Tag: deleted

  • Proud Boys juror says group’s deleted messages weighed on jury

    Proud Boys juror says group’s deleted messages weighed on jury

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    capitol breach pepper spray 70066

    “The Proud Boys didn’t want everybody to know the plan, because then I guess it would have gotten out. And they didn’t want it to get out,” Mundell said in the interview, noting that the thousands of messages they reviewed — extracted from the phones of Tarrio and his co-defendants — were peppered with blank slots where exchanges had been deleted.

    “And that’s why the government couldn’t present too much of the evidence that they had already deleted, because it was unrecoverable,” Mundell said. “So, they definitely didn’t want people to know.”

    And that wasn’t the only absence of evidence that factored into the jury’s deliberations. Mundell said that he was persuaded by the fact that there wasn’t a single message among the Proud Boys leaders — even after their members contributed to the chaos at the Capitol — urging their allies to withdraw from the riot or stay away from the violence.

    “That factored in for me. It showed an absence of evidence of standing down. No one says, ‘no, don’t do this. We’re not going to do this.’ There was none of that,” Mundell said. “And that was probably because they never said it. And the things that were affirming that they were going to be violent. They just kind of let it happen.”

    Mundell’s comments are the first insight into the jury’s deliberation in the case of Tarrio and four Proud Boys who prosecutors say were the most crucial drivers of the violence that unfolded at the Capitol on Jan. 6. The Justice Department contends that Tarrio, along with leaders Ethan Nordean, Joe Biggs and Zachary Rehl, spearheaded a conspiracy to prevent Joe Biden from taking office — and were prepared to use force to get their way. A fifth defendant, Dominic Pezzola, was acquitted of seditious conspiracy but convicted of numerous felonies for his own role in the attack — which included igniting the breach of the Capitol itself when he smashed a Senate window with a riot shield.

    Prosecutors showed evidence that the Proud Boys spent weeks before Jan. 6 discussing their desire to prevent Biden from taking office, and on Jan. 6, hundreds — in a crowd led by Nordean, Biggs and Rehl — marched to the Capitol even while Trump was speaking to his supporters near the White House. At the Capitol, members of the Proud Boys marching group were present — and often involved — in the crucial moments when the mob breached police lines and many later entered the Capitol, led by Pezzola.

    Mundell said he understood the jury’s work on the case as a significant moment for the country.

    “I think it’s huge. It’s something that needed to happen,” he said. “I definitely think it’s important because otherwise, somebody might get the idea that this is okay to do again.”

    Although the jury deliberated for about a week, Mundell said it didn’t take long for jurors to agree that the group had committed a seditious conspiracy.

    “The first day we elected a foreman. After that, we all put out our initial impressions of the evidence. We all voted and most people saw the evidence pointed towards seditious conspiracy. By the second day, we had pretty much established guilty verdicts on the conspiracy,” he said.

    Mundell said the group agreed that Pezzola was not guilty of seditious conspiracy because he wasn’t closely tied enough to Tarrio or the group’s leaders — Pezzola took the stand and emphasized that he had only been in the Proud Boys for a month before Jan. 6 and barely knew his co-defendants.

    “Another factor was just that he wasn’t the brightest bulb on the porch. And may not have been bright enough to really know about the plan,” Mundell said. “So I said, well, poor guy. He should’ve listened to his father-in-law, who told him ‘don’t go.’”

    Mundell said the jury simply did not buy the defense’s claims that the Proud Boys were only interested in First Amendment-protected protests and to make their voices heard in Washington.

    “You don’t stop the steal by breaking into the Capitol and over-running the police lines and beating up on and spraying the police,” he said.

    He also indicated that a crucial piece of evidence unearthed by an open-source online sleuth late in the Proud Boys trial factored heavily into the jury’s consideration of Rehl’s role in the attack. While Rehl, who took the stand in his own defense, had emphasized repeatedly that he committed no violence, prosecutors displayed a newly discovered video that appeared to show Rehl pepper spraying toward a line of outnumbered police officers at one of the early moments of the riot.

    “Rehl really got caught on cross examination after he was adamant that he never sprayed a police officer … On cross that all fell apart when the video came out and it showed that he was spraying towards the cops,” Mundell said.

    Mundell also emphasized that the jury considered very little about Trump’s role in Jan. 6, despite one “anti-Trump” juror’s effort to tie the former president to the Proud Boys’ actions. To be sure, Trump was a persistent undercurrent in the case — prosecutors noted that his invocation of the Proud Boys during a September 2020 debate turbocharged the group’s recruitment efforts. And his Dec. 19, 2020 tweet urging supporters to descend on Washington to protest the election results on Jan. 6, 2021, was the moment that jumpstarted the Proud Boys’ seditious conspiracy.

    But Mundell said those two episodes were the extent of Trump’s relationship to the case.

    “[T]he evidence doesn’t show anything that Trump did other than ‘be there, will be wild’ and ‘stand back and stand by,’” he said. “That was his contribution to this case. Other than that, everyone was focused. I think they got a fair trial.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • 4 deleted scenes of Pathaan that didn’t make it to theatre

    4 deleted scenes of Pathaan that didn’t make it to theatre

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    Mumbai: Superstar Shah Rukh Khan starrer Pathaan has managed to drag audiences to the cinemas and the film broke several records at the box office. People were stranded in queues to watch the movie in theatres during the first two weeks. The film is still running in various theatres across India since January and it finally got released on the OTT platform today on the 22nd of March.

    Earlier, the director of the film Siddharth Anand had hinted during an interview that the OTT release of the movie will include the deleted scenes which were not shown in theatres. After Siddharth’s revelations, fans were excited to watch the deleted scenes on Prime Video.

    Just after watching the movie on the OTT platform today, netizens shared their experiences via tweets and Instagram posts. Fans wondered why various scenes were removed from the movie and said that they wanted to watch all those deleted scenes on the big screen.

    Some of deleted scenes from Pathaan have caused quite a stir among fans after its OTT release. One of the deleted scenes shows the protagonist, Pathaan, being subjected to brutal torture by Russians, while another quick scene shows his triumphant return to the RAW office after being rescued by Salman Khan’s character Tiger. The third scene features Deepika Padukone’s character being interrogated by Indian forces.

    In addition to the deleted scenes, there are also a few dialogues that didn’t make it to the theatre release. One such dialogues of Shah Rukh Khan is, “Teri Hindi bohot achhi hai..Teri Maa Hindustan aayi thi Kya?”

    Pathaan has become the biggest Hindi hit of all time as it collected more than Rs 1000 crore. The movie stars Shah Rukh Khan, Deepika Padukone and John Abraham in the lead role.

    Check out few tweets below.

    pathaan deleted
    tweet 1638419651767205888 20230322 163352 via 10015 io
    tweet 1638418131717885952 20230322 163531 via 10015 io

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    #deleted #scenes #Pathaan #didnt #theatre

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Delhi murder case: Accused Gehlot deleted all chats from Nikki’s phone

    Delhi murder case: Accused Gehlot deleted all chats from Nikki’s phone

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    New Delhi: Sahil Gehlot, who allegedly strangled his girlfriend Nikki Yadav with data cable at Kashmiri Gate, has told the investigators that after killing her, he deleted all chats and data from her mobile phone and kept it with him after taking out the SIM card.

    Investigators have recovered her mobile phone from Gehot’s possession and have been sent for forensic examination.

    Any argumentative chat between the accused and the victim would have been another piece of evidence that would have strengthened the case against Gehlot, a resident of Mitraon village, sources said, adding that possibly, fearing this, he formatted the phone.

    According to the official, on February 9 night, Gehlot, a resident of Mitraon village, went to meet the woman at her Uttam Nagar residence where she lived with her younger sister.

    “Gehlot stayed there for two-three hours and later both of them went to Nizammudin railway station. But as they could not get tickets to Goa, they changed their plan to go to Himachal Pradesh and reached ISBT, Kashmere Gate,” said the official.

    “When the duo reached ISBT, an argument broke out between them. In between the fight, Gehlot kept receiving back-to-back calls from his family, which he says triggered him to his threshold point and he turned violent,” said a source.

    He then strangled Nikki with his mobile phone data cable inside the car, probably around 8 a.m on February 10, drove to his dhaba to hide her body, and then proceeded with his wedding on February 10.

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    #Delhi #murder #case #Accused #Gehlot #deleted #chats #Nikkis #phone

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )