Tag: New York

  • American flight makes emergency landing after lice spotted in woman’s hair

    American flight makes emergency landing after lice spotted in woman’s hair

    A flight in America made an emergency landing after passengers spotted lice in a woman’s hair.

    The flight, scheduled to fly from Los Angeles to New York, was rerouted to Phoenix.

    A TikTok user on board, the flight, said in a video that passengers were left confused as American Airlines did not inform them of what caused the diversion.

    Ethan Judelson’s video reached over 1.2 million views. As soon as the plane landed, he described seeing a woman causing a commotion as she rushed through the aisle towards the front. While he was confused, no other passenger paid attention to it.

    “It just seemed like one of those people who, as soon as the seatbelt sign goes off, gets up and tries to be the first to their bag,” he told People magazine, recalling the incident. “So the girl next to me … we were both like, ‘Why is she so rushed to get off? We’re all getting off together; calm down.”

    The TikToker mentioned that two women gave him “cryptic” answers when asked about what happened to them.

    After the plane made the emergency landing, Mr Judelson overheard hushed conversations among fellow passengers. According to eyewitnesses, two passengers had spotted lice crawling out of a woman’s hair, prompting them to alert the flight attendants.

    “Apparently, those two girls saw bugs crawling out of the woman’s hair and alerted the flight attendant,” Mr Judelson said in the TikTok video.

    The airline later issued a statement confirming that the flight was diverted due to a medical emergency.

  • Sana Javed, Shoaib Malik enjoy New York trip

    Sana Javed, Shoaib Malik enjoy New York trip

    Sana Javed and Shoaib Malik are currently enjoying a trip to the USA. They’ve been sharing beautiful pictures and stories on Instagram from New York. Sana shared stories of rain, while Shoaib posted many solo pictures. The couple also shared a photo together.

    Here, we’ve gathered all their pictures from the trip.

  • Trump fined $355 mn, banned from NY business in fraud trial

    Trump fined $355 mn, banned from NY business in fraud trial

    A New York judge ordered Donald Trump to pay $355 million over fraud allegations and banned him from running companies in the state for three years Friday in a major blow to his business empire and financial standing.

    Trump — almost certain to be the Republican presidential nominee this November — was found liable for unlawfully inflating his wealth and manipulating the value of properties to obtain favorable bank loans or insurance terms.

    Trump lashed out on social media calling the ruling a “Total SHAM,” the judge in the case “crooked” and the prosecutor who brought it “totally corrupt.” His legal team said he would “of course” appeal.

    As the case was civil, not criminal, there was no threat of imprisonment. But Trump said ahead of the ruling that a ban on conducting business in New York state would be akin to a “corporate death penalty.”

    Trump, facing 91 criminal counts in other cases, has seized on his legal woes to fire up supporters and denounce his likely opponent, President Joe Biden, claiming that court cases are “just a way of hurting me in the election.”

    However, Judge Arthur Engoron said the financially shattering penalties are justified by Trump’s behavior.

    “Their complete lack of contrition and remorse borders on pathological,” Engoron said of Trump and his two sons, who were also defendants, in his scathing ruling.

    “They are accused only of inflating asset values to make more money… Donald Trump is not Bernard Madoff. Yet, defendants are incapable of admitting the error of their ways,” he added, referring to the perpetrator of a massive Ponzi scheme.

    Trump’s sons Eric and Donald Trump Jr. were also found liable in the case and ordered to pay more than $4 million each, prompting Don Jr. to claim on social media that “political beliefs” had determined the outcome.

    Engoron also extended the mandate of retired judge Barbara Jones as an independent monitor of Trump’s business affairs, as well as ordering the appointment of an independent director of compliance to the Trump Organization, with candidates to be nominated by Jones.

    “Conditions that Judge Engoron imposed, such as having Judge Jones monitor the Trump companies, may be onerous. I do expect an appeal,” said Richmond University law professor Carl Tobias.

    It was as a property developer and businessman in New York that Trump built his public profile which he used as a springboard into the entertainment industry and ultimately the presidency.

    The judge’s order was a victory for New York state Attorney General Letitia James. She had sought $370 million from Trump to remedy the advantage he is alleged to have wrongfully obtained, as well as having him barred from conducting business in the state.

  • Did Taylor Swift attend a comedy show raising money for Gaza?

    Did Taylor Swift attend a comedy show raising money for Gaza?

    Taylor Swift attended a fundraising comedy show hosted by Rami Youssef in New York on Friday.

    Other celebrities present at the event include Selena Gomez, Cara Delevingne, Anya Taylor Joy and Zoë Kravitz.

    The show was a part of Youssef’s More Feelings tour and Friday’s event was sold out while its profits are reportedly to go in aid for the humanitarian crisis in Gaza through American Near East Refugee Aid (ANERA).

    Earlier this month, when Time magazine revealed Taylor Swift as person of the year, criticism poured in from across social media as people asserted that it is the journalists from Gaza who deserve to grace the cover page.

    Journalists in Gaza have been risking their lives and reporting from ground, unveiling Israeli atrocities being committed against Palestine. On the other hand, Taylor Swift is among the many famous, highly influential celebrities who has not spoken a single word in calling for a ceasefire in Gaza nor condemned Israeli attacks.

  • Sophie Turner, Joe Jonas reach temporary agreement on children’s custody

    Sophie Turner, Joe Jonas reach temporary agreement on children’s custody

    Celebrity couple Sophie Turner and Joe Jonas have reached a temporary agreement regarding the custody of their two daughters. The ‘Game Of Thrones’ actress made headlines when she sued the Jonas Brothers band member for taking possession of their children, and refusing to hand over their passports as per the previous deal made between the two.

    READ MORE; Sophie Turner sues Joe Jonas for custody of their daughters, says she found out about divorce through media

    However, People Magazine now reports that an interim consent order has been laid out for the couple’s two daughters. From October 9-21, the children will remain with Sophie as she travels through the US and England. And from October 21 till November 2, Joe will be given the responsibility of the children.

    After November 2, the children’s nanny will return the two daughters back to Turner to stay with them till November 22, after which they will live with Jonas once more. From December 16, the children will spend their holidays with Sophie till January 7.

    People further elaborates that both parities will submit a status report before December 23 which will outline the status of mediation between the two ex-spouses.

    Joe Jonas filed for divorce from Sophie on September 5 in Miami, claiming “the marriage between the parties is irretrievably broken.”

  • Trump indicted for racketeering over 2020 election interference

    Trump indicted for racketeering over 2020 election interference

    By Christian Monterrosa with Frankie Taggart in Washington

    Donald Trump was indicted Monday on charges of racketeering and a string of election crimes afer a sprawling, two-year probe into his eforts to overturn his 2020 defeat to Joe Biden in the US state of Georgia.

    The case — relying on laws typically used to bring down mobsters — is the fourth targeting the 77-year-old Republican this year and could lead to a watershed moment, the first televised trial of a former president in US history.

    Prosecutors in Atlanta charged Trump with 13 felony counts — compounding the legal threats he is facing in multiple jurisdictions as a firestorm of investigations imperils his bid for a second White House term.

    Eighteen co-defendants were indicted in the probe, including Trump’s former personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani, who pressured local legislators over the result afer the election, and Trump’s White House chief of staf, Mark Meadows.

    With Trump already due to go on trial in New York, south Florida and Washington, the latest charges herald the unprecedented scenario of the 2024 presidential election being litigated as much from the courtroom as the ballot box.

    “Rather than abide by Georgia’s legal process for election challenges, the defendants engaged in a criminal racketeering enterprise to overturn Georgia’s presidential election result,” Fulton County prosecutor Fani Willis told reporters.

    Willis said Trump and his co-defendants had until noon on August 25 to “voluntarily surrender” to authorities, adding that she would like to go to trial within six months.

    “So, the Witch Hunt continues!” Trump posted on his Truth Social platform.

    “Sounds Rigged to me! Why didn’t they Indict 2.5 years ago? Because they wanted to do itright in the middle of my political campaign. Witch Hunt!”

    His lawyers’ statement took issue with the “leak of a presumed and premature indictment before the witnesses had testified or the grand jurors had deliberated”, in what they say has been a “flawed and unconstitutional” process.

    In response to similar allegations by the Trump campaign, Willis said: “I make decisions in this ofice based on the facts and the law. The law is completely nonpartisan.” The twice-impeached Trump was charged with violating Georgia’s Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act, as well as six conspiracy counts over alleged eforts to commit forgery, impersonate a public oficial and submit false statements and documents.
    He is also accused of lying in statements and filing fake documents, as well as soliciting public oficials to break their oaths.

    -Most serious threat –

    Georgia, which Biden won by fewer than 12,000 votes, presents perhaps the most serious threat to Trump’s liberty as he leads the field comfortably for his party’s nomination to bid for reelection.

    Even if he is returned to the Oval Ofice, he would have none of the powers that presidents arguably enjoy in the federal system to pardon themselves or have prosecutors drop cases. The harsh penalties associated with RICO cases can be an incentive for co-defendants to seek cooperation deals, and the statutes are usually used to target organized crime. Thirty unindicted co-conspirators were mentioned in the indictment.

    Under federal law, anyone who can be connected to a criminal “enterprise” through which offenses were committed can be convicted under RICO. The broader Georgia law doesn’t even require the existence of the enterprise.

    Atlanta-area authorities launched the probe afer Trump called Georgia officials weeks before he was due to leave the White House, pressuring them to “find” the 11,780 votes that would reverse Biden’s victory in the Peach State.

    Meadows, who is accused of trying to get a public oficial to violate his oath, was on the call.

    Secret report –

    Willis empaneled a special grand jury that heard from around 75 witnesses before recommending a raf of felony counts in a secret report in February.

    She alleges that Trump’s team worked with local Republicans on a scheme to replace legitimate slates of “electors” — the oficials who certify a state’s results and send them to the US Congress — with fake pro-Trump stand-ins.

    The indictment lists a litany of telephone calls made by Trump, Giuliani and others to various state oficials for the purpose of unlawfully appointing fake electors to swing the Electoral College in Trump’s favor.

    Giuliani faces 13 felony counts, including over accusations of harassment of two Fulton County poll workers.

    Other Trump allies were charged over the accessing of sensitive data from an election office in a rural county south of Atlanta one day afer the 2021 Capitol riot.

    Trump is already facing dozens of felony charges afer being federally indicted over the alleged plot to subvert the election, and further prosecutions over his alleged mishandling of classified documents and keeping allegedly fraudulent business records.

    Authorities in Atlanta installed security barricades outside the downtown courthouse in anticipation of a potential influx of Trump supporters and counter-protesters in the latest case.

    Lawmakers investigating Trump’s eforts to cling to power heard evidence in a series of congressional hearings last summer that would challenge his potential defense that he genuinely believed he had been cheated of the election.

  • New York City co-names street ‘Allama Iqbal Avenue’ in honor of Pakistani National Poet

    New York City co-names street ‘Allama Iqbal Avenue’ in honor of Pakistani National Poet

    In the run-up to Pakistan’s Independence Day, an avenue in New York City has been co-named “Allama Iqbal Avenue”.

    The honor recognizes Allama Iqbal, an international icon and symbolic figure of Pakistani nationhood, who was instrumental in envisioning a separate homeland for the Muslims of the Subcontinent — a dream that was realized in 1947.

    Ambassador Masood Khan lauded the development, extending his congratulations to Ali Rashid, the President of the American-Pakistani Advocacy Group (APAG), for his leadership in this initiative.

    “Naming an avenue after our national poet in such a globally renowned city not only cements Pak-US ties but is also a source of pride for the Pakistani diaspora across the United States,” Khan said.

    Adrienne Adams, Speaker of the New York City Council, expressed her honor at celebrating the co-naming of the avenue as “Allama Iqbal Avenue” as Pakistan’s Independence Day approaches. She paid tribute to Iqbal’s work and vision that led to the creation of Pakistan and recognized the vibrant Pakistani community’s contributions to the cultural fabric of New York City.

  • TW: New York based Pakistani man arrested for murdering wife, baby daughter

    TW: New York based Pakistani man arrested for murdering wife, baby daughter

    Trigger warning: murder, domestic violence, abuse

    A Pakistani-American cab driver, Zanoor Jaffari, has been arrested in New York city on charges of murdering his wife and two-year-old daughter, with their five year old son present during the slaughter.

    According to the Suffolk County Police, the wife, Misbah Batool, 33, and the couple’s toddler Izziah, were found dead in the bedroom of the family’s home in Brentwood at 4:40 pm. Other relatives also lived in the house, and it was Jaffari’s mom who reported the stabbing.

    Suffolk County Police Chief of Detectives John Rowan said the couple’s boy was unharmed, and is currently under the custody of relatives.

    The murderer was initially hospitalised after the cops reported he showed signs of overdosing, before being held on murder charges. Jaffari has pled not guilty to the charges and has been remanded without bail.

    Prosecuters have alleged that Jaffari has a history of abusing his wife, before the family shifted to a new home in Long Island City.

  • Donald Trump becomes first US president to face criminal charges

    Donald Trump becomes first US president to face criminal charges

    A New York grand jury on Thursday indicted former United States (US) President Donald Trump, over hush money payments made to a porn star.

    Trump became the first ever former US president to face criminal charges.

    The 76-year-old Republican denies all wrongdoing in connection with the payments made ahead of the election that sent him to the White House.

    The former US president survived two impeachment threats and kept prosecutors at bay over charges ranging from the US Capitol riot to missing classified files — only to land in court over a sex scandal involving Stormy Daniels, a 44-year-old adult movie actress.

    Calling his indictment a “political persecution and election interference,” Trump believed that it would backfire on his successor, President Joe Biden, state prosecutors and his Democrat opponents.

    On March 18, Trump had declared he expected to be arrested within days over the payment to Daniels – who received $130,000 weeks before the election that brought Trump to power, to stop her from going public about a tryst she claims they had a decade earlier.

    In predicting his indictment, Trump also issued a call for demonstrations and dark warnings that it could lead to “potential death & destruction” that “could be catastrophic for our Country.”

    Trump, who is seen as the frontrunner for Republican nomination in the 2024 election, has branded all of the investigations political persecution.

    Trump staged his first presidential campaign rally in Texas on Saturday, addressing several thousand supporters — far fewer than the 15,000 he had expected — in the city of Waco, Texas.

    “The innocence of people makes no difference whatsoever to these radical left maniacs,” said Trump.

  • ‘It’s tragic that an entire generation finds Friends offensive’: Jennifer Anniston

    I’ll be there for you but not when you’re making offensive jokes.

    Since its debut in 1993, the popular American sitcom ‘Friends’ has won hearts of generations across the world with its hilarious depiction of the struggles of five adults living in an apartment near Central Park. Neat-freak Monica, the line “JOEY DOESN’T SHARE FOOD!”, Rachel and her lewks, but especially Ross and the line “PIVOT!” are part of our psyche.

    But it turns out, not all that glitters is gold because recent generations have found the popular sitcom to be insensitive for the copious amounts of sexism, body shaming, and especially Joey and his creepy flirting.

    Jennifer Aniston, who starred as the fashionista Rachel Green on the show, has addressed these controversies in an interview with AFP, while she was promoting her upcoming Netflix film ‘Murder Mystery 2’ which will co-star Adam Sandler. The actress lamented the dearth of comedy shows and criticism of ‘Friends’.

    “There’s a whole generation of people, kids, who are now going back to episodes of ‘Friends’ and find them offensive,” Aniston said. “There were things that were never intentional and others… well, we should have thought it through — but I don’t think there was a sensitivity like there is now.”

    The ‘Dumplin’ star went on to lament how difficult it is to make humor today.

    “Now it’s a little tricky because you have to be very careful, which makes it really hard for comedians, because the beauty of comedy is that we make fun of ourselves, make fun of life,” she said. “[In the past] you could joke about a bigot and have a laugh — that was hysterical. And it was about educating people on how ridiculous people were. And now we’re not allowed to do that.”

    Anniston went on to stress that it was necessary now more than ever that more shows like ‘Friends’ are made:

    “Everybody needs funny! The world needs humor! We can’t take ourselves too seriously. Especially in the United States. Everyone is far too divided.”