Anonymous ID: 31a414 March 11, 2020, 10:34 a.m. No.8378222   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8316

https://www.boston.com/news/local-news/2020/03/07/med-student-charged-with-research-smuggling-freed-on-bond-beth-israel-china

 

WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) — A medical student from China who U.S. authorities say tried to smuggle cancer research material out of the country has been freed on $100,000 bond over the objections of federal prosecutors.

 

Zaosong Zheng, 30, walked out of U.S. District Court in Worcester, Massachusetts on Friday but will remain under GPS-monitored house arrest, The Telegram & Gazette reported. His passport has also been confiscated.

 

Zheng was arrested in December at Logan International Airport in Boston with 21 vials of cancer cells in a suitcase he was taking to China, authorities said. Zheng stole the materials from his lab at Harvard-affiliated Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, authorities allege. The hospital has fired him.

Anonymous ID: 31a414 March 11, 2020, 10:43 a.m. No.8378316   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8378222

https://www.telegram.com/news/20200307/over-governments-objection-judge-in-worcester-releases-chinese-researcher-accused-of-trying-to-smuggle-cancer-cells-to-china

 

Over government’s objection, judge in Worcester releases Chinese researcher accused of trying to smuggle cancer cells to China

 

WORCESTER – A federal judge in Worcester Friday ordered a Chinese researcher accused of trying to smuggle cancer cells to China released before trial, denying a request from prosecutors that he delay his order while they appealed.

 

Zaosong Zheng, 30, had no comment as he walked out of U.S. District Court in Worcester bound for his apartment in Boston, where he will be under GPS-monitored house arrest.

 

Zheng was arrested in December after authorities at Logan Airport found 21 vials of cancer cells in a suitcase he was taking to China.

 

The government has opposed his release, arguing that he may be working with the Chinese government and raising questions about the source of $25,000 in additional bail money posted by his wife.

 

But Zheng has not been charged with conspiring with the Chinese government, and a federal judge Friday denied multiple requests from prosecutors that he remain in jail until an appeal could be heard.

 

“I wouldn’t be releasing the defendant on these conditions if I did not believe … they would reasonably assure (his) appearance,” Chief Magistrate Judge David H. Hennessy told Assistant U.S. Attorney Benjamin Tolkoff.

 

Tolkoff moved for a stay of Hennessy’s release order and, when that was denied, asked him to reconsider, saying he believed it possible another judge would rule differently.

 

In addition to raising questions about the source of bail money, Tolkoff had argued Wednesday that Zheng could face additional charges. He is currently charged with smuggling and lying to authorities.

 

An FBI agent testified Wednesday that preliminary forensic evidence indicates Zheng had communications with two people in China about the stolen vials, including one person from a university that planned to store the material in China.

 

Zheng told the FBI he stole the vials for his own research. Prosecutors allege in court documents his conduct “appears to have been a coordinated crime, with likely involvement by the Chinese government, as at least two other Chinese nationals working at the same lab have also stolen biological materials and smuggled them out of the United States.”

 

Zheng’s lead private lawyer, David Duncan, did not directly answer a question from the Telegram & Gazette Friday as to whether his client was working with the Chinese government.

 

Duncan, who took the question as he left the courtroom with Zheng’s wife, said he does not believe his client did anything wrong, and noted he is still preparing for trial.

 

Duncan wrote in court documents that Zheng’s wife, Wenjie Zhu, is in the U.S. conducting research at the National Institutes of Health.

 

Zhu politely said goodbye to a reporter after Duncan declined to make her available for comment.

 

Norman S. Zalkind, another lawyer who represents Zheng, declined to allow a reporter to question Zheng as he and his defense team left the courthouse after meeting with probation officers.

 

Zheng was aided at the defense table Friday by a Mandarin interpreter.

 

Federal authorities have been ratcheting up attempts to go after Chinese theft of research; in addition to Zheng, who was working for Harvard’s Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, they have arrested Harvard chemist Charles Leiber on unrelated allegations of setting up a lab in China in exchange for money.

 

Both Harvard University and Beth Israel requested Friday that Zheng stay away from their campuses. That request was deemed moot in court after Hennessy ordered Zheng on GPS-monitored house arrest.

 

Zheng, who lives at the Longwood Galleria in Boston, will be required to stay there except for medical and legal calls. He will also be allowed to go grocery shopping.

 

Hennessy ordered Zheng released after receiving notice from Longwood that Zheng’s family had paid his rent through the end of May. While prosecutors argued he is a flight risk, Hennessy noted the man’s passport has been taken and that his family has posted $40,000 cash toward his $100,000 bond.

 

The U.S. Attorney’s office did not immediately respond to an email offering comment Friday afternoon.

 

U.S. District Court Judge Denise J. Casper, the Boston judge who will ultimately hear Zheng’s case, affirmed Hennessy’s denial of the stay late Friday, court documents show.

 

Casper ordered an expedited schedule for the government’s motion of appeal, requiring Zheng’s lawyers to file a response by March 11.

Anonymous ID: 31a414 March 11, 2020, 11:04 a.m. No.8378561   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8624

>>8378551

>As Richards, 35, tells it, Sheen was angry because she had told her divorce attorney about discovering details of Sheen's porn-surfing practices. Richards's declaration, filed in support of her request for a restraining order against Sheen, contends that Sheen "belonged" to "disturbing" sites "which promoted very young girls, who looked underage to me with pigtails, braces, and no pubic hair performing oral sex with each other."

 

>Other sites visited by Sheen, Richards alleges, involved "gay pornography also involving very young men who also did not look like adults." Richards claims that she also discovered that Sheen "belonged to several sex search type sites" on which he "looked for women to have sex with." His online profile, Richards adds, included a photo of "his erect penis."

Anonymous ID: 31a414 March 11, 2020, 11:12 a.m. No.8378642   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8664 >>8681 >>8692 >>8694 >>8813

https://nypost.com/2020/03/10/conspiracy-theorist-alex-jones-arrested-on-drunk-driving-charge/

 

Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones arrested on drunk driving charge

 

Conspiracy theorist Alex Jones was arrested in Texas early Tuesday on charges of driving while intoxicated following a spat with his wife, authorities said.

 

Travis County Sheriff’s Deputies were responding to a disturbance at Jones’ house in Austin around 10:10 p.m. Monday, when they saw him going 45 mph in a 40 mph zone and stopped him, according to an arrest affidavit obtained by The Post.

 

“When I made contact with Jones I detected a strong odor of alcohol coming from his person,” the deputy wrote in the affidavit.

 

Jones, 46, claimed he and his wife got into an argument while eating dinner at a sushi restaurant, where he’d guzzled a bottle of sake, the court document states.

 

He then said he walked the three miles home from the restaurant, where the couple continued their tiff — prompting him to drive to another residence he owns downtown “to get away from his wife,” according to the affidavit.

 

Jones’ wife had told dispatchers that the pair got into a physical fight that later turned into a verbal argument.

 

She said Jones had booked it in a black Dodge Charger and was possibly drinking, the document states.

 

A sobriety test conducted on Jones found that he had a blood alcohol level of 0.076 at 11:55 p.m. and a level of 0.079 at 11:59 p.m. The legal blood alcohol limit for driving in Texas is 0.08.

 

However, drivers in the state can be charged with DWI if they’re considered impaired, even if they’re under the limit.

 

Jones’ eyes were described as watery and glassy with constricted pupils, while his demeanor was listed as excited, talkative, carefree and cooperative, in the documents.

 

The InfoWars founder was booked into the Travis County Jail around 12:37 a.m., according to Travis County sheriff’s office spokeswoman Kristen Dark.

 

He was released on $3,000 bond at around 4:11 a.m.