World
‘Nonstop beating’: Family seeks justice in fatal US traffic stop
Officers beat motorist Tyre Nichols for 3 minutes resulting in his demise, household says after seeing video of incident.
Civil rights activists have known as for “accountability and justice” after they are saying a motorist was crushed to demise by regulation enforcement officers in Tennessee, within the newest occasion of police violence to embroil the US.
Tyre Nichols died after a site visitors cease in Memphis, Tennessee earlier this month. On Tuesday, civil rights lawyer Ben Crump, who represents Nichols’s household, mentioned police had taken the 29-year-old away from his kinfolk, his neighborhood and his four-year-old son.
“Accountability and justice are the one method ahead,” Crump wrote on Twitter.
Crump’s assertion comes after Nichols’s household and legal professionals have been allowed to see physique digicam footage of the incident on Monday, resulting in outrage. The footage has not been launched to the general public, however legal professionals mentioned the video reveals that he was crushed for 3 minutes in what they known as a “savage” encounter.
“He was defenceless all the time. He was a human piñata for these cops,” Antonio Romanucci, Crump’s co-counsel, informed reporters on Monday.
“It was an unadulterated, unabashed, nonstop beating of this younger boy for 3 minutes. That’s what we noticed in that video.”
The legal professionals mentioned the authorities promised to launch the video inside the subsequent two weeks. A number of native, state and federal companies are investigating the incident.
Police mentioned that they’d tried to arrest Nichols, a Black man, on January 10 for reckless driving, however {that a} “confrontation occurred” as he tried to flee the scene on foot. Nichols was taken to a neighborhood hospital the place he died three days later.
The police introduced on Friday that 5 officers concerned within the arrest have been terminated after an administrative investigation decided that they used extreme power or did not intervene and render help to Nichols.
“The Memphis Police Division is dedicated to defending and defending the rights of each citizen in our metropolis,” Memphis police Director Cerelyn “CJ” Davis mentioned in an announcement. “The egregious nature of this incident will not be a mirrored image of the nice work that our officers carry out, with integrity, every single day.”
All 5 officers are Black, however Crump mentioned that was irrelevant, stressing that Black and brown motorists usually face discrimination whatever the officers’ race and that the ache of Nichols’s demise “is simply the identical”.
Crump in contrast the Nichols case to the notorious 1991 police beating of Rodney King in Los Angeles, which sparked violent protests and was the catalyst for requires police reforms.
“Regrettably, it reminded us of [the] Rodney King video,” mentioned Crump. “Regrettably, in contrast to Rodney King, Tyre didn’t survive.”
Nichols’s mom, RowVaughn Wells, mentioned her son was “murdered” by the officers. “My son didn’t do no medicine. He didn’t carry no weapons. He didn’t like confrontation. None of that. That’s why that is so exhausting,” she mentioned.
Nichols’s demise comes greater than two years after nationwide protests for racial justice and an finish to police brutality following the killing of George Floyd by a police officer in Minnesota who kneeled on his neck.
The US Congress has struggled to move main police reforms to deal with questions of extreme power regardless of rising calls from activists.
World
Trial Starts for Nicolas Sarkozy in Libya Election Case
Former President Nicolas Sarkozy of France on Monday went on trial in Paris over accusations that his 2007 campaign received illegal financing from the Libyan government of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi.
The trial, which is scheduled to last three months, is far from the first for Mr. Sarkozy, 69, a conservative politician who led France from 2007 to 2012, but it represents one of the most serious legal threats to the French politician since he left office.
Just last month, Mr. Sarkozy exhausted his final appeal in a separate corruption and influence peddling case, making him the first former French president sentenced to actual detention, though he will serve his time under house arrest with an electronic bracelet.
But of all the legal cases against Mr. Sarkozy, the Libya one is among the most sprawling, convoluted and explosive. It involves accusations that his campaign illegally accepted vast sums of money from Colonel Qaddafi, the former Libyan strongman who was killed by opposition fighters in 2011.
Mr. Sarkozy, who arrived in court without making any comments, has denied wrongdoing. He could face up to 10 years in prison and be fined nearly $400,000.
Here is what you need to know about the case.
What is the trial about?
Mr. Sarkozy is facing charges of illegal campaign financing, criminal conspiracy, concealing the misappropriation of public funds and passive corruption (a charge that applies to people suspected of receiving money or favors).
The case against him involves a complex web of political and financial ties between Mr. Sarkozy’s advisers, officials who were part of Colonel Qaddafi’s government, and businessmen or bankers who acted as intermediaries.
Twelve other people were also ordered to stand trial on similar corruption, embezzlement or illegal campaign financing charges.
“Our thesis is that of a corruption pact,” Jean-François Bohnert, France’s top financial prosecutor, told RMC radio on Monday.
Prosecutors say that Mr. Sarkozy and his allies sought financing from Libya, in violation of election funding rules, and that the Libyan government promised to provide it. In return, they said, it wanted economic deals, diplomatic recognition and possibly assistance from France in rescinding an arrest warrant against a top Libyan official.
Mr. Sarkozy visited Libya shortly after he was elected, then welcomed Colonel Qaddafi for a widely-criticized state visit in Paris, where the Libyan strongman memorably pitched his Bedouin-style tent.
How did the case start?
In 2011, as Libya was roiled by fighting between the army and rebels, Colonel Qaddafi and his son said in media interviews that Mr. Sarkozy’s 2007 presidential campaign had taken Libyan money.
Then, in 2012, the investigative news website Mediapart published a document, presented as a note by Libya’s secret services, that mentioned a deal to fund Mr. Sarkozy’s campaign with up to 50 million euros, or about $52 million. That same year, as part of a separate investigation, Ziad Takieddine, a French-Lebanese businessman, made a similar allegation.
In 2013, prosecutors opened an investigation. It lasted a decade and involvedover 20 countries, 50 police raids and 70 volumes of case files.
How has Mr. Sarkozy responded?
Mr. Sarkozy has repeatedly and strenuously denied the accusations, which he argues were driven mostly by allies of Colonel Qaddafi seeking revenge.
Under Mr. Sarkozy’s leadership, France played a prominent role in the NATO-led campaign of airstrikes that ultimately led to the toppling of Colonel Qaddafi and his death at the hands of Libyan rebels.
There have been conflicting accounts about the sequence of events and the amounts of money involved, and some of the defendants have shifted their versions of what happened.
Some Libyan officials have even denied that Mr. Sarkozy’s campaign received any funding, and Mr. Sarkozy’s legal team has seized on the vagaries of the case.
“We don’t even have the amount of this alleged illegal financing,” Christophe Ingrain, Mr. Sarkozy’s lawyer, told RTL radio on Sunday. “Sometimes it’s in euros, sometimes in dollars, sometimes in dinars, sometimes 2 million, 3 million, 50 million, 400 million. This isn’t serious.”
Mr. Sarkozy’s official records for the 2007 campaign indicated that he spent over €21 million, and any illicit financing from Libya would have enabled him to skirt France’s strict spending cap for presidential campaigns. Prosecutors have not clearly laid out how much Libya actually sent or how much they believe was actually spent on the campaign. But under French law, prosecutors do not have to prove that a corrupt deal was carried out to secure a conviction — only that one was agreed upon.
Mr. Sarkozy no longer holds public office. But his memoirs are best-sellers, he is still popular with the base of his conservative party and he retains some political influence.
Has Mr. Sarkozy been convicted before?
Yes, twice. Mr. Sarkozy has faced multiple accusations of financial impropriety since he left office.
In 2021, he became the first former president in France’s recent history to be sentenced to actual detention after he was convicted of trying to obtain information from a judge about a court case against him.
Mr. Sarkozy has exhausted his appeal options in that case, but he will not be incarcerated. Instead, he will serve one year under house arrest with an electronic bracelet, although a judge has not yet ruled on the practical details.
Mr. Sarkozy was also convicted in 2021 to a year of house arrest for illegally financing his unsuccessful 2012 re-election campaign, which wildly exceeded France’s spending limits. An appeals court last year upheld the conviction but halved his sentence, and that case is still going through the appeals process.
Other cases against Mr. Sarkozy have been dropped, including one in which we was accused of manipulating the heiress to the L’Oréal fortune into financing his 2007 campaign.
And some cases are still being investigated, including an offshoot of the Libya case. In 2023, Mr. Sarkozy was placed under formal investigation on charges of witness tampering, after allegations that his allies pressured Mr. Takieddine, the French-Lebanese businessman, into retracting his accusations.
World
Nigel Farage responds after Elon Musk declares he 'doesn't have what it takes' to lead Reform UK Party
Business tycoon Elon Musk asserted in a post on X that Reform UK Party leader Nigel Farage does not “have what it takes” and should be replaced.
“The Reform Party needs a new leader. Farage doesn’t have what it takes,” Musk declared in a tweet.
Farage, a member of the UK Parliament, disagreed.
ELON MUSK DEMANDS UK ACT ON GROOMING GANG SCANDAL AMID GROWING CALLS FOR PROBE: ‘NATIONAL INQUIRY NOW!’
“Well, this is a surprise! Elon is a remarkable individual but on this I am afraid I disagree. My view remains that Tommy Robinson is not right for Reform and I never sell out my principles,” he tweeted.
Musk has been speaking out in support of Robinson, who is currently imprisoned.
But Farage has noted that he does not want Robinson to join the Reform UK Party.
MUSK RENEWS HARSH REBUKE OF DEMS WHO REJECTED DEPORTING SEX OFFENDERS: VOTE OUT ‘EVERY ONE’
Farage has said that Robinson is not in prison “for exposing grooming gangs,” but for “contempt of court.”
“I know he’s in prison for contempt of court ffs, but there is NO justification for such a long prison sentence or for solitary confinement!” Musk wrote in a post on X.
Robinson’s real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, reports indicate.
ELON MUSK SAYS TESLA WILL GET CYBERTRUCK ‘BACK ON THE ROAD’ AFTER LAS VEGAS EXPLOSION
Musk, who strongly supported President-elect Donald Trump during America’s 2024 presidential contest, has claimed that if Trump had not won the election, “civilization would be lost.”
World
Will 2024 fears become reality in 2025?
Fears and uncertainties of 2024 might come to reality in 2025, with re-election of Donald Trump as US president as a major game changer for Brussels.
The first Radio Schuman episode of the new year follows significant uncertainties left behind by 2024 that Europe will have to handle.
The continent is set to experience significant political and policy shifts, with Ursula von der Leyen’s influence growing, the balance of power in the EU potentially changing due to elections in Germany, and global uncertainties like Trump’s re-election affecting relations with Russia and China.
Key policy discussions will include the upcoming EU Multiannual Financial Framework, increased defence spending and ongoing migration reforms. On top of that, there’s also competitiveness, energy security, and tackling budget deficits in EU economies, all up for debate.
Radio Schuman touches upon what’s ahead with Euronews reporter Paula Soler.
We will also explore last week’s presidential election in Croatia and look at the roster and the gameplan of the first MEP delegation of the year as it begins its work abroad.
Finally, are smokes vanishing into thin air only to be replaced with electronic cigarettes? We’ll check out who and how uses vapes — widely popular nicotine devices — across Europe.
Today’s Radio Schuman is hosted by senior policy reporter Gerardo Fortuna and produced by journalist Eleonora Vasques, with audio editing by Georgios Leivaditis. Music by Alexandre Jas.
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