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Judge: Jury can see swastikas school shooter drew in class

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Judge: Jury can see swastikas school shooter drew in class

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — In a failed try and bar the admission into proof a number of swastikas Florida faculty shooter Nikolas Cruz drew on assignments, his attorneys made an uncommon argument Thursday at his penalty trial: he was an equal alternative killer who shot his victims with out regard to race or faith.

The attorneys advised Circuit Choose Elizabeth Scherer exterior the jury’s presence that the Nazi image creates such sturdy anger and revulsion that permitting the panel to see these drawings violates his proper to a good trial as a result of there is no such thing as a proof that his 2018 homicide of 17 folks at Parkland’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas Excessive was pushed by bigotry. These killed and the 17 wounded included white, Black, Hispanic and Asian folks, Christians and Jews.

In addition they listed the quite a few occasions they requested Scherer earlier than jury choice to rule on whether or not the swastikas could be admitted, saying her failure affected the questions they requested potential jurors and their trial technique. They requested for a mistrial, which Scherer angrily rejected, calling their argument “disingenuous.”

She and prosecutors identified that the protection was not towards admitting drawings Cruz made that included a gross slur used towards Black folks, which they mentioned is equally offensive. The 12 jurors and 10 alternates embody people who find themselves white, Black, Asian and Hispanic.

Cruz, 23, pleaded responsible in October; the trial will solely decide whether or not he’s sentenced to demise or life with out parole. The jury have to be unanimous to impose a demise sentence.

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His public defenders are of their second week of presenting testimony about Cruz’s troubled life — from his beginning to a crack-addicted, hard-drinking prostitute who put him up for adoption to a childhood crammed with emotional and psychological issues that witnesses mentioned had been by no means adequately addressed.

Their technique is geared toward counteracting the emotional, grotesque and graphic proof and testimony the prosecution introduced over three weeks because it laid out the killings and the way Cruz deliberate the assault.

The swastikas had been drawn on English assignments introduced by the protection — they needed the symbols blacked out whereas sustaining different troubling drawings they contained. After Scherer rejected the attorneys’ try and redact the swastikas, they nonetheless introduced the assignments. The jury noticed the swastikas, however neither aspect singled them out.

The assignments got by Carrie Yon, who taught Cruz in eighth grade at Westglades Center College 4 years earlier than the capturing. Cruz had been in particular schooling courses for his conduct issues, however was now being allowed into some mainstream courses like Yon’s.

Yon testified Thursday she often returned a scholar’s materials, however stored Cruz’s as a result of she needed to doc his conduct considering it is likely to be wanted sooner or later. She additionally made contemporaneous notes. She turned the fabric over to the attorneys after the shootings.

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On assignments proven in courtroom Thursday, Cruz wrote obscenities and homosexual slurs and drew pictures of stick figures capturing one another and having intercourse. He as soon as wrote to Yon, “I hate you. I hate America.”

She mentioned Cruz would yell in school, flash his center fingers, throw objects and make threats. He as soon as advised her “You higher give me a superb grade on this project” and one other time lunged at her after which laughed. He hit different kids throughout one fireplace drill and bumped into the road in one other, nearly getting struck by a automotive.

She tried working with Cruz by giving him sweet and compliments when he behaved. One time, she praised him for doing his project, telling him she knew he could possibly be a superb scholar. He replied, “I’m a foul child. I wish to kill.”

On one evaluation, Yon wrote, “I strongly really feel Nikolas is a hazard to the scholars and college at this faculty. He doesn’t perceive the distinction between his violent emotions and actuality.”

She mentioned she initially thought Cruz needed consideration from lecturers and different college students, however ultimately believed he needed to get kicked out of Westglades as a result of he had no associates and couldn’t do the work.

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She regularly complained about Cruz to directors and confirmed them his assignments, however some weren’t useful. She mentioned one advised her, “He has a proper to an schooling. He has a proper to be right here like every other child.”

A particular schooling instructor advised Yon she was too petrified of Cruz, that she wanted to “get in his face” and inform him, “Hit me, go forward and hit me.” She refused to do this.

When requested if in her 12 years as a instructor if she ever had one other scholar who acted like Cruz, she had a easy response.

“No.”

John Vesey, the then-Westglades principal, mentioned in 35 years in schooling he additionally by no means had one other scholar like Cruz.

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“He was a way more needy child than any child I had ever seen,” Vesey mentioned.

Earlier than the tip of eighth grade, Cruz was despatched to a faculty, Cross Creek, that’s for college students with emotional and disciplinary issues. Cruz did comparatively nicely there, which allowed him to ultimately attend Stoneman Douglas. He was expelled from there a yr earlier than the capturing.

Vesey mentioned success at Cross Creek isn’t essentially predictive {that a} scholar like Cruz will succeed at a faculty like Stoneman Douglas with greater than 3,000 college students.

Cross Creek is “150 children with help inbuilt and you may make certain they’re much extra treatment compliant,” Vesey mentioned.

Vesey needs he had warned Stoneman Douglas directors about Cruz earlier than he arrived.

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“I really feel very responsible about it,” he mentioned.

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Office-Wear Influencers Like McLaurine Pinover Clock In Twice

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Office-Wear Influencers Like McLaurine Pinover Clock In Twice

As soon as he arrives to his office, just before 8 a.m. each day, Xander Maddox makes his way to the kitchen and lounge area, where large windows drench the space with ample natural lighting.

Usually his colleagues aren’t yet in at that hour, so he makes himself a cup of coffee and positions his phone in front of the window with the camera on and facing him. Then he hits record and steps back to capture the day’s outfit:

A black leather jacket.

A bright blue sweater from COS, Margiela loafers and two cups of Raisin Bran for breakfast.

A white T-shirt, gray pants and cherry red Nike Air Rifts, which he described as “a calm office fit.”

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The whole process takes about five minutes. Then he has to upload.

“I try to do the same routine every day just to make it cohesive,” he said in a phone interview.

Mr. Maddox, a 31-year-old executive assistant at a finance company in Jersey City, N.J., isn’t doing this as part of his day job, but for his side hustle as a fashion content creator on TikTok, where hundreds find inspiration in the looks he put together.

Fashion influencing is a billion-dollar business, by some estimates, and many creators aspire to make it their full-time job. But for office-style influencers, their side hustle depends on their main hustle. They’re working at — and showcasing — their style at their real-life offices: law firms, tech companies, call centers, advertising agencies. Several times a week, they discreetly find the perfect spot in their break rooms or restrooms to record their ensembles for the internet.

After all, where else are you supposed to shoot #professionalfashion, #officeootd and #workfashioninspo videos but at an actual office?

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In conversations with around half a dozen office-wear influencers in recent days, one thing was clear: You do have to time it right.

And posting your style at the office can backfire. Last week, McLaurine Pinover, the spokeswoman for the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, came under fire after CNN reported on her workplace-style influencer videos, filmed in her office and posted on Instagram as her agency oversaw the layoffs of thousands of federal workers as part of an order by the Trump administration. She deleted her Instagram account, @getdressedwithmc, soon after the news outlet reached out to her.

“There’s a lot of emotions around the government and the state of the world we’re in right now, so I think you got to read the room,” Mr. Maddox said of Ms. Pinover’s case. “If you are in a highly visible job and you’re doing something that seems to be insensitive to the masses, then you’ve got to be able to have that common sense.”

As someone who is 5-foot-10 and broadly built, Mr. Maddox said he had to be meticulous with his shopping, prioritizing pants and shirts that would fit his frame. He would describe his style as “cozy, but elevated” and aims to inspire men, especially those with his body type, who want to express personal style in the office. Many of his colleagues follow him online with enthusiasm and support, he said. They haven’t spoken about it directly, but Mr. Maddox said he was also pretty confident that is boss was OK with it.

“As long as it doesn’t affect work,” he said, adding that his boss has a large social media presence as the chief executive of the company.

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Five years after the coronavirus pandemic sent many employees home to log into meetings in loungewear, including new college graduates who began their professional careers on their couches, many are still unsure how to show up for work.

“After Covid, people didn’t know how to dress, because I definitely had no clue,” said Whitney Grett, a 27-year-old I.T. account manager for a staffing company in Houston. “Everyone was wearing sweatshirts the first year.”

Ms. Grett joined her current workplace remotely in early 2021, several months after she graduated from college. She was excited when it was time to return to the office and she could experiment with different ways to dress for work. Last summer, after receiving compliments from her co-workers about her outfits, she decided to start sharing her work looks on TikTok.

“It got to the point where I was like, I guess I’ll just start posting these because it just gave me another hobby to do, honestly,” she said.

In her videos, which are seen by thousands, Ms. Grett poses in front of the glass doors of an unoccupied conference room to capture her look for the day. She and a work friend usually meet up with a tripod around lunchtime to avoid foot traffic. Sometimes they have to wait until the end of the day to shoot if the office is really busy.

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“I get some comments from people being like, ‘Oh, I could never do that,’ and I’m like, ‘I understand,’” she said. “I have a very supportive team — I’m not the first one who posted videos from the office before. I think they’re happy that I keep it to a little room.”

According to Jaehee Jung, a professor of fashion and apparel studies at the University of Delaware, office-wear content is popular today because younger audiences, especially ones that started their careers in a hybrid work world, are desperate for guidance on a very basic question: How should I dress for work?

“You’re not at home, so you do have to think about what are some of the rules that could be considered in the working environment,” she said. “Because depending on the profession and industry, you do have some different etiquettes, different tolerance of formality.”

According to Professor Jung, shooting office-wear content in an actual office offers influencers one major advantage: being automatically perceived as an expert. That generic conference room décor proves that someone hired them to work in an office, so they must know something about getting dressed for one.

Vianiris Abreu, a 30-year-old human-resources manager at an advertising agency in Manhattan, said one of the reasons she began posting office wear on TikTok in 2021, when she returned to an office, was that she had missed dressing up for work. Working in a somewhat nontraditional environment allowed her to be more innovative in her dress than many would expect.

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“Perhaps what I wear is not something that all H.R. people wear, but it’s definitely normal being that I work in the advertising industry,” she said, adding that she doesn’t divulge too much online about where she works and what she does.

Ms. Abreu said that shooting in the office — she usually spends about 15 minutes a day recording what will become a seven-second clip on TikTok — comes off as more authentic.

“I think for me, the aesthetic of the office is very pretty, and the engagement seems to be higher,” she said. “But I also think it just shows me in the office, which is the whole point of it.”

In many cases, these side gigs can pay off. Last year, Mr. Maddox, the executive assistant in Jersey City, said earned around $2,000 in sponsorships, payments and merchandise from brands. He describes this extra income as “play money.” But he is selective about the work.

“I don’t take every opportunity that comes in because it’s not my full-time job,” he said.

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Boxing Legend George Foreman Dead at 76

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Boxing Legend George Foreman Dead at 76

George Foreman
Dead At 76
2x Heavyweight Champ

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Making More Than Just Beautiful Music Together

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Making More Than Just Beautiful Music Together

Carol-Anne Drescher and Robert McMahon Carroll were musicians in the same wedding band for more than a year before their own love story began.

Both had joined the Dane Wright Band of Hank Lane Music, a production company that coordinates live bands, in April 2019 and met on their first gig that month at the Mansion at Oyster Bay, in Woodbury, N.Y. Mr. Carroll joined as the keyboard player, and Ms. Drescher is a singer for the group.

“We were filling a void for two members who got married to each other and moved,” Ms. Drescher said. “I found Rob intimidating, because he was very stone-faced and had a few tattoos.”

Mr. Carroll, though, was attracted to Ms. Drescher. “When I looked at Carol-Anne, I thought, ‘Uh-oh, I’m in trouble.’”

“Every time I tried to talk to Rob, he gave me one-word answers and didn’t engage,” Ms. Drescher, 32, said.

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Mr. Carroll, 33, said he had found Ms. Drescher “too forward and loud.”

The two became friends that August when Mr. Carroll drove Ms. Drescher to her apartment in Manhattan’s Washington Heights neighborhood after a wedding job in Montauk, N.Y. During the three-hour ride, they discovered their shared interests in reading, weight lifting and alternative rock.

[Click here to binge read this week’s featured couples.]

They began chatting outside of work, by text and phone, usually late into the night. “We used to send each other memes or swap names of cool books we had read,” Ms. Drescher said. “Rob had become a part of my daily life, and eventually, we started hanging out in person.”

Ms. Drescher had recently moved to New York from Annapolis, Md., and Mr. Carroll, who lived in New Hyde Park, N.Y., helped her explore her new home. “Rob used to take me to museums like MoMA and his favorite bars and restaurants,” she said.

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Mr. Carroll and Ms. Drescher also performed together at social and corporate events under the name Dane Wright, which is unrelated to their roles in the wedding band.

Their relationship turned romantic on Dec. 15, 2020, when they attended a mutual friend’s birthday party near New Hyde Park. “It got too late for Carol-Anne to take the train to Manhattan, so I offered for her to spend the night on my couch,” Mr. Carroll said. “When we got to my place, we talked and talked and couldn’t get enough of each other.”

At one point, Ms. Drescher grabbed Mr. Carroll’s hands and leaned in to kiss him. “I was worried about ruining our friendship, but the feeling was so strong,” she said. “Luckily, Rob was receptive and kissed me back passionately.”

Ms. Drescher knew she wanted to marry Mr. Carroll when she watched him sing the Chris Stapleton country love song “Tennessee Whiskey” at a wedding in January 2021. “His voice was beautiful, and he looked so sincere,” she said.

Ms. Drescher, who grew up in Annapolis, is a full-time musician who sings and plays several instruments, including the piano, drums, and bass guitar. She has a bachelor’s degree in music from James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Va., and another, in nursing, from Farmingdale State College on Long Island.

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Mr. Carroll is also a full-time musician who sings and plays several instruments, including the piano, guitar and drums, and performs at Catholic masses and funerals in Long Beach. He has a bachelor’s degree in music performance from Adelphi University in Garden City, N.Y.

When wedding season slowed in February and March 2021, the couple got closer but kept their courtship a secret from bandmates. They spent their days at Mr. Carroll’s home, cooking, watching movies and reading books. “Carol-Anne pretty much lived with me without it being official,” Mr. Carroll said. “It was clear that we were soul mates.”

When weddings picked up again in late April, and the two had no doubt about their commitment, they let their bandmates in on their romance. That same month, they moved into an apartment in Westbury, N.Y.

They became engaged on Aug. 14, 2023. Ms. Drescher walked into their living room to find Mr. Carroll on his knees, holding a box with the diamond ring that they had picked out months before.

In May 2024, the couple bought what they described as their “dream home,” a waterfront three-bedroom colonial, in Lindenhurst, N.Y. In another milestone, Ms. Drescher graduated from nursing school; she plans to pursue a career in the field while continuing as a musician.

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They married on March 7, before 140 guests at the Mansion at Oyster Bay, where they had performed in their first wedding together. Michelle LaRosa, who was ordained by After Hours Wedding Ministry, officiated.

During the reception, Mr. Carroll surprised Ms. Drescher and the crowd with a recording of a slow love ballad he had written for her, called “The One.” “The song is about finding that perfect person, which Carol-Anne is,” Mr. Carroll said.

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