CNN Won’t Accept That Americans Are Actually Worried about Shoplifting

Sometimes, as Sigmund Freud never quite said, politics is just politics.

One would not always know this by reading the American press. Unencumbered by extraneous talents and achievements, a sizeable number of this country’s journalists have come to exhibit an excessive faith in the only tool that they are capable of wielding: words. These days, to open up a newspaper or website is to get the feeling that the authors and editors who are featured within believe that reality is optional, that the truth must be subordinated to the narrative, and that all human experiences have been crafted out of soft putty. Once, we described members of the media as “reporters.” Presently, “scriptwriters” might be more apt.

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New Hondas, Toyotas and American pickups — but not EVs: What’s behind the list of Canada’s most stolen vehicles

Canada’s auto theft rates continue to skyrocket, with the Honda CR-V retaining its dubious spot as the country’s most stolen vehicle atop a list that includes some of Canada’s other most popular SUVs and pickup trucks — but not electric vehicles.

Those are among the newly released findings of Équité Association, a private insurance industry association which compiles data from Canadian law enforcement agencies and insurance records.

Smart thieves avoid EV’s.

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An MMA fighter asks the right question about Epstein’s clients

I like MMA, having trained in it (in a mostly risk-free, exercise way) for many years. I also really like MMA fighters, who have proven to be people who are brave, not only in the ring but also outside of the ring, when it comes to standing against woke leftism. The most recent example is Joel “King Bau” Bauman, who walked into the fight arena wearing a shirt that asks just the right question about Jeffrey Epstein’s little black book.

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Bankman-Fried’s Parents Stand By Their Sam—And Face Their Own Legal Perils

Barbara Fried wanted to get close to her son.

During breaks in the monthlong criminal fraud trial of her firstborn child, Sam Bankman-Fried, she would sometimes leave her seat and walk up to the railing that separated him from the gallery. Watching him and his lawyers, often in silence, she was just inches away yet no more able to intervene on his behalf or prevent the conviction that many saw coming.

Joseph Bankman and Barbara Fried had hovered nearby when their son soared to prominence as the crypto industry’s biggest star, and advised him as his company collapsed and the government made its case against him. And after a federal jury delivered a guilty verdict that could send him to prison for decades, his parents are trying to prepare him for what comes next.

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Ontario security guard tackles hammer-wielding smash and grab teen robber at jewelry store

A mall security guard appeared fearless as he tackled a teenage robber who was wielding a hammer while he and his accomplices carried out a smash and grab robbery at a jewelry store in Canada.

Footage shot on a cellphone by shocked bystanders captured the moment six mall cops rushed to the scene as they witnessed the robbery in progress at White Carat Co. Diamond in the Brampton Mall on the outskirts of Toronto, Ontario on Wednesday at 6:30pm.

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Sam Bankman-Fried and the corruption of the elites

The rise and fall of the ‘crypto king’ is a damning indictment of our entire financial system.

Last week, Sam Bankman-Fried, the former chief executive and founder of cryptocurrency exchange FTX, was convicted of fraud and money laundering following a month-long trial in New York. SBF – or the ‘crypto king’, as he is sometimes known – was arrested last year when FTX went bankrupt and some $8 billion in customer funds went missing. He now faces decades in jail.

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UK: More than a third of victims say they would not report a crime to the police again

Victims are losing trust in the criminal justice system, as more than a third say they would not report a crime to the police again because of their experience, research by the victims’ commissioner will reveal on Wednesday.

Police inaction, lack of information about the progress of cases and lengthy court delays contributed to 34 per cent of victims saying they would not report their crime to police again.

Only 44 per cent of the 428 victims who participated in the research said they would report their offence to the police if it was repeated. Just over a fifth (22 per cent) did not express a view.

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Sam Bankman-Fried found guilty for fraud, but what about the federal government?

On Thursday, Sam Bankman-Fried was properly convicted for stealing $8 billion from customers. I wonder why brokers haven’t been punished for promoting FTX since they don’t appear to have properly researched the company?

For decades, the media, politicians, bureaucrats, the United Nations, scientists, educators, entertainers, and others have been running con games that dwarf the FTX scheme; so where’s their trial and conviction?

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What’s next for Sam Bankman-Fried’s inner circle after guilty verdict?

Sam Bankman-Fried’s inner circle who helped send down the disgraced crypto king are likely to face ‘relatively short’ sentences in a minimum security prison if they are jailed, a convicted fraudster has revealed.

Disgraced FTX founder SBF was found guilty of embezzling $10 billion of his clients’ money in what the prosecutor said was ‘one of the biggest financial frauds in American history’ on Thursday night and faces up to 115 years in jail.

Ex-girlfriend Caroline Ellison, FTX co-founder Gary Wang and engineering chief Nishad Singh all took to the stand against the former FTX boss and ultimately helped secure his conviction.

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Sam Bankman-Fried Is Found Guilty of 7 Counts of Fraud and Conspiracy

Sam Bankman-Fried, the tousle-haired mogul who founded the FTX cryptocurrency exchange, was convicted on Thursday of seven charges of fraud and conspiracy after a monthlong trial that laid bare the rampant hubris and risk-taking across the crypto industry.

Mr. Bankman-Fried became a symbol of crypto’s excesses last year when FTX collapsed and he was charged with stealing as much as $10 billion from customers to finance political contributions, venture capital investments and other extravagant spending. A jury of nine women and three men took just over four hours of deliberation on Thursday to reach a verdict, convicting Mr. Bankman-Fried of wire fraud, conspiracy and money laundering.



He will appeal.

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The Humiliating Cross-Examination of SBF

“Did you say in private, ‘Fuck regulators?’ ”

The first audience members started arriving around 10 p.m. on Sunday night, even though the event wouldn’t begin for another eleven and a half hours.

The people in line weren’t waiting for Taylor Swift tickets, or some new Apple device, but for a coveted seat in U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan’s courtroom in lower Manhattan, where alleged fraudster Sam Bankman-Fried was on trial. Only 21 seats were reserved for the press and the public, and it was first come, first served. If you wanted to be in that courtroom—to be able to see the reactions of SBF’s parents, say, or Kaplan’s expression as he chastised the defendant (which he did regularly)—there was no such thing as getting to the courthouse too early. By midnight, all the seats had been accounted for.


Best read on the trial’s progress to date IMO.

Sammy had better hope for a pardon or else he’ll never see the light of day.

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Sam Bankman-Fried admits taking his eye off the ball at doomed crypto firm, as $10BN FTX fraud trial nears its conclusion

On the final day of his testimony in court, FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried has admitted he ‘deeply regrets not taking a deeper look’ into the borrowing of $8 billion in customer deposits by his sister firm Alameda Research.

The alleged crypto fraudster periodically smirked and frowned in response to questions about the collapse of his bitcoin empire in November 2022 by prosecutor Danielle Sassoon, and gave a slew of evasive answers.

He is accused of committing one of the biggest financial frauds in American history – by using FTX customer deposits to prop up risky investments in fledgling hedge fund Alameda, which he ran with his ex-girlfriend Caroline Ellison.

I have no doubt the jury will convict as it sounds he behaved like a jerk throughout.

But how long will he get? Will he be pardoned?

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Sam Bankman-Fried trial: Crypto king blames ex-lover for going bust

Blaming your ex-girlfriend for the collapse of a currency trading exchange and the loss of billions of dollars is a bold move.

The stakes are even higher when you are in a federal court in Manhattan facing an effective life sentence if found guilty. But that is the hand Sam Bankman-Fried chose to play as he testified in his own defence on Monday.

Bankman-Fried, 31, is accused of diverting billions of dollars from customer accounts on his digital currency trading platform FTX to the trading firm Alameda Research, which he also owned, but which was partly run by his former girlfriend, Caroline Ellison. He has been charged with fraud, conspiracy and money laundering, which he denies.

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Sam Bankman-Fried trial: ‘I made mistakes but didn’t commit fraud’

The cryptocurrency entrepreneur whose trading exchange went bankrupt after an alleged theft of billions of dollars from customer accounts told a court in New York on Friday he had made “large mistakes” but never committed fraud.

Sam Bankman-Fried, 31, who was briefly a multibillionaire and the face of a new financial industry, told a jury he had hoped to create the world’s finest marketplace for digital currency trading. “Did it turn out that way?” his lawyer, Mark Cohen asked.

“Er, no,” he replied. “It turned out basically the opposite. A lot of people got hurt. Customers, employees, investors.”

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