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What is so beguiling is you are clearly prohibited from owning a firearm just as if you are a convicted felon or denounce your US citizenship, legal analyst James Gagliano told CNN's John King on Monday. "You have a misdemeanor conviction where there was violence detached to members of your family ... that happened in the court martial," he added, noting Kelley spent a year in confinement for his conviction. 411
Two bus drivers blocked the vehicle in, which prevented the driver from leaving the scene.A 27-year-old female driver was cited for reckless operation, a minor misdemeanor. Police said no one was injured.This story was originally published by 243
UC San Diego has learned, unofficially, that the China Scholarship Council under the (People's Republic of China) Ministry of Education has apparently issued instructions that CSC-funded visiting scholars who do not yet have visas will not be allowed to study at UC San Diego, university spokeswoman Laura Margoni said in a statement issued Monday.RELATED: Dalai Lama caps off UCSD commencement ceremony"UC San Diego was not notified of this directly by the China Scholarship Council and we are presently making inquiries to determine if this is the case," she said.UCSD officials were unable to provide an update Wednesday.Inside Higher Ed reported that the action would not appear to directly affect self-paying Chinese undergraduates -- only those scholars who are sponsored by the government. The publication said concerns have been raised recently about China's growing influence over U.S. universities, given the growing numbers of Chinese students studying in this country.RELATED: UC San Diego named one of the world's best universitiesMore than 3,600 Chinese students were enrolled at UCSD in the fall 2016 quarter, according to University of California data. This year's fall quarter begins next week, and fresh enrollment figures won't be available until October.Some of the Chinese students protested the Dalai Lama because of his support for independence for Tibet. 1388
Weinstein's lawyer said the act should not be applied."A typical sex trafficking case is someone who lures underage girls on the promise of a green card and locking them up in a basement and forcing them to have sex for money," Weinstein attorney Phyllis Kupferstein said.According to court documents, Weinstein's legal team argued that the sex trafficking statute doesn't apply to this case because, "not every alleged sexual assault constitutes a federal violation" and the application of the statute "would unfairly expand the federal sex trafficking statute to all sexual activity occurring between adults in which one party holds a superior position of power and influence."They argued that because nothing of value was exchanged by their client, the commercial sex act aspect was not met.Weinstein, who also is facing criminal charges in New York, has denied all allegations of "nonconsensual sexual activity."Weinstein's lawyer also said Tuesday the allegations in the lawsuit cannot be proven.Sweet wrote in his opinion that the trafficking law could apply."While the instant case is not an archetypal sex trafficking action, the allegations plausibly establish that (Harvey Weinstein's) 2014 conduct in Cannes, France, violated (federal law)."The judge wrote that other courts have applied the law to defendants who lured others with false promises for sexual purposes.In her complaint, Noble says she met Weinstein in February and he asked for an example of her acting, called a reel.Three months later Weinstein and Noble bumped into each other at his hotel in Cannes and he asked her to come to his room to review her reel, Noble says.Her complaint says that in his room he began massaging Noble and gripped her shoulders -- telling her she needed to relax, and if she did, his people would "take care of everything" for her.At some point, the suit alleges, he got a person on the phone whom he said was a producer who told her to be "a good girl and do whatever he wished," referring to Weinstein, and if she did "they would work" with her, the lawsuit alleges.Noble says she is not sure who the person was.After that, the suit alleges Weinstein groped her breasts. She resisted but felt "compelled to comply because of the tangible and intangible benefits" Weinstein offered to advance her career.The lawsuit says Weinstein pulled her into the hotel bathroom and started to sexually assault her. Noble says she told him to stop and attempted to leave the bathroom, but he blocked her exit.She described other unwanted contact and sexual actions and says she repeatedly implored him to stop.He told her, "Everything will be taken care of for you if you relax," the lawsuit says."We believe these claims are not legally or factually supported, and ultimately will not be sustained," Kupferstein said.Harvey Weinstein's legal team will ask the judge whether they can appeal the ruling.The law firm representing The Weinstein Company had no comment. The company is involved in Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings and a litigation stay is in place for all legal matters, including Noble's case, Sweet wrote.The law cited in the complaint is 18 USC 1591. The judge wrote that law was amended in 2015, but the opinion refers to the version of the law in effect in 2014. 3274
We have 11- and 12-year-old kids already being approached to smuggle narcotics. There is no age limit for this, cartels will look for those more vulnerable and the first opportunity they have, they'll take it, said Alan Regalado, a spokesperson for the Tucson sector of U.S. Customs and Border Protection.How are they being recruited?Officials at the U.S.-Mexican border near Nogales, Arizona, confirm that cartels are recruiting children from the Phoenix area to smuggle drugs."They are using females more than males, even Caucasian females, and males, to do the transshipment of narcotics," said Raul Rodriguez, a detective for the Santa Cruz County Attorney's Office.Rodriguez said cartels are running out of teens to recruit in the Nogales metro area, so now they are recruiting in places where no one expects. He says cartels use social media, video games, word of mouth, or trips to Mexico as some of the paths to recruitment."A kid from Glendale, Peoria, Mesa can come down here with friends or relatives. They said they are just going to spend the day and go back, but within a couple of hours, they are recruited," Rodriguez said."The community needs to know; the community needs to do something about it," Regalado said.Alarming spike in the number of Phoenix-area children busted for smuggling"We've had young people from this community being arrested near the border for smuggling reasons," Regalado said. He added that the spike in the number of Phoenix-area children busted for smuggling is alarming.According to CBP, between 2017 and 2018, more than 300 kids have been picked up for smuggling humans or drugs. They say drugs are in their vehicles, taped to their bodies, swallowed or stuffed into body cavities."(If) one of those packages ruptures that juvenile can die," Santa Cruz County Attorney George Silva said.Silva said many kids think being underage protects them from prosecution, but that is incorrect."In Arizona, there's a statute that specifically says that children under 18 can be prosecuted as adults if they're 14,15,16,17 and they committed a class two felony," he said.Silva prosecutes minors as adults on a case-by-case basis but stresses that the mandatory minimum prison time is three-and-a-half years. "That's the least that they're going to do if they go to trial and got convicted," he said.Silva says there is a misconception that only kids from Hispanic backgrounds are at risk. He says cartels do not discriminate."The majority of people that are getting arrested right now for trafficking hard drugs through our port of entry are white," Silva said.Regalado said they are also dealing with southbound smuggling — American teens trafficking weapons, ammunition, and money into Mexico."Don't think it won't happen to your kid because it may," said Regalado."It makes me popular."Regalado says he has seen kids from all kinds of communities falling into the hands of cartel recruiters."We've seen kids with parents that have given them everything ... and we ask (the kids), 'why did you do it? You really didn't need it,' and they said, 'I know, but it makes me popular.'""I found five assault rifles and a bulletproof vest."At least one Phoenix-area mother, who did not want to give her real name for fear of retaliation, believes cartel members recruited her son."I found five assault rifles and a bulletproof vest. I thought I was going to die, I panicked," "Alicia" said..Alicia thinks her son was recruited by the cartel to store their guns."They're using my son. He wasn't like that," she said.She said her son's behavior changed, and she was afraid of him and for him. She reported him to the police."I know he didn't want to hurt people, but I can't say the same about the cartel," Alicia said.Regalado said many kids recruited were just like Alicia's son."We see kids that ended up smuggling that wanted to go to college that come from a good community and they just don't understand why they made that decision," he said.This story was originally published by Courtney Holmes and Liliana Soto on 4048