
EXCLUSIVE I know exactly who killed my brother but the system is broken... justice still hasn't been served after 3 years
In June 2022, political analyst Gianno Caldwell lost his 18-year-old brother, Christian, to what he described as 'senseless gun violence' on the streets of their hometown in South Side Chicago.
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Reuters
37 minutes ago
- Reuters
ICE raids
Follow on Apple or Spotify. Listen on the Reuters app. Immigration enforcement agents have stepped up raids, detaining farmworkers, restaurant staff, meat packers, day laborers and construction workers. The Trump administration says the raids protect public safety and national security. Critics say they create fear among workers the country badly needs and impact asylum seekers trying to do the right thing. The first episode of On Assignment examines the impact of these raids across the country, from California to a New York courthouse. Further Reading Immigration raids leave crops unharvested, California farms at risk US immigration officials raid meat production plant in Omaha, dozens detained ICE's tactics draw criticism as it triples daily arrest targets


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Woman hurled in jail after letting grass in front of her home go brown during hot weather
A woman in Florida was thrown in jail after letting the grass in front of her home go brown during hot weather, violating HOA guidelines. Irena Green was arrested and spent a week in jail after a battle with her homeowner's association in Hillsborough County over browning grass in front of her home. 'I think they have way too much power,' Green told ABC news. 'I've never heard of anything like this in my life.' Green said her grass is often not green due to a large tree that's planted near her sidewalk, as well as mandatory watering restrictions that were put in place last year following a drought. She claimed, however, that her lawn was not the worst looking in the Riverview Creek View subdivision. 'If you drive around my neighborhood, you'll see there's plenty of yards not up to par,' she added. The Trowbridge Company Inc., the HOA management company, began notifying her of the violations, which spanned a range of issues including her browning lawn and a dirty mailbox, Green said. 'The grass had started turning brown. So they started sending notes, and it went from the grass being brown to there's a dent in my garage.' Green said the grass often isn't green in her yard due to a large tree that's planted near her sidewalk as well as mandatory watering restrictions last year following a drought On May 23, as she drove home with her daughter, she was pulled over and asked to step out of her vehicle and she was arrested and booked into the Orient Road Jail Green also was notified of violations including owning a commercial cargo van, which is not the only in her neighborhood, ABC reported. But as she failed to comply with the guidelines and respond to a request for mediation, the HOA filed a lawsuit against her alleging that she violated community appearance rules. Yet as she attempted to represent herself in court, she was told last July by the judge that she had around a month to fix the violations. 'My grass had to be brought up to par. He said you can get seed, you can do something, but you've got 30 days to get it corrected. So I said fine. He said if it's not done in 30 days, you're gonna go to jail,' Green told the outlet. Green said she did what she could to comply, even selling her van and cleaning her mailbox. She bought seed and watered her grass, but missed her next court date and claimed she hadn't been notified to appear at the hearing last August. 'I was supposed to receive documentation. Nothing was sent to my home,' Green said. 'And I reached out to the courthouse several times to try to find out when was my court date.' Green said she did what she could to comply, even selling her van and cleaning her mailbox. She bought seed and watered her grass, but missed her next court date and claimed she hadn't been notified to appear at the hearing last August Yet, the judge ordered that she was in contempt of court and a warrant was issued for her arrest. On May 23, as she drove home with her daughter, she was pulled over and asked to step out of her vehicle. 'He asked me can I get out. When I got out he said, "Ms. green, did you know that you have a warrant for your arrest?"' Green said. She was arrested and booked into the Orient Road Jail, according to ABC News. Yet, she was placed into custody without bond. 'So I couldn't even go home to my family. I sat in there for seven days. Seven days in the jailhouse like a criminal,' she added. Green described the process of being booked into the jail as 'horrible.' 'I work hard to buy this home for me and my kids in a better neighborhood and environment and to be taken to jail and to be treated like that for brown grass at my own home... that's horrible,' she said. She even described being held in jail with other inmates who queried why she was being held in custody. 'One girl, she kind of came over and asked me like "Hey, what are you in here for?" And I told her it was like for my grass,' Green said. 'And she's like 'Oh grass, they should make that stuff legal'. She's thinking that I'm talking about weed and I'm talking about my front yard grass.' Green's sister, a paralegal, filed a petition six-days after she was booked into the jail which requested an emergency hearing. 'I went to court, and I had to be shackled from my hands to my feet,' Green said as she recalled being the only person in county civil court wearing a jail uniform. In court, the HOA's attorney even opposed her release, Green said: 'He says "Well, it hasn't been resodded. The whole yard needs to be re-sodded." And she's like not from those pictures I see. She's like "No. I want her released immediately."' 'He wanted me to continue to sit in jail and not come home to my family,' she added. In a statement to the outlet, the Creek View HOA Board of Directors said: 'Ms. Green received notices of violations. She disregarded them. Legal action was filed by the Association after she failed to accept the offer to mediate the matter, pre-suit, as is required before a lawsuit can be filed...' 'After suit was filed and final judgment was entered against her, Ms. Green showed up for the court hearing on July 11, 2024... At the July 11 hearing, with Ms. Green present, another court date was set by the judge for August 19, 2024. 'She was instructed to comply with the requirements of the final judgment by August 19 and to report to the judge what was accomplished on August 19. Ms. Green failed to show up in court on August 19. 'Her failure to abide by the Court's instruction led to the arrest warrant being steps were taken by the Court due to Ms. Green's failure to comply with the Court's instructions.' While Green was released the next day following her hearing, she said: 'I definitely wish I would have hired a lawyer.'


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Musk's X must face claim of negligence over child abuse images, judge rules
A federal appeals court on Friday revived part of a lawsuit accusing Elon Musk's X of becoming a haven for child exploitation, though the court said the platform deserves broad immunity from claims over objectionable content. While rejecting some claims, the ninth US circuit court of appeals in San Francisco said X, formerly Twitter, must face a claim it was negligent by failing to promptly report a video containing explicit images of two underage boys to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC). The case predated Musk's 2022 purchase of Twitter. A trial judge had dismissed the case in December 2023. X's lawyers did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Musk was not a defendant. One plaintiff, John Doe 1, said he was 13 when he and a friend, John Doe 2, were lured, on Snapchat, into providing nude photos of themselves to someone John Doe 1 thought was a 16-year-old girl at his school. The Snapchat user was actually a child abuse images trafficker who blackmailed the plaintiffs into providing additional photos. Those images were later compiled into a video that was posted on Twitter. According to court papers, Twitter took nine days after learning about the content to take it down and report it to NCMEC, following more than 167,000 views, court papers showed. Circuit judge Danielle Forrest said section 230 of the federal Communications Decency Act, which protects online platforms from liability over user content, did not shield X from the negligence claim once it learned about the images. 'The facts alleged here, coupled with the statutory 'actual knowledge' requirement, separates the duty to report child pornography to NCMEC from Twitter's role as a publisher,' she wrote for a three-judge panel. X must also face a claim its infrastructure made it too difficult to report child abuse images. It was found immune from claims it knowingly benefited from sex trafficking, and created search features that 'amplify' child abuse images posts. Dani Pinter, a lawyer at the National Center on Sexual Exploitation, which represented the plaintiffs, said in a statement: 'We look forward to discovery and ultimately trial against X to get justice and accountability.'