Anonymous ID: 232560 Sept. 16, 2020, 4:34 p.m. No.10674743   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4760

Disneyland Lawsuits: You Have a 4 Percent Chance of Winning

 

(dated info)

 

In a period of 40 years more than 1,500 lawsuits have been filed against the park. At any given time, they are juggling at least 100 active cases (Koening, 1995). According to Orange County Superior Court records, less than a fourth of all resolved cases made it to trial, and the park has won over 80% of them. To win a suit against Disney, you have about a 4% chance of making it to court and winning.

 

https://www.units.miamioh.edu/psybersite/disney/lawsuits.shtml

Anonymous ID: 232560 Sept. 16, 2020, 4:47 p.m. No.10674867   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4962 >>5074 >>5076

(The Villages??)

 

41-year-old Coleman man arrested after alleged sex with 16-year-old

 

September 16, 2020

 

A 41-year-old Coleman man was arrested after allegedly having sex with a 16-year-old.

 

Adam Bin Abdur-Rashid was arrested early Wednesday morning at the Sumter County Sheriff’s Office facility at Pinellas Plaza in The Villages. The New York City native is facing a charge of sexual assault.

 

Abdur-Rashid and the teen at about 9:30 p.m. Tuesday walked out of a building at an undisclosed location where deputies had set up a perimeter, according to an arrest report, which was heavily redacted due to the sensitive nature of the case. The 16-year-old was identified as a male in the report. The report indicated the sexual activity had occurred on the fourth floor of the building they were departing.

 

Abdur-Rashid was booked at the Sumter County Detention Center on $5,000 bond.

 

https://www.villages-news.com/2020/09/16/41-year-old-coleman-man-arrested-after-alleged-sex-with-16-year-old/

Anonymous ID: 232560 Sept. 16, 2020, 4:49 p.m. No.10674878   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4883 >>4886 >>4903 >>4920 >>4962 >>5074 >>5076

(Send in the clowns?)

 

East LA clown performer arrested, accused of sexual assault on minor

 

Published 33 mins ago Los AngelesFOX 11

LOS ANGELES - A man who worked as a clown performer in East Los Angeles has been arrested on suspicion of sexually molesting a young child.

 

The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department took 51-year-old Florentino Gonzalez Penaloza into custody on September 6, for allegedly conducting a sex act with a child under the age of 10.

 

The sheriff’s department says the suspect is the family friend of the 10-year-old female victim. The victim alleged that between 2016 and 2020 the suspect sexually molested her.

 

Penaloza performed as a clown under the fictitious name of “Ponponio” and worked part-time for Payasos Party Supply in Boyle Heights.

 

He is currently in custody with bail set at $950,000.

 

Officials say based on the nature of the allegations, along with the suspect’s affiliation with children’s entertainment, detectives believe there may be additional unidentified victims. They are asking for the public’s help in identifying any additional victims.

 

https://www.foxla.com/news/east-la-clown-performer-arrested-accused-of-sexual-assault-on-minor

Anonymous ID: 232560 Sept. 16, 2020, 5 p.m. No.10674973   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel Ellsberg testifies in Assange’s defense, says WikiLeaks exposed ‘war crimes’ in ‘public interest’

 

16 Sep, 2020 23:25

 

Whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg – whose ‘Pentagon Papers’ leak exposed illegal US bombing during the Vietnam War – said Julian Assange would not see a fair trial if extradited to the US, comparing the publisher’s case to his own.

Testifying at Assange’s extradition hearing on Wednesday, Ellsberg said the WikiLeaks co-founder would be denied a chance to defend himself if sent to the US for a trial, noting that, like in his own case, Assange would not be permitted to argue his publications were in the ‘public interest.’

 

“I observe the closest of similarities to the position I faced, where the exposure of illegality and criminal acts institutionally and by individuals was intended to be crushed by the administration carrying out those illegalities,” Ellsberg told the court.

 

WikiLeaks disclosures – such as the grisly ‘Collateral Murder’ video, showing an American gunship firing on Iraqi journalists – have exposed evidence of war crimes, the famed whistleblower went on, arguing that Americans had a right to know what their government had done in their name.

 

“I was acutely aware that what was depicted in that video deserved the term murder, a war crime,” he said of the ‘Collateral Murder’ footage, adding in his written testimony that the video confronted citizens with the “reality of our war.”

 

On cross examination, a lawyer acting on behalf of Washington, James Lewis, argued that Assange was not being prosecuted for the infamous video in particular, but rather for publishing the military’s classified rules of engagement in Iraq, among other things. Ellsberg replied that disclosing the rules was necessary to demonstrate the war crimes committed in the video, adding that instead of punishing the soldiers involved, the government was now prosecuting the man who revealed evidence of their wrongdoing.

 

Lewis also challenged Ellsberg’s comparison to his own 1971 ‘Pentagon Papers’ leak – in which he passed 7,000 pages of classified documents on the Vietnam War to the press – observing that Ellsberg had withheld information from the disclosure. However, the whistleblower said he had not redacted a single name of an informant or covert CIA agent, and that unlike himself, Assange had withheld some names, and even approached the Defense and State Departments for help in making additional redactions. He was denied, Ellsberg said.

 

“So it’s all the governments’ fault then,” Lewis shot back.

 

“Yes, they bear a heavy responsibility,” Ellsberg responded, adding that the government’s sudden concern about redactions was “highly cynical” given that officials had rebuffed Assange’s request for assistance.

 

Ellsberg – a former strategic analyst for RAND Corp. who regularly worked with the State Department and the Pentagon between the 1950s and 1970s – disclosed evidence that the US had illegally expanded its bombing campaign on Vietnam into neighboring Laos and Cambodia, as well as how American officials in four administrations had misled the public about the war effort. Following the leak, Ellsberg was charged with 12 counts under the Espionage Act, the same law underpinning most of Assange’s charges, and faced up to 115 years in prison. His case was ultimately dropped after it was revealed that the government had gathered evidence against him illegally.

 

Assange remains in custody at London’s maximum security Belmarsh prison as he awaits a verdict in his extradition case, which is set to last into early October. If sent to the US for trial, the WikiLeaks publisher faces a 175-year prison sentence, charged with 17 counts linked to espionage and computer intrusion over his role in disclosing classified material.

 

https://www.rt.com/news/500895-daniel-ellsberg-assange-testimony/