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NYPD Plans to Deploy Robotic Dogs

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NYPD Plans to Deploy Robotic Dogs

The New York Police Division will use extra robots to combat crime, Mayor Eric Adams mentioned Tuesday.

The initiative consists of the deployment of a “K5” unit in Occasions Sq. that can assist beat officers with surveillance. Town additionally acquired two robotic canines—which the NYPD calls “Digidogs”—that can be used at incidents reminiscent of hostage conditions, officers mentioned. One other system will shoot monitoring gadgets onto suspect autos.

The NYPD experimented with the robotic canines in 2021, but it surely deserted them over backlash from progressive lawmakers and civil- liberties teams who had been involved concerning the over-militarization of police. Opponents reiterated the considerations Tuesday.

Mr. Adams, a former NYPD captain who was elected in 2021 on a platform of lowering crime, mentioned the criticism was coming from a vocal minority. He mentioned that police utilizing robotics within the twenty first century was akin to the sooner adoption of fingerprint know-how.

“If we weren’t prepared to maneuver ahead and use know-how on the way to correctly maintain cities protected, then you’ll not sustain with these doing dangerous issues,” he mentioned. “Digidog is out of the pound.”

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Town will lease one K5—which strikes much like a Roomba and appears like a 5-foot R2-D2—to be used within the Occasions Sq. subway station beginning in the summertime, in line with NYPD Chief of Division Jeffrey Maddrey. The robotic strikes autonomously and is geared up with a video digital camera, microphones, audio system and thermal detectors, in line with producer

Knightscope.

The cone-shaped system will present “real-time situational consciousness and actionable intelligence,” Mr. Maddrey mentioned. No facial-recognition know-how can be used, NYPD Commissioner

Keechant Sewell

mentioned.

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The so-called digidogs, in the meantime, are remote-controlled, four-legged items that may climb stairs. They are going to be used to research websites with attainable hazardous supplies, or to strategy barricaded suspects, officers mentioned. The robots are sometimes used for inspecting infrastructure or manufacturing amenities, in line with on-line supplies from producer Boston Dynamics, Inc. The corporate didn’t instantly return a message searching for remark.

The Surveillance Expertise Oversight Venture, an advocacy group, belittled the gadgets as “knockoff robocops” and mentioned that the town ought to use its sources in additional confirmed methods. “The NYPD is popping dangerous science fiction into horrible policing,” Albert Fox Cahn, the group’s govt director, mentioned in an announcement, referencing the 1987 movie “RoboCop.”

The left-leaning Working Households Get together criticized Mr. Adams for devoting sources to the robots when his administration has proposed cuts to libraries and is mandating that metropolis businesses trim prices. Mr. Adams mentioned “there’s by no means the fallacious time for public security” investments.

Patrick J. Lynch, president of the Police Benevolent Affiliation, mentioned the bots may assist in some areas however can’t substitute for human officers. “Fixing our staffing scarcity ought to proceed to be the NYPD’s high precedence,” he mentioned.

Town paid $750,000 for the robotic canines utilizing cash that was seized from criminals, an NYPD official mentioned. The K5 is being leased for six months at a price of roughly $9 per hour, in line with Knightscope chairman and CEO

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William Santana Li.

The full price can be round $12,250, a spokesman for Mr. Adams mentioned.

The corporate has a couple of half-dozen legislation enforcement shoppers, together with Huntington Park, Calif., the place a K5 unit is used to patrol a park. Mr. Adams realized of the robotic and known as the corporate, Mr. Li mentioned.

“We have to give the officers on the bottom actually sensible eyes and ears,” Mr. Li mentioned. “You may’t triple-shift a human.”

Write to Jimmy Vielkind at jimmy.vielkind@wsj.com

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Michael Cohen: I used to execute Trump’s threats against the press | CNN Politics

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Michael Cohen: I used to execute Trump’s threats against the press | CNN Politics

President-elect Donald Trump following through on his threats to sue media companies — this time suing the Des Moines Register over an 11th hour poll that showed Harris leading in the state just days before the election. Trump’s former fixer Michael Cohen says Trump’s strategy is “not new” and Cohen “wholeheartedly” believes the Des Moines Register and others will “capitulate” Trump’s lawsuits.

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Nissan and Honda hold talks about a merger of the two carmakers

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Nissan and Honda hold talks about a merger of the two carmakers

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Nissan and Honda are in exploratory talks about a merger of the two carmakers that would create a $52bn Japanese behemoth, according to people briefed on the matter. 

The two companies are studying a way to combine that would help them better compete at a time when traditional carmakers are grappling with fast-growing Chinese electric-vehicle manufacturers, and slower-than-expected consumer demand for EVs. 

The talks between Nissan and Honda are at an early stage, and there are concerns about a potential political backlash in Japan because a merger of two of the country’s most storied car brands could result in significant job cuts, one of the people with knowledge of the discussions said.

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Nissan and Honda announced in March they would team up to develop EVs and have deepened their talks amid uncertainty about what Donald Trump’s return as US president will mean for the car industry.

This year shares in Nissan, which has a cross-shareholding structure with France’s Renault, have fallen 40 per cent, giving it a market capitalisation of $8.2bn. Honda has a market capitalisation of $44bn.

Nissan in November unveiled an emergency turnaround plan that included 9,000 job losses, saying it would cut global production capacity by 20 per cent. The company downgraded its profit guidance for the second time this year after falling to a loss in the July to September quarter.

Nissan has been searching for an anchor investor for several months, and the Financial Times reported last month that “all options” were being considered, including a merger with Honda.

The merger talks between Nissan and Honda were first reported by Nikkei. Nissan said on Tuesday evening: “The content of the [Nikkei] report is not something that has been announced by either company.” 

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It added: “As announced in March this year, Honda and Nissan are exploring various possibilities for future collaboration, leveraging each other’s strengths. If there are any updates, we will inform our stakeholders at the appropriate time.” 

Honda issued a similar statement, saying it and Nissan were “exploring various possibilities for future collaboration, leveraging each other’s strengths”.

Renault declined to comment. 

In August, Honda and Nissan said they would roll out an EV by the end of the decade, as the two companies agreed to jointly develop software.

A merger between Nissan and Honda would give the enlarged company a major US manufacturing footprint, helping both brands to potentially minimise the impact of tariffs that Trump is proposing on imports from Mexico. Nissan has significant manufacturing operations in Mexico. 

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The auto industry also expects Trump, a long-standing critic of EVs, may slow adoption of them in the US, possibly by watering down emissions rules.

Nissan’s deteriorating financial performance came after it failed to counter a slowdown in global EV sales with a strong hybrid offering: cars that combine battery power with a traditional combustion engine. Sales of these vehicles have helped Toyota.

Nissan has recently been targeted by activist investors including Effissimo Capital Management, a Singapore-based hedge fund known for high profile campaigns against some of the biggest names in Japan, including Toshiba.

Nissan, which owns a stake in smaller rival Mitsubishi Motors, is planning a series of key product launches to try to regain momentum.

If talks on a merger persist between Nissan and Honda, the two companies would need to work out how to reconcile their starkly-different corporate cultures.

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The FT reported last month that Renault would be open to selling a portion of its shares in Nissan to Honda as part of a restructuring of its 25-year-old alliance.

One person close to Renault said a stronger relationship between Nissan and Honda could “only be positive” for the French group. 

Renault reorganised its alliance with Nissan last year, with the French group cutting its shareholding in the Japanese company to just under 36 per cent.

Nissan gained voting rights over its 15 per cent stake in Renault. Nissan has a 15 per cent voting stake in Renault.

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Luigi Mangione is charged with murder as an act of terrorism in CEO's death

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Luigi Mangione is charged with murder as an act of terrorism in CEO's death

Suspect Luigi Mangione is taken into the Blair County Courthouse on Dec. 10 in Hollidaysburg, Pa.

Benjamin B. Braun/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette/AP


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Benjamin B. Braun/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette/AP

NEW YORK — The man accused of killing UnitedHealthcare’s CEO has been charged with murder as an act of terrorism, prosecutors said Tuesday as they worked to bring him to a New York court from from a Pennsylvania jail.

Luigi Mangione already was charged with murder in the Dec. 4 killing of Brian Thompson, but the terror allegation is new.

Under New York law, such a charge can be brought when an alleged crime is “intended to intimidate or coerce a civilian population, influence the policies of a unit of government by intimidation or coercion and affect the conduct of a unit of government by murder, assassination or kidnapping.”

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Mangione’s New York lawyer has not commented on the case.

Thompson, 50, was shot dead as he walked to a Manhattan hotel where Minnesota-based UnitedHealthcare — the United States’ biggest medical insurer — was holding an investor conference.

After days of intense police searches and publicity, Mangione was arrested on Dec. 9 after being spotted in a McDonald’s in Altoona, Pennsylvania. New York police officials have said Mangione was carrying the gun used to kill Thompson, a passport and various fake IDs, including one that the suspected shooter presented to check into a New York hostel.

The 26-year-old was charged with Pennsylvania gun and forgery offenses and locked up there without bail. His Pennsylvania lawyer has questioned the evidence for the forgery charge and the legal grounding for the gun charge. The attorney also has said Mangione would fight extradition to New York.

The indictment could help move along procedural steps toward extraditing the suspect.

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Hours after his arrest, the Manhattan district attorney’s office filed paperwork charging him with murder and other offenses. The indictment builds on that paperwork.

Investigators’ working theory is that Mangione, an Ivy League computer science grad from a prominent Maryland family, was propelled by anger at the U.S. health care system. A law enforcement bulletin obtained by The Associated Press week said that when arrested, he was carrying a handwritten letter that called health insurance companies “parasitic” and complained about corporate greed.

Mangione repeatedly posted on social media about how spinal surgery last year had eased his chronic back pain, encouraging people with similar conditions to speak up for themselves if told they just had to live with it.

In a Reddit post in late April, he advised someone with a back problem to seek additional opinions from surgeons and, if necessary, say the pain made it impossible to work.

“We live in a capitalist society,” Mangione wrote. “I’ve found that the medical industry responds to these key words far more urgently than you describing unbearable pain and how it’s impacting your quality of life.”

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He was never a UnitedHealthcare client, according to the insurer.

Mangione apparently cut himself off from his family and close friends in recent months. His family reported him missing to San Francisco authorities in November.

Thompson, who grew up on a farm in small-town Iowa, was trained as an accountant. A married father of two high-schoolers, he had worked at the giant UnitedHealth Group for 20 years and became CEO of its insurance arm in 2021.

His killing kindled a fiery outpouring of resentment toward U.S. health insurance companies, as Americans swapped stories online and elsewhere of being denied coverage, left in limbo as doctors and insurers disagreed, and stuck with sizeable bills.

The shooting also rattled C-suites, as “wanted” posters with other health care executives’ names and faces appeared on New York streets and an outpouring of online vitriol prompted police to warn that there could be an “elevated threat.”

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