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California woman kidnapped in Mexico last year has been found, FBI says

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California woman kidnapped in Mexico last year has been found, FBI says

Saturday, July 15, 2023 10:41PM

FBI releases new video of Bay Area woman kidnapped in Mexico

SAN FRANCISCO — A woman who was kidnapped in Mexico last year has been found, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

This video is from a previous report.

San Mateo resident Monica de Leon Barba was released by her captors on July 14, the FBI said.

On November 29, 2022, she was kidnapped in Tepatitlán, Jalisco, Mexico, as she was walking home from work with her dog, the FBI said.

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Barba had grown up and lived most of her life in California before moving to Mexico for a job opportunity in photography.

The FBI said she is safe and will returning to her family in the United States.

“For the past eight months, FBI personnel in California and Mexico have worked tirelessly with the family and with partners here and in Mexico,” said Special Agent In Charge Robert Tripp of the FBI San Francisco Field Office. “Our relief and joy at the safe return of Monica and Gael is profound. The FBI investigation is far from over, but we can now work this case knowing an innocent victim is reunited with her family. On behalf of the FBI, I want to extend my sincere thanks to our law enforcement partners, to the family, and to the San Mateo community for their continued engagement and advocacy. They never forgot Monica, and neither did we.”

No arrests have been made as authorities continue to search for the suspects.

Copyright © 2023 KGO-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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Fintech N26 says regulatory action cost it ‘billions’ in lost growth

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Fintech N26 says regulatory action cost it ‘billions’ in lost growth

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Years of regulatory action against German fintech N26 for its poor anti-money laundering controls may have cost the business billions of euros, co-founder Valentin Stalf told the Financial Times, as authorities finally remove a cap on its growth.

Financial regulator BaFin in 2021 ordered online-only bank N26 to limit its new client sign-ups to 50,000 a month, compared with the average 170,000 a month it was taking on at the time. The cap was increased to 60,000 last year and it will be removed from June, according to N26. BaFin declined to comment.

The regulator disclosed last week that it had fined the bank €9.2mn for the persistent late filing of suspicious activity reports in 2022. This followed an earlier fine of €4.25mn in 2021 for similar problems in previous years. An independent monitor that oversees N26’s anti-money laundering controls on behalf of BaFin will remain in place, according to people familiar with the situation.

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N26 said on Tuesday that the direct costs of the saga added up to €100mn, including spending on its control functions and monitoring systems, and the fines. But co-founder Valentin Stalf told the FT that the indirect costs were much higher.

“The impact on N26 surely amounts to billions of euros because it lowered the company’s valuation as we were unable to grow,” he said. In its most recent funding round in 2021 — before BaFin announced it was taking action — N26 was valued at €7.7bn.

Valentin Stalf: ‘The impact on N26 surely amounts to billions of euros because it lowered the company’s valuation as we were unable to grow’ © Noam Galai/Getty Images for TechCrunch

Stalf said he was “pleased about the trust of our regulators” and stressed that the bank’s priorities had changed since 2021, meaning it would not return to its earlier expansion spree.

“Our key priority won’t be growth but profitability of clients and attractiveness of market,” he told the FT, adding that N26 wanted to create “a sustainable portfolio of clients which is profitable in the long run”.

He stressed that the business would “of course” grow from June, but declined to give a specific expansion target.

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Business dynamics were also in its favour he claimed, saying N26 had “very strong demand” for its digital banking services and that “the market has not been carved-up by our competitors over the past two and a half years”.

N26 was on track to become profitable in the second half of this year, he said. Last year, it halved its losses to €100mn and reported a 27 per cent increase in revenues to more than €300mn. This year, it was hoping to increase revenues by up to 35 per cent, according to Stalf.

The business was founded in 2013 and has 8mn customers in 24 European countries, but in the past few years it has pulled back from some of its international expansion plans, exiting the UK, the US and Brazil.

It started out offering current accounts but has recently moved into brokerage services and savings accounts.

Stalf said N26 “did learn a lot over the past two and a half years from the close co-operation with the regulator” and that this experience would be “helpful for our next steps towards an IPO”.

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Severe weather chances continue Tuesday for North Texas

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Severe weather chances continue Tuesday for North Texas


CBS News Texas

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NORTH TEXAS – A severe thunderstorm watch is in effect until 11 a.m. for most of North Texas.

A tornado warning has been issued for Dallas, Rockwall and Kaufman counties until 6:30 a.m. 

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A severe thunderstorm warning is in effect for Denton, Collin, Tarrant counties until 6:30 a.m.

A destructive severe thunderstorm warning is in effect for Dallas County until 6:30 a.m. Winds could reach up to 80 mph.


Strong winds, large hail causing traffic delays in North Texas

01:56

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We are tracking storms in our northern counties heading south this morning.

Large hail and damaging winds are the main concerns, localized flooding is also possible. 

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CBS News Texas


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Video: Severe Storms and Tornadoes Cause Destruction in Several States

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Video: Severe Storms and Tornadoes Cause Destruction in Several States

new video loaded: Severe Storms and Tornadoes Cause Destruction in Several States

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Severe Storms and Tornadoes Cause Destruction in Several States

Severe weather hit several parts of the United States over the weekend, killing more than 20 people and leaving hundreds of thousands without power.

[NO SPEECH]

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