Case Western Reserve (2-2, 1-2 PAC) vs. Saint Vincent (2-1, 1-1 PAC)
1 p.m. Saturday, Chuck Noll Field, Unity
Coaches: Greg Debeljak, Case Western Reserve; Aaron Smetanka, Saint Vincent
Series: Case Western Reserve leads 6-1
Last meeting: In 2019, Case Western Reserve 34, Saint Vincent 26
About Case Western Reserve: After opening the season 2-0, Case Western Reserve has lost two in a row, most recently dropping a 37-14 decision to Washington & Jefferson last week. Tied at 14 in the final moments of the second quarter, the Presidents scored a touchdown with four seconds left in the half before outscoring the Spartans, 16-0, over the final two quarters. Through its first four games, Case averaged 409.5 yards of total offense to rank second in the PAC and is led by two-time All-PAC quarterback Drew Saxton, who has thrown for a league-best 1,188 yards and 10 touchdowns. Debeljak is 119-47 in 18 seasons.
About Saint Vincent: Saint Vincent is looking for its second win all-time against Case in the eighth all-time meeting between the teams. The Bearcats are coming off of a decisive 41-7 PAC win over Thiel last week, as SVC out-gained Thiel, 422-206, in total offense. Five different players found the end zone for SVC, led by Billy Beck’s two rushing touchdowns, while Brady Walker completed 15 of 22 passes for 275 yards and three touchdowns. Defensively, Joanes Polynice recorded a game-high 12 tackles, while Marvell Cromerdie and Evan Brozenich each intercepted passes.
Paul Schofield is a Tribune-Review Staff Writer. You can contact Paul by email at pschofield@triblive.com or via Twitter .
A former Chinese justice minister has become a target of President Xi Jinping's anti-corruption campaign
ByThe Associated Press
October 2, 2021, 7:58 AM
• 2 min read
BEIJING -- A former Chinese justice minister has become a target of President Xi Jinping’s anti-corruption campaign.
Fu Zhenghua, who was also a former vice minister of public security, is under investigation for severe violations of party discipline and law, the ruling Communist Party's Central Commission for Discipline Inspection said Saturday. It did not provide any details in a one-sentence statement posted online.
It’s unclear why Fu, 66, would become a target of the campaign. He was the longtime head of public security for Beijing and vice minister of public security from 2013 to 2018. He then served as justice minister from 2018 to 2020.
When he was vice minister for public security, Fu led the probe of Zhou Yongkang, one of the most senior officials convicted in the anti-corruption campaign. Zhou, a former public security minster, was one of nine members of the Politburo Standing Committee, the Communist Party's top body, under Xi's predecessor, President Hu Jintao.
Zhou was sentenced to life in prison in 2015 on charges of taking bribes, abusing power and leaking state secrets.
Xi has been accused of using the anti-corruption drive to drive out political adversaries, and Zhou's downfall was seen as burying a once-powerful faction in the Communist Party.
The announcement of the investigation into Fu comes two days after the party's discipline commission said it had expelled another former vice minister of public security, Sun Lijun, citing accusations of corruption and abandoning his post during the COVID-19 outbreak.
United States gymnasts Kaylee Lorincz and Simone Biles hug after a Senate Judiciary hearing about the Inspector General's report on the FBI's handling of the Larry Nassar investigation on Sept. 15, 2021. Saul Loeb/Pool/AP
Saul Loeb/Pool/AP
The Justice Department is directing prosecutors to coordinate with state and local authorities in cases where federal charges won't be brought, part of a broad new push to support crime victims.
Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco outlined the new steps in a pair of memos Friday, days before she's scheduled to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee on reauthorizing the Violence Against Women Act. President Biden has called that law one of the most important legislative achievements in his long Senate career, and Monaco worked on the legislation as a young staffer before she attended law school.
"When considering whether to initiate federal criminal charges, we must never forget the people who put their trust in the Department to keep them safe," Monaco wrote. "Preventing violence or harm must be our top priority. Nowhere is this obligation more important than when vulnerable populations — including minors — are at risk."
The memo follows blistering criticism of the FBI for failing to do more to investigate disgraced former physician Larry Nassar, who sexually abused Olympic gymnasts and hundreds of other girls and young women before he was convicted and sentenced to decades behind bars. The Justice Department's Inspector General concluded that Nassar abused at least 70 victims after the FBI first received reports but failed to act promptly or to flag the concerns for local law enforcement authorities in Michigan.
Gymnast McKayla Maroney told senators last month that after she poured her heart out to an FBI interviewer about her abuse by Nassar, including details she had not shared with her parents, the agent replied, "Is that all?"
In a second memo, Monaco announced she would relaunch a working group for crime victims and update attorney general guidelines for victim and witness assistance, which she said have not had a comprehensive overhaul in a decade. She asked for recommendations within 120 days.
"The Department is committed to protecting crime victims' rights and treating victims and witnesses with respect in all of our interactions," Monaco wrote.
Early Friday, Monaco, Attorney General Merrick Garland and Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta attended a virtual listening session with members of the National Task Force to End Sexual and Domestic Violence.
MEXICO CITY, Oct 1 (Reuters) - Lawyers for relatives of 43 student teachers who disappeared in southern Mexico seven years ago criticized the government's disclosure on Friday of conversations between alleged criminals and authorities linked to the case.
The students from the Ayotzinapa Rural Teachers' College disappeared on Sept. 26, 2014, in the state of Guerrero. The remains of only three of the students have been positively identified.
A document released by the government from the investigation of the disappearances indicates that a high-ranking member of the criminal group Guerreros Unidos asked police to hand over the students the night they disappeared in the city of Iguala.
"It is risky that information about an ongoing investigation is disseminated in this way, as it may jeopardize its success," said a statement by the Miguel Agustin Pro Human Rights Center, which represents the relatives of the victims.
Text messages said that at least 17 of the students were taken to a "cave," according to the transcript released on Friday by the Interior Ministry at the request of President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador.
The unsolved kidnapping convulsed the country, sparking massive protests in 2014 and garnering international condemnation as one of the darkest examples of the government’s longstanding difficulty preventing violence or convicting those responsible.
Family members of the victims have long accused Mexican authorities, including the military, of complicity in the students’ disappearance.
Lopez Obrador in January confirmed that a witness had implicated soldiers in the 2014 disappearance of the students.
Reporting by Liz Diaz and Noe Torres; Writing by Cassandra Garrison; Editing by William Mallard
Article From & Read More ( Lawyers criticize Mexican government for releasing texts in student kidnap case - Reuters Canada )
https://ift.tt/3A3IZdp
Case
A wealthy socialite and a senior police official end up on a moonlit pier in paradise. Then a single fatal shot rings out. Locals called it the crime of the young decade, but what happened?
After midnight on May 28, 2021, authorities found 32-year-old Jasmine Hartin pacing on a pier covered in blood near the five-bedroom condo she shared with her common-law husband, Andrew Ashcroft, the son of a British billionaire. Just off the pier, Police Superintendent Henry Jemmott was floating in the Caribbean Sea, shot dead.
Who is Jasmine Hartin?
LinkedIn
Jasmine Hartin says that a lot of people misjudge her. "People perceive me as being -- a billionairess and this -- entitled, spoiled rich girl and this wild, crazy party girl that's hanging from rafters. That's not it at all. I'm a businesswoman. I'm a mother. I'm a friend… I'm a wife."
Police Superintendent Henry Jemmott
Belize Channel 7
Henry Jemmott had a wide range of friends in Belizean society. He was as at ease with the Ashcrofts and their enormous wealth, as he was with the working-class people he grew up with. As the only son in his family, he was affectionately called "King." Following in the footsteps of his sister Cherry Jemmott, Henry became a police officer and worked his way up.
The birth of the Alaia
Alaia Belize / YouTube
Jasmine Hartin arrived in Belize in 2014 and made a splash on the social scene. A year later, her life changed when she met Andrew Ashcroft. In May 2021, just weeks before the shooting, the pair cut the ribbon on their professional dream: a Marriott-branded resort worth millions. Though Hartin seemed to have it all, she says there was trouble in her relationship with Ashcroft and they were essentially leading separate lives.
Jasmine Hartin's protector
Facebook
On May 22, 2021, Hartin says she was at a party some 70 miles from home when she says a man followed her into a room and was quite aggressive with her in a sexual manner. After fighting the man off, Hartin says she called her "protector," Henry Jemmott. Hartin says Jemmott drove an hour to come pick her up and urged her to get a gun for her protection in the future. She says Jemmott even showed her his Glock 17 weapon so she could, "get a feel for it."
A favor returned
CBS News
Some three days after Jemmott rescued Hartin from the party, it was Jasmine's turn to help her friend. She says she received a text message from Henry asking to stay at the Grand Colony for a couple days and "just blow off some steam." Jemmott checked into the resort Wednesday, May 26.
Gone fishing
Facebook
The day after checking into the hotel, Henry Jemmott went fishing with his best friend Francisco "Panny" Arceo. Arceo says Jemmott was happy and that Henry told him he had a date that night. Arceo told "48 Hours" that when he asked Henry who he was going on a date with, Jemmott replied, "That one, I'm taking it to my grave."
Alone on a pier
Belize Channel 7
Documents from law enforcement, courts and forensic experts in Jasmine Hartin's case have not been made public. Much of her account of that night cannot be independently corroborated. Hartin told her story in detail for the first time on American TV to "48 Hours" starting with how she and Henry Jemmott ended up on that pier alone. Hartin says she and Ashcroft were supposed to meet Jemmott for a drink, but Ashcroft backed out last minute. As a full moon settled over the tropical Caribbean night, Hartin met with Jemmott alone. She says they were sitting on Jemmott's oceanfront balcony drinking whiskey and admiring the stars when they decided to go down and sit on the pier.
Private gun lessons
Facebook
As he'd done after rescuing her from that party, Hartin says Jemmott again pulled out his 9 mm Glock 17 and handed it to her. Hartin says Jemmott began teaching her how to eject and reload the magazine clip and bullets. "He helped me get the clip out," said Hartin in a sit-down television interview with "48 Hours" correspondent Peter Van Sant. "I was unloading it. Then he took the bullets and put them beside him … I was under the impression that the gun was completely empty at the time."
Moment by moment
CBS News
During her interview with "48 Hours," Hartin took Van Sant through the events she says occurred that night moment by moment. Hartin says that she and Jemmott were about to head inside when he asked her to hand him the magazine clip, which at the time – according to Hartin – was in the gun. "And I'm trying to click out the magazine and it's not working," says Hartin. "So, I'm holding it like this and I'm trying to use the moonlight or whatever to see if I'm clicking the right button." She says the barrel of the gun was pointed to the left, where Jemmott was sitting. "Next thing I know, the gun went off."
Rampant rumors
Amandala/Belize Channel 7
With a respected police officer dead and a wealthy powerful woman in a concrete jail cell there were rampant rumors about Jasmine Hartin and Henry Jemmott: were drugs and infidelity involved? The speculation was fueled by reports that Hartin's account of that night had changed. According to Channel 7 in Belize, the first account Hartin told was that the fatal shot may have come from a passing boat.
After a jailhouse visit with a lawyer, Hartin reportedly admitted she fired the fatal shot– accidentally. Hartin was charged with manslaughter by negligence and eventually released on bail.
A grieving family
CBS News
Henry Jemmott was beloved by his family and the people of Belize whom he had spent his life serving. The Jemmott family, including his three sisters, does not believe Hartin's account of what happened the night Henry died. Henry's sister, Cherry Jemmott, pictured right, said, "She gave so many stories, so who knows when she's telling the truth?" Cherry Jemmott doesn't believe the shooting was an accident and says her brother was shot behind the ear, "execution-style."
The family is hopeful that when the ballistic report is revealed, it will lead prosecutors to upgrade the charge to murder.
What did Jasmine know?
Belize Channel 7
Central to Hartin's story is that she knew very little about handguns and that Henry Jemmott wanted to teach her for her own protection. But video appeared of Hartin in Belize with a shotgun. Cherry Jemmott says, "The video tell me that Jasmine is well versed, have wide knowledge of bigger firearms." Hartin says, "What the video doesn't show is that it really was probably my tenth attempt at the watermelon. I'm not very good with firearms."
Firearms expert
CBS News
With so much riding on Hartin's account of Henry Jemmott's shooting, "48 Hours" decided to consult an expert opinion about whether her story lines up. David Katz is a former DEA agent, and a veteran firearms instructor who taught at the FBI/DEA Academy in Quantico. After Katz was shown portions of Hartin's interview, he conceded that "it's a troubling story from so many aspects, starting with … why she's practicing … in the dark?" However, Katz says that Hartin's description of where her hand was when the gun went off leads him to believe it, "absolutely," could have been an accidental shooting. Prosecutors have not released what forensics, ballistics or other tests authorities have conducted.
Struggling with loss
Belize Channel 7
Ever since his funeral, Henry Jemmott has watched over his family from a portrait on the wall. The family is waiting for the trial and hopes to get what they would consider justice. For them, justice would be Jasmine Hartin charged with murder. For her part, Hartin says she would "accept any punishment."
Hartin's trial date hasn't been set yet.
Under Belizean law, she could get as much as five years for negligent manslaughter, but also as little as a fine without any jail time.
Steven Donziger, a Harvard Law School grad, embraced his son Matthew outside federal court in Manhattan Friday.
Photo: shannon stapleton/Reuters
NEW YORK—Disbarred attorney Steven Donziger was sentenced Friday to six months in prison for contempt of court after a federal judge concluded that he willfully violated orders stemming from a three-decade-long legal crusade against Chevron Corp. over pollution in the Ecuadorean rainforest.
Friday’s sentencing follows a July ruling by U.S. District Judge Loretta Preska in New York finding Mr. Donziger guilty of six counts of criminal contempt of court. She found that he disobeyed court orders as he sought to enforce a $9.5...
NEW YORK—Disbarred attorney Steven Donziger was sentenced Friday to six months in prison for contempt of court after a federal judge concluded that he willfully violated orders stemming from a three-decade-long legal crusade against ChevronCorp. over pollution in the Ecuadorean rainforest.
Friday’s sentencing follows a July ruling by U.S. District Judge Loretta Preska in New York finding Mr. Donziger guilty of six counts of criminal contempt of court. She found that he disobeyed court orders as he sought to enforce a $9.5 billion judgment that he won against the oil giant in Ecuador and that he was barred from profiting from.
Before handing down the sentence of six months and a $10 fee, Judge Preska said Mr. Donziger’s conduct had shown an astonishing disrespect for the law and the authority of federal courts.
“Mr. Donziger spent the last seven plus years thumbing his nose at the U.S. judicial system,” she said. “It’s now time to pay the piper.”
Mr. Donziger, who has already spent two years in home confinement, vowed to appeal. “I cannot today express remorse for actions I maintain are ethical and legal,” he told the judge.
He said the toll on his family and human-rights work had been punishment enough. Some of his supporters were at the courthouse Friday, many wearing face masks with the words “Free Donziger,” and dozens of his backers had written to Judge Preska asking that he be sentenced to time already served.
Before Friday’s hearing, the Harvard Law School grad had already been stripped of his ability to practice law and largely confined to his Manhattan apartment since August 2019, wearing an ankle bracelet.
In her July ruling, which came after a five-day trial, Judge Preska concluded that “at stake here is the fundamental principle that a party to a legal action must abide by court orders or risk criminal sanctions, no matter how fervently he believes in the righteousness of his cause or how much he detests his adversary.”
Mr. Donziger in 1993 first accused Texaco Inc. of polluting a swath of previously pristine rainforest, arguing in a New York lawsuit that the company’s drilling activities ruined the quality of life for local indigenous communities. Chevron later acquired Texaco and assumed its legal defense.
The company pushed back, successfully moving the dispute to Ecuador, where a protracted trial ended in a $9.5 billion judgment against Chevron in 2011. The win, however, was fleeting, with Chevron accusing Mr. Donziger and his allies of manipulating the proceeding even before the final judgment was entered.
That dispute brought the battle back to the U.S., where Chevron won a civil racketeering lawsuit codifying its theory that the Ecuadorean judgment was the product of ghostwriting and other inappropriate acts. That 2014 ruling by U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan essentially blocked Mr. Donziger from trying to enforce the Ecuadorean judgment or from ever profiting from the award.
Chevron has denied any culpability for lasting oil damage in the jungle, saying the company resolved the issue with Ecuador decades ago. It hasn’t paid any of the $9.5 billion award.
Chevron repeatedly flagged to Judge Kaplan when its lawyers believed Mr. Donziger was disobeying his 2014 ruling, including once when he hired a life coach in exchange for a sliver of his share in the Ecuadorean judgment.
In 2019 Judge Kaplan brought criminal contempt charges and referred the matter to Judge Preska for trial. In an unusual move, the case is being prosecuted by a private lawyer because the U.S. attorney’s office for the Southern District of New York declined to pursue it.
That private prosecutor, New York lawyer Rita Glavin, asked the judge in a court filing to consider that “Mr. Donziger’s disobedience was deliberate and repeated. He has expressed no remorse for his conduct. To this day, Mr. Donziger has not produced documents he was ordered to produce.”
Ms. Glavin also encouraged the court to “consider a sentence to deter those who would seek to undermine the rule of law in this way in the future.”
An attorney for Mr. Donziger, Ronald Kuby, saw it differently.
“Mr. Donziger has been punished enough,” he wrote in a presentencing memo.
Article From & Read More ( Chevron Foe Steven Donziger Sentenced to Six Months in Contempt Case - The Wall Street Journal )
https://ift.tt/3oqvxOk
Case
LONDON, Oct 1 (Reuters) - The sentencing in a London court of British oil services group Petrofac (PFC.L) over charges that it failed to prevent bribery in Iraq, Saudi Arabia and the UAE has been postponed to Monday, a court spokesperson said in an email.
Petrofac had said it would plead guilty to seven charges by Britain's Serious Fraud Office (SFO) after a four-year investigation relating to projects awarded in Iraq, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia between 2012 and 2015. read more
Reporting by Kirstin Ridley, writing by Shadia Nasralla; Editing by Jon Boyle