
Putin's former classmate turned top judge Irina Podnosova dies at 71 in latest ‘mystery' death of senior Russian figure
Irina Podnosova, 71, died after battling cancer for over a year, sources say, but Ukrainian commentators say this is the latest in a string of 'mysterious' deaths in the Russian elite.
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Podnosova, who was appointed as Chief Justice of Russia's Supreme Court in April 2024, died in Moscow, according to Russian media.
It comes as Oil tycoon Andrey Badalov, 62, died after falling from the 17th floor of a luxury Moscow tower block, where he lived in a 10th floor penthouse.
Putin's transport minister Roman Starovoit, 53, died this month from gunshot wounds on the day he was fired - a death officially seen as suicide but with widespread speculation that he was murdered.
Podnosova's death is also a sign that 72-year-old Putin's habit of appointing his fellow septuagenarians to key posts has limitations for his repressive regime.
Podnosova's predecessor Vyacheslav Lebedev died in April last year soon after he was 80.
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Daily Mail
a minute ago
- Daily Mail
Was a hitman hired to kill Dordogne expat? Days before Karen Carter's brutal stabbing a mysterious man was seen outside her house. Now locals believe her murder could be the work of an assassin
Two days before her murder, on her 65th birthday, Karen Carter posed for what is believed to be her last ever photograph while out for lunch with friends. Smiling at the camera and cuddling her new puppy, Haku, the mother-of-four was on the brink of a new life having decided to divorce her South African husband and set up home permanently in this charming corner of south-west France. As we now know, the Gallic idyll she longed for was tragically never to be. Karen was stabbed to death on April 29 in a frenzied attack outside the 250-year-old holiday property she owned with her estranged husband. The former teacher had just arrived home from a wine-tasting event at the hilltop farmhouse of a 'charming' Frenchman to whom she had grown close as she negotiated her divorce. Her attacker, who police say was lying in wait, struck so fast as she got out of her Dacia Duster car that her handbag, and Haku, were still inside. In an area of the Dordogne where crime is virtually unheard of, Karen's friends in the village of Tremolat hoped this terrible crime would quickly be solved. But three months on, and with British tourists now arriving in droves to spend their summer holiday in the region, the killer is still at large. Amid news that French police have now summoned a group of villagers for DNA tests, I returned to Tremolat this week to speak to those involved in the case. Shockingly, I can reveal that Karen's friends in the village are now convinced that her murder was not a 'crime of passion', as was previously speculated, but a cold-blooded professional hit –what is known in France as a 'meurtre commandite '. If the idea of a contract killer operating in this tranquil and bucolic corner of rural France seems outlandish, then it is a theory being given credence by French detectives, not least because of the sighting of a suspicious man spotted by Karen's home just three days before she was killed. The Daily Mail is the first newspaper to be told of this potential suspect, who was reported to police in the immediate aftermath of Karen's death but has never been traced. One of Karen's French neighbours, the eyewitness who saw him, spoke exclusively to the Mail this week out of frustration at the apparent lack of progress being made on the case. 'We made eye contact and he looked away very quickly and didn't say 'Bonjour' which is very unusual around here,' he recalled, noting that the man, who he says was black and someone he had never seen in the village, was walking along the road at the front of Karen's house but had no bag with him, or anything that might have suggested he was a hiker wandering through the area. 'He was a bit taller than me and thin and muscular with sculpted arms,' added the neighbour, who says he has now spoken to police four times about the sighting. 'I thought it was odd at the time but I was in a hurry and so I didn't think any more about it. I wish now that I'd challenged him. After Karen was murdered, I told the police straight away.' French detectives are notoriously tight-lipped about ongoing cases, but this week an investigating source agreed that 'the circumstances of the murder certainly point to a targeted assassination'. The source added: 'He lay in wait, carried out the attack out of sight of anyone else and then made sure the victim was dead before escaping.' No murder weapon has ever been found and beyond the sighting of the suspicious man outside Karen's home, there are few leads for detectives to go on. There is no CCTV in Tremolat. Residents, who in the past thought nothing of leaving their doors unlocked, have never seen the need for doorbell cameras in an area often referred to as Dordogneshire because of its popularity with Brits who love its old-fashioned rural charm. Police initially focused their attention on tyre tracks left by a car parked at the edge of a wood, a six-minute walk from the murder scene through walnut groves and a barley field – but for now, that trail also appears to have gone cold. Reports last month of an attack on another woman initially sparked fears that the killer had struck again. The 28-year-old woman was said to have been 'stalked from behind and knocked unconscious' while out walking her dog in the village on May 26. But according to a source in the prosecutor's office in Bergerac, 'no connection has been established between the two crimes'. The discovery of a 31-year-old woman's body in a village five miles away appears to be yet another red herring. That death is said to have been a suicide. This week, French gendarmes were seen returning to Karen's home on the outskirts of Tremolat, with their attention focused on the outside of the honey-coloured property, which is still cordoned off with yellow police tape. The once pristine home is a sorrowful sight. Weeds have sprung up across the gravel driveway. A cellophane-wrapped dead bunch of flowers lies on the verge outside. The gendarmes' visit comes three weeks after senior investigating judge Clara Verger, who has been placed in charge of the case, ordered the DNA testing of 15 villagers who came into contact with Karen in the hours before her killing. The appointment of Ms Verger may yet be further evidence that police are leaning towards the possibility that the killing was the work of an outsider rather than a local. As president of the tribunal judiciaire in the nearby town of Perigueux, she has powers to liaise with overseas authorities. Those asked to give mouth swabs at the gendarmerie in the nearby town of Lalinde include a small group of friends as well as around a dozen guests who attended the wine-tasting with Karen on the evening of her murder. Among them was Tremolat's 61-year-old mayor, Eric Chassagne, who said this week that Karen was 'beaming' and 'radiant' on the night she died. 'I think everyone who may have met Karen during the day and evening of April 29 was sampled,' said Mr Chassagne, adding that he had been told the exercise was a 'process of elimination'. 'They want to close certain lines of inquiry,' he said. 'From what I understand, they would like to compare the DNA with that found in the victim's vehicle.' Another woman, who was also asked to provide a mouth swab, said she had been told police wanted to eliminate anyone who might have come into contact with Karen's car. She added: 'I was happy to go to Lalinde and give DNA,' she said. 'I'd do anything if I thought it would help get justice for Karen.' Still overwhelmed by the unthinkable horror of her death, Karen's friends in Tremolat endlessly go over the terrible events that led up to it, trying to work out how her killer knew she would be returning home alone that Tuesday night and how on earth he managed to strike and then flee without being caught. Karen had spent the evening at a wine-tasting hosted by Jean-Francois Guerrier, a former managing director of Fujitsu who lived for several years in Camberley in Surrey. One guest who was there has reportedly claimed that he felt they were 'being watched'. Karen left the event at around 10pm, telling fellow guests she needed to take her puppy home to settle him. She set off by car back to Les Chouettes, the holiday home she bought 15 years ago with her husband Alan, a ten-minute drive away. Her killer would easily have been hidden from view among the dense greenery that surrounds her property on the outskirts of the village. Her assailant lunged at her as she got out of her car, stabbing her eight times in her chest, groin, arm and leg and severing her aorta. In yet another tragic twist to this brutal crime, she was found in a pool of her own blood by Guerrier who, after waving off the last of his guests, had driven to join Karen at her home before stumbling across a scene of almost unimaginable horror. A friend told the Daily Mail this week that while it was clear that she was beyond saving, Guerrier tried to resuscitate her after summoning the emergency services. 'He doesn't talk about it much but it was very traumatic for him,' said the friend. 'He said what he saw was just gore.' Guerrier was quizzed by police but swiftly eliminated from inquiries. A second arrest followed, that of 69-year-old divorcee Marie-Laure Autefort who lived nearby and had made no secret of her own love for Guerrier. She was held in custody for 48 hours amid suspicions that she might have had a grudge against the couple but was also released after providing a concrete alibi. Karen's close friend told me that she was 'very discreet' about her relationship with her 'confidant' Guerrier but it is clear that the pair had become close in recent months. In a poignant text message sent to a friend after the murder, he wrote: 'We were happy being happy. This has left a big black hole.' A month before her death, Guerrier accompanied Karen on an overseas trip to South Africa with a local women's over-50s football team, Les Reines du Foot, in which she played. Karen's husband Alan, who visited Tremolat a week after her murder, has spoken of 'a feeling of complete betrayal' upon hearing that his wife had formed this new relationship. He organised his wife's funeral, which took place in the nearby town of Bergerac early last month before returning to South Africa. The Daily Mail understands that Karen told 65-year-old Alan, a keen surfer who runs his own environmental agency, that she wanted a divorce in January this year. She had already consulted a family lawyer in South Africa asking for assistance in separating their assets. The couple have four adult children who live in Australia, Britain and the US. A source has told me she didn't want her husband to retain a share in their French holiday property because of her fears that things would get messy if he ever remarried. In return for 'Les Chouettes' she was prepared to hand over her financial interest in their marital home, 7,000 miles away, in the coastal city of East London in South Africa. She was also in the process of buying a one-bedroom cottage in Tremolat, planning to live there while earning a rental income from Les Chouettes. 'She saw her future in France not South Africa,' says the source who spoke to the Daily Mail. 'Karen wanted a fresh start.' Speaking on the phone from South Africa this week, Alan Carter said that while the slow progress of the case was frustrating, French police had assured him they were 'vigorously pursuing' Karen's killer. 'It's such a small village, you think someone would know something,' he said. He said that although there was talk of a divorce, it 'wasn't definite'. 'I still hoped that we would find a way to save our marriage. I didn't want it to end in divorce,' he told me. 'We were still talking.' The last time he saw Karen was in South Africa in May after she finished her tour with the French women's football team and came to East London. 'I've learned since that this other man accompanied her on the tour but she said nothing about it when she came to stay with me and the family. 'I have to accept that she had some kind of relationship with this chap but she said nothing to me or her friends here to suggest that something was going on.' He said that he and his family and Karen's friends in South Africa were still grieving for her. 'We are still hurting,' he said. Compounding the family's agony, he said that Karen's Lancashire-born mother, who was left devastated by her daughter's brutal death, passed away three weeks ago. There is no doubt the murder is still the talk of Tremolat, above all at Cafe Village, a community-run social club in Tremolat popular with expats, where Karen and Guerrier both volunteered behind the bar. The cafe was 'shut indefinitely' in the wake of Karen's murder but reopened on May 28. As well as music events, it hosts French conversation classes, quiz nights and knitting sessions. Membership costs just €15 a year. A week earlier, an invitation-only memorial service was held at the cafe, with photographs of Karen displayed alongside bouquets of flowers and the performance of a song written for the occasion by one of the club's regular musicians called 'We'll remember you well' which left those gathered in tears. On Wednesday evening, the cafe was bustling with locals and visiting tourists who filled the outdoor trestle tables, drinking local wine and eating food from the visiting 'Dordogne Chippy' fish and chip van while listening to live music including covers of songs by The Police and The Beach Boys. It was exactly the kind of evening that Karen loved. Among those present was Jean-Francois Guerrier who is now caring for Karen's cross-breed puppy. He has declined to speak about Karen's murder, saying only that she was 'a lovely lady'. 'He doesn't talk about what happened. He's just trying to keep busy,' said a source at the cafe. 'We all miss Karen terribly but life has to go on.' The birthday photograph taken of Karen two days before her murder now hangs on the wall by the bar in her memory. She spent that happy day having lunch with girlfriends and visiting a flower market in the nearby town of Le Bugue. 'Karen wanted to put the past behind her,' her close friend said this week. 'She was excited about the future and turning over a new leaf. She thought she was embarking on a new chapter of her life,never realising what was lying in wait for her.'


The Guardian
31 minutes ago
- The Guardian
US appeals court indiciates it might declare Trump's birthright citizenship order unconstitutional
Donald Trump's order restricting birthright citizenship appeared on Friday to be headed toward being declared unconstitutional by a second federal appeals court, as judges expressed deep skepticism about a key piece of the US president's hardline immigration agenda. A three-judge panel of the Boston-based first US circuit court of appeals sharply questioned a lawyer with the federal justice department as to why they should overturn two lower-court judges who blocked the order from taking effect. Those lower-court judges include one in Boston who last week reaffirmed his prior decision to block the order's enforcement nationally, even after the US supreme court in June curbed the power of judges to broadly enjoin that and other policies. The San Francisco-based ninth US circuit court of appeals last week became the first federal appeals court to hold Trump's order as unconstitutional. Its ultimate fate will likely be determined by the supreme court. Eric McArthur, a justice department attorney, said on Friday that the citizenship clause of the US constitution's 14th amendment, which was ratified in 1868 after the US civil war, rightly extended citizenship to the children of newly-freed enslaved Black people. 'It did not extend birthright citizenship as a matter of constitutional right' to the children of people in the US without documentation, he said. But the judges questioned how that argument was consistent with the supreme court's 1898 ruling interpreting the clause in United States v Wong Kim Ark, long understood as guaranteeing American citizenship to children born in the US to non-citizen parents. 'We have an opinion by the supreme court that we aren't free to disregard,' said David Barron, the chief US circuit judge who like his two colleagues was appointed by a Democratic president. Trump's executive order, issued on the Republican's first day back in the Oval Office on 20 January, directs agencies to refuse to recognize the citizenship of US-born children who do not have at least one parent who is a US citizen or lawful permanent resident, also known as a 'green card' holder. Every court to consider the order's merits has declared it unconstitutional, including the three judges who halted the order's enforcement nationally. Those judges included Leo Sorokin, a US district judge in Boston, who ruled in favor of 18 Democratic-led states and the District of Columbia, who had swiftly challenged Trump's policy in court. 'The supreme court has repeatedly recognized children born to individuals who are here unlawfully or who are here on a temporary basis are nonetheless birthright citizens,' Shankar Duraiswamy, a lawyer for New Jersey, argued Friday. The 6-3 conservative majority US supreme court on 27 June sided with the administration in the litigation by restricting the ability of judges to issue so-called universal injunctions and directing lower courts that had blocked Trump's policy nationally to reconsider the scope of their orders. Sign up to This Week in Trumpland A deep dive into the policies, controversies and oddities surrounding the Trump administration after newsletter promotion But the ruling contained exceptions, allowing federal judges in Massachusetts and New Hampshire and the ninth circuit to issue new decisions stopping Trump's order from taking effect nationally. The rulings on appeal to the first circuit were issued by Sorokin and the New Hampshire judge, who originally issued a narrow injunction but more recently issued a new decision in a recently-filed class action blocking Trump's order nationwide. Separately, in an immigration-related ruling on Friday, US district Judge Jia Cobb in Washington DC blocked the Trump administration from fast-tracking the deportation of potentially hundreds of thousands of immigrants who were paroled into the country under humanitarian programs during Joe Biden's presidency. Cobb said it served the public interest to put on hold the Department of Homeland Security's expedited removals for those who entered with temporary parole rather than cause irreparable harm to immigrants by allowing them.


The Guardian
34 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Far-right extremists using games platforms to radicalise teenagers, report warns
Far-right extremists are using livestream gaming platforms to target and radicalise teenage players, a report has warned. The new research, published in the journal Frontiers in Psychology, reveals how a range of extremist groups and individuals use platforms that allow users to chat and livestream while playing video games to recruit and radicalise vulnerable users, mainly young males. UK crime and counter-terror agencies have urged parents to be especially alert to online offenders targeting youngsters during the summer holidays. In an unprecedented move, last week Counter Terrorism Policing, MI5 and the National Crime Agency issued a joint warning to parents and carers that online offenders 'will exploit the school holidays to engage in criminal acts with young people when they know less support is readily available'. Dr William Allchorn, a senior research fellow at Anglia Ruskin University's international policing and public protection research institute, who carried out the study with his colleague Dr Elisa Orofino, said 'gaming-adjacent' platforms were being used as 'digital playgrounds' for extremist activity. Allchorn found teenage players were being deliberately 'funnelled' by extremists from mainstream social media platforms to these sites, where 'the nature and quantity of the content makes these platforms very hard to police'. The most common ideology being pushed by extremist users was far right, with content celebrating extreme violence and school shootings also shared. On Tuesday, Felix Winter, who threatened to carry out a mass shooting at his Edinburgh school, was jailed for six years after the court heard the 18-year-old had been 'radicalised' online, spending more than 1,000 hours in contact with a pro-Nazi Discord group. Allchorn said: 'There has definitely been a more coordinated effort by far-right groups like Patriotic Alternative to recruit young people through gaming events that first emerged during lockdown. But since then a lot of extremist groups have been deplatformed by mainstream spaces, so individuals will now lurk on public groups or channels on Facebook or Discord, for example, and use this as a way of identifying someone who might be sympathetic to reach out to.' He added that, while some younger users turn to extreme content for its shock value among their peers, this can make them vulnerable to being targeted. Extremists have been forced to become more sophisticated as the majority of platforms have banned them, Allchorn said. 'Speaking to local community safety teams, they told us that approaches are now about trying to create a rapport rather than making a direct ideological sell.' The study also spoke to moderators, who described their frustration at inconsistent enforcement policies on their platforms and the burden of deciding whether content or users should be reported to law enforcement agencies. While in-game chat is unmoderated, moderators said they were still overwhelmed by the volume and complexity of harmful content, including the use of hidden symbols to circumvent banned words that would be picked up by automated moderation tools, for example, a string of symbols stitched together to represent a swastika. Allchorn highlighted the need for critical digital literacy for parents as well as law enforcement so they could better understand how these platforms and subcultures operate. Last October Ken McCallum, the head of MI5, revealed that '13% of all those being investigated by MI5 for involvement in UK terrorism are under 18', a threefold increase in three years. AI tools are being used to assist with moderation, but they struggle to interpret memes or when language is ambiguous or sarcastic.