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Father and Teenage Son Are Charged in Killing of Rapper PnB Rock

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Father and Teenage Son Are Charged in Killing of Rapper PnB Rock

A person and his teenage son have been charged with homicide in reference to the deadly capturing of the rapper PnB Rock at a restaurant in Los Angeles on Sept. 12, the authorities stated on Thursday.

The daddy, Freddie Lee Trone, 40, who was arrested in Las Vegas on Thursday, and his 17-year-old son, who was arrested in Lawndale, Calif., on Tuesday, have been every charged with one rely of homicide, two counts of second-degree theft and one rely of conspiracy to commit theft, the authorities stated.

Mr. Trone’s spouse, Shauntel Trone, 32, was arrested in Gardena, Calif., on Tuesday and charged with one rely of being an adjunct after the actual fact to the killing, in line with the Los Angeles County District Legal professional’s Workplace. It was not instantly clear if they’d legal professionals. (The 17-year-old, who was not recognized as a result of he’s a juvenile, is Ms. Trone’s stepson, a spokesman for the district legal professional’s workplace stated.)

Their arrests got here weeks after PnB Rock, a 30-year-old Philadelphia rapper whose authorized identify was Rakim Allen, was shot whereas having lunch together with his girlfriend at Roscoe’s Home of Hen and Waffles in South Los Angeles, in an assault that shocked his followers and the music trade.

“The homicide of Mr. Allen dimmed a vivid mild within the lives of his followers, mates and most significantly his household,” George Gascón, the district legal professional in Los Angeles County, stated in an announcement. “The accused people’ alleged actions on this case have been heartless and merciless and robbed the world of Mr. Allen’s abilities.”

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On Sept. 12, PnB Rock was having a meal together with his accomplice when a person entered the restaurant at about 1 p.m. and demanded that he hand over his jewellery, the Los Angeles Police Division stated in a statement. Then, the person shot Mr. Allen and “eliminated a few of his property,” the police stated.

The person additionally demanded property from PnB Rock’s girlfriend earlier than fleeing the restaurant and getting inside “an awaiting car,” the police stated.

The authorities haven’t stated who shot Mr. Allen, or who was driving the awaiting car.

The police have stated that an Instagram publish that tagged PnB Rock and confirmed him contained in the restaurant might need helped tip the assailants to his presence.

Chief Michel Moore of the Los Angeles Police Division stated earlier this month that PnB Rock was shot and killed due to the property that he had with him.

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The Los Angeles Police Division had stated on Wednesday that officers have been trying to find Mr. Trone, who was thought-about “armed and harmful” on the time.

A lot of robberies focusing on actors, musicians and athletes have occurred lately. Bashar Jackson, who carried out as Pop Smoke, was killed in a house invasion in early 2020. Followers famous that the day earlier than he was shot, he had posted pictures on Instagram displaying a stack of money and a present bag label together with his Los Angeles tackle.

Slightly greater than per week earlier than PnB Rock was killed, he spoke about being focused in Los Angeles and recalled a scenario by which he was adopted. “The place I’m from, we like sneaky criminals,” he stated in a YouTube interview with DJ Akademiks. “In L.A., it’s like they daring.”

Atlantic Information, his label, described his dying as a “mindless loss.” PnB Rock, who was identified for his melodic fashion, was a part of a wave of rappers whose reputation and distinctive sound was partly constructed on their capability to effortlessly change between singing and rapping.

Atlantic Information stated that PnB Rock had been “greater than an artist.”

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“To many,” the corporate stated, “Rakim Allen was an awesome good friend. He was additionally a beautiful father to 2 stunning little women.”

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A mega-gift for an HBCU college fell through. Here's what happened — and what's next

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A mega-gift for an HBCU college fell through. Here's what happened — and what's next

Florida A&M University announced a “transformative” donation earlier this month — but the school said it ceased contact with the donor after questions arose about the funds.

Jeffrey Greenberg/Universal Images Group via Getty Images


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Jeffrey Greenberg/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Florida A&M University announced a "transformative" donation earlier this month — but the school ceased contact with the donor after questions arose about the funds. Image shows shrubbery and landscaping around a large sign for the college in Tallahassee, Fla.

Florida A&M University announced a “transformative” donation earlier this month — but the school said it ceased contact with the donor after questions arose about the funds.

Jeffrey Greenberg/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Transformative financial donations don’t come along often in higher education. So when a donor promised a $237.75 million gift to Florida A&M University, school officials were understandably excited.

The donor was Gregory Gerami, a 30-year-old businessman from Texas who said he wanted to make sure the historically Black school’s windfall would help students who needed the money most. Funds were also designated for FAMU’s athletics department.

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“This is more than $100 million more than we have currently in our endowment,” FAMU President Larry Robinson said as he unveiled the donation at the school’s spring commencement ceremony in Tallahassee, Fla. “This is just incredible.”

But amazement at the large gift soon gave way to shock as questions arose about Gerami’s donation. And as word of the surprise donation spread, FAMU leaders were confronted with news reports that linked Gerami to an earlier transformative gift to another school — a donation that never came to fruition.

In an interview with NPR, Gerami refused to confirm or deny his role in that earlier donation to a university in South Carolina. As for FAMU, Gerami says he fulfilled his part of the arrangement.

But FAMU’s Robinson now says it was a mistake to accept Gerami’s gift — and the school’s board wants to know why Robinson and a small circle in his administration agreed to keep the donation a secret.

The fallout has begun: Robinson said last Wednesday that Shawnta Friday-Stroud, who as the vice president for university advancement played a key role in the donation, was resigning from that post. She will retain her job as dean of the school of business and industry, he said.

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Mysterious graduation speaker announces a massive gift

Gerami announced the donation during a May 4 commencement ceremony, in an elaborate event where he delivered a fairly standard graduation speech — before giving Robinson a belt buckle and saying he should buckle up for what was coming.

As a gigantic nine-figure check was brought onto the stage, the PA system played a montage of songs, including The O’Jays’ “For The Love of Money” and “Grateful” by Hezekiah Walker.

About the $237.75 million donation, Gerami told the crowd: “By the way, the money is in the bank.”

Friday-Stroud later said that Gerami’s speech was his idea. And last week, Robinson, the university president, apologized for the event, saying it’s something that should not have happened.

The university has removed the video of the commencement from its YouTube page, along with other mentions of the donation from its website and social media channels.

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Gregory Gerami stands with Florida A&M University President Larry Robinson and other leaders at a commencement ceremony on May 4, unveiling a large donation. Robinson now says the announcement shouldn't have happened.

Gregory Gerami stands with Florida A&M University President Larry Robinson and other leaders at a commencement ceremony on May 4, unveiling a large donation. Robinson now says the announcement shouldn’t have happened.

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Gregory Gerami stands with Florida A&M University President Larry Robinson and other leaders at a commencement ceremony on May 4, unveiling a large donation. Robinson now says the announcement shouldn't have happened.

Gregory Gerami stands with Florida A&M University President Larry Robinson and other leaders at a commencement ceremony on May 4, unveiling a large donation. Robinson now says the announcement shouldn’t have happened.

FAMU/Screenshot by NPR

How the events unfolded

After the May 4 commencement, skeptics such as Jerell Blakeley, writing for the Education News Flash Substack on May 6, raised questions about Gerami, highlighting news reports connecting him to at least one earlier big college donation that fell apart.

FAMU then put the donation on pause, with Kristin Harper, chair of the board of trustees, stating in a public meeting on May 10 that “serious concerns have been raised regarding the validity of the gift, the adequacy of the due diligence processes and whether the foundation board and board of trustees have been provided ample oversight opportunity.”

Last week, Robinson said engagement with Gerami had “ceased,” and he began referring to the gift as a “proposed donation” that was stopped in its tracks.

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As the school’s foundation and board of trustees held public Zoom meetings to discuss the matter, more details about the donation emerged:

  • While Gerami said the money was “in the bank,” Friday-Stroud said the donation was made in the form of 15 million shares of stock in Batterson Farms, Gerami’s privately held company.
  • As for the gift amount of $237.75 million, Friday-Stroud told FAMU’s foundation on May 9 that the sum reflected the stock being valued at $15.85 a share. But in that board meeting, it also emerged that FAMU did not have a third party analyze the valuation.
  • When asked why FAMU hadn’t independently verified the stock’s value during discussions about the donation, Friday-Stroud said a decision was made to hold off on a third-party valuation of the stock until the university’s annual financial audit, scheduled for early summer.
  • Friday-Stroud said that she and Robinson were among the people who signed nondisclosure agreements requiring them to keep the donation secret from other leaders. She also cited donors’ rights to privacy and confidentiality under state law.
  • Robinson says he didn’t tell the chair of either the school’s foundation or board of trustees, who have legal and financial oversight for the institution, because he was worried that doing so might “jeopardize this transformational donation.”

Friday-Stroud told the foundation board that Gerami contacted the university in the fall of 2023 about making a donation. After an initial wealth screening review, she said, “a more expansive second screening” of Gerami made the small circle of FAMU officials aware of potential concerns — “pretty much all of which is what has been put out now in social media,” she said, seemingly referring to reports alleging Gerami was linked to failed donations to South Carolina’s Coastal Carolina University and another school.

But around the same time officials became aware of those allegations, Friday-Stroud said, Gerami’s stock certificates were transferred to the university’s account. She and Robinson discussed the matter and chose to move forward, she said. The school recently released the gift agreement it signed with Gerami, listing the transaction as taking place in April.

“I wanted it to be real and ignored the warning signs along the way,” Robinson told the board of trustees on May 15. But it wasn’t until after the donation was announced, he said, that he decided “engagement with Mr. Gerami should cease.”

“I take full responsibility for this matter and ensuing fallout. I apologize,” Robinson said.

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Board members are now seeking an investigation into how the donation became a debacle, including the university president’s failure to disclose the deal to the board before commencement, the nondisclosure agreements, the donor-vetting process, and other questions about who knew what about the deal, and when.

Gerami responds to the allegations

“The stock was transferred [to FAMU] and that’s really all that I have to say,” Gerami said in an interview with NPR, adding that his gift agreement with FAMU was made public.

He also said he’s the subject of stories that are inaccurate, without identifying any information that was incorrect.

His remarks to NPR are in reference to news stories that emerged in 2020, when Coastal Carolina University in Conway, S.C., announced a $95 million donation pledge. But within a few months, the school said it had “ended its relationship with an anonymous donor who …. has not fulfilled an early expectation of the arrangement.”

In an email to NPR, the university refused to confirm or deny the donor’s identity. But The Sun News in Myrtle Beach, S.C., reported that the donor was Gerami, citing data gained from a Freedom of Information Act request, its own research and multiple interviews with him.

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“Gerami reluctantly confirmed he was the donor,” the paper reported last June, adding that in Gerami’s telling, he pulled the plug on the deal because he felt disrespected by some Coastal Carolina officials, alleging racism in one instance.

When NPR asked him about the Coastal Carolina University donation, Gerami acknowledged knowing about the gift, which he called “a planned gift.”

He also gave NPR conflicting accounts of what his ties to the gift were. At one point, he said “I don’t know who the donor at Coastal is” and “There’s no documentation to show that I’m the donor at Coastal.” Moments later, he said “I’m not going to confirm or deny that I’m the donor at Coastal.”

Coastal Carolina’s initial statement about the proposed gift, which is no longer on its website, said its new donor was also a supporter of Miles College, a private HBCU in Alabama. But, The Sun News reported last year, “Gerami said a planned donation to Miles College was also never made.”

Officials from Miles College did not reply to NPR’s requests for comment.

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When NPR asked Gerami why — if he wasn’t the donor at Coastal Carolina — he didn’t seek a correction to last year’s Sun News article, Gerami replied, “that story did not carry much weight … it didn’t pick up much traction. … So why would I feed into that traction? … I didn’t feel like I needed to jump in there.”

“I have no issues with Coastal,” he said. Later, he added, “I don’t have any issues with anyone that is out there. So no, I’m not going to touch on things just because somebody writes a story.”

When asked how he feels about FAMU ending its plan for a donation from him, Gerami replied, “Things are being taken out of context.” He ended the conversation shortly afterward.

What we know about Gerami’s business

In his speech at FAMU, Gerami said he had overcome “formidable challenges,” including being born with an opiate addiction and fetal alcohol syndrome and diagnosed with cerebral palsy and ADHD. He was raised by a foster family, he said, after being born to “a single mother who was 24 with eight kids,” according to NPR’s transcript of the now removed video.

In portions of their commencement-day remarks that closely echoed each other, Gerami and Robinson mentioned two mentors: an unidentified Merrill Lynch banker; and a former Arlington, Texas, mayor named Robert Cluck (who did not reply to NPR’s requests for comment).

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In 2015, Gerami ran for public office, challenging an incumbent city council member in Arlington, Texas. He finished a distant fourth, trailing a university student and a part-time mail carrier.

Then, in recent years, came reports linking him to eye-popping college donations.

At FAMU, Gerami didn’t go into much detail about how he purportedly accrued a fortune. He said only that he had harnessed his “entrepreneurial spirit, transforming a small lawn care business into a successful property management company” before becoming the founder and CEO of Batterson Farms Corp.

Batterson grows industrial hemp in warehouses, using hydroponics, Gerami said during this speech. The venture also researches bioplastics and “cultivating industrial hemp for cancer research,” he added.

Batterson Farms has a website, but it offers few details about the company’s scale. The only available product it lists is HempWood, a composite material produced by a company in Kentucky that says all its hemp fiber is grown within 100 miles of its location in that state. NPR reviewed Batterson Farms’ public Facebook page and records from the Texas Department of Agriculture to learn more about Gerami’s company.

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On its Facebook page, Batterson Farms displays its license as a hemp producer in Texas. The company also says it operates multiple Texas locations, including in Van Horn; the Dallas area; Austin; San Antonio; Houston; and El Paso. In April 2023, Gerami was featured in a news story in Lubbock, Texas, saying his company had taken control of seven warehouses on 114 acres of land to grow hemp there.

In response to a records request from NPR, the Texas Department of Agriculture Hemp Program said on Monday that it has a contact address for Batterson Farms in San Antonio, and a business address in Austin, and that there is “no registered hemp production” at those locations.

The state agency confirmed that Batterson Farms has a current hemp producer license (the first step in the state’s commercial hemp licensing process), and a lot crop permit, both of which are tied to an address in Paradise, a small town in Wise County, northwest of Fort Worth.

“A Hemp Producer is required to purchase a lot crop permit anytime they plan to grow hemp under the TDA Hemp Program. A lot crop permit is good for one hemp crop,” according to the Texas agriculture department, which also confirmed that this location is registered to grow hemp.

“Batterson Farms Corp does not have any other license or permit with the TDA Hemp Program,” the agency said. The company isn’t on the state’s most recent list of hemp processors, for instance.

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The agency also said that it “does not have any information for [Batterson Farms] locations in Van Horn, TX; Dallas County, TX; Houston, TX; or El Paso, TX.”

The available information provided few details about whether Gerami’s company is operating at a scale making its stock worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

At the time of publication, Gerami had not responded to NPR’s request for more information about his donation and his business.

What does this mean for Florida A&M University now?

It’s an embarrassing setback for FAMU, at a time when its leaders are touting the school’s successes as one of the country’s top HBCUs and in fundraising and sports.

HBCU institutions have been getting more money as donors realize their importance in preparing Black Americans for success, Amir Pasic, the dean of Indiana University’s Lilly Family School of Philanthropy, told NPR. In his view, it makes sense to invest in a school like FAMU.

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“Spelman in particular just a few months ago got a $100 million gift,” he said. “And Mackenzie Scott has been investing in HBCU and community colleges as well.”

But, Pasic added, the school should have been alerted to a potential problem due to how quickly the mammoth gift proposal took shape, in only about six months.

“It is rare that these gifts aren’t part of a long-term conversation that donors have had over multiple years and sometimes even decades with the university,” he said, particularly from a first-time donor.

Pasic said he agrees that the now-canceled donation would have been “transformative” for FAMU. He also has ideas about the fallout for FAMU and what its leaders should do now.

“It’s something of an embarrassment. But on the other hand, I think the silver lining for them is that it demonstrated their ambition and that they really want to do more and achieve more for their students, faculty and staff,” he said.

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“So I think they should just embrace that.”

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Germany’s new generation of winegrowers

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Germany’s new generation of winegrowers

There is currently a rather touching, to me anyway, ad campaign being run by the VDP, the association of elite wine producers in Germany.

It consists of an Instagram blitz and about 20 digital posters in German cities, each depicting a young(ish) winegrower, with a quote from each of them explaining why they have chosen their career.

Typically, they have taken over relatively small enterprises from their parents and are doing the hard work in the vineyard and cellar themselves. Julian Huber of the famous Bernhard Huber estate in Baden producing Germanic answers to red and white burgundy is disarmingly modest: “I probably wouldn’t have been good for anything else.”

Eleventh-generation grower Peter Jakob Kühn in the Rheingau was famously a pioneer of organic viticulture there, back in the early 1990s. His son Peter Bernhard Kühn waxes philosophical with his contribution: “I learn, love and hate, am king and servant, find freedom and connection.” Kai Schätzel in Rheinhessen is working in the family estate for the most altruistic of reasons: “I believe that good agriculture can save the world.”

It would be misleading, however, to suggest that only the sons inherit the earth at German family wine estates. Despite having three older brothers, it is Catharina Mauritz who has taken over the Domdechant Werner estate in the Rheingau from her father, Franz Michel. Katharina Prüm long ago succeeded her father, Manfred, at the famous JJ Prüm estate in the Mosel, making wines that are noticeably fruitier and more approachable in their youth. Upstream in the Saar valley Dorothee Zilliken has taken over the reins from her father, Hanno. She and her husband, Philipp, are deliberately making wines that are even lighter, and perceptibly drier, than those of the previous generation.

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The campaign may be partly in response to the labour shortage affecting wine production in Germany, as throughout the wine world. But according to the VDP, aware that there are many easier jobs than winegrowing, it is “a political message designed to generate enthusiasm and empowerment among nature, culture and craft lovers”. It reflects today’s spirit of co-operation among VDP members, something I was assured on a recent visit there was not that common a generation or two ago.

Part of what I love about winegrowing is that its appeal is strong enough to persuade young, well-travelled, well-educated people to adopt a physically demanding outdoor profession in which they are pitted against a more powerful, increasingly unpredictable force: nature. Winegrowing is an art, a craft and nowadays has to be a science too.

Younger generations of vintners not only routinely attend top wine schools but also intern at some of the world’s finest wine estates, where they soak up the latest practicalities of grape-growing and winemaking.

Wine writer and retired producer Armin Diel of Schlossgut Diel in the Nahe told me that his 2001 Christmas present to his daughter Caroline, now in charge of the estate with her French husband, Sylvain Taurisson-Diel, was a handwritten letter presented on a silver plate from Aubert de Villaine of Burgundy’s most famous estate Domaine de la Romanée-Conti, inviting her to intern during the 2002 harvest.

Nature can be a cruel adversary. At this year’s Weinbörse wine fair in Mainz, where almost 1,700 of the latest releases were shown by the great majority of the VDP’s 200 members, many of the producers were still reeling from especially savage frosts a few days earlier. The Zillikens reckon to have lost up to 70 per cent of their potential 2024 crop, so many buds were turned to ice on the vine.

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In the nearby Ruwer valley, the famous vineyards of the Maximin Grünhaus estate were also badly hit. But Maximin von Schubert, who has taken over from his father, Carl von Schubert, and continues the estate’s diversification into red wine production thanks to some rather lovely Pinot Noir plant material imported from Burgundy, has taken out a form of frost insurance. He has deliberately bought land round about the original estate vineyards with different expositions and elevations, thereby reducing the likelihood of their all being frosted at the same time.

If there were a stylistic generalisation to be made about the wines of the current generation of VDP members, it is that they seem to be following German consumer taste in making drier and drier wines. Sweetness in German wine is all too readily associated with the darkest days of the industry in the 1970s and early 1980s in the wake of the 1971 German Wine Law that promoted sweetness above all else, including true quality.

It has taken years of discussion, largely on the part of the VDP, to evolve a system that prizes geography and balance above the Kabinett, Spätlese and Auslese categories defined by residual sugar levels. Today there is also a labelling system more like Burgundy’s in which the most admired wines, and the ones likely to benefit from the finest grapes, are those from the most specific locations: single-vineyard wines.

Caroline Diel, for instance, is now making wines that are bone dry and distinctly chewy in youth so that she has completely changed the estate’s release timetable. Today’s Schlossgut Diel wines enjoy much longer ageing in bottle before being put on the market. Unlike most other producers in Mainz she had no 2023 whites to show and even her 2022s were still tightly textured.

The same phenomenon is evident in the wines being made by Sebastian Fürst, son of Paul of the Rudolf Fürst estate in Franken. Paul was a pioneer of fine Pinot Noir, called Spätburgunder in Germany. Sebastian, who joined him in 2007, is typical of his generation, having studied viticulture and oenology at Geisenheim university and having worked in wineries in Burgundy, Alsace, Spain, South Africa and other top addresses in Germany. His 2022 Spätburgunders are particularly youthful, yet clearly very promising.

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Sebastian Fürst also displays the environmental awareness of his generation, a phenomenon vigorously promoted within the VDP by Johannes Hasselbach, who worked in finance before coming back to his family’s Gunderloch estate in Rheinhessen. On his watch there seems to be new energy and polish to the wines from their famous vineyards on the Rhine.

Like so many of his contemporaries, Hasselbach treasures the flavours that result from the yeasts naturally present in the vineyard and winery above those that result from specially cultured yeasts that have been bought in.

Jan Eymael came back to Weingut Pfeffingen in the Pfalz from interning at Château Smith Haut Lafitte in Bordeaux with his wife, Karin, and realised he really liked the smell of their blend of Sauvignon Blanc and Sémillon in the fermentation vat. As a result he developed a new, much more opulent style for the white they make from their mature Scheurebe vines.

As a result of all these outside influences, German wine may be more varied than it was in the 1970s sugar-water era, but it is so much better.

Favourite recent releases of wines tasted in Mainz

In the UK, Howard Ripley will be offering wines shown in Mainz next month. The Germans see 1Gs as their Premiers Crus and GGs as their Grands Crus.

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Rieslings

  • Peter Lauer, Ayler Kupp Auslese #10 2023 Mosel (7.8%)

  • Maximin Grünhauser, Abtsberg Spätlese 2023 Mosel (7.5%)

  • Fritz Haag, Brauneberger Juffer Kabinett 2023 Mosel (8%)

  • Dr Bürklin-Wolf, Wachenheimer Böhlig 1G 2023 Pfalz (12.5%)

  • Dr Bürklin-Wolf, Wachenheimer Rechbächel 1G 2023 Pfalz (12.5%)

Reds

  • Meyer-Näkel, Dernauer Blauschiefer Spätburgunder 2022 Ahr (13%)

  • A Christmann, Königsbacher Ölberg Spätburgunder 1G 2022 Pfalz (13%)

  • Jean Stodden, Recher Herrenberg Frühburgunder GG 2021 Ahr (12.5%)

  • Jean Stodden, Bad Neuenahrer Sonnenberg Spätburgunder GG 2021 Ahr (13%)

  • Dr Heger, Achkarrer Schlossberg Spätburgunder GG 2020 (13.5%)

Tasting notes, scores and suggested drink dates on Purple Pages of JancisRobinson.com. International stockists on Wine-searcher.com

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Boos and anti-Trump chants at Libertarian convention where former president is set to speak

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Boos and anti-Trump chants at Libertarian convention where former president is set to speak

WASHINGTON — Former President Donald Trump is used to warm welcomes by loyal supporters at speaking events on the campaign trail.

This weekend might be different.

Trump is set to deliver a speech Saturday at the 2024 Libertarian National Convention, and if Friday night’s program is any indication, he could be facing a hostile crowd.

Former GOP presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, who quickly endorsed Trump after dropping out, was booed during his convention remarks Friday night when he mentioned Trump.

“I’m speaking to you as a libertarian at my own core. I have gotten to know Donald Trump over the course of the last several years and the last several months,” Ramaswamy said as many in the crowd booed in response.

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Ramaswamy continued, urging the audience of about 100 to ask themselves if they wanted to influence the next administration.

Separately, as Libertarian party members reviewed procedures and motions, a person at a microphone proposed that “we go tell Donald Trump to go f— himself.”

The audience cheered and roared with applause.

“That was my motion too!” another man yelled. “We are a Libertarian convention looking to nominate Libertarians. We do not need to give that time to non-Libertarians.”

Behind the two men, a third chanted, “F— Donald Trump.”

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A spokesperson for the Trump campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the crowd’s sentiments toward the presumptive Republican nominee for president.

Several voters watching speeches at the convention, where independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. spoke, said they were disillusioned with both major political parties.

Avi Rachlin, a 22-year-old Michigan voter, said he cast a ballot for Trump in 2020 but plans to vote for the Libertarian candidate in November.

“People say that a third party vote is a wasted vote. You’re voting for the other team,” Rachlin said on Friday. “And I don’t see it that way. I think it sends a strong message of disapproval with the current contenders for both offices.”

John Burke Stringfellow, a Virginia voter who said he backed Trump in 2016 and then President Joe Biden in 2020, said he thought a rematch between the two candidates is “terrible.”

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“I say ditch the rematch and go for a three match,” he said.

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