The following arrests were made recently by local police departments. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Massachusetts’ privacy law prevents police from releasing information involving domestic and sexual violence arrests with the goal to protect the alleged victims.
LOWELL
• Nicole Ellison, 45, homeless; warrant (failure to appear for shoplifting by asportation).
• Milciades Ramirez Ramon, 37, 187 Middlesex St., Lowell; trespassing after notice, violation of bylaws/ordinances (knife).
• Apahlo Sullivan, 29, 18 Park View St., No. 1, Boston; warrant (probation violation for possession Class B drug), possession of Class B drug with intent to distribute, possession of Class A drug with intent to distribute, manufacturing/dispensing Class A drug.
• Wendy Alicea, 46, homeless; warrants (failure to appear for breaking and entering, and vandalizing property).
• Eric Roy, 40, 16 Wright St., Lowell; warrant (leaving scene of property damage), operating motor vehicle after license suspension, possession of Class A drug, possession of Class B drug with intent to distribute, receiving stolen property under $1,200, miscellaneous motor vehicle offense (conceal plate).
• Katelynn Gravlin, 26, homeless; assault and battery with dangerous weapon (knife), assault and battery of police officer, resisting arrest.
• Matthew Howard Gerling, 21, 36 Tsienneto Road, Derry, N.H.; driving without giving proof, driving motor vehicle after license revocation/suspension, speeding 21 to 24 mph over limit of 55 mph or less.
• Maria Vazquez Poveda, 51, 79 Elm St., Apt. 6, Nashua; simple assault.
• Rafael Rodriguez-Torres, 42, 11 Merrimack St., Nashua; failure to appear at arraignment, warrant.
SAN JOSE – A 23-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of slashing a VTA bus driver several times with a knife Wednesday morning in San Jose, according to authorities.
The episode happened just after 7 a.m. at Blossom Hill Road and Hillview Avenue, the Santa Clara County Sheriff’s Office said in a series of social media posts.
The suspect was repeatedly pulling the stop request cord, and when the bus driver confronted him, he became aggressive, pulled out a knife and slashed the driver several times, according to authorities.
The sheriff’s office said the suspect ran from the bus but was quickly detained by deputies. He was booked into county jail on felony charges including assault with a deadly weapon.
The victim was treated for his injuries.
“Violence against transit workers – or anyone on our public transportation system – will not be tolerated,” the sheriff’s office said. “The safety of our community remains our top priority.”
President Trump said Monday he would renew his assault on mail-in voting after Russia’s autocratic leader, Vladimir Putin, told him to do so at their meeting in Alaska last week.
The president provided few details, but wrote on social media that he would “lead a movement to get rid of MAIL-IN BALLOTS, and also, while we’re at it, Highly ‘Inaccurate,’ Very Expensive, and Seriously Controversial VOTING MACHINES.”
Already in March, Trump had issued an executive order directing the Justice Department to “take all necessary action” to prevent mail-in ballots received after election day from being counted. The order also attempted to impose a proof of citizenship requirement for voter registration.
Those portions of the executive action has been enjoined by courts over constitutional concerns. But another provision, directing the independent U.S. Election Assistance Commission to shift its guidance on voting machines banning the use of certain bar codes and quick-response codes, has been allowed to proceed.
The U.S. Constitution states that the timing, place and manner of elections “shall be prescribed in each state” by local legislatures, and that Congress has the ability to pass laws altering state election regulations. The president is given no authority to prescribe or govern election procedures.
Nevertheless, Trump wrote Monday that states “are merely an ‘agent’ for the Federal Government in counting and tabulating the votes.
“They must do what the Federal Government, as represented by the President of the United States, tells them, FOR THE GOOD OF OUR COUNTRY, to do,” he wrote.
Trump’s action comes on the heels of his meeting with Putin in Anchorage, where the Russian leader told him that mail-in ballots led to his electoral defeat in 2020, according to the president.
The U.S. intelligence community has assessed that Putin attempted to influence the last three U.S. presidential elections in Trump’s favor.
Trump blamed his 2020 election loss to President Biden on a conspiracy of voter fraud. But independent analysts, state attorneys general and every court that reviewed the matter found no evidence of fraud that altered results in the race.
“Vladimir Putin said something — one of the most interesting things. He said, ‘Your election was rigged because you have mail-in voting,’” Trump told Fox News in an interview.
Trump has criticized mail-in voting since entering politics in 2015. But his presidential campaign embraced the practice leading up to the 2024 election, encouraging his supporters — especially those affected by Hurricane Helene in North Carolina — to take advantage of mail-in voting opportunities.
“Absentee voting, early voting and election day voting are all good options,” Trump said at the time. “Republicans must make a plan, register and vote!”
But on Monday, Trump wrote that voting machines “cost Ten Times more than accurate and sophisticated Watermark Paper, which is faster, and leaves NO DOUBT, at the end of the evening, as to who WON, and who LOST, the Election.”
“With their HORRIBLE Radical Left policies, like Open Borders, Men Playing in Women’s Sports, Transgender and ‘WOKE’ for everyone, and so much more, Democrats are virtually Unelectable without using this completely disproven Mail-In SCAM,” Trump wrote.
“I, AND THE REPUBLICAN PARTY, WILL FIGHT LIKE HELL TO BRING HONESTY AND INTEGRITY BACK TO OUR ELECTIONS,” he added. “THE MAIL-IN BALLOT HOAX, USING VOTING MACHINES THAT ARE A COMPLETE AND TOTAL DISASTER, MUST END, NOW!!!”
Trump said he would take additional executive action before the 2026 midterm elections, but provided no details on timing.
In the Oval Office yesterday for a meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, Trump said his lawyers were currently in the process of drafting an order. “It’s time that the Republicans get tough and stop it,” he said.
“Mail-in ballots are corrupt. You can never have a real democracy with mail-in ballots. And we as a Republican Party are going to do everything possible to end mail-in ballots,” Trump said. “They’re corrupt.”
BOSTON — A bipartisan group of lawmakers are hoping to close a “loophole” in state law that allows people who impersonate ICE agents and other federal authorities to shake down immigrants or sexually assault women to go without punishment.
The proposal, filed by state Sen. Bruce Tarr, R-Gloucester, Rep. Anne Margaret Ferranate, D-Gloucester, and others would make it a crime to impersonate a federal law enforcement official. Under current law, criminal charges can only be filed against someone accused of impersonating a state or local law-enforcement official.
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A new lawsuit from Maryland accuses the WWE and its founders of fostering a culture of sexual abuse within the organization and looking the other way while a longtime ringside announcer preyed on young men he hired as “ring boys.”
BALTIMORE (AP) — A new lawsuit accuses the WWE and its founders of fostering a culture of sexual abuse within the organization and looking the other way while a longtime ringside announcer preyed on young men he hired as “ring boys.”
The suit was filed Wednesday in Maryland, where a recent law change eliminated the state’s statute of limitations for child sex abuse claims, opening the doors for victims to sue regardless of their age or how much time has passed.
The complaint alleges that Melvin Phillips, who died in 2012, would target young men from disadvantaged backgrounds and hire them as “ring boys” to help with the preparations for wrestling matches. Phillips would then assault them in his dressing room, hotels and even in the wrestlers’ locker room, according to the complaint, which was filed on behalf of five men.
The abuse detailed in the lawsuit occurred over several years during Phillips’ long tenure with the organization, which spanned from the 1970s to the early 1990s. Because of his death, Phillips is not among the named defendants.
Instead, the complaint targets World Wrestling Entertainment founders Vince and Linda McMahon, the husband and wife team who grew the organization into the powerhouse it is today. The couple was well aware of Phillips’ brazen misconduct but did little to stop him, according to the complaint.
“This wasn’t an isolated instance,” said attorney Greg Gutzler, who represents the five unnamed plaintiffs. “There was a culture of abuse and it started at the top.”
According to the lawsuit, which was filed in Baltimore County Circuit Court, the abuse occurred in several states, including Maryland, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Pennsylvania. The plaintiffs were all between 13 and 15 when they met Phillips.
Gutzler said the plaintiffs finally found the strength to come forward and sue after Vince McMahon resigned from WWE’s parent company TKO Group Holdings earlier this year amid his own sexual misconduct scandal. He resigned in January after a woman who previously worked for WWE filed a federal lawsuit accusing him of serious misconduct, including offering her to a star wrestler for sex and distributing pornographic pictures and videos of her. McMahon had already stepped down as WWE’s CEO in 2022 during an investigation into allegations that match those in the federal lawsuit.
An attorney representing McMahon, Jessica Rosenberg, denied the latest abuse allegations contained in Wednesday’s complaint. In a written statement, she referenced New York Post reporting from the early ’90s, saying the recent lawsuit asserts “these same false claims.”
“We will vigorously defend Mr. McMahon and are confident the court will find that these claims are untrue and unfounded,” the statement read.
Emails were sent to Linda McMahon and her organization seeking comment.
Attorneys for the other defendants aren’t yet listed in online court records. Emails seeking comment were sent to WWE and TKO Group Holdings.
McMahon was the leader and most recognizable face at WWE for decades. When he purchased what was then the World Wrestling Federation from his father in 1982, wrestling matches took place at small venues and appeared on local cable channels. WWE matches are now held in professional sports stadiums, and the organization has a sizable overseas following.
WWE merged last April with the company that runs Ultimate Fighting Championship to create the $21.4 billion sports entertainment company TKO Group Holdings.
The lawsuit alleges that WWE leaders “gave Phillips free rein to use his highly public WWE personality and image to entice local kids,” allowing them to meet famous wrestlers and attend the popular events.
It alleges the McMahons fired Phillips in 1988 because of abuse allegations surfacing around that time, but they rehired him six weeks later.
Linda McMahon, who stepped down as the company’s chief executive in 2009, later led the Small Business Administration under former President Donald Trump.
The lawsuit was filed under a Maryland law that went into effect last year after state lawmakers voted to eliminate the statute of limitations for such cases. Before the change, people in Maryland who were sexually abused as children could bring lawsuits up until they turned 38.
Lawmakers approved the change with the Catholic Church sexual abuse scandal in mind after a scathing investigative report revealed the scope of the problem within the Archdiocese of Baltimore. But it opened the door for legal action against a range of other entities, including the state’s juvenile justice agency.
However, the future of these claims is uncertain because the constitutionality of the law is currently being decided by the Supreme Court of Maryland.
WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden is “deeply concerned” about the unauthorized release of classified documents on Israel’s preparation for a potential retaliatory attack on Iran, a White House spokesman said Monday.
The Biden administration is still not certain if the classified information was leaked or hacked, White House national security spokesman John Kirby said. Officials don’t have any indication at this point of “additional documents like this finding their way into the public domain,” he said.
Kirby added that the Pentagon is investigating. U.S. officials on Saturday had confirmed an investigation by the administration.
“We’re deeply concerned, and the president remains deeply concerned about any leakage of classified information into the public domain. That is not supposed to happen, and it’s unacceptable when it does,” Kirby said.
Marked top secret, the documents first appeared online Friday on the Telegram messaging app and quickly spread among Telegram channels popular with Iranians.
Analysts at the SITE Intelligence Group, a consultancy that monitors and analyzes online threats from extremist groups, tracked the release of the documents to a Telegram channel popular with Iran-backed militias. The channel contained posts from an anonymous user with a long history of posting other supposedly top-secret content who said they had access to the leaked documents. The user also wrote that they had sold some of the material and provided it to the Iranian military.
The release comes at a pivotal time in the Middle East, as Israel considers its response to Iran’s attack.
“The smallest item — even something like the leak of this relatively innocuous document — could move things in new directions,” said Rita Katz, SITE’s co-founder and executive director.
Rep. Mike Turner of Ohio, the Republican chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, said the unauthorized release of the information was concerning, especially given the “high stakes of what’s going on in the Middle East right now.”
While it remains possible the information was obtained through hacking, “if this has been a leak, it is criminal and it is certainly espionage,“ Turner said Monday on the BBC.
The Telegram channel identifies itself as being based in Tehran, Iran’s capital. It previously published memes featuring Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and material in support of Tehran’s self-described “Axis of Resistance,” which includes Middle East militant groups armed by the Islamic Republic.
One of the two documents resembled the style of other material from the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency leaked by Jack Teixeira, an Air National Guardsman who pleaded guilty in March to leaking highly classified military documents about Russia’s war on Ukraine and other national security secrets.
However, Israel’s leadership has repeatedly stressed it will not let Iran’s missile attack go unanswered.
The investigation into the release of the documents may take some time as authorities look for digital or physical clues that could reveal how the information got out, and what implications it may have for information management and intelligence sharing with U.S. allies, according to Gavin Wilde, a senior fellow in the Technology and International Affairs Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
“I imagine they’ll eventually get to the bottom of it,” said Wilde, who formerly worked on the National Security Council. “The intelligence community has gotten a lot better at digital chain of custody — who has seen a particular document, how many times it’s been shared, and with whom.”
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre on Monday declined to comment on what changes the government has made to better safeguard top secret information in the aftermath of the Discord leak. She added that Biden has “complete confidence” in the Pentagon, Justice Department and intelligence community following the latest unauthorized disclosure.
The nation’s spy agencies have worked to bolster cybersecurity since the Discord leak and the conviction of former NSA contractor Reality Winner. Accounting for human behavior, however, can be a harder challenge, according to Shawnee Delaney, a former officer at the Defense Intelligence Agency who is now CEO of the Vaillance Group, a private threat analysis firm.
“Cybersecurity isn’t just a technological issue,” Delaney told The Associated Press. “It’s a human one, and humans are wholly unpredictable.”
Spokespeople for the Pentagon and the NSA said officials were aware of the incident but had no further comment.
Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.
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By AAMER MADHANI and DAVID KLEPPER – Associated Press
ALBANY, N.Y. (NEWS10) — University at Albany’s University Police Department is investigating an attack that happened on campus around 4 p.m. on Saturday. Police announced that the assault happened at the Campus Center food court on the Uptown Campus.
Police say two suspects attacked a man, who is now being treated for his injuries. The suspects are described as college-age men and appear in the following photos, according to a University Police safety notification that was sent out to students shortly after the incident:
Photos: UAlbany’s University Police Department
Law enforcement reports that the suspects left the building and may still be on campus. The investigation remains ongoing.
Police ask that anyone with information about this incident, or that needs help on campus, contact UPD at 518-442-3131 or 911 from any campus phone. Stick with NEWS10 as this story develops.
An arrest warrant is out for John Callis, 24, who police say brutally assaulted two 23-year-old men on Sunday after the Washington Commanders and Baltimore Ravens football game in Maryland.
Warning: The video above contains violent imagery that may be unsuitable for certain audiences.
An arrest warrant is out for John Callis, 24, who police say brutally assaulted two 23-year-old men on Sunday after the Washington Commanders and Baltimore Ravens football game in Maryland.
Video of a man wearing a Baltimore Ravens jersey beating two men went viral, and police identified the person as Callis. He is wanted on charges of first-degree aggravated assault and three counts of second-degree assault.
Callis’ lawyer, Patrick Seidel, told WTOP in a statement, “We are aware of the criminal allegations and have been in direct communication with the State’s Attorney’s Office. Mr. Callis will be voluntarily surrendering himself.”
The insurance company Maury Donnelly & Parr Inc., where Callis reportedly worked, posted a statement on X, saying, “MDP has a zero-tolerance policy for violence and aggressive behavior. This individual is no longer employed with our firm.”
This is a developing story. Stay with WTOP for the latest.
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WASHINGTON (AP) — Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris’ campaign is dismissing accusations that she and a co-author plagiarized parts of a 2009 book on the U.S. criminal justice system as a desperate attempt by “rightwing operatives” to distract voters.
Plagiarism experts and academics who reviewed the claims said several were benign or could not be proven, and others were more due to careless writing than malicious intent.
The allegations surrounding the book, “Smart on Crime: A Career Prosecutor’s Plan to Make Us Safer,” surfaced Monday when conservative activist Christopher Rufo posted an article on his Substack platform that listed a handful of passages he said were copied from other sources without any or adequate attribution.
“Taken in total, there is certainly a breach of standards here,” Rufo wrote. “Harris and her co-author duplicated long passages nearly verbatim without proper citation and without quotation marks, which is the textbook definition of plagiarism.”
James Singer, a spokesman for the Harris campaign, said in an emailed statement that the plagiarism allegations represent a partisan attack on a book Harris co-authored more than a decade ago.
“Rightwing operatives are getting desperate as they see the bipartisan coalition of support Vice President Harris is building to win this election, as (former president Donald) Trump retreats to a conservative echo chamber refusing to face questions about his lies,” Singer wrote. “This is a book that’s been out for 15 years, and the vice president clearly cited sources and statistics in footnotes and endnotes throughout.”
Rufo’s article cited a new study of Harris’ 248-page book by Stefan Weber, an Austrian academic known in Europe as a “plagiarism hunter.” Among the findings, the book plagiarized a section from a Wikipedia article and made up a childhood anecdote that originated with Martin Luther King Jr., according to Weber.
Trump’s running mate, Ohio Republican Sen. JD Vance, seized on the allegations to needle Harris.
“Hi, I’m JD Vance. I wrote my own book, unlike Kamala Harris, who copied hers from Wikipedia,” he wrote on X. Vance’s 2016 memoir, “ Hillbilly Elegy ” recounts his blue-collar upbringing in Kentucky and Ohio.
The allegation involving King centers on a story Harris said her mother told her about a time when she was fussing as a toddler. Her mother, according to the book, asked her what was wrong and what she wanted. “I wailed back, ‘Fweedom,’” Harris wrote. Weber said Harris appropriated the anecdote, without attribution, from an interview King gave in 1965.
But other plagiarism experts questioned the severity of the claims. Jonathan Bailey, a consultant and publisher of the website Plagiarism Today, said in a Tuesday post that the King story allegation first arose in early 2021 and couldn’t be proven based on available evidence. But several other plagiarism accusations are more troublesome, he said, including Weber’s allegation that Harris’ book copied and pasted, without citation, a section of a Wikipedia article.
But the patterns in the book point to “sloppy writing habits, not a malicious intent to defraud,” he said.
What to know about the 2024 Election
“Though some of the passages, such as the Wikipedia one, are sloppy to the point of negligence, when you look at the portion of the book involved, the nature of the issues, and the citations provided, negligence remains more likely than malice in my eyes,” Bailey wrote.
Miguel Roig, a psychology professor at St. John’s University in New York who studies plagiarism in the sciences, said the lapses described by Weber meet the definition of plagiarism. But, he added, context is important. The problematic passages amount to a small total of the overall book and “hardly seems like an attempt to defraud,” he said.
“Any time minor issues like these occur, the offending authors should simply acknowledge the obvious errors, apologize, and make corrections where feasible, and just move on,” Roig said.
Harris wrote “Smart on Crime” when she was the district attorney for San Francisco. The book spelled out her ideas for improving public safety and making the criminal justice system more effective. In 2010, a year after the book was published, she was elected attorney general of California.
Harris’ co-author, Joan O’C. Hamilton, works as a book collaborator and ghostwriter, according to her website.
Weber, the plagiarism researcher in Austria, said in an email that much of the work to check Harris’s book was done by an associate whom he did not identify. But he said the associate was “driven by personal choice and interest, not by political motivations.” This was Weber’s first “international case,” he said.
He also said he was unaware until the Harris review had been released that Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, had published books.
“Every scientist can feel free to check the books of Donald Trump or whomsoever as we did it with Kamala Harris,” Weber said.
Debora Weber-Wulff, a professor of media and computing at Berlin University of Applied Sciences in Germany and no relation to Weber, sided with Bailey’s assessment and said the book’s publisher would have to decide whether any problems justify removing it from sales. Any legal action is unlikely because the original author of the plagiarized content would have to pursue a potentially costly lawsuit.
“No one in their right mind would invite a suit like this,” Weber-Wulff said. “Only the lawyers profit.”
Police at UCLA have issued a crime alert after two students reported being drugged at recent parties near campus.
The first incident occurred Thursday, when the first victim went to three different parties along Gayley Avenue and “developed symptoms which they did not believe were from alcohol,” according to the crime alert.
That student reported the incident a couple days later.
The second incident occurred in the 600 block of Gayley Avenue on Saturday when a student, after being handed a drink, also developed symptoms they did not believe to be from alcohol or marijuana, according to the alert. That student went to the emergency room and reported the incident later that night.
No suspect description was provided, and the incidents are being investigated as off-campus aggravated assaults using drugs, police said.
LONDON (AP) — Two people who were critically injured in attacks while attending London’s Notting Hill Carnival earlier this week have died, police said Saturday.
The Metropolitan Police force said 32-year-old Cher Maximen died early Saturday after being stabbed in the street on Aug. 25. She had been visiting the carnival, billed as Europe’s biggest street party, with her child, who was not hurt.
A 20-year-old local man was arrested and charged with attempted murder, and is now likely to face a murder charge.
Police also announced the death of Mussie Imnetu, 41, who was found unconscious in a west London street with a head injury on Monday night. The chef had been visiting Britain from his home in Dubai.
A 31-year-old London man has been charged with causing grievous bodily harm, and police said the charge would be reviewed after Imnetu’s death.
More than 1 million people each year attend the carnival, a two-day celebration of Afro-Caribbean culture that takes place on the streets of the Notting Hill neighborhood in west London.
The event draws revelers from around the world for its flamboyant dancers, colorful costumes, rousing steel bands and booming outdoor sound systems, but is sometimes marred by violence on the sidelines. Police said eight people were stabbed at the event this year and more than 300 people were arrested, most for possessing an offensive weapon or drug offenses.
“Carnival is about bringing people together in a positive celebration. That it has ended with the tragic loss of life, among other incidents of serious violence, will sadden everyone involved,” said Commander Charmain Brenyah, the police spokesperson for Carnival.
WASHINGTON — Two people who prosecutors say were motivated by white supremacist ideology have been arrested on charges that they used the social media messaging app Telegram to encourage hate crimes and acts of violence against minorities, government officials and critical infrastructure in the United States, the Justice Department said Monday.
The defendants, identified as Dallas Erin Humber and Matthew Robert Allison, face 15 federal counts in the Eastern District of California, including charges that accuse them of soliciting hate crimes and the murder of federal officials, distributing bombmaking instructions and conspiring to provide material support to terrorists.
Humber, 34, of Elk Grove, California, and Allison, 37, of Boise, Idaho were arrested Friday. Humber pleaded not guilty in a Sacramento courtroom Monday to the charges. Her attorney Noa Oren declined to comment on the case Monday afternoon after the arraignment.
It was not immediately clear if Allison had an attorney who could speak on his behalf.
The indictment accuses the two of leading Terrorgram, a network of channels and group chats on Telegram, and of soliciting followers to attack perceived enemies of white people, including government buildings and energy facilities and “high-value” targets such as politicians.
“Today’s action makes clear that the department will hold perpetrators accountable, including those who hide behind computer screens, in seeking to carry out bias-motivated violence,” Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke, the Justice Department’s top civil rights official, said at a news conference.
Their exhortations to commit violence included statements such as “Take Action Now” and “Do your part,” and users who carried out acts to further white supremacism were told they could become known as “Saints,” prosecutors said.
Justice Department officials say the pair used the app to transmit bomb-making instructions and to distribute a list of potential targets for assassination — including a federal judge, a senator and a former U.S. attorney — and to celebrate acts or plots from active Terrorgram users.
Those include the stabbing last month of five people outside a mosque in Turkey and the July arrest of an 18-year-old accused of planning to attack an electrical substation to advance white supremacist views. In the Turkey attack, for instance, prosecutors say the culprit on the morning of the stabbing posted in a group chat: “Come see how much humans I can cleanse.”
A 24-minute documentary that the two had produced, “White Terror,” documented and praised some 105 acts of white supremacist violence between 1968 and 2021, according to the indictment.
“The risk and danger they present is extremely serious,” said Assistant Attorney General Matthew Olsen, the Justice Department’s top national security official. He added: “Their reach is as far as the internet because of the platform they’ve created.”
Telegram is a messaging app that allows for one-on-one conversations, group chats and large “channels” that let people broadcast messages to subscribers. Though broadly used as a messaging tool around the world, Telegram has also drawn scrutiny, including a finding from French investigators that the app has been used by Islamic extremists and drug traffickers.
Telegram’s founder and CEO, Pavel Durov, was detained by French authorities last month on charges of allowing the platform’s use for criminal activity. Durov responded to the charges with a post last week saying he shouldn’t have been targeted personally and by promising to step up efforts to fight criminality on the app.
He wrote that while Telegram is not “some sort of anarchic paradise,” surging numbers of users have “caused growing pains that made it easier for criminals to abuse our platform.”
___
Associated Press reporter Trân Nguyễn contributed from Sacramento, California.
PITTSBURGH — A man was charged with felony aggravated assault after an alleged glass bottle attack on two Jewish students on the campus of the University of Pittsburgh, a city newspaper reported Saturday.
According to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, the 52-year-old suspect was also charged with simple assault, reckless endangering, resisting arrest and harassment.
The Post-Gazette, citing a criminal complaint, said the man was seen on surveillance video sitting at a table across the street from the students as they walked near Pitt’s Cathedral of Learning on Friday evening. Police say he ran across the street and hit them from behind with the bottle.
The students, who were wearing traditional Jewish yarmulke head coverings, were treated at the scene, the university said. One had cuts on his face, and the other had cuts on his neck, the Post-Gazette said, citing the criminal complaint.
The suspect, who has no known affiliation with the school, was wearing a kaffiyeh, a traditional checkered scarf worn in the Middle East and increasingly displayed as a symbol of solidarity with the Palestinian people.
University leaders were in contact with the Hillel University Center as well as the Jewish Federation of Greater Pittsburgh.
Agents from the FBI’s Pittsburgh field office were also sent to the scene to investigate the possibility of a hate crime, the newspaper said.
The university called it an “appalling incident” but said there was no ongoing threat to the public. Counseling was being made available.
“To be clear: Neither acts of violence nor antisemitism will be tolerated,” the university said in a statement.
Court documents did not list an attorney for the suspect, and a listed number for him couldn’t be found Saturday.
The incident came at the end of the first full week of fall semester classes and a few months after spring protests on the campus over the war in Gaza, one of which took place in front of the Cathedral of Learning.
LONDON — Two people who were critically injured in attacks while attending London’s Notting Hill Carnival earlier this week have died, police said Saturday.
The Metropolitan Police force said 32-year-old Cher Maximen died early Saturday after being stabbed in the street on Aug. 25. She had been visiting the carnival, billed as Europe’s biggest street party, with her child, who was not hurt.
A 20-year-old local man was arrested and charged with attempted murder, and is now likely to face a murder charge.
Police also announced the death of Mussie Imnetu, 41, who was found unconscious in a west London street with a head injury on Monday night. The chef had been visiting Britain from his home in Dubai.
A 31-year-old London man has been charged with causing grievous bodily harm, and police said the charge would be reviewed after Imnetu’s death.
More than 1 million people each year attend the carnival, a two-day celebration of Afro-Caribbean culture that takes place on the streets of the Notting Hill neighborhood in west London.
The event draws revelers from around the world for its flamboyant dancers, colorful costumes, rousing steel bands and booming outdoor sound systems, but is sometimes marred by violence on the sidelines. Police said eight people were stabbed at the event this year and more than 300 people were arrested, most for possessing an offensive weapon or drug offenses.
“Carnival is about bringing people together in a positive celebration. That it has ended with the tragic loss of life, among other incidents of serious violence, will sadden everyone involved,” said Commander Charmain Brenyah, the police spokesperson for Carnival.
The mayor of Marysville was assaulted in his town, right in the downtown area.Prosecutors said Derek Hopkins, 36, hit Chris Branscum in the back, right in front of the chief of police and a city council member.The three officials are colleagues connected as leaders of the city of Marysville, and are now connected by an alleged crime. “Out of nowhere, I thought I was hit by a car,” said Branscum. “I was hit so hard.”Last week, Branscum, council member Dom Belza and the chief of police had a meeting with Congressman Doug LaMalfa.They were waiting for the congressman on the sidewalk at Fifth and D streets, outside the abandoned Hotel Marysville, which was destroyed in a June fire. “The next thing I know, there’s this guy sliding by me, running, and I yelled an expletive at him,” said Branscum. Belza saw the man coming up behind the mayor, and he described him as “looking rough.””I kept my eye on him, but as he approached, he just hauled off and slugged the mayor right in the back, square in the back,” he said. Belza didn’t hesitate. He chased down the suspect and tackled him about half a block away.His knees are still scabbed from the takedown.Belza said that during the scuffle, Hopkins punched him in the face and the police chief jumped on top and restrained Hopkins until officers arrived to take him to jail. “It was just a blatant act of violence. While instincts kicked in, I’m not 100% sure, but, you know, that’s just what I can sum it up to. I just always have gone to the issues rather than away from them,” said Belza.The mayor, at age 75, is grateful his younger council member jumped into action, recognizing his role as a citizen first. “He’s a badass. So is the chief of police,” said Branscum. “Dom took him down, and the chief was right there, right behind him. They did a heck of a job.”The Yuba County district attorney believes the suspect didn’t know it was a public official, so he doesn’t face as serious of charges.Clinton Curry said Hopkins was arraigned on two counts of misdemeanor battery. His maximum sentence on each count is six months in the county jail. More serious charges were not filed because there was no evidence to prove that Hopkins knew he was assaulting a public official or that he used a weapon or force likely to cause great bodily injury. Hopkins is still being held in jail on a $2,500 bond and will be back in court next week, with a jury trial scheduled for Sept. 17.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter
MARYSVILLE, Calif. —
The mayor of Marysville was assaulted in his town, right in the downtown area.
Prosecutors said Derek Hopkins, 36, hit Chris Branscum in the back, right in front of the chief of police and a city council member.
The three officials are colleagues connected as leaders of the city of Marysville, and are now connected by an alleged crime.
“Out of nowhere, I thought I was hit by a car,” said Branscum. “I was hit so hard.”
Last week, Branscum, council member Dom Belza and the chief of police had a meeting with Congressman Doug LaMalfa.
“The next thing I know, there’s this guy sliding by me, running, and I yelled an expletive at him,” said Branscum.
Belza saw the man coming up behind the mayor, and he described him as “looking rough.”
“I kept my eye on him, but as he approached, he just hauled off and slugged the mayor right in the back, square in the back,” he said.
Belza didn’t hesitate. He chased down the suspect and tackled him about half a block away.
His knees are still scabbed from the takedown.
Belza said that during the scuffle, Hopkins punched him in the face and the police chief jumped on top and restrained Hopkins until officers arrived to take him to jail.
“It was just a blatant act of violence. While instincts kicked in, I’m not 100% sure, but, you know, that’s just what I can sum it up to. I just always have gone to the issues rather than away from them,” said Belza.
The mayor, at age 75, is grateful his younger council member jumped into action, recognizing his role as a citizen first.
“He’s a badass. So is the chief of police,” said Branscum. “Dom took him down, and the chief was right there, right behind him. They did a heck of a job.”
The Yuba County district attorney believes the suspect didn’t know it was a public official, so he doesn’t face as serious of charges.
Clinton Curry said Hopkins was arraigned on two counts of misdemeanor battery. His maximum sentence on each count is six months in the county jail. More serious charges were not filed because there was no evidence to prove that Hopkins knew he was assaulting a public official or that he used a weapon or force likely to cause great bodily injury.
Hopkins is still being held in jail on a $2,500 bond and will be back in court next week, with a jury trial scheduled for Sept. 17.
SOLINGEN, Germany — German police said early Sunday that a 26-year-old man turned himself in, claiming to be behind the deadly Solingen knife attack that left three dead and eight wounded at a festival marking the city’s 650th anniversary.
Düsseldorf police said in a joint statement with the prosecutor’s office that the man “stated that he was responsible for the attack,” adding he had been arrested before, but didn’t provide details. “This person’s involvement in the crime is currently being intensively investigated,” the statement said.
On Saturday the Islamic State militant group claimed responsibility for the attack, without providing evidence. The extremist group said on its news site that the attacker targeted Christians and that he carried out the assaults Friday night “to avenge Muslims in Palestine and everywhere.” The claim couldn’t be independently verified.
Officials had earlier said a 15-year-old boy was arrested on suspicion he knew about the planned attack and failed to inform authorities, but that he was not the attacker. Two female witnesses told police they overheard the boy and an unknown person before the attack speaking about intentions that corresponded to the bloodshed, officials said.
People alerted police shortly after 9:30 p.m. local time Friday that a man had assaulted several people with a knife on the city’s central square, the Fronhof. The three people killed were two men aged 67 and 56 and a 56-year-old woman, authorities said. Police said the attacker appeared to have deliberately aimed for his victims’ throats.
Solingen, a city of about 160,000 residents near the bigger cities of Cologne and Düsseldorf, was holding a “Festival of Diversity” to celebrate its anniversary. It began Friday and was supposed to run through Sunday, with several stages in central streets offering attractions such as live music, cabaret and acrobatics. The attack took place in front of one stage.
The festival was canceled as police looked for clues in the cordoned-off square.
The IS militant group declared its caliphate in large parts of Iraq and Syria about a decade ago, but now holds no control over any land and has lost many prominent leaders. The group is mostly out of global news headlines.
Prosecutors on Monday charged two men with known associations to a notorious South Los Angeles street gang with murder in the death of “General Hospital” actor Johnny Wactor after the suspects implicated themselves during jailhouse discussions, sources told The Times.
Two other men were also charged with lesser crimes in connection with Wactor’s death, authorities said.
Robert Barceleau, 18, is accused of shooting Wactor after the actor came upon him and two other members of the Florencia 13 gang on Hope Street near Pico Boulevard and confronted them because he thought they were trying to tow his car in the wee hours of May 25. Authorities say the men were jacking up Wactor’s car to steal its catalytic converter and he was shot after accosting them.
Johnny Wactor was shot to death after interrupting men trying to steal his car’s catalytic converter on May 25, authorities say.
(Willy Sanjuan / Invision / Associated Press)
Barceleau, who is also known as “Smallz,” is an identified member of the Florencia 13 gang, according to information from a search warrant filed in the Wactor investigation. His fingerprints, as well as those of Sergio Estrada and Leonel Gutierrez, matched those lifted from the floor jack left at Wactor’s car, according to the search warrant. Authorities say Estrada, a.k.a. “Prieto,” and Gutierrez, or “Tripps” — both also 18 — are affiliated with the gang.
Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. George Gascón and interim LAPD Chief Dominic Choi said more than 50 search warrants were served in the case.
Witnesses identified Gutierrez as a suspect in Wactor’s slaying because of a distinct “F” tattoo on his face — for Florencia, police said.
The three men were arrested Thursday on suspicion of murder. A fourth person — Frank Olano, 22 — was arrested on suspicion of being an accessory to murder.
After their arrests, some of the men implicated themselves in the slaying during recorded jailhouse conversations, according to two law enforcement sources familiar with the investigation but not authorized to discuss it publicly.
Calling Wactor’s death a “senseless shooting,” Gascón on Monday charged Barceleau and Estrada with murder.
Barceleau was charged with special circumstances murder during an attempted robbery with personal use of a firearm, attempted robbery, grand theft and aggravated circumstances of using a firearm. If convicted, he faces life without the possibility of parole.
Anita Joy, right, who was with Johnny Factor when he was killed, hugs Gary Hoiness after Monday’s news conference where murder charges against Factor’s suspected killers were announced.
(Al Seib/For The Times)
Estrada was charged with murder with the use of a firearm, attempted robbery and grand theft with a firearm.
Gutierrez was charged with attempted robbery and grand theft with allegations of a principal armed with a firearm.
Olano was charged with one count of accessory after the fact to murder, one count of receiving stolen property and three counts of being a felon with a firearm.
“There are two that are facing life in prison, one life without the possibility,” Gascón said during a news conference Monday. “One of them fired a weapon; the other one was there. … Barceleau fired the gun.”
Barceleau, Gutierrez and Estrada all have lengthy criminal histories, according to court and arrest documents reviewed by The Times.
Barceleau has previously been arrested on suspicion of assault with a firearm, robbery and burglary. Gutierrez has prior arrests on suspicion of possession of a firearm, vehicle theft, grand theft, assault with great bodily injury, battery and robbery. Estrada’s priors include suspicion of assault with a firearm, robbery and burglary. Alano, a.k.a. “Little,” has been arrested on suspicion of grand theft, vandalism, possession of a firearm and assault on a police officer.
Barceleau is being held without bail, and Estrada is being held in lieu of $2.070 million bail. Olano’s bail was set at $1.08 million and Gutierrez’s at $120,000.
Moses Castillo, a retired LAPD detective and advocate for the Wactor family, said the failure to file special gang allegations against the men, as the district attorney has repeatedly done in prior gang cases, means the men will face far less time in prison if convicted.
L.A. County Dist. Atty. George Gascón and interim LAPD Chief Dominic Choi announced murder and other charges Monday against slain “General Hospital’’ actor Johnny Wactor’s suspected assailants.
(Al Seib/For The Times)
Neither Gascón nor Choi would discuss the evidence in the case, including any statements made by the accused. All four appeared in a downtown court Monday and were waiting to be called for their hearing.
The charges come after friends of the actor called for the district attorney to lock up those responsible for the actor’s death.
“I don’t think it is right that these suspects, whoever killed Johnny, ever gets freedom ever again,” fellow actor Micah Parker said Monday outside the downtown criminal courts building. “That is justice in our eyes, and we asked George Gascón to serve justice and do his job today.”
Parker and others were asking the district attorney to commit to seeking the maximum sentence for the men — life in prison without the possibility of parole.
Wactor’s slaying has become symbolic of growing issues related to violent robberies in Los Angeles, and particularly the rise of street violence in the city’s downtown core.
The actor had finished a shift at the Level 8 bar about 3:20 a.m. May 25 when he and co-worker Anita Joy were walking to his car and interrupted the thieves.
Wactor first thought his car was being towed, Joy said. After realizing that wasn’t the case, he asked the men to leave, showing his open hands to indicate he wasn’t a threat. Nevertheless, he was shot at close range, Joy said. A security guard from the bar said he found Joy and the mortally wounded Wactor and called 911.
Joy asked Wactor whether he was OK, and he responded, “Nope. I’ve been shot,” according to the statement of probable cause in the arrests of the suspects.
After the shooting, the men fled north on Hope Street in a stolen getaway car described as a 2018 black four-door Infiniti Q50 with a tan interior, police said.
After reviewing videos and interviewing witnesses, homicide detectives with the Los Angeles Police Department identified the suspects. Barceleau had been arrested June 5 on suspicion of assault by the LAPD, but was not charged with a crime and was released the same day.
It was not until this month that arrests were made, after repeated efforts by friends, family and politicians calling for more resources on the case and a tougher approach to crime in Los Angeles.
After the arrests, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass thanked police “for their continued efforts to keep Angelenos safe and to bring justice to victims of violence.”
“Now, we must ensure that those who are responsible for this brazen and heinous act are held fully accountable,” she said.
On Monday, Choi said the “tragic, untimely death” of Wactor has left a void in the hearts of his family, friends and fans as well as the broader community.
“To the family and loved ones of Mr. Wactor, we know that no legal action can bring back the person you have lost, but we hope that today’s announcement brings some measure of comfort in knowing that those who are responsible are no longer on the streets and not going to be able to hurt anyone again,” Choi said.
Video captured by those inside the D.C. restaurant shows employees wearing Shake Shack uniforms hitting the man and others pulling him away as customers looked on.
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DC police investigate suspected hate crime at Shake Shack, restaurant suspends employees
Christian Dingus, 28, said it happened Saturday evening after a store employee told them to stop kissing.
“He kind of interrupted us and said, ‘Hey, stop. You can’t be doing that here,’” Dingus told WTOP.
According to Dingus, the comment made his partner upset.
“He was like, ‘We’re not doing anything wrong,’” he said.
His partner was escorted out of the restaurant, moving the confrontation from inside the restaurant to the sidewalk. From there, Dingus said the incident escalated.
According to Dingus, several additional employees came over. He said after attempting to defuse the situation from the doorway of the store, he got more involved when the group had his partner backed up against a brick wall.
“I stepped fully outside, and at that point, raised my voice for the first time, where I was like, ‘Hey, stop, leave him alone,’” Dingus said.
He said after waving his hands in the air, he was targeted.
“I was pushed and pretty quickly after that, it’s kind of a blur. But I just know I was jumped on by multiple of them at that point, getting punched in my face, in my head, falling to the ground, and then while I was on the ground, continued to be hit in my head and my body for what seemed like forever,” Dingus said.
Video captured by those inside the restaurant shows employees wearing Shake Shack uniforms hitting the man and others pulling him away, as customers looked on from inside the restaurant.
Dingus said he’s not sure who broke things up.
When the police arrived, they spoke with the employees of the restaurant and, according to Dingus, told him it would be best if he left the area.
According to a police report, one of the people involved claimed Dingus “placed his hands on his neck” and that “he was defending himself.”
Christian Dingus, 28, said he was attacked by Shake Shack employees after kissing his boyfriend. (Courtesy Christian Dingus)
“I was on the ground with multiple people hitting me with my hands on my head. Did I have my hand on all their necks? Kind of just absurd,” Dingus said.
He also claimed some videos of what happened that have appeared online also discredit that claim.
Dingus said his jaw was injured and he suffered a concussion.
In a statement to WTOP, Shake Shack said the employees involved have been suspended as the restaurant investigates what took place.
Police said it is also still investigating the incident as a hate crime for which the motivation may be “Sexual Orientation — Anti-Gay.”
For Dingus, he said he moved to D.C. with the hope of living in a place where he can be comfortable being who he is, and only recently became comfortable with expressing physical affection in public.
“For me to finally be comfortable to do that, and in a place that I deem safe, to be kind of torn away that quickly is just … it’s pretty awful,” he said.
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NEW YORK (AP) — The federal government wants to make it easier for employees to quit a job and work for a competitor. But some companies say a new rule created by the Federal Trade Commission will make it hard to protect trade secrets and investments they make in their employees.
At least three companies have sued the FTC after it voted to ban noncompete agreements, which prevent employees from working for competitors for a period of time after leaving a job. Their cases are now pending in Florida, Pennsylvania and Texas and the issue could end up in front of the U.S. Supreme Court.
Here’s what you should know about noncompete agreements:
What are they?
Once seen as a way to protect trade secrets among high-level executives, noncompete agreements have become more common, with some companies requiring lower-wage employees in fast-food and retail establishments to sign them before accepting a job.
The agreements prohibit employees from taking a job with a rival company or starting a competing business for a set period of time, to prevent employees from taking corporate secrets, sales leads, client relationships or skills to a competitor.
What did the FTC do?
The FTC voted in April to prohibit employers nationwide from entering into new noncompete agreements or enforcing existing noncompetes starting Sept. 4, saying the agreements restrict freedom of workers and suppress wages.
“In many cases, noncompetes are take-it-or-leave-it contracts that exploit workers’ lack of bargaining power and coerce workers into staying in jobs they would rather leave, or force workers to leave a profession or even relocate,” the FTC said.
The FTC says roughly 30 million people, or 1 in 5 workers, are subject to noncompete agreements. That in turn limits their ability to change jobs, which is often the best way to get a pay raise or promotion. Some people don’t even realize they’ve signed such an agreement until they’re hit with a lawsuit after changing jobs.
The FTC rule does not apply to senior executives, which the agency defines as workers earning more than $151,164 who are in a policy-making position.
Several states, including California, already have bans on noncompete agreements.
“As far as I know there’s a lot of companies in California, and high tech employees who are doing just fine,” said Tom Spiggle, founder of the Spiggle Law Firm based in Washington, D.C., that focuses on protecting workers.
“They’ve just gotten a little out of hand with line cooks being subject to noncompetes in some industries,” Spiggle added. “Think about it. You can’t work in a similar position for a year or more, and there’s often a geographical radius. You’ve got to move so you’re able to continue to work. For people who are spooning the beans on the front line, they’re signing noncompetes. Why?”
Who is suing the FTC and why?
Companies opposing the ban say they need noncompete agreements to protect business relationships, trade secrets and investments they make to train or recruit employees.
“The ban would make it easy for top professionals to go across the street and compete against us,” said John Smith, chief legal officer at Ryan, LLC, a tax services firm based in Dallas that sued the FTC.
Ryan uses noncompete agreements and nondisclosure agreements to ensure employees don’t share trade secrets when they leave. But nondisclosure agreements are harder to detect — and enforce — than noncompete agreements.
“In a nondisclosure agreement, that employee leaves, and you don’t know what information they are sharing with the new employer, a competitor of yours,” Smith said. “It can take a lot of time and money to figure that out.”
Business groups have voiced support for Ryan’s lawsuit, including the Society for Human Resource Management, which said the FTC rule is overly broad and would discourage employers from investing in training for workers if those workers could easily quit the next day and take their knowledge elsewhere.
U.S. District Judge Ada Brown has ruled that Ryan and its co-plaintiffs, including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, are likely to prevail in court and that the ban on noncompete agreements cannot go into effect for them until their case is resolved.
In Florida, a retirement community called Properties of the Villages sued saying its sales associates’ lifelong relationships with residents of the community are central to its business model. The company said it invests heavily in training its sales associates, and they sign noncompetes, which say for 24 months after leaving the company they won’t compete to sell homes within the Villages community, which spans 58,000 acres.
Lawyers for Properties of the Villages said in a hearing Wednesday that the FTC’s rule would have major economic consequences, and under the so-called “major questions” doctrine, Congress cannot delegate to executive agencies issues of major political or economic significance.
While stating sympathy for lower-wage workers caught in noncompete agreements, U.S. District Judge Timothy Corrigan said the plaintiff is likely to succeed in its argument that the FTC’s rule invokes the major questions doctrine.
He noted that the FTC, by one metric, estimates that employers will pay from $400 billion to $488 billion more in wages over 10 years under the rule. “Suffice it to say that the transfer of value from employers to employees, from some competitors to other competitors, from existing companies to new companies and other ancillary effects will have a huge economic impact.”
Congress intended for the FTC to take action to prevent unfair competition, and all noncompete agreements are unfair, said Rachael Westmoreland, an attorney with the Department of Justice who defended the FTC Wednesday. “They restrict competition. That’s their entire purpose,” she said.
Corrigan granted a preliminary injunction in the case, prohibiting enforcement of the rule just for Properties of the Villages, until the case is resolved. His ruling did not apply to any other company, and will not stop the FTC’s rule from going into effect on Sept. 4, he said.
Meanwhile in a separate case, ATS Tree Services sued the FTC in Pennsylvania, calling its proposed ban unfair and saying it usurps states’ authority to establish their own laws.
ATS said it makes employees sign noncompete agreements because it invests in specialized training for workers and it couldn’t afford to if the employees could leave and immediately use that training and the company’s confidential information for a competitor.
But U.S. District Court Judge Kelley Hodge said the tree company failed to show it would be irreparably harmed by the ban and the company wasn’t likely to win the case.
What happens next?
In Texas, the judge there is planning to file a merits disposition, which is essentially a decision about the case without a trial, on or before Aug. 30. And in Pennsylvania, ATS Tree Services is expected to file a request for summary judgment later this month.
With divergent rulings expected to emerge from the cases — and with lawyers on the losing sides likely to appeal — observers are expecting the issue to work its way up to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour shows in Vienna, Austria, have been canceled after government officials confirmed an alleged ISIS-linked terrorist plot to attack large events, organizers said Wednesday.
“With confirmation from government officials of a planned terrorist attack at Ernst Happel Stadium, we have no choice but to cancel the three scheduled shows for everyone’s safety,” Barracuda Music, the concerts’ organizer, said in an online post.
The announcement came shortly after two suspected extremists were arrested in Austria on Wednesday, one of whom appeared to be planning an attack on a major event in the Vienna area such as Swift’s concerts over the weekend, authorities said.
Austrian authorities said that the two individuals are tied to ISIS. The information about the suspects originated from U.S. intelligence and was communicated to Austrian authorities, sources familiar with the matter told CBS News.
The Ernst Happel Stadion, where Taylor Swift will perform three concerts this week, pictured on June 4, 2024, in Vienna, Austria
Guenther Iby/SEPA.Media /Getty Images
The 19-year-old main suspect was arrested in Ternitz, south of Vienna, and the second person in the Austrian capital.
Swift’s concerts had been scheduled to take place at Vienna’s Ernst Happel Stadium on Thursday, Friday and Saturday as part of her massively successful Eras Tour. The shows’ ticket vendor in Austria said that all tickets would be refunded within 10 business days.
Franz Ruf, the public security director at Austria’s interior ministry, said that authorities became aware of “preparatory actions” for a possible attack “and also that there is a focus by the 19-year-old perpetrator on the Taylor Swift concerts in Vienna,” the Austria Press Agency reported. Ruf said the concerts would have attracted audiences of up to 65,000, with thousands more expected to congregate outside the stadium.
A “targeted raid was carried out this morning,” coordinated by various state and city law enforcement offices, Ruf said.
Taylor Swift performs onstage during The Eras Tour on July 27, 2024, in Munich, Germany.
Thomas Niedermueller/TAS24/Getty Images
The Austrian Interior Ministry said that both suspects had become radicalized on the internet and made “concrete preparations for a terrorist attack.” Ruf said the 19-year-old Austrian citizen had pledged an oath of allegiance to the Islamic State group in July.
Ruf also said that chemical substances were seized from the main suspect’s home and were being evaluated. He didn’t give more details.
A person familiar with the matter told CBS News Wednesday evening that police found chemical substances when the 19-year-old was arrested, but not all the components necessary to build a working explosive device.
Austrian authorities canceled the concerts out of an abundance of caution because the investigation is continuing into other possible co-conspirators who may have been involved in the alleged plans, the source added.
Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer called the concerts’ cancellation “a bitter disappointment for all fans in Austria,” adding that “the threat was recognized early, combated and a tragedy prevented.”
“We live in a time in which violent means are being used to attack our western way of life,” Nehammer wrote on social media. “Islamist terrorism threatens security and freedom in many western countries. This is precisely why we will not give up our values such as freedom and democracy, but will defend them even more vehemently.”
Prior to the cancellation announcement, Provincial Police President Gerhard Pürstl had said officials would step up security measures for the concerts to include the deployment of police officers in both civilian clothes and uniform, video surveillance, a police dog unit and other special law enforcement units.