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Friday, March 31, 2023

Fortuneteller to remain in custody pending court hearing - TribLIVE

A fortuneteller accused of bilking clients will remain in the Westmoreland County Prison after she was arrested earlier this month in Florida.

Alexis Mitchell, 29, was charged with theft and other offenses after a North Huntingdon man claimed he paid her $10,000 for illegal fortunetelling services last August. Police said Mitchell called herself “Psychic Novena Saint” and was awaiting trial on identity theft charges in connection with allegations made in 2019 by an Irwin woman that she was the victim of a fortunetelling scam.

According to court records, Mitchell, whose last listed address is in Las Vegas, failed to appear for a Westmoreland County court appearance in early 2020, which prompted the issuance of an arrest warrant. Mitchell was captured earlier this month in Delray Beach, Fla.

During a brief court appearance on Thursday, Westmoreland County Common Pleas Judge Christopher Feliciani ordered Mitchell to remain in jail pending a hearing April 12 in which prosecutors will seek to revoke her unsecured bail set four years ago.

Mitchell is tentatively scheduled to appear for a preliminary hearing April 19 in North Huntingdon.

Rich Cholodofsky is a Tribune-Review staff writer. You can contact Rich by email at rcholodofsky@triblive.com or via Twitter .

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Fortuneteller to remain in custody pending court hearing - TribLIVE
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Fortuneteller to remain in custody pending court hearing - TribLIVE

A fortuneteller accused of bilking clients will remain in the Westmoreland County Prison after she was arrested earlier this month in Florida.

Alexis Mitchell, 29, was charged after theft and other offenses after a North Huntingdon man claimed he paid her $10,000 for illegal fortunetelling services last August. Police said Mitchell called herself “Psychic Novena Saint” and was awaiting trial on identity theft charges in connection with allegations made in 2019 by an Irwin woman that she was the victim of a fortunetelling scam.

According to court records, Mitchell, whose last listed address is in Las Vegas, failed to appear for a Westmoreland County court appearance in early 2020, which prompted the issuance of an arrest warrant. Mitchell was captured earlier this month in Delray Beach, Fla.

During a brief court appearance on Thursday, Westmoreland County Common Pleas Judge Christopher Feliciani ordered Mitchell to remain in jail pending a hearing April 12 in which prosecutors will seek to revoke her unsecured bail set four years ago.

Mitchell is tentatively scheduled to appear for a preliminary hearing April 19 in North Huntingdon.

Rich Cholodofsky is a Tribune-Review staff writer. You can contact Rich by email at rcholodofsky@triblive.com or via Twitter .

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Fortuneteller to remain in custody pending court hearing - TribLIVE
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What local insurance brokers are saying about the pending Blue Cross sale - Greater Baton Rouge Business Report

(File photo)

For local insurance professionals, news that Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Louisiana had made a deal to be acquired by Elevance Health may have been surprising, but not necessarily shocking. 

“There’s been a lot of consolidation in the industry,” notes Zack Stafford with Lockton, who was nonetheless surprised the news didn’t leak sooner. “Usually, information like that gets out early.”

Stafford says Louisiana Blue becoming the 15th state plan for Elevance, which does business as Anthem, could boost investment and technology for the local insurer. Large, self-funded groups could save money on fees paid to access provider networks in other states, he says. 

But there are concerns about moving from Blue Cross, a nonprofit, to a publicly traded for-profit company that has to worry about its stock price. 

“My fear for the fully insured business is that those rates will ultimately go up,” Stafford says. 

He’s also concerned that some of Blue Cross’ 3,000 or so Louisiana employees will be let go in the name of efficiency. Company officials say the deal will not spur layoffs or office closures, and CEO Steven Udvarhelyi says he expects to maintain current employment levels for at least the first two years. 

“Wow, I didn’t expect this,” Kerry Drake with Cadence Insurance recalls thinking. “But knowing the health care landscape, probably not shocking.” 

Drake also says the larger company’s resources could benefit large self-funded groups, but he worries about the impact on rates for groups with 100 or fewer members. He says other brokers report that Anthem/Elevance gives its successful subsidiaries the freedom to run the business.

“Louisiana Blue is an incredibly successful business,” says Morgan Kendrick, the Elevance executive who oversees the company’s Blue plans. “The objective with all of the plans is to maintain the autonomy locally as far as decision-making, running the business and serving the customers.” 

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What local insurance brokers are saying about the pending Blue Cross sale - Greater Baton Rouge Business Report
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Wednesday, March 29, 2023

Tuesday, March 28, 2023

Hockey Canada rules 2018 junior players ineligible for international competition pending investigation - CBC

Hockey Canada says players from the 2018 world junior hockey team will not be considered for international competition until an investigation into an alleged sexual assault involving members of the team is complete.

In a statement obtained Monday evening by The Canadian Press, Hockey Canada indicated the decision was made earlier this year and that players from the team will not be considered until "the investigation and adjudicative process of the alleged incident in 2018 are complete."

Hockey Canada says the decision has been communicated to the management group for the upcoming hockey world championship scheduled May 12-28 in Tampere, Finland, and Riga, Latvia.

The statement comes hours after a parliamentary committee unanimously passed a motion ordering Hockey Canada to hand over a report from an investigation into the 2018 allegations.

Heinen Hutchison Robitaille LLP was hired by Hockey Canada to perform a third-party investigation.

WATCH | Hockey Canada agreed in December to release financial statements:

Hockey Canada to release financial statements following review

3 months ago

Duration 2:41

Hockey Canada has agreed to release its latest financial statements following a review of the organization’s governance that was carried out in light of settlements the group has paid for alleged sexual misconduct by players.

The motion, tabled by Conservative MP Kevin Waugh to open a Heritage committee meeting on safe sport, ordered Hockey Canada to provide the law firm's completed report within 24 hours.

"I have heard that Henein Hutchinson has given the report to Hockey Canada and I wish to receive it here in the very near future to look it over," Waugh said.

The motion passed with an amendment from Liberal MP Chris Bittle to have the report redacted for privacy purposes before being submitted.

Waugh told The Canadian Press later the report would also need to be translated into French.

"A letter will be sent to a Hockey Canada today," Waugh said.

"Hopefully they will give us the report by Henein Hutchinson, and then we can get it translated."

News broke in May that members of the 2018 world junior team were accused of a group sexual assault after a Hockey Canada gala event in London, Ont.

As part of the fallout, an independent investigation into the allegations by HHR (then Henein Hutchison) ordered by Hockey Canada was reopened.

Partner Danielle Robitaille said before a Heritage committee hearing into the scandal in July that the investigation was initially closed in 2018 because the complainant did not provide a statement.

Robitaille said she contacted Hockey Canada and asked for a mandate to reopen the investigation after learning that the complainant planned to participate.

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Hockey Canada rules 2018 junior players ineligible for international competition pending investigation - CBC
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Judge Puts Voyager Sale to Binance.US on Hold Pending Government Appeal - CoinDesk

"Upon consideration of all parties’ written submissions, as well as the conferences and oral argument held in this matter, the Government’s emergency motion is hereby GRANTED. An opinion setting forth the reasons for this ruling will issue shortly," the ruling said.

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Judge Puts Voyager Sale to Binance.US on Hold Pending Government Appeal - CoinDesk
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Autopsy pending after 5-year-old boy found dead in Oakland County pool - FOX 2 Detroit

Family members are waiting for the results of an autopsy after a 5-year-old boy was found dead in a pool in Oakland County over the weekend.

The boy, who has special needs and has been missing in the past, was reported missing in Lake Orion on Saturday afternoon. 

While searching for him, Lake Orion firefighters found his body inside a covered pool on Cresmont, about a block away from the boy's home. There was about a foot of standing water in that pool. According to the Oakland County Sheriff's Office, there was a ladder on the pool that the child most likely used to climb in.

Related: Body of 3-year-old boy found in pond at Michigan apartment complex

The boy was wearing jeans and a sweatshirt but no jacket. The temperature at the time was 37 degrees Fahrenheit.

"All indications are it’s a tragic accident. I'm sure the family is suffering greatly, but ultimately, the final report will be handed over to the prosecutor for any determination," said Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard.

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Autopsy pending after 5-year-old boy found dead in Oakland County pool - FOX 2 Detroit
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Monday, March 27, 2023

Indian govt has 54 Chinese investment proposals pending: FM Nirmala Sitharaman - Economic Times

The Indian government has received about 54 foreign direct investment proposals from China since last year that are pending for approval, said Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman.

"54 FDI proposals received during the past year and current year with investor/ beneficial owner from China/Hong Kong are pending for decision with government as on March 21, 2023," Sitharaman informed lawmakers on Monday.

The Indian government is not considering easing restrictions put in place a few years ago on foreign investments from countries that share land border with India, Sitharaman said.


In 2020, India sought to limit investments from China as political tensions heightened between the two countries with its soldiers clashing at the disputed Himalayan region.

The restrictions called for beneficial owners of a country sharing a land border with India to seek its government's approval for investments.

The step was taken to prevent hostile takeovers of Indian companies when the country was severely impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Indian govt has 54 Chinese investment proposals pending: FM Nirmala Sitharaman - Economic Times
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Sunday, March 26, 2023

Strong signal, pending action: Putin’s warrant shows limits of international law - The Hill

Strong signal, pending action: Putin’s warrant shows limits of international law | The Hill

Russian President Vladimir Putin is a wanted man, but his chance of avoiding judgment is high.

It’s a sad realization for many who are looking to hold the Russian leader accountable for launching a full-scale invasion against Ukraine and face responsibility for unimaginable horrors allegedly carried out by Russian forces.  

Still, global justice advocates say the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) arrest warrant against Putin for war crimes, served last week, sends a powerful message of deterrence and animates a debate over enforcement.  

An arrest warrant was also served for Maria Lvova-Belova, Russia’s Presidential Commissioner for Children’s Rights. Both were charged with the unlawful deportation of Ukrainian children to Russia. 

But there’s frustration over how the ICC, based in The Hague, Netherlands, can execute the arrest warrant. 

Russia has rejected the ICC’s authority out-of-hand. Moscow is not a signatory to the Rome Statute that enshrined the court’s jurisdiction. 

The forcible transfer of a population by an occupying power, in particular children, is a war crime under the Rome Statute. 

Ukraine’s Prosecutor General Andriy Kostin said that they have succeeded in bringing back 308 Ukrainian children who were abducted by Russia, but estimates that Moscow holds more than 16,000 of these children.

In a program reportedly overseen by Lvova-Belova, these children are submitted for “reeducation” that in effect denies their Ukrainian identity and are handed over for adoption by Russian families. 

Acting on an ICC warrant

The 123 members of the ICC are generally compelled to act on an arrest warrant if an alleged perpetrator travels to their countries. Still, they can refuse to act by citing domestic law, in particular if a country respects that a head of state enjoys unique protections and immunity from arrest.  

Member-states South Africa and Hungary have already raised concerns over their commitments to the ICC. 

“We can refer to the Hungarian law and based on that we cannot arrest the Russian President … as the ICC’s statute has not been promulgated in Hungary,” said Gergely Gulyas, chief of staff to Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Reuters reported

And South Africa’s international relations minister, Naledi Pandor, reportedly said Friday that the government is seeking legal advice over their obligations to the ICC if Putin arrives in Durban in August to attend the BRICS summit, the grouping of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.

Pandor said South Africa wants to “be in a position where we could continue to engage with both countries to persuade them towards peace.” 

Mary Glantz, senior adviser for the Russia and Europe Center at the U.S. Institute of Peace, said South Africa’s response to the ICC warrant sends an important signal of the power of the court.

“I think the initial mood in the Global South was business as usual. The fact that they’re even investigating what legal obligations they have and that they’re thinking about this, I think is a positive step,” she said, referring to South Africa.

“It’s a step in the right direction that maybe we’re moving the needle a little on global public opinion about what’s going on in Ukraine.”

It’s an unusual move by the ICC to make public its arrest warrants, Gantz said, and is likely a signal of the court’s confidence in the evidence it has for its case, and that it may have other secret warrants for members of Putin’s inner circle. 

“They could show up somewhere and that country, as a state party, could get the information that ‘nope, there’s an arrest warrant’ and they could be picked up,” Gantz said. 

“It leaves a pall of uncertainty around everybody in [Putin’s] inner circle when it comes to international travel.”

America’s relationship with ICC

The war crimes warrant has also brought up uncomfortable questions for the U.S., which walks a fine line between voicing support for international justice and clashing intensely with the ICC over its pursuit of war crimes investigations allegedly by U.S. soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan. 

The Biden administration has eased friction with the ICC by removing sanctions imposed on its chief prosecutor by the former Trump administration. The ICC, in turn, set aside investigations into alleged crimes committed by American forces in Afghanistan. 

The U.S., which is not a member state of the ICC, has said the court’s most important function is to carry out justice in countries where the home courts are compromised, and that the strength of the American justice system should shield it from efforts to make it a target of the international court. Still, Congress has recognized the U.S. can do more and took recent action to amend U.S. law to better position itself to assist the ICC and apprehend alleged war criminals.

This includes the Justice for Victims of War Crimes Act, signed into law in January, which allows for America’s courts to carry out trials against alleged war criminals who are found to be in the U.S., even if they never targeted Americans or committed crimes in the U.S. The law is unlikely to be used to go after Putin, given the far-fetched scenario he’d travel to the U.S.

Another important piece of legislation, included in the 2023 funding bill, lifted a prohibition on the U.S. working with the ICC, but narrowly defined it to focus specifically on war crimes investigations surrounding Russia’s war in Ukraine.

“And so they changed it to say, ‘OK, for this very, very specific situation, there’s a certain amount of help we can give,’” said Celeste Kmiotek, staff lawyer with the Strategic Litigation Project at the Atlantic Council, which focuses in part on accountability for atrocity crimes and human rights violations.

“This is a very good opportunity for U.S. lawmakers to really consider, potentially being more open to the ICC.”

A delicate debate on U.S. involvement with the ICC is playing out behind closed doors between the Pentagon and the White House, the New York Times reported earlier this month, saying the Department of Defense is blocking the State Department from transferring war crimes evidence to the ICC. 

The evidence reportedly includes material about decisions by Russian officials to deliberately target civilian infrastructure and related to the ICC’s case against Putin and Lvova-Belova.

On Friday, a bipartisan group of senators sent a letter urging President Biden to share U.S.-collected evidence with the ICC: “Knowing of your support for the important cause of accountability in Ukraine, we urge you to move forward expeditiously with support to the ICC’s work so that Putin and others around him know in no uncertain terms that accountability and justice for their crimes are forthcoming.”

A State Department spokesperson said that the administration has “worked hard” over the past two years to improve U.S. relations with the ICC, pointing to the lifting of sanctions and “a return to engagement,” but did not specifically address whether it is directly providing evidence to the international court. 

Child relocation charges just the start?

The war crimes allegations over the forced relocation of children is significant, international law experts have argued, because it could lay the groundwork for more war crimes charges, including genocide and crimes against humanity. 

There’s some optimism to believe Putin and his most senior officials will face justice. 

Of the 18 heads of state or heads of major military forces wanted by international justice, 83 percent have faced accountability, Thomas Warrick, a nonresident senior fellow for the Atlantic Council wrote in an analysis.

Putin has few friends left in the world. Still, support he receives from Chinese President Xi Jinping, and the comments from Hungary and South Africa highlight that the Russian leader is not entirely isolated.

But a larger rap sheet, possibly including genocide and other heinous war crimes, could help pressure action from countries who have stayed on the sidelines. 

“You got to wonder, how many states really want to be seen standing side-by-side with an accused war criminal,” Gantz said, “somebody who is accused of kidnapping children, at this point, and could potentially be accused of genocide, which I think could be even more poisonous, even more toxic to people standing next to him.” 

Tags ICC Russia-Ukraine war Vladimir Putin Vladimir Putin

Copyright 2023 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Strong signal, pending action: Putin’s warrant shows limits of international law - The Hill
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Over 60,000 police complaints pending till March 25 — 5-fold jump from last year - The Indian Express

There has been a five-fold jump in the number of pending complaints and cases lodged with Delhi Police between January and March this year as compared to last year. Officials Sunday said most complaints are of street crime and personal disputes.

While senior police officers had directed district commissioners to submit weekly and monthly reports about street crimes and preventive action, many cases still remain pending.

According to data accessed by The Indian Express, from January 1 to March 25 this year, a total of 1,05,432 complaints were lodged with police and 60,140 complaints are pending. Though the complaints have decreased this year, pendency continues to grow.

Last year, in the same period, over 1,10,488 complaints were lodged and 10,791 complaints were pending. Similarly, in 2021, over 1,33,413 complaints were lodged and 8,189 complaints were pending.

This year, more than 57% of complaints are pending compared to 6% in 2021 and 9% in 2022. According to the Delhi Police’s complaints portal, most of the complaints (98%) are lodged offline through calls, letters and at stations. Only 1-2% are lodged through Delhi Police’s website.

A senior police officer, who refused to be named, said, “It’s difficult to bifurcate between complaints at times. Also, officers are guided to look at bigger cases or heinous cases first. The leftover complaints are mostly of petty street crime, thefts or fights between neighbours. Our investigating teams focus more on murder, robbery, arms, rape and other such cases.”

As per data, there is an increase in pending cases through the years. From 2022 to 2023, there is a notable increase of 500% in pending cases. From 2021 to 2022, the increase is 25%.

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However, senior officers at the PHQ said the data may not be sufficient as there are pending cases from previous years as well. “Some of the solved or disposed of cases are from previous weeks, months or years. We have to see the date of each case and when it is solved. There could be an increase because we are taking old cases into account,” said an officer.

Officers in districts said there are pending complaints in cases of feuds or minor thefts. “There are double complaints or calls about the same case. We register complaints but later take only one case forward,” added the officer.
The Delhi Police spokesperson and Vigilance Department refused to comment on the data and increasing pendency saying the data is not sufficient.

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Over 60,000 police complaints pending till March 25 — 5-fold jump from last year - The Indian Express
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Strong signal, pending action: Putin’s warrant shows limits of international law - The Hill

Photo illustration of a dual red and blue-toned Vladimir Putin, center, on top of a faded black and white background of a destroyed building in Ukraine.
Illustration / Madeline Monroe; Sputnik Kremlin Pool Photo via AP, Mikhail Metzel; Associated Press, Thibault Camus

Russian President Vladimir Putin is a wanted man, but his chance of avoiding judgment is high.

It’s a sad realization for many who are looking to hold the Russian leader accountable for launching a full-scale invasion against Ukraine and face responsibility for unimaginable horrors allegedly carried out by Russian forces.  

Still, global justice advocates say the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) arrest warrant against Putin for war crimes, served last week, sends a powerful message of deterrence and animates a debate over enforcement.  

An arrest warrant was also served for Maria Lvova-Belova, Russia’s Presidential Commissioner for Children’s Rights. Both were charged with the unlawful deportation of Ukrainian children to Russia. 

But there’s frustration over how the ICC, based in The Hague, Netherlands, can execute the arrest warrant. 

Russia has rejected the ICC’s authority out-of-hand. Moscow is not a signatory to the Rome Statute that enshrined the court’s jurisdiction. 

The forcible transfer of a population by an occupying power, in particular children, is a war crime under the Rome Statute. 

Ukraine’s Prosecutor General Andriy Kostin said that they have succeeded in bringing back 308 Ukrainian children who were abducted by Russia, but estimates that Moscow holds more than 16,000 of these children.

In a program reportedly overseen by Lvova-Belova, these children are submitted for “reeducation” that in effect denies their Ukrainian identity and are handed over for adoption by Russian families. 

Acting on an ICC warrant

The 123 members of the ICC are generally compelled to act on an arrest warrant if any of the alleged perpetrators travels to their countries. Still, they can refuse to act by citing domestic law, in particular if a country respects that a head of state enjoys unique protections and immunity from arrest.  

Member-states South Africa and Hungary have already raised concerns over their commitments to the ICC. 

“We can refer to the Hungarian law and based on that we cannot arrest the Russian President … as the ICC’s statute has not been promulgated in Hungary,” said Gergely Gulyas, chief of staff to Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Reuters reported

And South Africa’s international relations minister, Naledi Pandor, reportedly said Friday that the government is seeking legal advice over their obligations to the ICC if Putin arrives in Durban in August to attend the BRICS summit, the grouping of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.

Pandor said South Africa wants to “be in a position where we could continue to engage with both countries to persuade them towards peace.” 

Mary Glantz, senior adviser for the Russia and Europe Center at the U.S. Institute of Peace, said South Africa’s response to the ICC warrant sends an important signal of the power of the court.

“I think the initial mood in the Global South was business as usual. The fact that they’re even investigating what legal obligations they have and that they’re thinking about this, I think is a positive step,” she said, referring to South Africa.

“It’s a step in the right direction that maybe we’re moving the needle a little on global public opinion about what’s going on in Ukraine.”

It’s an unusual move by the ICC to make public its arrest warrants, Gantz said, and is likely a signal of the court’s confidence in the evidence it has for its case, and that it may have other secret warrants for members of Putin’s inner circle. 

“They could show up somewhere and that country, as a state party, could get the information that ‘nope, there’s an arrest warrant’ and they could be picked up,” Gantz said. 

“It leaves a pall of uncertainty around everybody in [Putin’s] inner circle when it comes to international travel.”

America’s relationship with ICC

The war crimes warrant has also brought up uncomfortable questions for the U.S., which walks a fine line between voicing support for international justice and clashing intensely with the ICC over its pursuit of war crimes investigations allegedly by U.S. soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan. 

The Biden administration has eased friction with the ICC by removing sanctions imposed on its chief prosecutor by the former Trump administration. The ICC, in turn, set aside investigations into alleged crimes committed by American forces in Afghanistan. 

The U.S., which is not a member state of the ICC, has said the court’s most important function is to carry out justice in countries where the home courts are compromised, and that the strength of the American justice system should shield it from efforts to make it a target of the international court. Still, Congress has recognized the U.S. can do more and took recent action to amend U.S. law to better position itself to assist the ICC and apprehend alleged war criminals.

This includes the Justice for Victims of War Crimes Act, signed into law in January, which allows for America’s courts to carry out trials against alleged war criminals who are found to be in the U.S., even if they never targeted Americans or committed crimes in the U.S. The law is unlikely to be used to go after Putin, given the far-fetched scenario he’d travel to the U.S.

Another important piece of legislation, included in the 2023 funding bill, lifted a prohibition on the U.S. working with the ICC, but narrowly defined it to focus specifically on war crimes investigations surrounding Russia’s war in Ukraine.

“And so they changed it to say, ‘OK, for this very, very specific situation, there’s a certain amount of help we can give,’” said Celeste Kmiotek, staff lawyer with the Strategic Litigation Project at the Atlantic Council, which focuses in part on accountability for atrocity crimes and human rights violations.

“This is a very good opportunity for U.S. lawmakers to really consider, potentially being more open to the ICC.”

A delicate debate on U.S. involvement with the ICC is playing out behind closed doors between the Pentagon and the White House, the New York Times reported earlier this month, saying the Department of Defense is blocking the State Department from transferring war crimes evidence to the ICC. 

The evidence reportedly includes material about decisions by Russian officials to deliberately target civilian infrastructure and related to the ICC’s case against Putin and Lvova-Belova.

On Friday, a bipartisan group of senators sent a letter urging President Biden to share U.S.-collected evidence with the ICC: “Knowing of your support for the important cause of accountability in Ukraine, we urge you to move forward expeditiously with support to the ICC’s work so that Putin and others around him know in no uncertain terms that accountability and justice for their crimes are forthcoming.”

A State Department spokesperson said that the administration has “worked hard” over the past two years to improve U.S. relations with the ICC, pointing to the lifting of sanctions and “a return to engagement,” but did not specifically address whether it is directly providing evidence to the international court. 

Child relocation charges just the start?

The war crimes allegations over the forced relocation of children is significant, international law experts have argued, because it could lay the groundwork for more war crimes charges, including genocide and crimes against humanity. 

There’s some optimism to believe Putin and his most senior officials will face justice. 

Of the 18 heads of state or heads of major military forces wanted by international justice, 83 percent have faced accountability, Thomas Warrick, a nonresident senior fellow for the Atlantic Council wrote in an analysis.

Putin has few friends left in the world. Still, support he receives from Chinese President Xi Jinping, and the comments from Hungary and South Africa highlight that the Russian leader is not entirely isolated.

But a larger rap sheet, possibly including genocide and other heinous war crimes, could help pressure action from countries who have stayed on the sidelines. 

“You got to wonder, how many states really want to be seen standing side-by-side with an accused war criminal,” Gantz said, “somebody who is accused of kidnapping children, at this point, and could potentially be accused of genocide, which I think could be even more poisonous, even more toxic to people standing next to him.” 

Tags ICC Russia-Ukraine war Vladimir Putin Vladimir Putin

Copyright 2023 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Strong signal, pending action: Putin’s warrant shows limits of international law - The Hill
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Saturday, March 25, 2023

Friday, March 24, 2023

With Abortion Protection Bill Pending in Salem, Planned Parenthood Associates Names Interim Leader - Willamette Week

It’s a fraught time for reproductive health in the United States. Although Oregon has strong protections for abortion, one of the state’s leading advocacy groups in that policy area, Pro-Choice Oregon, shut down last month after 50 years, despite the renewed risks that followed the U.S. Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade last June.

Oregon lawmakers are currently considering House Bill 2002, which would strengthen protections and insurance coverage for abortions and gender-affirming care, but the state’s leading political force in that arena, Planned Parenthood Advocates of Oregon, is leaderless since executive director An Do became Gov. Tina Kotek’s communications director in January.

Stepping into the breach: former House Majority Leader Jennifer Williamson (D-Portland), who will serve as interim director until the organization replaces Do. Williamson currently works for Strategies 360, a lobbying and political consulting firm that represents Planned Parenthood Advocates.

“It’s a critical time for reproductive health in Oregon and in the nation,” Williamson says. “Planned Parenthood Advocates is the only organization solely focused on that policy area in Oregon.”

HB 2022 is scheduled for a work session March 27 at 3 pm in front of the House Committee on Behavioral Heath and Health Care.

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With Abortion Protection Bill Pending in Salem, Planned Parenthood Associates Names Interim Leader - Willamette Week
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Manhattan DA blasts House GOP for ‘unprecedented inquiry into a pending local prosecution’ - The Independent

Wednesday, March 22, 2023

HPD: Charges pending after argument leads to shooting at Overlook Apartments - WDAM

HATTIESBURG, Miss. (WDAM) - The Hattiesburg Police Department expects to issue charges as they investigate a shooting at an apartment complex Monday morning.

According to HPD spokesman Ryan Moore, officers responded to a report of the shooting at 3610 Campbell Drive, at the Overlook Apartments complex, just after 9 a.m.

When officers arrived on the scene, they were told that two people were in an argument, and one of them shot several rounds during the incident.

HPD says there were no injuries during the incident, and everyone involved has been accounted for.

Moore says charges are pending as the investigation is ongoing.

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HPD: Charges pending after argument leads to shooting at Overlook Apartments - WDAM
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Pending BOE OK, New Branford Schools Superintendent Named - Patch

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Pending BOE OK, New Branford Schools Superintendent Named  Patch
Pending BOE OK, New Branford Schools Superintendent Named - Patch
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Sunday, March 19, 2023

Teacher who assigned 'sexual fantasy' story on leave pending investigation - KVAL

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Teacher who assigned 'sexual fantasy' story on leave pending investigation  KVAL
Teacher who assigned 'sexual fantasy' story on leave pending investigation - KVAL
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Funerals pending for March 19 - Bloomington - The Pantagraph

CRAIG, Patricia L., 90, Melvin, died Saturday (March 18, 2023). Rosenbaum Funeral Home, Gibson City. 

SHORT, Andrew C., 35, Heyworth, died Tuesday (March 14, 2023). Calvert Funeral Home, Clinton.

SMITH, David M., 76, Bloomington, died Friday (March 17, 2023). Carmody-Flynn Funeral Home, Bloomington.

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Funerals pending for March 19 - Bloomington - The Pantagraph
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Friday, March 17, 2023

Milwaukee real estate group pending purchase of Northridge Mall property - WDJT

MILWAUKEE (CBS 58) -- A Milwaukee-based real estate group signed a purchase agreement for Northridge Mall Thursday afternoon, a surprising and last-minute move ahead of Friday's court hearing said Judge Sosnay.

The sealed purchase agreement is from Phoenix Investors LLC, a company that redevelops dilapidated properties.

Friday's conversation was supposed to be about the city's request for ownership over the mall; Judge Sosnay delayed the ruling.

The judge suggested Phoenix Investors and the city talk over the purchase agreement and raze order.

"To the city, I'm encouraging you to be receptive, you might as well see what they propose," said Sosnay.

City Attorney Odalo Ohiku said the move was a delay tactic.

Nick DeSiato, chief of staff for the City of Milwaukee, said he backs anything that will help the city thrive.

"We're just finding out about this agreement from yesterday, and while of course we want to have development in this community, it needs to be the right development for this community," said DeSiato.

The owners of Black Spruce Enterprises did not appear in court. The company's attorney said his client could not attend for lack of childcare during spring break. The owner lives in Canada.

The judge issued Black Spruce a new fine of $1,000 against the directors which will accumulate daily until they comply with orders. They were also issued another lien for over $200,000 at the city's request. 

The next expected court date is March 14.

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Milwaukee real estate group pending purchase of Northridge Mall property - WDJT
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Erdoğan Lifts Objections to Finland’s Pending NATO Membership - National Review

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Erdoğan Lifts Objections to Finland’s Pending NATO Membership  National Review
Erdoğan Lifts Objections to Finland’s Pending NATO Membership - National Review
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Thursday, March 16, 2023

Large Russian city's anti-Putin former mayor jailed for 14 days pending trial - Fox News

A former mayor of Russia's fourth-largest city was ordered to spend 14 days in custody on Thursday pending his trial on charges that could entail a longer prison term, part of authorities' efforts to muzzle dissent.

Yevgeny Roizman, a sharp critic of the Kremlin, is one of the most visible and charismatic opposition figures in Russia. He enjoyed broad popularity while serving as mayor of Yekaterinburg, a city of 1.5 million people in the Ural Mountains.

Last year, Roizman, 60, who was mayor from 2013 to 2018, faced accusations of discrediting the Russian military and was barred from attending public events, using the internet, telephone or mail and communicating with anyone other than his lawyers and close family pending his trial.

RUSSIA DETAINS OPPOSITION LEADER OVER CRITICISM OF WAR IN UKRAINE

Police arrested Roizman on Thursday on charges of reposting material containing a reference to the organization led by jailed Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny that was banned by authorities. Roizman rejected the accusations during a court hearing in Yekaterinburg after his detention and insisted that he wasn't even registered on that social network. His lawyer argued that the repost was done by members of one of his numerous support groups.

Despite Roizman's arguments, the court in Yekaterinburg sentenced him to 14 days in jail. The ruling would bar him from running in the elections set for later this year, although Roizman hasn't voiced an intention to join the race.

Former Yekaterinburg, Russia, Mayor Yevgeny Roziman, a prominent Putin critic, has been ordered to spend at least 14 days in jail pending trial.

Former Yekaterinburg, Russia, Mayor Yevgeny Roziman, a prominent Putin critic, has been ordered to spend at least 14 days in jail pending trial. (AP Photo/Vladimir Podoksyonov)

It was unclear whether the authorities would use his conviction to keep him behind bars for breaking the order not to use the internet. It was also unclear what the sentence would mean for his separate trial on charges of discrediting the military that is expected to open later this month.

Courts repeatedly fined Roizman last year on charges of discrediting the military, and he could face up to three years in prison for a repeat offense if convicted.

RUSSIANS ARRESTED IN THOUSANDS WHILE PROTESTING PUTIN'S MOBILIZATION, HUMAN RIGHTS GROUP SAYS

Days after Russian President Vladimir Putin sent troops into Ukraine last year, Russian lawmakers approved legislation that outlawed the alleged disparagement of the Russian military or the spread of "false information" about the country’s military operation in Ukraine. Courts across the country have increasingly handed out prison terms to critics of Moscow’s actions in Ukraine.

Roizman was one of the few visible opposition figures in Russia who hadn't yet been been jailed or fled the country under pressure from authorities. A prominent opposition politician, Ilya Yashin, was sentenced to 8½ years in prison on charges of discrediting the military, and another top opposition figure, Vladimir Kara-Murza, has been jailed on the same charges and is now facing trial.

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Kara-Murza's health has deteriorated significantly behind bars, his lawyer Vadim Prokhorov said. The politician couldn't attend a court hearing on Thursday and it was canceled, Prokhorov said on Facebook. The defense will work on getting the politician to a civilian hospital for examination and treatment and on releasing him from custody pending trial, Prokhorov said.

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Wednesday, March 15, 2023

More cases pending in $15M fraud involving former TD Bank employees in Miami-Dade - WPLG Local 10

MIAMI – More cases remain pending in a fraud that involved two former employees of TD Bank in Miami-Dade County who remained at The Federal Detention Center on Tuesday in downtown Miami.

Daniel “Danny” Hernandez, the bank’s former area retail marketing manager and a former Bank of America financial center manager in Miami, admitted to using his position to recruit Armando Ariel De León, a TD Bank employee, and a group of bank customers in a conspiracy to defraud federal pandemic-related aid programs of over $25 million, according to prosecutors.

Hernandez’s plot, which mainly involved defrauding two Small Business Administration programs — The Paycheck Protection Program and the Economic Injury Disaster Loan — succeeded in getting about $15 million, according to federal prosecutors.

Hernandez pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud in December, and he was sentenced to 10 years in prison last week. De León pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud in October and he was sentenced to five years in prison last month.

Investigators identified four other alleged co-conspirators as William Alexander Posada Sandrea, Erich Javier Alfonso Barata, Alvaro Enrique Castillo, and Douglas David Melean Socorro.

Prosecutors filed a federal case for conspiracy to commit bank fraud against Posada Sandrea in May that remained pending on Tuesday after he pleaded guilty in July and didn’t show up for sentencing in October, court records show.

Prosecutors filed a federal case of conspiracy to commit wire fraud against Barata in June and closed it in October, court records show. Prosecutors also filed federal cases against Castillo and Melean Socorro in May and September that also remained pending on Tuesday.

Investigators asked anyone with information about the cases to call the Department of Justice’s National Center for Disaster Fraud Hotline at 1-866-720-5721 or visit this page to file a complaint form.

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    Tuesday, March 14, 2023

    Miami Township fire chief on administrative leave 'pending an investigation' - WCPO 9 Cincinnati

    MIAMI TOWNSHIP, Ohio — On Friday, Miami Township Fire Chief Brien Lacey was placed on paid administrative leave "pending an investigation," the township announced.

    A press release from Miami Township in Hamilton County was issued on Tuesday, though it did not elaborate on the investigation that necessitated Lacey's leave. The press release contained two lines, one confirming Lacey's paid administrative leave pending an investigation and one stating the township will not comment further.

    Lacey was promoted to fire chief Miami Township Fire & EMS in December 2020, according to a social media post announcing his new position. Before that, he was sworn in as the assistant chief in December 2019.

    This is a developing story and will be updated as more information becomes available.

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    Report: Patriots tender pending restricted free agent cornerback - Patriots Wire

    The New England Patriots tendered defensive back Myles Bryant on Tuesday afternoon, according to ESPN’s Mike Reiss. Bryant’s tender is $2.6 million for a one-year deal.

    He has been with the organization since the 2020 season. His best season came in 2022, when he recorded 70 tackles, 45 solo tackles and an interception, in addition to six pass deflections. Granted, it wasn’t all good, but he clearly upped his game in a year where the defense had to carry the team.

    Bryant coming back for another season would mean the Patriots retain another piece of their secondary. Corner Jonathan Jones was retained on Monday after signing a two-year deal with the team.

    Keep in mind, New England would have a chance to match if another team signs Bryant to an offer sheet.

    The Patriots have not made many splashes so far in free agency, outside of keeping players already in the organization. Nevertheless, this particular move aims to give New England continued stability in the secondary.

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    JSO officer arrested: Criminal case pending - ActionNewsJax.com

    JACKSONVILLE, Fla — Reports from the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office state that On Friday, March 10, at approximately 7:00 p.m., a St. Johns County Sheriff’s Deputy conducted a traffic stop on a vehicle being driven by an active police officer with the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office. 

    The stop occurred following a reported speeding violation on U.S. 1 North in St. Johns County, Florida.

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    Following the stop and contacting the driver, Craig Aaron Soucek, the officer had reason to believe that he was driving under the influence and as a result, he requested the response of a DUI Unit and roadside field sobriety exercises were requested.  Following the interaction with the deputy, Soucek was arrested for Driving Under the Influence of Alcohol and transported to the St. Johns County Detention Center.

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    Officer Craig Soucek was off duty and driving a personal vehicle at the time of the traffic stop and subsequent arrest.  He has been employed with the City of Jacksonville for 23 years (May/1999).  As a result of the arrest, he has been administratively reassigned while the criminal case is pending.

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    This arrest marks the fourth of a JSO employee this year.

    Click here to download the free Action News Jax news and weather apps, click here to download the Action News Jax Now app for your smart TV and click here to stream Action News Jax live.

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