Anonymous ID: 964346 April 2, 2024, 2:05 p.m. No.20668107   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8112 >>8182 >>8266 >>8277 >>8279

Seagram's heiress Hannah Bronfman's son nearly electrocutes himself after shoving a necklace into a power outlet - as toddler's dad issues heartfelt warning to all parents

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13264957/seagrams-heiress-hannah-bronfman-son-nearly-electrocutes-necklace.html

 

Seagram's heiress Hannah Bronfman's husband revealed how their son almost electrocuted himself by shoving a necklace into a power outlet.

 

Hannah's huband Brendan Fallis shared a scary video on TikTok Monday evening in which he told viewers that his three-year-old son had almost electrocuted himself. The terrifying incident took place while Fallis was enjoying a massage. His son Preston wanted to hang out in the room during his dad's treatment.

 

During the massage, Preston got ahold of his dad's chain - which he had taken off for the message. While the toddler was playing with the jewelry - he shoved it into an outlet in an extension power bar in their family home.Fallis showed the aftermath - a blackened plug socket - in the TikTok to demonstrate how the chain had caused an electric shock.

 

'He jumped away, I heard a spark, stood up… nothing happened because obviously power bars have a trip, a breaker in it.' Luckily, because the plug socket was part of an extension cable and not in the wall - because the consequence could have probably been far worse.

 

Fallis took this opportunity to warn other parents. 'This is really scary,' he said.

'Just a note to all parents, you never know. This is tucked away under a bedside table,' he warned.

Anonymous ID: 964346 April 2, 2024, 2:33 p.m. No.20668216   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8235 >>8279

Accused Al-Qaeda mastermind of USS Cole bombing that killed 17 sailors off Yemen in 2000 to finally go on trial next year in longest running death penalty case at Guantanamo Bay

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13264749/USS-Cole-bombing-killed-17-sailors-Yemen-2000-finally-trial-year-longest-running-capital-case-Guantanamo-Bay.html

 

The trial of the alleged mastermind of the al-Qaeda bombing of the USS Cole in 2000 may finally take place next year following a new ruling. It means the longest-running capital case at the Guantanamo Bay base in Cuba could reach a conclusion 25 years after the terrorist attack.

 

Army judge Col. Matthew S. Fitzgerald, who is the fourth judge to preside over the case, said it was 'important to set benchmarks' as he made a goal of proceeding to trial in 2025.

 

Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, a Saudi national, is accused of orchestrating the deadly bombing in the port of Aden in 2000, which killed 17 U.S. sailors and wounded 37. He could get the death penalty if convicted by a military commission of charges that include terrorism and murder. The military commission proceedings have repeatedly stalled since al-Nashiri’s arraignment in 2011.

 

He was originally detained in 2002 and moved to Guantanamo bay in 2006.

 

Paul Abney, a survivor of the attack and a retired Navy master chef, who was in court for the latest hearing, told the New York Time that he was 'delighted' by the judge's determination to move forward.He told the newspaper: 'Even if it doesn’t happen next year the fact that he’s willing to put a target date down, and make it a goal to shoot for, is, I think, inspiring.'

 

In February 2018 a previous judge put proceedings on hold after members of the defense team quit over alleged violations of attorney-client privilege. Eight months after that an appeals court rejected arguments that had led to the indefinite stay.

 

There have also been delays over defense claims that al-Nashiri was tortured at CIA 'black sites' in the wake of 9/11. In June last year a UN report said the United States and several other countries had committed human rights violations against al-Nashiri. The UN working group said he had been arbitrarily detained for more than 20 years and voiced concern about his physical and mental well-being.

 

Al-Nashiri is accused of organizing the attack on the USS Cole by two suicide bombers in a small boat as the destroyer made a fuel stop in Yemen. The explosion ripped a 40ft hole in the side of the warship. Al-Qaeda claimed responsibility for the bombing, which took place 11 months before the 9/11 attacks on the United States.