Lexx Diamond

Art Lover ❤️ Sex Addict®™
Staff member




Ex-Colorado clerk Tina Peters found guilty in election machine breach case​

Peters was accused of using someone else’s security badge to give expert affiliated with Mike Lindell access to system

Associated Press
Tue 13 Aug 2024 11.39 EDT
Share


Former Colorado clerk Tina Peters, a hero to election deniers, has been found guilty in a breach of her county’s election computer system in a jury verdict returned Monday at trial.
Peters was accused of using someone else’s security badge to give an expert affiliated with My Pillow chief executive Mike Lindell access to the Mesa county election system. Prosecutors said she was seeking fame and became “fixated” on voting problems after becoming involved with those who had questioned the accuracy of the 2020 presidential election results.

The case marked the first prosecution of a local election official over a suspected security breach amid the conspiracy theories that swirled around the 2020 election. It heightened concerns over potential insider threats, in which rogue election workers sympathetic to partisan lies could use their access and knowledge to launch an attack from within.
In closing arguments at Peters’ trial, prosecutor Janet Drake argued that the former clerk allowed a man posing as a county employee to take images of the election system’s hard drive before and after a software upgrade in May 2021.
Drake said Peters observed the update so she could become the “hero” and appear at Lindell’s symposium on the 2020 presidential election a few months later. Lindell is a prominent promoter of false claims that voting machines were manipulated to steal the election from Donald Trump.
“The defendant was a fox guarding the henhouse. It was her job to protect the election equipment, and she turned on it and used her power for her own advantage,” said Drake, a lawyer from the Colorado attorney general’s office.
Drake has been working for the district attorney in Mesa county, a largely Republican county near the Utah border, to prosecute the case.
Before jurors began deliberations, the defense told them that Peters had not committed any crimes and only wanted to preserve election records after the county would not allow her to have one of its technology experts present at the software update.
Defense lawyer John Case said Peters had to preserve records to access the voting system to find out things like whether anyone from “China or Canada” had accessed the machine while ballots were being counted.
“And thank God she did. Otherwise we really wouldn’t know what happened,” he said.
Peters allowed a former surfer affiliated with Lindell, Conan Hayes, to observe the software update and make copies of the hard drive using the security badge of a local man, Gerald Wood, who Peters said worked for her. But while prosecutors say Peters committed identity theft by taking Wood’s security badge and giving it to Hayes to conceal his identity, the defense says Wood was in on the scheme so Peters did not commit a crime by doing that.
Wood denied that when he testified during the trial.
Political activist Sherronna Bishop, who helped introduce Peters to people working with Lindell, testified that Wood knew his identity would be used based on a Signal chat between her, Wood and Peters. No agreement was spelled out in the chat.
The day after the first image of the hard drive was taken, Bishop testified that she posted a voice recording in the chat. The content of that recording was not included in screenshots of the chat introduced by the defense. The person identified as Wood responded to that unknown message by saying: “I was glad to help out. I do hope the effort proved fruitful,” according to the screenshots.
Prosecutor Robert Shapiro told jurors that Bishop was not credible.
Peters is charged with three counts of attempting to influence a public servant, criminal impersonation, two counts of conspiracy to commit criminal impersonation, one count of identity theft, first-degree official misconduct, violation of duty and failing to comply with the secretary of state.

 

Lexx Diamond

Art Lover ❤️ Sex Addict®™
Staff member
0d72b2c4271e3248366fc20d00c0545af04c39c8.jpg
 

Helico-pterFunk

Rising Star
BGOL Legend







 

Helico-pterFunk

Rising Star
BGOL Legend




 

Helico-pterFunk

Rising Star
BGOL Legend





89400437-0-image-a-16_1725742639360.jpg













Featured-Image-mug-77.jpg


Jennifer-Heathcoe.jpg
 

Helico-pterFunk

Rising Star
BGOL Legend



The 39-year-old singer discussed her relationship with The Lord of the Rings star in a racy interview for the Call Her Daddy podcast.

She revealed her reward for Bloom’s household chores to host Alex Cooper, telling her: “If I come downstairs and the kitchen is clean, and you've done it all, and you’ve done all the dishes, and you’ve closed all the pantry doors, you better be ready to get your d--- sucked. I mean like literally. That is my love language.”
 

RoomService

Dinner is now being served.
BGOL Investor

Sir Ian McKellen Is Asked To 'Return His Knighthood' After Calling Queen Elizabeth 'Rude' And 'Mad'​

The Movie Star Almost Turned Down The Knighthood Honor​


Sir Ian McKellen at the The Good Liar premiere



Sir Ian McKellen has been criticized and called upon to return his knighthood after a recent interview in which he called Queen Elizabeth II "rude" and "quite mad."

The actor's comments were about his conversation with the late queen during his knighting ceremony. Now, experts have challenged his statements and asked him to return the royal honor.

During the interview, Ian McKellen also criticized other royal family members, including King Charles III, Prince Philip, and the Duke of Sussex, Prince Harry.

The iconic actor recently had an interview with The Times, in which he reflected on the few meetings he had with the queen during her reign, especially when he was appointed Companion of Honour for his services to drama and equality.

He said, "The Queen, I'm sure she was quite mad at the end. And on the few occasions I met her she was quite rude."

McKellen recalled his award ceremony and the conversation he had with Queen Elizabeth, labeling it a "bloody rude" interaction.

She allegedly told the actor, "You've been doing this for an awfully long time." In response, McKellen said, "But not as long as you," which reportedly earned him "a Royal smile."

The queen then shocked him further by saying, "Does anyone still actually go to the theatre?"'

Explaining her remark, McKellen said, "It meant, 'Does anyone care a f-ck about you because I don't. Now off you go!'"

Royal Experts Want Him To Return His Knighthood​

Rome: Sir Ian McKellen at Film Fest


McKellen's statements about Elizabeth have earned him heavy criticism from several royal experts.

They challenged the truth of his claims and even called for the "Lord of the Rings" actor to return his knighthood honor. He received the highly esteemed honor in 1991 for his services to the performing arts.

Royal biographer Margaret Holder spoke to the Daily Express about McKellen's statements about the late queen.

She said, "Perhaps if Sir Ian feels so slighted by the queen he could consider returning his knighthood, although he may regret that in the future."

Another royal expert Dickie Arbiter, who was the official spokesman for the queen for over a decade, asked why McKellen accepted the award if he felt this way.

Royal biographer Christopher Wilson also challenged the truth of McKellen's claims, saying there's no recorded instance of the late queen speaking rudely to anyone.

During his interview with The Times, McKellen revealed that he considered rejecting being knighted but was convinced by his friend, actor, and Stonewall co-founder Michael Cashman. He explained the benefits the honor would bring McKellen, which made the Hollywood star agree.

"And he was right, because being a knight opens doors," McKellen noted. "I mean, look at Sir Keir Starmer. A big part of his success was that the BBC had to keep calling him 'Sir Keir.' It made him sound terribly respectable. Poor old Boris Johnson doesn't even have an MBE."

McKellen also spoke about the backlash he received after he finally accepted the honor.

The "X-Men" actor shared that a friend spoke to him days after and issued a warning: "You are about to discover your best friends are your worst enemies."
 

Helico-pterFunk

Rising Star
BGOL Legend

Helico-pterFunk

Rising Star
BGOL Legend


 

Helico-pterFunk

Rising Star
BGOL Legend









vlcsnap-2024-06-03-15h47m11s992.png
 

Lexx Diamond

Art Lover ❤️ Sex Addict®™
Staff member
NY Daily News

Ex-NYC school food boss Eric Goldstein gets 2 year-sentence in chicken bribery case​

John Annese, New York Daily News
Mon, September 9, 2024 at 6:49 PM EDT·4 min read
5

bea8150390c439cb7c4d5c1968bc8d55

Bryan Pace/New York Daily News/TNS
Former New York City schools food czar Eric Goldstein was given a lenient two-year prison sentence Monday for a bribery scandal that resulted in students being served tainted chicken.
Goldstein, 56, was facing a possible 6½ years in federal prison, but a Brooklyn judge cut him and his three co-conspirators a break Monday — after the corrupt school boss and his poultry-peddling friends pleaded that their lives were already spoiled.
“These four defendants are indeed fundamentally good men. They lived good lives,” United States Circuit Judge Denny Chin said as he passed sentence in Brooklyn Federal Court Monday. “But they did go astray, and severely astray … I acknowledge that the case has already placed a great burden on the defendant’s families.”
Chin added, “On the other hand, this was indeed a serious, brazen crime, the bribing of a high-ranking public official. … And I think the defendants knew precisely what they were doing.”
A jury convicted Goldstein and three businessmen, Blaine Iler, Michael Turley and Brian Twomey, of bribery and bribery conspiracy charges last year.
The co-conspirators were each facing 4¼ to 5¼ years behind bars based on sentencing guidelines, but Chin went low with them as well — a year and a day for Iler, 37, and 15 months for Twomey, 51 and Turley, 54.
He recommended all four serve their time in minimum-security prison camps. Chin did not set a surrender date, as they’re planning to appeal the conviction.
Goldstein, described in court as the No. 3 official in the city’s school system, controlled thousands of employees and the city’s $1.2 billion yellow bus budget, plus a $550 million school food program and a $7.5 million school sports operation.
Prosecutors argued at trial the three men, who owned the Texas-based Somma Food Group, started an imported beef business in 2015 with Goldstein as a back-channel to bribe him to get Somma’s food on school menus.
Goldstein fast-tracked a yogurt parfait made by Somma in 2015, and did the same for Somma’s chicken tenders and drumsticks in 2016. The chicken turned out to be a barf-inducing disaster, and kids were fed oozing drumsticks and tenders with bits of bone, metal and plastic.
After a school staffer choked on a bone in a tender and nearly died in September 2016, the Somma execs gave Goldstein their stakes in the beef biz, plus another $66,700, to get their poultry back on school plates.
Goldstein’s lawyer, Neil Kelly of the Federal Defenders, insisted that he made would have made every one of his menu decisions regardless of his relationship with the Somma three.
“These were decisions he was going to make anyway, because they were right,” Kelly said. “This is a unique individual. This is someone who devoted his life to improving the lives of millions of public school children.”
The charges have brought Goldstein to financial ruin, destroyed his reputation and career and devastated his family, Kelly added, complaining that his face was “splashed on the cover of the Post, the Daily News and the Daily Mail.”
A weepy Goldstein asked the judge not to “punish” his family by imprisoning him.
“They have suffered tremendously this past few years. I humbly ask that you show mercy on them,” he said.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Polemeni pushed back on the defense attorneys’ claims that the charges didn’t amount to a typical corruption case, and that Goldstein’s plans in the import beef business would have meant possibly making far more than the nearly $100,000 in bribes he received.
“He ran a nearly $3 billion operation. This is not a maybe-a-corruption case, a maybe-a-bribery case,” he said. “The fact that cash wasn’t put in bags, the fact that Mr. Goldstein made decisions he would have made, it doesn’t matter. That’s not what this is about.”
Goldstein and Kelly declined comment outside the courthouse Monday.
One onlooker, retired NYPD Sgt. Pat Russo, who sat in on the trial, provided information to the FBI and worked with a whistleblower, said Goldstein got off too easy.
Russo’s father, Frank, ran a food vendor company and pleaded guilty in a bid-rigging scandal back in 2000.
“My father received 21 months in prison but he pleaded guilty,” Russo said. “I think it’s ridiculous that Eric only received 24 months and he refused to plead guilty. … When I took over the business for my father, the only way I was allowed to stay in business, and I agreed, was to hire a federal monitor.”
Russo added, “I understand Eric’s life was destroyed, but he did that to himself.”
 

Casca

Rising Star
BGOL Investor

MCAO turns down case against former Buckeye Union High School principal​

Joe Kinney was arrested last week, accused of attempting to lure a child online.

Kinney allegedly admitted to talking to people who claimed to be children online but said that he just thought it was a "fantasy" and that he never intended to go through with any acts with children.

 

Lexx Diamond

Art Lover ❤️ Sex Addict®™
Staff member

Miss Switzerland finalist is 'strangled and PUREED in a blender by her husband': 'Killer used a jigsaw and garden shears to dismember victim'​

  • The 38-year-old was found dead at her home outside of Basel in February
By James Reynolds and Miriam Kuepper

Published: 13:20 EDT, 11 September 2024 | Updated: 14:33 EDT, 11 September 2024

A former Miss Switzerland finalist was allegedly strangled and dismembered with a jigsaw and garden shears before being pureed in a blender by her husband.

The body of 38-year-old model Kristina Joksimovic was found in February in Binningen, near Basel in Switzerland.

Her husband, who was only named by pseudonym Thomas in local media, 41, had an appeal for release from custody rejected today by the Federal Court in Lausanne after admitting to having killed his wife.

An ongoing investigation concluded today there were 'concrete indications of mental illness' underlying the case.

Kristina, the mother of their two children, was allegedly killed because she had previously come at him with a knife, dismembering her body 'in a panic'.

89549069-13838657-image-a-1_1726073401350.jpg

+7
View gallery

The model's husband admitted to having killed his wife, claiming self defence, per local media
Kristina, the mother of their two children, was allegedly killed because she had previously come at him with a knife, dismembering her body 'in a panic'

+7
View gallery

Kristina, the mother of their two children, was allegedly killed because she had previously come at him with a knife, dismembering her body 'in a panic'

Kristina's body was found on the evening of February 13.

Investigators determined that Kristina had been strangled before she died.

The verdict states the suspect confessed to strangling his wife.

An autopsy concluded that the body was then dismembered in the laundry room with a jigsaw, knife and garden shears.

Body parts were then chopped up with a hand blender, 'pureed' and dissolved in a chemical solution, local outlet Blick reported.

A medical-forensic report also 'contradicts his description of self-defence', according to Swiss outlet FM1 Today.

Thomas was reportedly arrested a day after her remains were found by a 'third party' in February.

Friends expressed their shock at the news. One told Blick as the news broke: 'To me, they seemed like the perfect family.'

The couple lived overlooking scenic views from a 'spacious semi-detached house' looking over Basel, 20 Minuten reported.

Kristina and her husband had two daughters together

+7
View gallery
Kristina and her husband had two daughters together
Kristina coached the next generation of models for pageants, as well as businesswomen

+7
View gallery


Kristina coached the next generation of models for pageants, as well as businesswomen
Kristina trained Miss Switzerland candidates to follow in her footsteps

+7
View gallery
Kristina trained Miss Switzerland candidates to follow in her footsteps
Another said the relationship had been 'in crisis for months', with police allegedly called out beforehand over reports of physical violence.

Investigators have said Thomas, a businessman, showed a 'conspicuously high level of criminal energy' in their assessment.

They cited a 'lack of empathy and cold-bloodedness after killing his wife', and his efforts to cover up her death, adding that the defendant had 'sadistic-sociopathic traits'.

Prosecutors say that the defendant had previously strangled his wife before killing her, local outlet BZ Basel reports.

Kristina, a Binningen native with Serbian roots, had reportedly switched from modelling to become a catwalk coach, inspiring the next generation.

Among other things, she trained Miss Switzerland candidates to follow in her footsteps.

She also trained businesswomen for walking confidently in their professional or private lives.

Kristina, a Binningen native with Serbian roots, took part in a number of pageants in the 2000s

+7
View gallery


Kristina, a Binningen native with Serbian roots, took part in a number of pageants in the 2000s
Kristina had once won the Miss Northwest Switzerland pageant and went on to be a finalist in the 2008 national competition

+7
View gallery
Kristina had once won the Miss Northwest Switzerland pageant and went on to be a finalist in the 2008 national competition
She had once won the Miss Northwest Switzerland pageant and went on to be a finalist in the 2008 national competition.

The same year, she founded a coaching and consulting agency for aspiring models.

Former Miss Switzerland Christa Rigozzi shared her 'shock' at the news in February.

'It's terrible. I'm really shocked,' she told 20 Minuten. 'I'm thinking of her two daughters.

'She was such a beautiful and kind-hearted woman.'
 

Lexx Diamond

Art Lover ❤️ Sex Addict®™
Staff member

Inmate is re-arrested on suspicion of rape and sex assault SECONDS after being released under Keir Starmer's early prison release scheme​


By Rory Tingle, Home Affairs Correspondent For Mailonline

Published: 11:48 EDT, 11 September 2024 | Updated: 14:07 EDT, 11 September 2024

A prisoner was arrested on suspicion of rape moments after being set free under Sir Keir Starmer's early release scheme, MailOnline can reveal.

The extraordinary scene played out yesterday morning during a mass freeing of inmates at Wandsworth Prison in south-west London.

The man was seen walking out of the gates of the jail before turning his head from side to side in astonishment as he realised police were waiting for him.

He allowed himself to be cuffed and led away into a waiting van that took him to a nearby police station.

Following an enquiry to the Met, it has emerged the man, 28, was arrested on suspicion of rape, sex assault and a racially aggravated public order offence - raising the question of why he was ever lined up for early release in the first place.

The man was seen walking out of HMP Wandsworth following his release yesterday morning

+4
View gallery
The man was seen walking out of HMP Wandsworth following his release yesterday morning
He looks around in astonishment as he notices police officers are waiting for him

+4
View gallery
He looks around in astonishment as he notices police officers are waiting for him

The Met told MailOnline: 'A 28-year-old man was arrested on Tuesday on suspicion of rape, sexual assault and a racially/religiously aggravated public order offence.

'He was taken to a south London police station before being bailed pending further enquiries in relation to the allegation of rape.

Read More​

EXCLUSIVE
As newly released prisoners head to McDonald's... law-abiding locals are left 'terrified'​

article image

'No further action will be taken in connection with the other allegations.'

It is unclear when the alleged rape took place.

The incident came amid joyous scenes outside Britain's prisons, as 1,700 criminals were set free after serving a fraction if their sentences.

At Wandsworth, sparkling wine was sprayed in the air as a group of men celebrated the early release of one of their friends, known only as Daniel.

Cheers went up as the young man left the jail and was quickly embraced by a woman before joining the rowdy group.

The friends, who arrived in a fleet of luxury cars including a black BMW, passed the hours in the lead-up to his release listening to music, smoking and laughing in what resembled a party atmosphere.

The man allowed himself to be handcuffed and led into a waiting police vehicle

+4
View gallery
The man allowed himself to be handcuffed and led into a waiting police vehicle
He is then led away into a waiting police van, which took him into custody

+4
View gallery
He is then led away into a waiting police van, which took him into custody
They brought along two £17.99 bottles of Luc Belaire Luxe sparkling wine, which were shaken and sprayed as their friend exited the prison gate.

A total of 16 inmates had left Wandsworth by midday.
 
Top