth over Rs4.5 lakh while the homeowners were away in Pune recently. The incident occurred between 11pm on May 15 and 7am on May 16 at Binaki Layout, Yadav Nagar, under the jurisdiction of Yashodhara Nagar police station. The complainant, Rupesh Amarnath Walde, 45, locked his home and travelled with his family to his sister's residence in Pune. Upon returning, he discovered the lock and latch of the main door broken and the house ransacked. The burglars made away with Rs50,000 in cash, gold ornaments weighing 127 grams, and around 25 tolas of silver jewellery. The total value of the stolen property is estimated at Rs4,48,500. Based on Walde's complaint, police registered a case against unidentified suspects under Sections 305(A) and 331(4) of the Bhartiya Nyay Sanhita (BNS). Sources said that the officials are examining nearby CCTV footage in the neighbourhood to trace the culprits. Residents are being urged to remain vigilant and report any suspicious activity. This is one of several recent incidents in the city that have raised concerns about security in residential colonies, especially when homes are left unattended for extended periods.