Rudy Giuliani, the former personal lawyer of former United States President Donald Trump, has said evidence collected during an FBI raid on his home as part of a probe into his dealings in Ukraine would prove he and the former president are “innocent”.
The former mayor of New York City told Tucker Carlson of Fox News that the electronic devices seized at his Manhattan residence and a separate office on Wednesday would show he did not violate federal law as he sought to dig up dirt on political rival Joe Biden in Ukraine in 2019 to support Trump.
“The evidence is exculpatory. It proves the president and I and all of us are innocent,” Giuliani said of the Ukraine dealings, for which the former president was later impeached by the US House of Representatives. He was later acquitted in a Senate trial.
New York
Earlier this month, Twitch announced it would start banning users for behavior conducted away from its site.
The move by Amazon’s live-streaming platform involved hiring a law firm to conduct investigations into users’ offline misconduct, a new twist and the latest prominent example of tech companies acting on “off-service” behavior.
How platforms enforce against activities conducted not just on their services but on other sites and offline is often only described vaguely in their rules. But as lawmakers and researchers examine tech’s relationship with real-world violence or harm, this type of moderation is gaining attention.
Facebook’s rules ban users they deem dangerous, including those involved in terrorist activity, organized hate or criminal groups, convicted sex offenders, and mass murderers. People who have murdered one person are mostly allowed, a spokeswoman said, due to the crime’s volume. Last year, Facebook expanded the list to include “milita
Prime Minister Narendra Modi. | PIB/ AFP
Dr Navjot Dahiya, the national vice president of the Indian Medical Association, on Monday called Prime Minister Narendra Modi a “super spreader” of the coronavirus for holding political rallies in poll-bound states and allowing Kumbh Mela to take place amid the second wave of the pandemic, reported
The Tribune.
“While the medical fraternity is trying hard to make people understand mandatory Covid-19 norms, PM Modi did not hesitate to address big political rallies, tossing all Covid-19 norms in the air,” Dahiya said in a statement.
Dahiya noted that when the first patient of the coronavirus was found in India in January 2020, the prime minister, instead of making arrangements to tackle the infection, organised gatherings of over one lakh people in Gujarat to welcome the then United States President Donald Trump, reported
Canadian woman accused of mailing poison to Donald Trump pleads not guilty to new charges
A Montreal-area woman has pleaded not guilty to new charges linked to a letter sent to Donald Trump while he was still president. The new charges are about sending threats through the mail and violating biological weapons prohibitions.
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The Canadian Press ·
Posted: Apr 26, 2021 5:06 PM ET | Last Updated: April 26
Pascale Ferrier appears in a jail booking photograph taken after her arrest by the Mission Police Department in Mission, Texas, U.S. March 13, 2019. (Hidalgo County Sheriff s Office/Reuters )
A Quebec woman accused of mailing poison last year to former United States President Donald Trump pleaded not guilty to added charges in a Washington court today.
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