logo
#

Latest news with #McKinlay

Kanab sex offender charged with 50 felonies for sexual exploitation of a minor
Kanab sex offender charged with 50 felonies for sexual exploitation of a minor

Yahoo

time7 days ago

  • General
  • Yahoo

Kanab sex offender charged with 50 felonies for sexual exploitation of a minor

Report child sexual assault material to law enforcement by contacting the ICAC Tip Line at (801) 281-1211 or your local law enforcement agency. KANAB, Utah () — A registered sex offender in Kanab has been arrested after a cyber tip revealed he possessed Child Sexual Assault Material (CSAM). Law enforcement says that he poses a risk to minors in the community due to what was found at his home. Tyi Kay McKinlay, 43, has been charged with 50 felony counts of sexual exploitation of a minor and one misdemeanor count of possession of a child sex doll. He was previously convicted of sexual abuse of a child in 2004 and was placed on the sex offender registry. According to documents, on May 1, an officer with the Kane County Sheriff's Office received a case assignment from the Utah Attorney General's Office Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force. A CyberTipline report from Google reported that more than 100 files of child sexual abuse material (CSAM) were associated with a Gmail account. Sex offender arrested for attempting to meet child in Lehi, documents say On May 12, the officer received another case assignment, this time with 1,668 files of CSAM associated with the Gmail account. The name on the account was McKinlay's, and the date of birth matched his. An IP geolocation also matched McKinlay. The officer confirmed that at least 50 files of CSAM were on McKinlay's cell phone. On May 28, a search warrant for McKinlay's vehicle, person, and house in Kanab revealed he had several disturbing possessions. According to the officer, McKinlay had photos of local, underage females and a jar containing a female child's underwear. He was also in possession of a doll depicting an underage female child. McKinlay was booked into the Kane County Jail and is currently being held without bail due to the risk officers believe he poses to the community. Charges are allegations only. All arrested persons are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. SLCPD arrest man for nearly hitting officers with vehicle while fleeing traffic stop Utah unveils new housing dashboard in effort to hit 'moonshot' goal of building 35,000 starter homes DOJ cutting American Bar Association access to judicial nominees Kanab sex offender charged with 50 felonies for sexual exploitation of a minor Hyundai Ioniq 5 XRT: The EV Revolutionizer Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Hearts CEO McKinlay says club ‘got it wrong' with Critchley appointment
Hearts CEO McKinlay says club ‘got it wrong' with Critchley appointment

STV News

time21-05-2025

  • Sport
  • STV News

Hearts CEO McKinlay says club ‘got it wrong' with Critchley appointment

Hearts chief executive Andrew McKinlay admits the club made a mistake with their managerial recruitment process and appointment last time out. Hearts sacked Neil Critchley after six months in charge after they failed to qualify for the Premiership top six and then lost at home to Dundee to raise the prospect of a relegation fight. They have since won their final four games under caretaker boss Liam Fox and appointed former Aberdeen and Kilmarnock manager Derek McInnes as their new head coach. Regarding the previous appointment, McKinlay told Sky Sports: 'I'll admit that we got it wrong. If anyone can stand there and say they've not made mistakes then I challenge them on that. The main thing is you learn from those mistakes. 'We went for a certain type of manager and Neil was a very good coach, very nice guy, but I'm not sure he quite got the club and got the demands of the club. 'We spoke to a number of people but ultimately Neil was the one we ended up with and the only one that we actually entered into serious discussions with. 'We spoke to a good number of other individuals, some of whom were named at the time, some of whom weren't. 'The one thing I did learn from that process though – and it is much harder with foreign managers – was you've got to meet people face to face. 'We didn't actually meet anyone face to face last time round. Some of that was circumstances, (sporting director) Graeme (Jones) wasn't in the role, I was out in Azerbaijan. 'It wasn't straightforward, we were keen to do it as quickly as possible and therefore we did it all remotely and I would never do that again. 'I don't think there's anything wrong with doing some of the interviews remotely, maybe the first lot, but I don't think you should ever appoint anyone into a job like that that you haven't sat down with face to face and that's something that obviously we've done on several occasions with Derek. 'We need someone that understands the Scottish game, someone that's managed at the top end of Scottish football, understands the demands of the Hearts support and has had success in the past. Derek is the man and I'm really looking forward to working with him.' McKinlay expressed sympathy for Critchley and claimed he was 'very unlucky in some ways'. Hearts looked set to qualify for the knockout stages of the UEFA Conference League after a good start but a late penalty cost them victory at home to Petrocub in a final game they were expected to win. They missed out on the top six on the final day and then had two men sent off in the Scottish Gas Scottish Cup semi-finals against Aberdeen before going down to a late extra-time winner. 'Every fine margin, everything went the wrong way for us,' McKinley said. 'So in some ways you've got to feel sorry for Neil. 'We just got to the stage where we felt we were concerned, I'll be honest, after that Dundee game that we were going to slip into a relegation situation. 'I understand some people might think we were hasty but we just felt, a difficult decision but we just had to make it. And I think hindsight shows it was probably the right decision.' Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

Will Oasis Have New Music Ahead of the Reunion Tour? Here's What the Band's Manager Says
Will Oasis Have New Music Ahead of the Reunion Tour? Here's What the Band's Manager Says

Yahoo

time15-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Will Oasis Have New Music Ahead of the Reunion Tour? Here's What the Band's Manager Says

While rumors about the upcoming Oasis reunion tour continue to swirl, one of the band's co-managers has put one to bed: There will be no new music from the Gallagher brothers. Speaking to Music Week, Alec McKinlay, who heads the band's Ignition Management and Big Brother Recordings, Oasis' U.K. label, revealed that there were no plans for Noel Gallagher and Liam Gallagher to get back in the studio together for a new record. The band released their most recent album, Dig Out Your Soul, in 2008. More from Billboard Every Oasis Album, Ranked (Critic's Take) Adam David Delivers Teddy Swims' 'Lose Control' on 'The Voice' as Finalists Are Set Blake Shelton Drops 'Texas' on 'Fallon,' Says Post Malone Fueled His Return 'This is very much the last time around, as Noel's made clear in the press,' McKinlay said in the interview published Tuesday (May 13). 'It's a chance for fans who haven't seen the band to see them, or at least for some of them to. But no, there's no plan for any new music.' The confirmation arrives after months of rumors, including some teasing by frontman Liam on his social platforms. In September, Liam responded to a fan to say that a new record was 'already finished,' and in November he said he was 'blown away' by the songs Noel had allegedly written for a new album. The band's reunion tour kicks off in the U.K. at the Principality Stadium in Cardiff, Wales, on July 4. The run of dates will continue through Manchester, London, Edinburgh and Dublin before hitting North America, Latin America, Asia and Australia across the 41 planned shows. Elsewhere in the interview, McKinsley discussed the response to the shows globally. 'We'd obviously been planning it for a while and the moment when it went live was a little bit of a step into the unknown in terms of how big the reaction would be,' McKinlay said. 'When it all hit home, it was just phenomenal. The reaction was very much one of, 'Finally, some good news after all the nonsense that's been going on in the world.' 'Probably the biggest and most pleasing surprise of the reunion announcement is how huge it was internationally,' he added. 'Honestly, we knew it would be big here, and that doesn't take much intuition. But looking outside the U.K., we knew they had a strong fanbase, we did all the stats. We were quite cautious about what that would mean when it came to people actually buying tickets, but we were just bowled over by how huge it was. 'We could have sold out half-a-dozen Rose Bowls in Pasadena and probably eight MetLife Stadiums in New York in a day,' McKinsley shared. 'We saw the ticket stats, we were watching what was happening and the demand was way beyond our expectations.' The clamor for Oasis tickets in the U.K. sparked a debate about on-sale practices. In March, the Competition and Markets Authority said that Ticketmaster may have 'misled' fans about ticket prices for the events. The band has yet to officially confirm who will be performing in the live group alongside Noel and Liam, but the latter has denied reports that 'Hello' will be dropped from the setlist due to its connection to convicted pedophile Gary Glitter. Best of Billboard Chart Rewind: In 1989, New Kids on the Block Were 'Hangin' Tough' at No. 1 Janet Jackson's Biggest Billboard Hot 100 Hits H.E.R. & Chris Brown 'Come Through' to No. 1 on Adult R&B Airplay Chart

Athletics Insight: Juliet McKinlay, Jonathan Maples lead Whanganui track and field rankings
Athletics Insight: Juliet McKinlay, Jonathan Maples lead Whanganui track and field rankings

NZ Herald

time14-05-2025

  • Sport
  • NZ Herald

Athletics Insight: Juliet McKinlay, Jonathan Maples lead Whanganui track and field rankings

McKinlay won awards in three categories at the recent Whanganui/Manawatu Athletics Awards and was the New Zealand under-18 heptathlon gold medal winner and a member of the New Zealand Schools team to California. McKinlay had an outstanding season. Year 9 Whanganui High School athlete Jamie Munro is ranked second behind McKinlay in both 100m and 200m, with hurdler Kaylee Bishoff second in both hurdles and 60m while Lulu Dufty, in a year affected by injury, ranked second in both horizontal jumps. Youth was to the fore in high jump with Hannah Cameron and Mareka Kendrawaca displaying high potential. Thrower Phoebe Corin, although small in stature, displays technical maturity and headed the discus rankings and is second to expat Maples in hammer. Another Year 9 athlete, Harlynn Faalili, headed the 300m rankings. Whanganui Girls College hurdler Grace Fannin headed the 300m hurdles and 400, 600 and 800m, showing a strength that will prove valuable when later she progresses to 400m hurdles. Middle distance runner Hannah Byam, who was second over 2000m steeplechase at the North Island Schools, also led the Whanganui 1500m and 3000m rankings. Her Whanganui Collegiate teammate Tilly Darke headed the 800m, with Masters New Zealand record holder Sally Gibbs leading the 5000m rankings. The leading male athlete was Jonathan Maples who topped the rankings in 60, 100, 150, 200, 400m and 400m hurdles. Maples, who had an outstanding season, won the New Zealand 400m hurdles title and took silver in the 400m and bronze in the 4 x 400m. Maples is currently in England and races this weekend at the Loughborough International. Maples is followed by the very promising Damian Hodgson in the 150m, 200m, 400m, 600m and 400m hurdles where he won gold in the under-20 championship. Hodgson follows several former leading local athletes and is US-bound in August. Hopefully Hodgson, like George Beamish, Brad Mathas and Lexi Maples, will retain his club affiliation. Auguz Thongskul had an outstanding breakthrough year, winning a bronze medal at the Athletics New Zealand under-18 championships and stepping two places higher on the podium at the North Island Schools with a new impressive personal best. Thongskul added a personal best of over 0.3s in the 100m, taking third in the North Island championship. The young Whanganui High jumper/sprinter has an exciting future. Colorado-based George Beamish headed the 2000m steeplechase, mile and 5000m with Oliver Jones heading both the 1500m and 3000m (Jones won the MWA Out of Stadia Award in his under-20 age group). Whanganui High School athletes Sean Frieslar, Alex Payne and Lennox Brotherton show considerable middle-distance promise. Top male throwing rankings were shared by Oliver Toohey (javelin), Cody Campbell (discus) and Te Huatahi Bradley (shot). At a recent meeting at Sport Whanganui, there was considerable discussion on where to place North Island Schools on the development–elite spectrum. One opinion shared by all was that schools and Athletics Whanganui need to provide pathways for all athletes, particularly those who showed promise at the North Island competition. Cullinane senior jumper Ethan Linklater, who heads all three male jump rankings and is new to the sport, provides a prime example.

Oasis have 'no plans' to release new music
Oasis have 'no plans' to release new music

The Advertiser

time14-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Advertiser

Oasis have 'no plans' to release new music

Oasis have "no plans" to release new music. The Britpop legends will return to the stage on July 4th to kick off Oasis Live 25, their first tour in 16 years, but the group's co-manager Alec McKinlay insisted this is not the beginning of new releases from the band. "This is very much the last time around, as Noel's made clear in the press," the Ignition and Big Brother Recordings director told Music Week magazine. "It's a chance for fans who haven't seen the band to see them, or at least for some of them to. But no, there's no plan for any new music." More than 10 million fans from 158 countries attempted to buy tickets to brothers Noel and Liam Gallagher's reunion tour, and McKinlay said Oasis were "bowled over" by the international demand. "Probably the biggest and most pleasing surprise of the reunion announcement is how huge it was internationally," he said. "Honestly, we knew it would be big here, and that doesn't take much intuition, but looking outside the UK, we knew they had a strong fanbase, we did all the stats. "We were quite cautious about what that would mean when it came to people actually buying tickets but we were just bowled over by how huge it was." McKinlay said the reaction was "phenomenal" when Oasis confirmed their reunion tour, and the Wonderwall hit makers were pleased to be bringing some positive news to the world. "We'd obviously been planning it for a while and the moment when it went live was a little bit of a step into the unknown in terms of how big the reaction would be," he said. "When it all hit home, it was just phenomenal. "The reaction was very much one of, 'Finally, some good news after all the nonsense that's been going on in the world'." Oasis have "no plans" to release new music. The Britpop legends will return to the stage on July 4th to kick off Oasis Live 25, their first tour in 16 years, but the group's co-manager Alec McKinlay insisted this is not the beginning of new releases from the band. "This is very much the last time around, as Noel's made clear in the press," the Ignition and Big Brother Recordings director told Music Week magazine. "It's a chance for fans who haven't seen the band to see them, or at least for some of them to. But no, there's no plan for any new music." More than 10 million fans from 158 countries attempted to buy tickets to brothers Noel and Liam Gallagher's reunion tour, and McKinlay said Oasis were "bowled over" by the international demand. "Probably the biggest and most pleasing surprise of the reunion announcement is how huge it was internationally," he said. "Honestly, we knew it would be big here, and that doesn't take much intuition, but looking outside the UK, we knew they had a strong fanbase, we did all the stats. "We were quite cautious about what that would mean when it came to people actually buying tickets but we were just bowled over by how huge it was." McKinlay said the reaction was "phenomenal" when Oasis confirmed their reunion tour, and the Wonderwall hit makers were pleased to be bringing some positive news to the world. "We'd obviously been planning it for a while and the moment when it went live was a little bit of a step into the unknown in terms of how big the reaction would be," he said. "When it all hit home, it was just phenomenal. "The reaction was very much one of, 'Finally, some good news after all the nonsense that's been going on in the world'." Oasis have "no plans" to release new music. The Britpop legends will return to the stage on July 4th to kick off Oasis Live 25, their first tour in 16 years, but the group's co-manager Alec McKinlay insisted this is not the beginning of new releases from the band. "This is very much the last time around, as Noel's made clear in the press," the Ignition and Big Brother Recordings director told Music Week magazine. "It's a chance for fans who haven't seen the band to see them, or at least for some of them to. But no, there's no plan for any new music." More than 10 million fans from 158 countries attempted to buy tickets to brothers Noel and Liam Gallagher's reunion tour, and McKinlay said Oasis were "bowled over" by the international demand. "Probably the biggest and most pleasing surprise of the reunion announcement is how huge it was internationally," he said. "Honestly, we knew it would be big here, and that doesn't take much intuition, but looking outside the UK, we knew they had a strong fanbase, we did all the stats. "We were quite cautious about what that would mean when it came to people actually buying tickets but we were just bowled over by how huge it was." McKinlay said the reaction was "phenomenal" when Oasis confirmed their reunion tour, and the Wonderwall hit makers were pleased to be bringing some positive news to the world. "We'd obviously been planning it for a while and the moment when it went live was a little bit of a step into the unknown in terms of how big the reaction would be," he said. "When it all hit home, it was just phenomenal. "The reaction was very much one of, 'Finally, some good news after all the nonsense that's been going on in the world'." Oasis have "no plans" to release new music. The Britpop legends will return to the stage on July 4th to kick off Oasis Live 25, their first tour in 16 years, but the group's co-manager Alec McKinlay insisted this is not the beginning of new releases from the band. "This is very much the last time around, as Noel's made clear in the press," the Ignition and Big Brother Recordings director told Music Week magazine. "It's a chance for fans who haven't seen the band to see them, or at least for some of them to. But no, there's no plan for any new music." More than 10 million fans from 158 countries attempted to buy tickets to brothers Noel and Liam Gallagher's reunion tour, and McKinlay said Oasis were "bowled over" by the international demand. "Probably the biggest and most pleasing surprise of the reunion announcement is how huge it was internationally," he said. "Honestly, we knew it would be big here, and that doesn't take much intuition, but looking outside the UK, we knew they had a strong fanbase, we did all the stats. "We were quite cautious about what that would mean when it came to people actually buying tickets but we were just bowled over by how huge it was." McKinlay said the reaction was "phenomenal" when Oasis confirmed their reunion tour, and the Wonderwall hit makers were pleased to be bringing some positive news to the world. "We'd obviously been planning it for a while and the moment when it went live was a little bit of a step into the unknown in terms of how big the reaction would be," he said. "When it all hit home, it was just phenomenal. "The reaction was very much one of, 'Finally, some good news after all the nonsense that's been going on in the world'."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store