Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Accused. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Accused. Mostrar todas las entradas

The United States barred on Friday travel by Somali officials and other individuals to the United States, accusing them of “undermining the democratic process” in Somalia.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the United States imposed the visa ban after Somalia pushed back to March 15 parliamentary elections due to have been completed Friday.

“We are now imposing visa restrictions under this policy against a number of Somali officials and other individuals to promote accountability for their obstructionist actions,” Blinken said in a statement issued by the State Department.

No central government has held broad authority for 30 years in Somalia, which is caught in a lengthy election process repeatedly held up in a power struggle between President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed and Prime Minister Mohammed Hussein Roble.

The parliamentary election, which started in November, is an indirect process that involves clan elders picking the 275 members of the lower house, who then choose a new president on a date yet to be fixed.

Data from the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs shows 4.3 million people in Somalia are affected by drought, with 271,000 displaced as a result.

The al Qaida-linked al Shabab group, which frequently carries out gun and bomb attacks in the capital, Mogadishu, and elsewhere in Somalia, has also been an impediment to the election.

In mid-February, a suicide bomber targeted a minibus full of election delegates, killing at least six people in Mogadishu.

The delegates were unharmed.

Five crimes were charged by the prosecution two former mayors of the municipality of Piedras, Tolima.

These are Rogelio Montealegre Murillo and Arquímedes Ávila Rondón, who were accused of the crimes of embezzlement by appropriation, prevarication by omission, contract without compliance with legal requirements, falsehood in a private document and ideological falsehood in a public document.

The Public Administration Unit of the Tolima Prosecutor’s Office found irregularities in the signing and execution of work contract 113 of November 19, 2011, whose purpose was the construction of the sewage system and its complementary works in the Campoalegre village, located in the area Rural of Stones.

The contracted value was for an amount close to 1,600 million pesos.

The same procedure covers Benjamín Orlando Arana Osuna, who was a contractor; Alberto Casabianca Moreno, who acted as auditor; Jhon Paul Peña Rojas, former adviser to the Ministry of Planning and Public Works in 2011; and Gloria Piedad Reyes Ariza, planning advisor for the same period.

Rogelio Montealegre Murillo, mayor in the 2008-2011 period, processed the contract with Arana Osuna, apparently without complying with the legal requirements. For his part, Peña Rojas, advisor to the Mayor’s Office, would have participated in the process without observing the essential requirements in the previous studies.

Arquímedes Ávila Rondón, mayor 2012-2015, liquidated the contract ignoring the alleged irregularities, according to the investigation.

The Prosecutor’s Office determined that Arana Osuna would have appropriated 290 million pesos, sum that was paid to him for activities and works that he never executed. Likewise, Casabianca Moreno, as controller of the contract, would have been allowed to appropriate 86 million pesos that were paid to him for activities that were also not carried out and for this they would have falsified public and private documents.

Meanwhile, Peña Rojas, Reyes Ariza and Casabianca Moreno apparently refused to carry out their duties, since they did not monitor the contract as required by law.

The preparatory trial hearing will be on June 13 of this year.

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The two men who were arrested for the alleged kidnapping of spa ownerhis son and his grandson, will now also have to answer for the murder of the last two.

The bodies of Javier Mauricio Palomino, 45, and his son Juan Fernando Palomino Zuluaga, 26, were found in a common grave on the banks of the Cajambre River, in the rural area of ​​Buenaventura (Valle del Cauca), on the 10th of February.

(You can read: ‘Don’t kill us more children, please’: the cry of a family in Cali)

The kidnapping took place at the location in Zabaletas, jurisdiction of Buenaventura, on June 6, 2021.

Aliases ‘Camacholis’ and aliases ‘Care Trapo’, accused of belonging to the ‘Jaime Martínez’ criminal group, of the Farc dissidents that operate in this region of the country, the Prosecutor charged them as alleged co-authors of the crimes kidnapping and aggravated homicide. They did not accept charges.

According to the evidence collected by the investigating body, they would be responsible for the kidnapping and subsequent murder of the Palominos.

The three victims were tied hand and foot and put on a boat stationed on the Zabaletas River.

(You may be interested in: Controversy over another motorcyclist who runs over a traffic guard in Cali)

According to the investigation, the defendants apparently communicated with the family of the kidnapped and demanded the payment of 200 million pesos for their release.

The family would have deposited 100 million pesos in a bank account, after which the criminals released the owner of the tourist establishment with the promise of sending the remaining 100 million to free his son and grandson. Once released, the man paid another 150 million. However, he never heard from the kidnappers or his relatives again. Only until last Thursday, February 10, when their bodies were found in a common grave.

they recaptured them

The Prosecutor’s Office clarified that ‘Camacholis’ and ‘Care Trapo’ had already been captured on October 4, 2021 during a registration and background check operation by CTI servers, together with marines from the National Navy in Zabaletas.

(We suggest: Esperanza Gómez denies relationship with a ‘webcam’ studio in Cali)

When they asked for their identity documents, the uniformed officers confirmed that they had a valid arrest warrant requested by the Police Gaula for the kidnapping of the owner of the spa, his son and his grandson.

But after the discovery of the lifeless bodies of two of the kidnapped, last weekend, the two men were recaptured in the Buenaventura District Prison by CTI servers together with units of the National Navy, after a judge issued the court order within the criminal process for the crime of the Palomino.

More news from Colombia

They suspended the PAE in Cartagena because food is “very expensive”

RPTV NEWS AGENCY team:

Journalist: Angelica Luque

Camera and Edition: Angelo Ramirez

BOGOTA COLOMBIA). Wednesday, February 16, 2022 (RPTV NEWS AGENCY). Two Venezuelan citizens would be guilty of the murder of the journalist from the United Nations Office, Natalia Castillo, which occurred at dawn on December 24, 2021, in the town of Teusaquillo.

According to the investigation, one of the defendants would have participated directly in the crime and in the robbery of which two friends of the communicator in Bogotá were victims. The other would be involved in accessing the banking products of one of the victims to extract money from her.

The defendants are: Ángel Rolando Colina Lugo, alias Ángelo; and Javier Enrique Ramírez Gómez, alias Porky.

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2021




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The man was outside his house.

The man was outside his house.

Police caught him on the street on Sunday instead of serving his sentence.

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Loyal Dana Light

Luz Dana Leal, Co-founder of the Green Party.

Luz Dana Leal, Co-founder of the Green Party.

The Founder of the Green party made a strong statement on the case.

There are more than six complaints made by women on social networks against the candidate for the chamber for the Green party, David Guerrero.

(You may be interested: This is the political map to the House of Representatives for Santander)

The young women denounced that they were victims of abuse while they were sleeping by the candidate, who is an activist for environmental causes.

As these complaints passed, Luz Dana Leal, founder of the Green Party and head of the list for Santander, came out.

“As a woman and as a candidate I have defended the role of women in public lifejust as I have ordered the State and all other authorities to truly protect all of us with effective justice that is not yet another victimizer in any case,” she said.

The candidate said that: “When we formed the list, there was no accusation or investigation against any of the candidates. I have asked the questioned candidate to speak out publicly, make the defenses and clarify the facts of which he is accused.”

The candidate has not yet ruled on these complaints that were known in the last few hours.

“I have asked the ethics committee and the women’s committee of the Alianza Verde party to carry out the necessary investigations and to act with total rigor,” Leal emphasized.

Finally, he invited those who accused the candidate through social networks to make the respective formal complaint to the authorities.

BUCARAMANGA

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RPTV NEWS AGENCY team:

Journalist: Julian Pena

Camera and Edition: John Reyes

BOGOTA COLOMBIA). Tuesday, February 8, 2022 (RPTV NEWS AGENCY). The presidential candidate Gustavo Petro raised controversy on social networks where a video circulates in which the leader of the Historical Pact allegedly jumped on stage in Girardot to give a campaign speech under the influence of alcohol.

“Let the red flags be raised again. May this city be called the red capital of Colombia again. What to do if they voted for Uribe, if they voted for Duque, if the reality was the economic destruction of the territory?”, were the words that Petro pronounced in the video.

The accusations and claims before the apparent state of intoxication of the former mayor of Bogotá, did not wait, Congressman Edward Rodríguez, of the Democratic Center, was one of those who came out to reproach the presidential candidate and challenged Petro to submit to a test of Breathalyzer to clear up any doubts.

From his Twitter account, the left-wing politician pointed out that after returning from a trip to Europe and the time change, a drink he had before the public act did not sit well with him.

“It is true that with the fatigue of the trip to Europe and the time change, I did not like a drink that I had before Girardot’s act, in a previous meeting. I apologize to those who attended the event, which I wanted to fulfill despite my tiredness, ”he said.

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2021




The federal trial for three former Minneapolis police officers charged with violating George Floyd’s civil rights as Derek Chauvin pinned the Black man’s neck to the street began Monday with opening statements, after a jury of 18 people was swiftly picked last week.

J. Kueng, Thomas Lane and Tou Thao are broadly charged with depriving Floyd of his civil rights while acting under government authority. All three are charged for failing to provide Floyd with medical care and Thao and Kueng face an additional count for failing to stop Chauvin, who was convicted of murder and manslaughter in state court last year.

FILE - Former Minneapolis police officers J. Alexander Kueng, Thomas Lane and Tou Thao are seen in this combination of photos provided by the Hennepin County Sheriff's Office in Minnesota on June 3, 2020.

FILE – Former Minneapolis police officers J. Alexander Kueng, Thomas Lane and Tou Thao are seen in this combination of photos provided by the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office in Minnesota on June 3, 2020.

Legal experts say prosecutors have to prove Kueng, Lane and Thao willfully violated Floyd’s constitutional rights, while defense attorneys are likely to blame Chauvin for Floyd’s murder, which was videotaped and triggered worldwide protests, violence and a reexamination of racism and policing.

FILE - Former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin sits in front of a picture of George Floyd displayed during Chauvin's trial for second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter in the death of Floyd in Minneapolis.

FILE – Former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin sits in front of a picture of George Floyd displayed during Chauvin’s trial for second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter in the death of Floyd in Minneapolis.

Floyd, 46, died on May 25, 2020, after Chauvin pressed him to the ground with his knee on Floyd’s neck for 9 1/2 minutes while Floyd was facedown, handcuffed and gasping for air. Kueng knelt on Floyd’s back and Lane held down his legs. Thao kept bystanders from intervening.

Attorneys for the Floyd family have said bystander video shows that the three officers “directly contributed to [Floyd’s] death and failed to intervene to stop the senseless murder.”

On Thursday, 18 people were chosen for the jury; 12 will deliberate and six will be alternates. Two of the jurors — one expected to deliberate and one alternate — appear to be of Asian descent. The rest appear to be white. The jurors include people from the Twin Cities area, the suburbs and southern Minnesota. The court declined to provide demographic information.

Federal prosecutions of officers involved in on-duty killings are rare. Prosecutors face a high legal standard to show that an officer willfully deprived someone of their constitutional rights. Essentially, prosecutors must prove that the officers knew what they were doing was wrong, but did it anyway.

The indictment charges Thao, who is Hmong American; Lane, who is white; and Kueng, who is Black, with willfully depriving Floyd of the right to be free from an officer’s deliberate indifference to his medical needs. The indictment says the three men saw Floyd clearly needed medical care and failed to aid him.

Thao and Kueng are also charged with a second count alleging they willfully violated Floyd’s right to be free from unreasonable seizure by not stopping Chauvin as he knelt on Floyd’s neck. It’s not clear why Lane is not mentioned in that count, but evidence shows he asked twice whether Floyd should be rolled on his side.

Both counts allege the officers’ actions resulted in Floyd’s death.

U.S. District Judge Magnuson told jurors that the trial could last four weeks. It’s not known whether any of the three officers will testify. It’s also not clear whether Chauvin will testify, though many experts who spoke to The Associated Press believe he won’t.

Lane, Kueng and Thao also face a separate state trial in June on charges they aided and abetted both murder and manslaughter.

The Justice Department dropped charges Thursday against a Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor accused of concealing ties to the Chinese government, a further setback to a federal initiative that was set up to prevent economic espionage and theft by Beijing of trade secrets and academic research.

The department revealed its decision in the case against Gang Chen in a filing in federal court in Boston, saying it could no longer meet its burden of proof.

U.S. Attorney Rachael Rollins, the top federal prosecutor in Massachusetts, said the move was “in the interests of justice” and was the result of new information the government had received about the allegations.

“After a careful assessment of this new information in the context of all the evidence, our office has concluded that we can no longer meet our burden of proof at trial,” Rollins said. “As prosecutors, we have an obligation in every matter we pursue to continually examine the facts while being open to receiving and uncovering new information.”

The outcome, which had been expected and was earlier recommended by prosecutors in Boston, is a blow to a Justice Department effort known as the China Initiative, which was set up in 2018 to crack down on Chinese economic espionage and trade secret theft. A key prong of the initiative has focused on academics in the U.S. accused of concealing research ties to China on grant applications. But critics have long said the effort unduly targets researchers based on ethnicity and that it chills academic collaboration.

The Justice Department is reviewing the future of the program, a process expected to be completed in the coming weeks, said spokesperson Wyn Hornbuckle.

In a statement, Chen thanked his supporters and said he would have more to say soon.

“While I am relieved that my ordeal is over, I am mindful that this terribly misguided China Initiative continues to bring unwarranted fear to the academic community and other scientists still face charges,” Chen said.

Accusations against Chen

Chen, a mechanical engineering professor, was arrested in January 2021 in the final days of the Trump administration and charged with concealing ties to Beijing while also collecting U.S. payment for his nanotechnology research.

Prosecutors accused him at the time of entering into undisclosed contracts and appointments with Chinese entities, including acting as an “overseas expert” for the Chinese government at the request of the People’s Republic of China Consulate Office in New York. Many of those roles were “expressly intended to further the PRC’s scientific and technological goals,” authorities in court documents.

He was accused of failing to disclose information about connections to China in an application for an Energy Department grant. Chen’s lawyers have consistently said that he did nothing wrong and that he disclosed what he needed to disclose.

The case began to wobble as the government received new information, including from the Energy Department, a person familiar with the matter said last week.

In a statement Thursday, defense attorney Robert Fisher called the case a “wayward prosecution” and said his client was eager to return to work. He thanked the “many witnesses who came forward and told the government how badly they misunderstood the details surrounding scientific and academic collaboration.”

“Our defense was this: Gang did not commit any of the offenses he was charged with. Full stop. He was never in a talent program. He was never an overseas scientist for Beijing. He disclosed everything he was supposed to disclose, and he never lied to the government or anyone else,” Fisher said in a statement.

Other China Initiative cases

Many of the China Initiative cases against academics and professors have centered on false statement or fraud allegations, rather than accusations of espionage or passing along academic research or technical or scientific expertise to China.

The initiative has resulted in some significant guilty pleas and convictions and did score a high-profile win last month with the conviction of a Harvard University professor on charges that he hid his ties to a Chinese-run recruitment program.

But other big cases brought as part of the China Initiative have faltered.

A federal judge in September, for example, threw out all charges against a University of Tennessee professor accused of hiding his relationship with a Chinese university while receiving research grants from NASA, and the university has since offered to reinstate him.

Critics of the China Initiative have called for the Justice Department to shut the program down. The department’s top national security official, Matthew Olsen, met Wednesday with members of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, who expressed their concerns.

Andrew Lelling, who was the U.S. attorney in Boston when Chen was charged, wrote in a LinkedIn post several weeks ago that the China Initiative was created in response to “concerns about economic espionage involving an emerging political rival.”

Now, he wrote, the “initiative has drifted, and in some significant ways, lost its focus. DOJ should revamp, and shut down, parts of the program, to avoid needlessly chilling scientific and business collaborations with Chinese partners.”

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