Tag: guilty

  • 2 found guilty of murdering man outside Hindu temple in UK

    2 found guilty of murdering man outside Hindu temple in UK

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    London: Two men have been found guilty of fatally stabbing a man outside a Hindu temple located in South East of England, media reports said.

    Mohammed Rafaqit Kayani, 24, from Slough, was found injured in the temple car park in Keel Drive on August 30, 2022 and died later in hospital, the BBC reported.

    A jury at Reading Crown Court convicted Hassan Al-Kubanji, 22, of Pimlico in London, and drug dealer Riaz Miah, 21, of no fixed address on Thursday, adjourning their sentencing until April 3.

    While Miah previously pleaded guilty to supplying heroin and cocaine as well as possessing a blade in public, the jury found Al-Kubanji not guilty of the same three offences.

    A third defendant, Miguel Parian John, 42, was found guilty of assisting an offender and two counts of blade possession.

    However, he was cleared of two counts of possessing cocaine and heroin with intent to supply, the report said.

    John will be sentenced at a later date.

    According to a Reading Chronicle report, the defendants began shouting after the verdict and a brawl broke out in the court with riot police being called subsequently.

    Kayani, a keen boxer and a Virgin Atlantic Heathrow check-in agent, was stabbed in the chest and collapsed in a pool of blood.

    He was chased from a playground in Concorde Way to the Slough Hindu Temple after an “altercation”, according to media reports.

    The Reading Crown Court heard earlier that Miah and Al-Kubanji were allegedly “defending themselves” from Kayani and his friend Adil Mahmood.

    Kayani’s wife described him as “a loving son, caring brother, selfless friend and proud Muslim man”.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Aussie-Indian man pleads guilty to unruly behaviour on Air Canada flight

    Aussie-Indian man pleads guilty to unruly behaviour on Air Canada flight

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    Melbourne: An Australian-Indian man pleaded guilty to one count of behaving in an offensive and disorderly manner in an aircraft, and was fined AUS$750 by a local court this week.

    Hardik Patel, 46, from Rooty Hill in western Sydney, became aggressive and abusive onboard a 15-hour Air Canada flight from Vancouver due to heavy drinking, and was arrested upon his arrival at Sydney Airport earlier this month, the Daily Mail reported.

    The Air Canada crew found one litre bottle of Bacardi and a water bottle containing a liquid smelling strongly of alcohol with Patel. The crew confiscated the bottles as according to the Civil Aviation and Safety Authority, airline passengers can only consume alcohol provided by cabin crew during a flight.

    The crew reported that Patel had then become aggressive shortly before AC33 from Vancouver touched down.

    The Australian Federal Police officers, who arrested Patel, observed he had a “flushed face and a strong alcohol odour”.

    According to a statement of facts submitted in the court, Patel “had poor ability to understand instructions and indifferent demeanour, which escalated to being abusive towards police”.

    When the police told him that it is an offence to consume one’s own alcohol in an aircraft, Patel’s responses were “largely aggressive and incoherent”, the Daily Mail reported.

    He continued to ask police why he was arrested and “became more verbally aggressive and argumentative towards police officers, yelling and screaming and trying to engage with members of the public,” the report said.

    The police then decided to take Patel into custody “for his own safety and welfare and the welfare and safety of those around him”, the statement submitted to the court said.

    The Downing Centre Local Court on Monday convicted Patel and fined him AUS$750.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Indo-Canadian man pleads guilty to smuggling migrants into US

    Indo-Canadian man pleads guilty to smuggling migrants into US

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    Toronto: Indo-Canadian Rajinder Pal Singh, who admitted to receiving more than $500,000, for coordinating a human smuggling ring moving migrants into the US via Canada, has pleaded guilty to the charges, the media reported.

    Singh was arrested in Washington in May last year.

    According to CBC News, during a plea agreement hearing in the US District Court, Western District of Washington at Seattle, Singh pleaded guilty to “conspiracy to transport and harbour certain aliens for profit and conspiracy to commit money laundering”.

    His sentencing is scheduled for May 9.

    In October last year, The Fifth Estate reported that Singh had become a “person of interest” in the Manitoba RCMP investigation into the tragic freezing death of the Patel family on the Canada-US border in January 2022.

    On January 19, 2022, the bodies of three-year-old Dharmik Patel; his 11-year-old sister, Vihangi Patel; their mother, 37-year-old Vaishali Patel; and their father, 39-year-old Jagdish Patel; were found in a snow-covered field east of Emerson, about 100 km south of Winnipeg.

    The US investigators had surveillance of Singh discussing possibly moving migrants through Manitoba, according to The Fifth Estate.

    “The wiretapped conversations took place in January 2022, around the same time the Patel family was being moved from the Greater Toronto Area to the remote border area south of Winnipeg,” said the report.

    “Singh played a key role in the non-citizens smuggling conspiracy” and “prior to the unlawful entry of the non-citizens into the US, he would coordinate with members of the conspiracy who housed the non-citizens in British Columbia,” read the plea agreement.

    To help migrants navigate the Canadian border, Singh used the Life360 app, which allows users to share their physical location through their cell phone.

    Once they made their way into the US, he would arrange pickups through the Uber ride share app.

    Singh charged up to $11,000 per person for his services, according to the report.

    The US Homeland Security had been investigating Singh since 2018.

    In 2009, Singh pleaded guilty to bank fraud and illegal re-entry after deportation. He was sentenced to another 27 months in US federal prison, said the report.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Ex-cops plead not guilty over African-American man’s death

    Ex-cops plead not guilty over African-American man’s death

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    Washington: Five former police officers in Memphis, who have been charged with murder over the death of African-American man Tyre Nichols, have pleaded not guilty in their first court appearance.

    The 29-year-old died in a hospital on January 10, three days after a traffic stop by Memphis police.

    On January 27, the Memphis Police Department released four graphic videos, totalling more than an hour of footage, showing the five former police officers, who are also black, brutally beating the victim.

    Tadarrius Bean, Demetrius Haley, Desmond Mills Jr, Emmitt Martin III and Justin Smith were fired after an internal investigation by the police department, the BBC reported.

    During the hearing at the Shelby County Criminal Court on Friday, Judge James Jones confirmed the five defendants had pleaded not guilty to charges of second-degree murder, aggravated assault, aggravated kidnapping, official misconduct and official oppression.

    The former officers are currently out on bail, with the next hearing scheduled on May 1.

    They face up to 60 years in prison if convicted of murder.

    The Memphis Police Department’s so-called SCORPION unit, to which the fired officers belonged, has been permanently deactivated.

    The fallout has also reached other agencies, including the Memphis Fire Department, which fired three emergency medical technicians.

    Two additional Memphis police officers have also been relieved of duty.

    The death of Nichols came nearly three years after the police murder of African-American man George Floyd in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

    Floyd, 46, died on May 25, 2020, after an encounter with Minneapolis police, during which white officer Derek Chauvin knelt on his neck for more than nine minutes while making an arrest with other colleagues.

    The police killing of Floyd sparked outrage and protests across the US in the summer of 2020 against police brutality and systemic racism.

    Police killed 1,186 people in the US last year, according to Mapping Police Violence.

    African-Americans were 26 per cent of those killed by police in 2022 despite accounting for only 13 per cent of the population.

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    #Excops #plead #guilty #AfricanAmerican #mans #death

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • I feel guilty for wanting a more kinky sex life than my partner can offer

    I feel guilty for wanting a more kinky sex life than my partner can offer

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    I have been with my partner for seven years and we have not had sex for the last three. For a long time this was due to her mental health and a period of intense stress and trauma. During this time I flirted with other people and rediscovered my love of kink, a love my partner does not share. This also led to an affair that resulted in the best sex of my life. My partner now wants the relationship to work and to re-engage sexually but, much as I love her, I find myself recoiling from her efforts. I also feel tremendous guilt that my desire for a more kink-based sex life might destroy a seven-year relationship.

    It sounds as though you are on your way out of this relationship. You have difficult decisions to make. If you choose to stay, you will either have to give up your outside activities or continue them in secret. Whatever you choose, there will be a price to pay. First, you must try to find out if it would even be possible for you to re-engage with your partner, although your use of the word “recoiling” suggests that is unlikely. It sounds as though you have been hiding an important part of your sexual self for some time in this relationship. If we are not fully ourselves with a partner, the pressure of shutting off an “unacceptable” part can become too great and end the relationship. Provided your specific “kink” interest is a consensual one, try to be accepting of it yourself, and recognise that you deserve to be fully accepted by others.

    • If you would like advice from Pamela on sexual matters, send us a brief description of your concerns to private.lives@theguardian.com (please don’t send attachments). Each week, Pamela chooses one problem to answer, which will be published online. She regrets that she cannot enter into personal correspondence. Submissions are subject to our terms and conditions.

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    #feel #guilty #wanting #kinky #sex #life #partner #offer
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Tesla crash: Indian-American who drove family off cliff pleads not guilty

    Tesla crash: Indian-American who drove family off cliff pleads not guilty

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    New York: An Indian-American, who was accused of deliberately driving his Tesla off a California cliff with his wife and children inside, has pleaded not guilty to attempted murder.

    Dharmesh A. Patel, 41, of Pasadena has been charged with “attempted first-degree murder and child abuse, as well as enhancements for great bodily injury and domestic abuse”.

    Appearing before a Redwood City courthouse last week, Patel, a radiologist at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center in Los Angeles, entered his not-guilty plea.

    If convicted on the three counts of murder charges, Patel could get a life sentence in prison.

    According to The New York Post, Patel has tapped a prominent California attorney, Joshua Bentley, to defend his case, and has a preliminary hearing scheduled for March 20.

    San Mateo District Attorney Steve Wagstaffe said that statement from Patel’s wife as well as witness accounts from other motorists and video of the roadway gave enough evidence to frame charges against him.

    A San Mateo judge had ordered to hold Patel without bail at the Maguire Correctional Facility, citing the danger he poses to his family.

    Patel’s car was travelling south on State Route 1 on January 2 when it went over a 250-foot cliff at Devil’s Slide, south of the Tom Lantos Tunnels, and flipped and landed on its wheels near the water’s edge.

    Firefighters had to cut the vehicle to pull Patel’s two children — a seven-year-old girl and a four-year-old boy — from the vehicle. The daughter suffered a serious injury, while the boy escaped with just bruises.

    The couple was pulled out of the vehicle’s windows.

    Investigators are yet to establish Patel’s motive behind the act.

    “We’re looking into what led up to this. Was there depression or anything else? It wasn’t just that he was trying to kill them, he was trying to kill himself too,” Wagstaffe had said in a late January press conference.

    Patel has been ordered not to contact his wife or their children.

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    #Tesla #crash #IndianAmerican #drove #family #cliff #pleads #guilty

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Meadows ally set to plead guilty for illegal campaign finance contribution

    Meadows ally set to plead guilty for illegal campaign finance contribution

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    Bennett did not respond to messages seeking comment, but her attorney said in a statement that the case “involves a technical violation of campaign-finance regulations, based on a loan from a family member.”

    “Lynda looks forward to putting it behind her,” Kearns Davis, Bennett’s attorney, said.

    An attorney for Mark Meadows also did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Bennett’s campaign finance records don’t immediately make clear which contributions prosecutors believe to have been unlawful. Bennett’s reports indicate she loaned herself $80,000 at the end of 2019 and paid a portion of it back. Her report terminating her political committee did not list any outstanding balance.

    Campaign finance laws limited individual campaign contributions for the 2020 election cycle to $2,800 in the primary and $2,800 in the general for an aggregate total of $5,600 in that campaign cycle. However, candidates can make unlimited donations or loans to their own campaigns.

    Meadows backed Bennett to replace him in Congress after he resigned his seat to join the Trump White House, until she lost the primary to Cawthorn. Then-President Donald Trump also endorsed Bennett in the primary, and Republicans in North Carolina worried that Meadows’ aggressive effort to steer his seat to an ally might backfire.

    Meadows’ wife Debbie was active in support of Bennett on the campaign trail and Meadows pointed to his wife’s closeness with Bennett to underscore her support for Trump.

    Mark Meadows is facing intense legal scrutiny for his role in Donald Trump’s effort to subvert the 2020 election. Prosecutors in Washington and Georgia are investigating the effort, as well as the role that some of Trump’s close allies played.

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    #Meadows #ally #set #plead #guilty #illegal #campaign #finance #contribution
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • 4 more Oath Keepers found guilty of seditious conspiracy tied to Jan. 6 attack

    4 more Oath Keepers found guilty of seditious conspiracy tied to Jan. 6 attack

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    Seditious conspiracy, which requires prosecutors to prove that defendants planned to forcibly prevent the execution of a U.S. law, is the gravest charge to emerge from the Jan. 6 attack. The government has secured 10 convictions for seditious conspiracy since last year, including three other Oath Keepers and a member of the far-right Proud Boys who pleaded guilty to the charge. Five Proud Boys leaders, including the group’s national chair Enrique Tarrio, are currently on trial on seditious conspiracy charges, as well.

    Prosecutors say the Oath Keepers began planning to derail the transfer of power shortly after Biden was projected to be the winner of the 2020 election. Though Rhodes and other members of the group said they merely came to Washington to act as security details for speakers at Trump’s “Stop the Steal” rally, members of the group later joined the mob breaching the Capitol building.

    Nearly two dozen Oath Keepers entered the Capitol through the Columbus Doors near the rotunda before splitting into two groups and heading toward the House and Senate chambers.

    The Oath Keepers also organized a large stockpile of firearms and other weaponry at a hotel in Arlington, Va., which they intended for use if the violence escalated even further. Vallejo remained stationed at the hotel, prepared to shuttle the weapons to D.C. if the group called on him, but it never did.

    Members of the group remained stoic as the verdict was read aloud. Seated in a row of the public gallery were Tarrio’s mother; the mother of Ashli Babbitt, a Jan. 6 rioter who was shot and killed by a Capitol Police officer while trying to breach the House chamber; and Nicole Reffitt, whose husband is serving a seven-and-a-half-year sentence for obstruction of Congress’ Jan. 6 proceedings. They were also present earlier in the day when Jan. 6 defendant Richard Barnett — who is featured in famous images with his feet on a desk in then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office suite — was found guilty on eight charges related to the breach of the Capitol.

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    #Oath #Keepers #guilty #seditious #conspiracy #tied #Jan #attack
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • ‘A f–king idiot’: Man who breached Pelosi suite says he’s guilty of bluster, not crime

    ‘A f–king idiot’: Man who breached Pelosi suite says he’s guilty of bluster, not crime

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    It was a climactic moment as a milestone Jan. 6 prosecution neared its conclusion. Barnett’s image at the desk in Pelosi’s office became a symbol of the brazenness of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol and the vulnerability of a key institution attempting to fulfill its responsibility to certify the 2020 election. The case was poised to head to the jury Friday afternoon, with a verdict likely early next week.

    In lengthy, tense cross-examination, Gordon raised sharp doubts about key aspects of Barnett’s Jan. 6 story. Barnett contended that he climbed the center steps of the Capitol to gain a vantage point to find two friends who he lost in the chaos. He then claimed that he was “pushed” into the Capitol after getting stuck in a densely packed crowd near the rotunda doors. He said he roamed around the building merely looking for a bathroom, and found himself in Pelosi’s office suite.

    Then, he claimed he got caught up in the moment and acted foolishly by posing for a photo at the desk of Pelosi aide Emily Berret. He claimed he took an envelope off Berret’s desk — meant for then-Rep. Billy Long (R-Mo.) – and left a quarter as compensation. He didn’t consider it theft, he said, because he paid for the envelope and removed it because he had bled all over it and wanted to remove the “biohazard.”

    Gordon suggested in questioning that Barnett had ample opportunities to turn around and leave the Capitol before he entered the building and that he never once asked an officer for help finding a bathroom. And despite his purported concerns about the tainted envelope, he held onto it for days before throwing it, unsealed, onto the table in his interview with the FBI. The truth is, Gordon said, Barnett took the envelope as a “trophy.”

    “You don’t know the truth, sir,” Barnett shot back.

    Video evidence played during the trial showed Barnett waving the bloodstained envelope outside the Capitol, boasting about his jaunt inside Pelosi’s office suite and the note he left on her desk: “Nancy, Bigo was here, bi-otch.” Prosecutors noted that Barnett tried — while in jail for his alleged Jan. 6 crimes — to have his partner copyright the phrase.

    Throughout his cross-examination, Barnett repeatedly spoke over Gordon’s questioning, often going on tangents or digressions that prompted admonishments from the judge and from Gordon. As Gordon’s questioning drew to a close, Barnett at times grew agitated with the pointed inquiries, saying he was “getting quite tired of it.”

    “I ain’t breaking down,” Barnett said after a particularly tense exchange. “I’ve made mistakes. I went through hell up there. The officers went through hell up there. … I’m struggling with this.”

    Gordon homed in on Barnett’s interaction with two police officers who sought to usher him from Pelosi’s suite. He yelled about “communism” during the first interaction, and during the second, he told the officer “We’re in a war. Pick a side. Don’t be on the wrong side or you’re going to get hurt.”

    Barnett said he was just “blustering” and that he never meant he would be the one to hurt the officer.

    Barnett’s defense attorneys emphasized that he is prone to hyperbole and had no criminal history, that he never committed violence inside the Capitol and turned himself in to law enforcement after driving home to Arkansas. In addition to Barnett’s testimony, his wife Tammy Newburn and his cousin Eileen Halpin testified on his behalf, describing him as a quirky, gregarious but well-liked member of his community.

    Barnett began his testimony by indicating he regretted his actions toward Pelosi and for going to D.C. at all.

    But prosecutors emphasized that Barnett repeatedly agitated against people who supported certifying Joe Biden’s presidential victory, that he viewed “patriots” as people who opposed Biden’s election and repeatedly suggested he would do anything to prevent Biden from taking office.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )