Cesar Chavez’s family to endorse Biden after RFK Jr. claims civil rights leader would’ve voted for him


President Biden is set to be endorsed Friday by members of Cesar Chavez‘s family — a mostly symbolic gesture, but one meant to send a signal to independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who’s trying to invoke his own family’s ties to the late union organizer and civil rights leader.  

Fernando and Paul Chavez, the sons of the late co-founder of the United Farm Workers, are endorsing the president on Friday, the Biden campaign told CBS News. The family already has close ties to the campaign as Julie Chavez Rodriguez, the granddaughter of Chavez, serves as the president’s campaign manager.

“The bonds of affection and respect for a president who by his character and actions consistently reflects the genuine legacy of my father, Cesar Chavez,” Paul Chavez said in a statement.

A sculpture of Cesar Chavez is seen in the Oval Office on January 28, 2021.
A sculpture of Latino American civil rights and labor leader Cesar Chavez is displayed in the Oval Office of the White House, Jan. 28, 2021.

Evan Vucci / AP


“Today, my grandfather’s bust sits in the Oval Office — a reminder that President Biden understands the power of organizing and working people and recognizes the impact of my grandfather’s legacy to continue to mobilize our communities into action,” Julie Chavez Rodriguez told CBS News. “In an election that will determine the fate of organized labor, our Latino community, and our democracy, I could not be more humbled to accept the support of my family as one of many that will power us to victory in November ¡Si se puede!.”  

An historic 36.2 million Latino voters are eligible to vote in this year’s election, an increase of 6 million voters since 2020, according to Pew Research. Both Mr. Biden and former President Donald Trump have been courting the Hispanic vote in key battleground states like Nevada and Arizona. Recent polls show this crucial demographic may be more up for grabs than in recent presidential cycles. While Mr. Biden still garners majority support from Latino voters, his backing from this critical demographic has waned. According to a CBS News poll from late February, Mr. Biden’s support among Hispanic voters has dropped by 12 points since 2020, from 65% to 53%.

Enter RFK Jr., who in his independent bid for the White House has been utilizing his uncle John F. Kennedy’s famous “Viva Kennedy” mantel in recent weeks to appeal to Latinos. On Saturday, borrowing heavily from the 1960s slogan, Kennedy will campaign in Los Angeles at a “Viva Kennedy 2024” event designed to launch his campaign’s outreach to Hispanic voters and to connect his insurgent White House bid to his father’s historic ties to the farmworker movement that helped birth the modern-day Latino civil rights movement. 

The friendship between the elder Kennedy and United Farm Workers’ iconic leader Cesar Chavez helped galvanize Latino support for Robert F. Kennedy in the 1968 Democratic presidential primary before he was assassinated after winning the California primary. 

This is the second time in two weeks that Mr. Biden’s reelection campaign has tried to blunt Kennedy’s campaign. On St. Patrick’s Day, the president gave members of the extended Kennedy family — including some of the candidate’s siblings and cousins — a private tour of the Oval Office and West Wing before hosting them with hundreds of others at a holiday reception. Members of the Kennedy family posted photos with the president in a signal that they stand with Mr. Biden and the Democratic Party’s nominee, despite their relative’s campaign.

The president’s ties to the Kennedy and Chavez families and his appreciation for their patriarchs are not only deeply personal, but also marked in the White House, as busts of both Robert F. Kennedy and Cesar Chavez are prominently displayed in the Oval Office.



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Breaking down Trump’s free speech claims in Georgia election case


Breaking down Trump’s free speech claims in Georgia election case – CBS News

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A judge in the Georgia 2020 election case heard arguments Thursday over whether former President Donald Trump’s First Amendment rights shield him from prosecution. CBS News campaign reporter Katrina Kaufman joins “America Decides” with key takeaways.

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Ruby Franke’s husband claims Jodi Hildebrandt was possessed


The estranged husband of Ruby Franke, the Utah family vlogger convicted of child abuse, alleged that her business partner, Jodi Hildebrandt, was possessed, according to an interview released last week by prosecutors in Washington County, Utah.Kevin Franke, who filed for divorce from Ruby Franke in November, said he became Hildebrandt’s “resident exorcist” during the time they allowed the former life coach to stay in their house. 

The two were arrested in August after police found one of Franke’s sons emaciated with open wounds and bound with duct tape. He had escaped Hildebrandt’s home to a neighbor’s house. One of Franke’s daughters was found in a similar malnourished condition in Hildebrandt’s home. 

Both women were sentenced in February to four one- to 15-year terms in prison, served consecutively. Under Utah law, the maximum aggregate sentence for consecutive terms is 30 years.

In the interview, Kevin Franke — who has not been charged with any crimes — said he witnessed Hildebrandt at times “go into possession mode” and “talk in different voices.”

“It was really creepy,” he said, “but the voices would say: ‘She’s ours. We’re not letting go. She is Satan’s bride.’”

Attorneys for Kevin Franke, Ruby Franke and Hildebrandt did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The interview is the latest window into the monthslong child abuse case that became a public spectacle. Last week, the Washington County Attorney’s Office also released Ruby Franke’s heavily redacted handwritten journal entries, which detailed months of abuse. 

Ruby Franke, right, and business partner, Jodi Hildebrandt, speaks during an Instagram video posted to their @moms_of_truth account.
Ruby Franke, right, and her business partner, Jodi Hildebrandt, in a video posted to their @moms_of_truth Instagram account.@moms_of_truth via Instagram

The Franke family rose to prominence on YouTube, where they amassed 2.3 million subscribers to their now-defunct channel, “8 Passengers.” Ruby Franke’s strict parenting style on the channel had drawn concern from viewers and neighbors in the years before her arrest.

Hildebrandt also faced scrutiny over her life-coaching service, ConneXions, which some former clients have described to NBC News as a program that isolated them from loved ones and destroyed marriages.

Kevin Franke told authorities why he and Ruby Franke decided to take Hildebrandt in, sharing his timeline of events in the years the two women became close.

He said he got involved with ConneXions in 2020 after his wife and one of her close friends persuaded him to join a men’s group that met with Hildebrandt every week. For a while, he said, the meetings seemed to help strengthen their marriage.

But things began to change in March 2021, he said, when Hildebrandt allegedly told her inner circle that she “believed she was being tormented and haunted by shadow figures every night.” By mid-April that year, he said, Hildebrandt had reached out to Ruby Franke for help.

“Ruby was convinced that we could intervene and help Jodi,” he told investigators. “I didn’t want anything to do with it.”

Kevin Franke said he visited Hildebrandt’s home for the first time in May 2021, when she opened up to the couple about her struggles. That was when he noticed “crashes in the basement while we were talking upstairs and plates in the kitchen just flying off by themselves, like full speed smashing on the wall and falling to the floor by themselves.”

Eventually, he said, he reluctantly agreed to take Hildebrandt into his and Ruby Franke’s home. He said he saw Hildebrandt go into trances.

“The moment she showed up at my house, just the weirdest crap started happening: lights turning on and off, sounds of people walking in walls — like footprints going up walls and across the ceiling — and stuff floating around,” he said. “It was weird and I hated it. And I became the resident exorcist.”

He said Ruby Franke had begun going into her own trances by September 2021, during which she allegedly believed she was in heaven speaking with God and Jesus. He claimed she and Hildebrandt would lock themselves in a room for hours, after which, he said, Ruby Franke would tell him about her visions and the work God had called upon them to do.

Read NBC News’ coverage of Ruby Franke:

Kevin Franke described growing more suspicious of Hildebrandt and her intentions as Ruby Franke appeared to grow closer to her. He claimed that prompted Ruby Franke to ask for a separation in July 2022. After he moved out, he told investigators, every week turned into “psychological hell.”

“The only way I would ever get back into my house was I had to get Jodi’s approval, because if I didn’t get Jodi’s approval. I would never get Ruby’s approval,” he said. 

“As I’m looking back, I’m realizing there wasn’t a solution, and it was, you either had Jodi’s approval or you didn’t,” he said, adding, “She became like the arbiter of truth, the arbiter of forgiveness, God’s own mouthpiece.”

In October last year, just before Kevin Franke filed for divorce, his attorney Randy Kester told TODAY.com that the Frankes had been separated “at Ruby’s directive.”

“Kevin did not want to be separated,” Kester said. “He wanted to work through concerns as a family. There was never any formal, written decree of separate maintenance or separation agreement. The separation was under terms prescribed by Ruby and Jodi Hildebrandt.”

Lawyers for Ruby Franke said at the time of the divorce filing that she was “devastated” by the news but that she understood Kevin Franke’s reasoning and respected his decision.

During the trial, lawyers for Ruby Franke said Hildebrandt “systematically isolated” her from her family over a long period, which caused her to adopt a “distorted sense of morality” under Hildebrandt’s influence.

“For the past four years, I’ve chosen to follow counsel and guidance that has led me into a dark delusion,” Ruby Franke said at her sentencing hearing. “My distorted version of reality went largely unchecked as I would isolate from anyone who challenged me.”

Hildebrandt also gave a brief statement to the court during the sentencing.

“I desire for [the children] to heal physically and emotionally,” she said. “One of the reasons I did not go to trial is because I did not want them to emotionally relive the experience, which would have been detrimental to them. My hope and prayer is that they will heal and move forward to have beautiful lives.”



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Trump’s claims on crime rates clash with police data



Surging crime levels, out-of-control Democratic cities and “migrant crime.”

Former President Donald Trump regularly cites all three at his campaign rallies, in news releases and on Truth Social, often saying President Joe Biden and Democrats are to blame.

But the crime picture Trump paints contrasts sharply with years of police and government data at both the local and national levels.

FBI statistics released this year suggested a steep drop in crime across the country last year. It’s a similar story across major cities, with violent crime down year over year in Chicago, New York and Washington, D.C.

NBC News analyzed crime data to evaluate Trump’s assertions about the topic.

U.S. and big city crime rates

Trump’s campaign often refers to crime levels, regularly pointing the finger at Biden.

“On Joe Biden’s watch, violent crime has skyrocketed in virtually every American city,” the campaign said in a news release published this month on its site.

Trump himself has made similar remarks.

“Four years ago, I told you that if crooked Joe Biden got to the White House, our borders would be abolished, our middle class would be decimated and our communities would be plagued by bloodshed, chaos and violent crime,” Trump said in a speech last month at the Conservative Political Action Conference. “We were right about everything.”

Government figures don’t support that characterization.

Reported violent crime dropped 6% across the board when comparing the last three months of 2022 to the same period in 2023, the FBI reported.

The reported drops were especially pronounced in the big cities that Trump often assails, many of which have Democratic mayors. Violent crime dropped by 11% in cities with populations of 1 million or more, according to FBI data, while murders dropped by 20%, rape was down 16%, and aggravated assault fell by 11%.

Reached for comment, the Trump campaign pointed to other reports indicating that certain types of crimes increased in specific cities.

At the national level, the reported rate of violent crime in 2022, the most recent full year with comprehensive FBI data, was 380.7 offenses per 100,000 people. That’s lower than the overall reported violent crime rate from 2020 — the last full year Trump was in office — when the figure was at 398.5.

The lowest reported violent crime rate of Trump’s presidency was in 2019, when the metric was at 380.8 — in line with the 2022 rate.

The FBI said it will release more comprehensive 2023 crime data in October, just before the election.

The Trump campaign, reached for comment, cited certain categories of violent crime, such as motor vehicle theft, as having increased during the Biden administration, according to FBI figures.

“Joe Biden is trying to convince Americans not to believe their own eyes,” campaign press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement, adding that “Democrats have turned great American cities into cesspools of bloodshed and crime.”

New York City crime

Trump, who was born and raised in New York but now lives in Florida, often rails against what he portrays as an increasing crime rate in his former hometown.

Those references to soaring violence have only increased as he faces criminal charges in New York accusing him of falsifying business records related to hush money payments to adult film star Stormy Daniels. Trump, who has pleaded not guilty in that case, must also post a $175 million bond to prevent state Attorney General Letitia James from collecting the judgment from a New York civil fraud case.

“I did nothing wrong, and New York should never be put in a position like this again,” Trump posted on Truth Social about the civil judgment in all capital letters. “Businesses are fleeing, violent crime is flourishing, and it is very important that this be resolved in its totality as soon as possible.”

In a separate post, he claimed that “murders & violent crime hit unimaginable records” in the city.

However, major crimes in New York City are down this year by 2.3%, according to police department data comparing year-to-date figures to the same period in 2023.

Those figures for last year were also far below the highs from recent decades. In 1990, more than 527,000 major crimes were reported, compared to more than 126,000 last year, according to New York police data — a drop of more than 75%.

In 2001, more than 162,000 major crimes were reported in New York. The figure dropped by more than 20% over the next two decades.

At the same time, New York City data indicates that the number of major crimes increased in the past few years, though reported violent crimes like murder and rape were down last year from previous years.

‘Migrant crime’

Trump’s dehumanizing language about migrants has become a mainstay of his political speeches since he first sought office in 2015.

In a news release this month, his campaign said the “border Crisis has created a tragic surge in violent crime against innocent American citizens at the hands of some of the world’s most violent criminals.”

Trump has also focused his energy on high-profile cases such as the death of Laken Riley, who was killed in Georgia while jogging. The suspect is a Venezuelan citizen who entered the U.S. illegally in 2022.

“Every day, innocent citizens are being killed, stabbed, shot, raped and murdered because of Biden migrant crime,” Trump said in a video posted to his campaign’s X account last week.

However, there is no evidence of a migrant-driven crime wave in the U.S., according to local police department data.

Crime reports have decreased in several major cities targeted by Texas’ Operation Lone Star, a program backed by Republican Gov. Greg Abbott that flies or buses migrants from the state to Democratic-run cities across the U.S.

Several of those cities — New York, Chicago, Washington and Philadelphia — have had decreases in year-to-date reported crime totals compared to the same period last year.






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ISIS claims responsibility for Moscow attack, suspects appear in court


ISIS claims responsibility for Moscow attack, suspects appear in court – CBS News

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The four men accused of carrying out the deadliest terror attack in Russia in nearly 20 years appeared in court on terrorism charges Sunday. More than 130 people were killed when the men allegedly opened fire at a concert hall near Moscow on Friday. An affiliate of the Islamic State group says it was behind the attack. CBS News national security contributor Sam Vinograd has more.

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Baseless ‘2020 poll fraud’ claims resurface ahead of S. Korea vote in April


As South Korea geared up for elections in April, social media posts shared a photo of a stack of ballot papers they misleadingly claimed was evidence of vote rigging in the country’s 2020 polls. The picture was taken by a lawyer who alleged votes cast for the Democratic Party in the city of Guri did not have any fold marks, suggesting they were fraudulently filled out. However, the Supreme Court ruled ballots without clear fold marks were not proof of fraud. A legal bid to challenge election results in Guri was dismissed.

The photo, which was shared on Facebook on March 8, 2024, shows a bundle of ballot papers.

The top one shows a vote cast for the Democratic Party’s Yun Ho-jung, who was elected member of parliament for Guri in 2020 (archived link).

Yun’s party won in a landslide and secured the most number of seats in the National Assembly.

Korean text below the picture says police must “prevent the emergence of piles of printed ballots like these during the April 10, 2024 poll”.

<span>Screenshot of the Facebook post, taken on March 15</span>

Screenshot of the Facebook post, taken on March 15

A reverse image search on Google found the photo was originally posted on Facebook by lawyer Park Joo-hyun on May 21, 2020.

“Evidence preserved from the Guri Election Commission,” he wrote in Korean.

“How come the ballot papers inside the early absentee voting envelope are so stiff? They’re as stiff as newly printed banknotes!”

He told South Korean daily Chosun Ilbo that the “stiff” early voting ballots — those that looked fresh and without apparent creases — were suspicious as voters would have to fold them in half to fit the return envelope (archived link).

Similar posts misleadingly claiming the photo was evidence of fraud have circulated online since the 2020 vote here, here and here.

Court cases

However, Korea’s Supreme Court rejected a similar argument in a case it heard alleging fraud in the 2020 elections.

The case — filed in a district in Incheon, southwest of the capital Seoul — argued ballots without fold marks should be considered forgeries.

The court ruled in July  2022 that the absence of fold marks alone did not provide evidence of irregularities (archived link).

It noted the ballots were small enough to be put in the ballot box without folding or placed in the return envelope for absentee, early voters.

Moreover, the court said it used a microscope to examine the ballots that the plaintiff claimed to have no fold marks and in fact found marks on a significant number of them.

The plaintiff was not identified in the ruling.

In addition, the election commission said in its invalid ballots guideline that unfolded ballots were considered valid unless the voter intentionally disclosed their vote (archived link).

As of March 22, 2024, no evidence of rigging in the 2020 election emerged, despite multiple cases filed in court.

According to South Korea’s election commission, 126 lawsuits sought to nullify various poll results in 2020 but no vote rigging was substantiated to date (archived link).

In Guri city, where the picture circulating online was taken, two legal bids challenged the results, a representative from the commission told AFP on March 18.

One of the bids was dropped while the court dismissed the other due to the applicant’s failure to follow proper civil procedure, the representative added.

Ballot paper

Ballot papers have “better crease recovery” compared to regular paper, the election commission representative also said.

A representative from Moorim SP — one of two paper manufacturers that supply ballot paper in South Korea — separately told AFP on March 20: “If ballots are folded, they are unfolded before being put into a sorter. If the ballot paper’s ability to recover from creasing is poor, it causes jamming and hinders the automated sorting process.”

The election commission confirmed to AFP the same type of paper will be used for ballots in the upcoming April poll.



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Kyiv rebuffs Putin’s claims that gunmen who killed 133 Russian concertgoers had links to Ukraine


  • Russian President Vladimir Putin linked Moscow concert hall attackers to Ukraine.

  • At least 133 people were killed by gunmen, and 11 have suspects been detained, say Russian sources.

  • ISIS-K claimed responsibility for the attack.

Russian President Vladimir Putin claimed the gunmen who attacked a Moscow concert hall and killed 133 people had links to Ukraine, an allegation Kyiv completely rejected.

“They tried to escape and were moving toward Ukraine, where, according to preliminary information, a window was prepared for them from the Ukrainian side to cross the state border,” Putin said.

Putin alleged the connection when he broke his silence on the attack 20 hours after at least four gunmen infiltrated Crocus City Hall in Krasnogorsk, on the outskirts of the Russian capital.

Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) had earlier claimed a link between Ukraine and the gunmen in a statement, said Russian news agency TASS.

“The terrorists planned to cross the border and had contacts on the Ukrainian side,” the message read.

Pro-Putin supporters on social media platformed the baseless theory in the immediate aftermath of the attack.

Kyiv denied any involvement and called the FSB claims a”provocation,” per the Kyiv Post.

Andrii Yusov, a representative of the Main Intelligence Directorate (HUR) of the Ministry of Defense, rejected the FSB’s statements as “absurd.”

Putin had dismissed US warnings

Emergency services vehicles are seen outside the burning Crocus City Hall concert hall following the shooting incident in Krasnogorsk, outside Moscow on March 22, 2024.

Emergency services vehicles are seen outside the burning Crocus City Hall concert hall following the shooting incident in Krasnogorsk, outside Moscow on March 22, 2024.Photo by STRINGER/AFP via Getty Images

The four gunmen have been detained, said Putin, alongside seven other detainees.

According to Russia’s Investigative Committee: “The death toll will rise further. According to preliminary data, the causes of death were gunshot wounds and poisoning by combustion products.”

ISIS-K, one of the most active regional affiliates of the Islamic State, claimed responsibility for the attack.

The militant group previously hit the headlines for orchestrating the suicide bombing at the Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul that killed 13 US military soldiers and 169 civilians in 2021.

Putin called on international cooperation to address terrorism.

“We will stand united against this common enemy of international terrorism no matter where it shows its ugly head,” he said, per Politico.

Just three days before the rampage, Putin dismissed US warnings about an incident as “blackmail.”

Read the original article on Business Insider





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Russia hits Ukraine with deadly hypersonic missile strike as Kyiv claims local women spying for Moscow


Odesa, Ukraine — About 30 miles from the front line in eastern Ukraine, two Russian hypersonic missiles damaged an apartment building and a hotel popular with international journalists covering the war. Pavlo Kyrylenko, head of the regional military administration in the Donetsk region, said seven people were killed in the Monday evening strike with 81 more wounded, including two children.

Almost half of those wounded in the attack were Ukrainian fire and rescue workers, as the second missile struck about 40 minutes after the first. Emergency services rushed to the site of the first explosion, not knowing that a second missile was about to hit. 

Aftermath of a Russian missile attack in Pokrovsk
Rescuers work at the site of a building destroyed during in a Russian missile strike in Pokrovsk, Donetsk region, Ukraine, August 8, 2023.

VIACHESLAV RATYNSKYI/REUTERS


Russia claimed it had struck a Ukrainian army command post in Pokrovsk, but Ukrainian officials accused Vladimir Putin’s forces of deliberately targeting first responders.

“All of (the police) were there because they were needed, putting their efforts into rescuing people after the first strike,” Ivan Vyhivskyi, Ukraine’s National Police chief, said according to The Associated Press. “They knew that under the rubble were the injured — they needed to react, to dig, to retrieve, to save, and the enemy deliberately struck the second time.”

Stunned and staring at an apartment building with its walls crumbling right after the strike, residents of the town of Pokrovsk quickly turned into rescuers, scrambling to help the wounded who lay sprawled out on the ground.

“The flames filled my eyes,” said Kateryna, a 58-year-old local woman who was wounded in the attack. “I fell on the floor… there’s shrapnel in my neck.”

Lydia, her 75-year-old neighbor, said a window fell onto her, leaving her back, knee and legs cut up.

Aftermath of a Russian missile attack in Pokrovsk
Lydia, 75, a local resident, sits in her destroyed flat, at an apartment building destroyed during a Russian missile strike, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Pokrovsk, Donetsk region, Ukraine, August 8, 2023.

VIACHESLAV RATYNSKYI/REUTERS


Part of the local hotel Druzhba — which means “friendship” — was also smashed. It has been used by many journalists covering this war, including our own CBS News team who were there in June. They had to take shelter in the hotel basement when a missile exploded outside.

“Russia is trying to leave only broken and scorched stones,” said Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. “We have to stop Russian terror.”

Local woman allegedly spying for Russia

That terror, according to Ukraine’s counterintelligence services, included a sleeper cell of Russian agents within the local population.

Ukraine’s SBU Counterintelligence agency said Tuesday that it had arrested three more Ukrainian women from the Pokrovsk district who were allegedly part of a covert network of Russian agents transmitting the movements of Ukrainian combat aircraft, personnel and military vehicles to the enemy.

ukraine-women-spy-network-donetsk.jpg
An agent of Ukraine’s SBU Counterintelligence agency is seen with a Ukrainian woman from the eastern Pokrovsk district who was arrested as part of an alleged network of Russian informants, according to a statement by the SBU published on August 8, 2023.

Handout/SBU Counterintelligence


The women “walked around the area and secretly took photographs of Ukrainian objects,” the SBU alleged.

The claims came just a day after the spy agency said another Ukrainian woman had been detained and accused of gathering intelligence about a July visit by Zelenskyy to Mykolaiv, a city near the southeast front line, for an alleged assassination attempt on the president and a “massive airstrike” on the region.

The SBU’s Tuesday claims, at least geographically, make sense: The eastern Donetsk region borders Russia, and the further east you go, the more of a historical affinity there is among the local population for Moscow.


Ukraine says woman held in plot to assassinate President Volodymyr Zelenskyy

02:17

“The peculiarity of the enemy group was that it consisted exclusively of local women who supported the armed aggression of the Russian Federation against Ukraine,” the SBU said in a statement revealing the arrests, alleging that the women worked “simultaneously” for Russia’s FSB spy agency and the Wagner Group mercenary army.

Ukraine’s SBU claimed the women arrested this week were in “standby mode,” waiting since before the full-scale invasion was even launched in February 2022, for orders from Moscow.



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Family of Pvt. Travis King Eases Back on Claims of Being Ignored by the Army


The family of Pvt. Travis King is walking back claims that they have not been contacted by the Army since King went over to North Korea.

Jonathan Franks, a spokesman recently hired by the family, took responsibility for the shift in message, telling Military.com in a phone call Monday that “in the hectic end to the week, I got my wires crossed.”

An Army spokesman told Military.com that the service was “confirming details with Travis’ unit” but asserted it was “in regular contact with the family and endeavored to provide all possible information.”

Read Next: Air Force, Space Force Offer New Mental Health Referrals Under Brandon Act

On Monday, Cynthia Smith, an Army spokeswoman, told Military.com that, since King crossed into North Korea, “an Army commander continues to communicate with [King’s mother] via telephone several times a week.”

Smith did not immediately provide additional details when asked by Military.com about the frequency of the phone calls, duration of each conversation, and the name of the Army commander.

“The questions that she has, like any mother would have, are probably pretty difficult for the military to answer at the moment,” Franks said.

Although Franks readily took responsibility for the mismatch in statements, he also noted that the family has struggled with the amount of attention they’ve received from national media since the story of King’s departure broke on July 18, 2023.

Four days ago, King’s mother, Claudine Gates, and his uncle appeared on “Good Morning America,” where she said she couldn’t “function” or “think straight.”

“I was sure that at the end of the week, the issue was the Army was calling and not getting an answer, and it turned out they’ve been calling,” Franks said.

Meanwhile, questions swirl about whether the military will consider King a prisoner of war — a designation that carries certain protections and entitlements under the Geneva Conventions.

Franks says that former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, who has negotiated with North Korea on numerous occasions and helped arrange prisoner releases from other countries, has agreed to help in their case.

It was only on Aug. 1 — two weeks after King disappeared into the reclusive dictatorship — that the Pentagon announced North Korea had acknowledged the United Nations Command’s inquiries. But the Pentagon’s top spokesman, Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder, told reporters at the time that he didn’t have “any substantial progress to read out.”

Last week, Reuters reported that U.S. officials have yet to confer the status on King, citing his decision to cross into North Korea of his own free will and in civilian attire.

Speaking with reporters Monday, Ryder said that granting King that status is just one possibility — there are others.

“That’s all still under discussion right now,” Ryder said, before noting that “the primary goal right now is just ensuring that Pvt. King is OK, that he’s being taken care of.”

A defense official told Military.com that they expect King to be treated humanely, in accordance with international law.

— Konstantin Toropin can be reached at konstantin.toropin@military.com. Follow him on Twitter @ktoropin.

— Thomas Novelly can be reached at thomas.novelly@military.com. Follow him on Twitter @TomNovelly.

Related: Frustration and Questions Swirl for Family of Soldier Who Ran into North Korea





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Johnny & Associates Sex Abuse Claims ‘Deeply Alarm’ UN Inspectors


A team of United Nations inspectors has said it is “deeply alarmed” by the allegations of sexual abuse that may have taken place at leading Japanese talent agency Johnny & Associates. Abuses may have involved “several hundred” talents, according to the org.

The United Nations Working Group on Business and Human Rights began its first official visit to Japan last month and concluded 12 days of meetings and interviews last week.

While the group met with government departments and more than a dozen companies, special attention was paid to Johnny’s during the visit. The company was specifically discussed in the group’s end-of-mission statement.

Abuses are alleged to have occurred during the period before the 2019 death of company founder Johnny Kitagawa. The scale of abuse and the Japanese media’s part in covering up the allegations, which were first disclosed in the 1990s by the Shukan Bunshun magazine and were heard in open court as far back as 2003 in a libel suit, make the Johnny’s case a major scandal.

Mainstream Japanese media are alleged to have ignored problems at Johnny & Associates as they benefited from access to the agency’s music and acting talent. The company was responsible for making stars of acts including the J-Pop band SMAP, Tanokin Trio, Arashi, Kinki Kids and KAT-TUN.

The scandal had remained largely dormant until March, when the BBC aired a documentary that included interviews with alleged victims of Kitagawa’s abuse. Since then, others have come forward and identified themselves as Kitagawa’s victims.

“Our interactions with victims of sexual harassment involving Johnny and Associates talents have exposed deeply alarming allegations of sexual exploitation and abuse involving several hundreds of the company’s talents, with media companies in Japan reportedly implicated in covering up the scandal for decades,” reads the UN group’s end-of-mission statement.

Johnny’s and TEPCO, the power giant that was the operator of the Fukushima nuclear power plant, were the only companies singled out for explicit mention in the 10-page statement. TEPCO was criticized for its wage policies and for reportedly forcing subcontractors to work on decontamination of the disaster-hit power station.

At a press conference on Friday, the UN group criticized both Johnny’s and the Japanese government for failing to properly investigate the sexual abuse allegations at the company.

“The perceived inaction by the government and [the company] among victims … highlights the need for the government, as the primary duty bearer, to ensure transparent investigations” into the case, said Pichamon Yeophantong, a political scientist and member of the U.N. Working Group.

The UN group said that Johnny’s appeared not to be taking seriously victim reports and it questioned the independence of the company’s investigation.

“According to testimony received, doubts persist about the transparency and legitimacy of Johnny and Associates’ Special Team (or Independent Team) for investigation. We have received reports of the lack of response to victims seeking mental health consultations from Johnny and Associates’ Mental Care Consultation Desk,” the UN statement said.

Contacted on the eve of the UN group visit in July, Johnny’s denied any knowledge of the UN probe or its participation. “We do not at present have any knowledge whatsoever as to the nature or remit of this matter,” the spokesperson said in a statement emailed to Variety.

The identities of all those who spoke to the UN group about Johnny’s are not known. However, Ishimaru Shimon, now 55, was one who identified himself on Friday. Another former Johnny’s talent, musician Akimasa Nihongi, previously told Kyodo News that he planned to cooperate with the investigation.

The UN group’s chairperson, Damilola Olawuyi, explained to reporters that some of the alleged victims claimed they had been assaulted more than 40 times. The youngest victims were of elementary school age at the time of the alleged abuse.

Casting its net wider than the allegations of sexual abuse at Johnny’s and the media omerta, the UN Working Group sounded the alarm about a broad range of Japanese media and entertainment industry practices, calling them “deeply troubling.”

“The industry’s exploitative working conditions, along with the lack of labor law protection for workers and a clear legal definition of harassment, foster a culture of impunity for sexual violence and harassment. We were informed, for example, about the sexual harassment and abuse of female journalists and the lack of remedial action taken by broadcasting stations,” reads the end-of-mission statement.

“We were also alerted to excessively long working hours and issues related to unfair subcontracting relationships in the animation sector, with creators often given contracts that inadequately protect their intellectual property rights,” it continued.

While Japan will have to wait until June 2024 before the UN group issues its final definitive report, the coruscating interim text and the Friday press conference may give a further nudge to the country’s #MeToo movement and efforts to reform the country’s entertainment industry.

Cannes Palme d’Or winner Kore-eda Hirokazu and six other directors belonging to a group called Eiga Kantoku Yushi no Kai (which translates to Voluntary Association of Film Directors) last year launched A4C (Action4Cinema/Coalition for the Establishment of a Japan CNC), a non-profit lobby group dedicated to addressing ingrained industry problems.

The A4C members seek to change what they perceive as unfair employment terms. They also advocative for finance flowing back into the industry in order to lift the country’s surprisingly low-budget filmmaking operations.

The A4C members have also thrown their weight behind moves to tackle sexual abuse and the male-dominant industry structure. They allied themselves with the Association to End Sexual Abuse in the Film and Moving Image Industry, a group founded by female actor Suiren Midori, who last year went public with allegations of sexual abuse by (male) director Sakaki Hideo. Sakaki made a general apology, but did not admit to any specifics.

Numerous Japanese film directors have been accused of sexual abuse, though none have yet been charged by police.



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