Hiker Tried to Fight Off Bear Before Being Dragged into Forest, Friend Says. His Body Was Just FoundNew Foto - Hiker Tried to Fight Off Bear Before Being Dragged into Forest, Friend Says. His Body Was Just Found

Getty A hiker was attacked by a brown bear on Aug. 14 while hiking Mount Rausu A friend witnessed the victim being dragged into a forest by the animal Authorities confirmed that the body of the victim was found on Aug. 15 on the mountain Officials in Japan said a body found on a mountain is that ofa missing hiker who was attacked by a brown bear The incident involving the male hiker and the animal occurred on Thursday, Aug. 14, on Mount Rausu in the Japanese prefecture of Hokkaido,The Japan Times,The Japan NewsandNHKreported. Police said the victim was walking a trail on Mount Rausu on Thursday morning when the attack happened, according to theAgence France-Presse. The friend ran to help the victim and witnessed him trying to fight off the bear — before the animal dragged the victim into a forest,The Japan Newsand NHK reported. https://people-app.onelink.me/HNIa/kz7l4cuf The friend, who was uninjured, reported the attack to police. They tried calling the victim's number but received no response. On the morning of Friday, Aug. 15, police and searchers came across a piece of a shirt that may have belonged to the victim near where the friend contacted authorities, according to NHK. A wallet linked to the victim was also discovered. Authorities said the victim was later found in the afternoon and taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead, the AFP reported. He has been identified as 26-year-old Sota Keisuke, according to NHK. An official also told the AFP that hunters captured and killed a bear near the trail. A DNA examination will be performed to determine whether that bear is connected to the victim's death. Following the attack, authorities closed the mountain trail,The Japan Timesreported. Officials with the Hokkaido prefectural government said Thursday's incident was the first recorded bear attack in the Shiretoko Mountain Range, which includes Mount Rausu, in 63 years, according toThe Japan News. According to figures unveiled earlier this month, there were 11,600 brown bears in Hokkaido at the end of 2023, a decline of 500 from the previous year, the AFP reported. Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. This latest incident comes nearly one month aftera hunter in his 50s went missing also in Hokkaido— and just days after a brown bear was spotted in the area. A friend informed authorities that the hunter never returned from his outing on Mount Esan on July 15,The Guardian,Kyodo NewsandThe Japan Newsreported. A gun believed to have belonged to the man was found near bloodstains, according to the reports. The disappearance came after a large brown bear was reported in the area on July 12. Read the original article onPeople

Hiker Tried to Fight Off Bear Before Being Dragged into Forest, Friend Says. His Body Was Just Found

Hiker Tried to Fight Off Bear Before Being Dragged into Forest, Friend Says. His Body Was Just Found Getty A hiker was attacked by a brown b...
Brooklyn construction magnate gets probation for funneling illegal donations to NYC Mayor Eric AdamsNew Foto - Brooklyn construction magnate gets probation for funneling illegal donations to NYC Mayor Eric Adams

NEW YORK (AP) — A Brooklyn construction magnate was sentenced Friday to a year of probation for working with a Turkish government official to funnel illegal campaign contributions to New York City Mayor Eric Adams, resolving one of two related federal cases after themayor's criminal charges were dropped. Erden Arkan, 76, told Manhattan federal Judge Dale Ho that he regretted his "poor judgments" in engaging in the straw donor scheme, which helped Adams fraudulently obtain public money for his 2021 mayoral bid under the city's matching funds program. Ho cited Arkan's age and otherwise clean record in imposing the sentence, telling the Turkish-born businessman that his immigrant success story "exemplifies the American dream." "I hope that you don't let this one mistake define you," Ho told Arkan. Arkan faced up to six months in prison under federal sentencing guidelines, but prosecutors and the federal probation officer agreed that no prison time was warranted. In addition to probation, he must also pay a $9,500 fine and $18,000 in restitution. Arkan pleaded guilty in January to a conspiracy charge in Manhattan federal court. Weeks later,President Donald Trump's Justice Department pressured prosecutors to drop their underlying case against Adams, ultimately getting it dismissed. In court Friday, Arkan's lawyer Jonathan Rosen blasted the government for continuing to pursue his case after getting Adams' charges dismissed. "To put it mildly, this is a very unusual case. In fact, it is unprecedented," Rosen argued. In February, Justice Department leadershipordered Manhattan federal prosecutors to drop Adams' case, arguing that it was hindering the Democratic mayor's ability to assist the Republican administration'simmigrationcrackdown. Ho, who also oversaw the mayor's case, dismissed his charges in April. In a written opinion, he agreed it was the only practical outcome but also criticized what he said was the government's "troubling" rationalefor wanting the chargesthrown out. While Adams was spared, prosecutors continued to pursue related cases against Arkan and a former aide to the mayor, Mohamed Bahi. Bahi, who served as City Hall's chief liaison to the Muslim community,pleaded guilty on Tuesday to soliciting straw donationsfor Adams' mayoral campaign from employees of a different Brooklyn construction company at a December 2020 fundraiser. Arkan acknowledged in his January plea that he knowingly violated the law by reimbursing employees of his construction firm for their donations to Adams' campaign. In brief remarks Friday, he apologized to city taxpayers who bankroll the matching funds program, telling Ho: "I love this city. I dedicated my life to making it better. It pains me that I have harmed it." According to prosecutors, Adams personally solicited donations from Arkan and a Turkish consular official at an April 2021 dinner. The following month, Arkan held a fundraiser at the headquarters of his construction company, KSK, in which 10 employees donated between $1,200 and $1,500 to the campaign. They were later reimbursed by Arkan, making them illegal straw donations. Adams then used those funds to fraudulently obtain public money under the city's matching funds program, which provides a generous match for small-dollar donations, prosecutors allege. A well-known member of New York's Turkish community, Arkan's ties to Adams first emerged in November 2023 after federal investigators searched the businessman's home, along with the home of Adams' chief fundraiser and his liaison to the Turkish community. Adamspleaded not guiltyto bribery and other charges after a2024 indictmentaccused him of accepting illegal campaign contributions and travel discounts from a Turkish official and others — and returning the favors by, among other things, helping Turkey open a diplomatic building without passing fire inspections. At a Feb. 19 hearing that precipitated the dismissal of his case, Adams told Ho: "I have not committed a crime." The first-term mayor, a former police captain, skipped the June Democratic primary and is currently running for reelection as an independent.

Brooklyn construction magnate gets probation for funneling illegal donations to NYC Mayor Eric Adams

Brooklyn construction magnate gets probation for funneling illegal donations to NYC Mayor Eric Adams NEW YORK (AP) — A Brooklyn construction...
ICE agents trashed two Pennsylvania restaurants during a raid, employees allegeNew Foto - ICE agents trashed two Pennsylvania restaurants during a raid, employees allege

A local Mexican restaurant chain in Pennsylvania is trying to forge ahead a week after a worksite immigration raid left property damage at two of its storefronts and a workforce afraid to show up to their jobs, according to two employees and a witness who spoke with NBC News. It all started Aug. 7 when immigration authorities showed up at two Emiliano's Mexican Restaurant & Bar locations in the Pittsburgh area. As many as 16 workers were detained — nine worked at a location in Gibsonia, a suburb north of Pittsburgh, and seven others worked at another location in the nearby township of Cranberry. Ina social media post that same afternoon,which included a video taken by a worker, the business accused agents of storming into its restaurants and leaving "a trail of fear, confusion, and destruction" that included a burned kitchen, torn ceiling tiles, broken doors, a safe cut open by an agent and trashed food. The incident raises questions over the tactics used by authorities at this particular raid. This week, gas plumbers fixed a stove that was damaged during the raid, according to two people working at the restaurant chain. Staffing was also thin at the locations targeted by immigration authorities as employees who witnessed the raid, including those who are U.S. citizens, remain "in shock," they added. "No one wants to go back, everyone is scared." Both workers who spoke with NBC News requested to not be named to protect their family's privacy because of an ongoing federal investigation in connection with last week's events. The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Western District of Pennsylvania declined to clarify what the investigation it is leading is about. As the immigration arrests were happening last week, someone alerted an emergency response immigrationhotlinerun byCasa San Jose, a local nonprofit that advocates for Latino and immigrant communities. The organization quickly dispatched about 20 volunteers to both locations to act as legal observers, collect testimonies and provide support to the workers and families affected, according to Jaime Martinez, a community defense organizer at Casa San Jose. At the Gibsonia location, "the raid actually caused a kitchen fire that agents were unable to extinguish at the beginning, which put people in danger," Martinez told NBC News on Tuesday. Employees who spoke to Martinez and his volunteers said the stove was on when agents entered the kitchen because workers were cooking food as they prepared to open the restaurant Thursday morning. The restaurant's manager warned agents that the open burners were on, but witnesses alleged that agents didn't do anything until a fire sparked, he said. The detained employees, who had their arms and ankles shackled, were the ones who directed the agents to find the fire extinguisher and instructed them on how to use it after initially failing to operate it, according to employees who spoke to Martinez and his volunteers. "By the time the fire department got there, the fire had already been put out with a dry chemical extinguisher, but only after this delay," Martinez said. A spokesperson with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement told NBC News in an email Thursday that the "damage to the restaurant, including the small fire, was created by the illegal aliens themselves while they were trying to escape or hide from law enforcement officers." According to ICE, the agents showed up at the locations in Gibsonia and Cranberry to execute federal search warrants based on information it got alleging that the restaurants were employing undocumented workers,WPXI, NBC's affiliate in Pittsburgh, reported.The agency added that the 16 people detained lack legal status and are now in ICE custody, undergoing immigration proceedings. "But in the process of coming in with that warrant, they also terrorized the community, pointed guns at people and destroyed a local business," Martinez said. In response to this, the ICE spokesperson told NBC News, "All agents and officers followed established legal procedures while executing the warrants." At the Cranberry location, Casa San Jose volunteers interviewed a worker who described seeing officers come into the restaurant, shouting "police" and pointing their long guns at the employees. One female employee who was in the kitchen said an agent "pointed the gun at her head" while telling her to stop cooking, according to Martinez. While she was not detained after showing proper documentation, "this lady is now going to have to live with the trauma of having law enforcement point a gun at her head while she was at work," Martinez said. Martinez and one of the workers who spoke with NBC News said agents lined up all of the cuffed employees and made them kneel while pointing their weapons at them. "Agents and officers operated within established law enforcement standards in order to ensure the safety of law enforcement officers, the public and the illegal aliens themselves," the ICE spokesperson said in response to this allegation. Last week was not the first time immigration authorities attempted to detain employees from Emiliano's Mexican Restaurant & Bar. The ICE spokesperson confirmed to NBC News that a June incident was part of "an investigation that ultimately led to the execution of the warrants" this month. Martinez said that on a night in June, he got a call on the hotline, reporting unmarked vehicles surrounding a nearby apartment complex. When the volunteer who was dispatched arrived at the area, she noticed the vehicles were parked with their engines still running, in front and behind the restaurant. According to Martinez, it looked like federal agents inside the vehicles were waiting for workers to come out of the restaurant as it was closing. The vehicles left once TV crews arrived on the scene, he said. "There were nine people in that restaurant on lockdown," Martinez said, adding his group doesn't know the immigration status of those workers since it doesn't ask people about that as part of its policy. "But you don't have to be undocumented to be afraid of getting detained." Since launching the hotline in March, Casa San Jose has received more than 650 calls reporting more than 100 immigration detentions in the area and has dispatched volunteers in at least 70 instances, according to Martinez. In the wake of the raids at Emiliano's Mexican Restaurant and Bar locations, the community came together and collectively donated more than $133,000. The workers who spoke with NBC News said the business plans to use the funds to cover bond expenses, one month worth of salary for each employee detained and repair damage done to the restaurant.

ICE agents trashed two Pennsylvania restaurants during a raid, employees allege

ICE agents trashed two Pennsylvania restaurants during a raid, employees allege A local Mexican restaurant chain in Pennsylvania is trying t...
Taylor Swift and Blake Lively 'Aren't Speaking' as Fans Speculate About Singer's Song 'Ruin the Friendship' (Source)New Foto - Taylor Swift and Blake Lively 'Aren't Speaking' as Fans Speculate About Singer's Song 'Ruin the Friendship' (Source)

Taylor Swift and Blake Lively are currently not speaking as Swift prepares to release her next album,The Life of a Showgirl, in October, as a source tells PEOPLE Their friendship has been under scrutiny since the singer's name was brought into theIt Ends With Uslegal battle between Lively and Justin Baldoni Swift and Lively have been friends since 2014 Taylor SwiftandBlake Livelyare currently not in communication. Theirlongtime friendshiphas been under public scrutiny since Swift's name was brought into Lively'songoing legal battlewith herIt Ends With Uscostar and directorJustin Baldoni, which began in December 2024. Now, a source close to the situation tells PEOPLE, "Taylor and Blake aren't speaking." Swift, 35, hascome up several times duringthe actress' legal war with Baldoni, 41. The superstar's name was first brought into the mix when Baldoni's legal team alleged that Swift had pressured him to accept Lively's rewrites on the movie ina complaint Baldoni filedin January thathas since been dismissed. Later, in May, Baldoni's legal teamdropped the subpoena they'd issued to Swift. Swift's rep claimed the subpoena was "designed to use Taylor Swift's name to draw public interest by creating tabloid clickbait instead of focusing on the facts of the case." Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty ; Taylor Hill/FilmMagic On Aug. 13 Swift announced the upcoming release of hernew album,The Life of a Showgirl, which will include a song titled "Ruin the Friendship," that fans are speculating is about her relationship with Lively, 37. Swift revealed during her recentappearanceon boyfriend Travis Kelce's podcast that she recorded the album while on the European leg of her Eras Tour before she became embroiled in theIt Ends With Usdrama. Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic; John Nacion/Variety/Getty In April, a source told PEOPLE that Swift "was really hurt" after she was implicated in Lively and Baldoni's legal case, and in May a source told PEOPLE that her friendship with Lively "has halted." At that time, another insider said that while the pair were "taking some space," they were "not no longer friends." Two months later, a source told PEOPLE that Lively and Swift wereworking toward being "on good terms,"though their friendship "isn't the same as it was before." Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. The pair's friendship can be documented going back to 2014. Swift, who isgodmotherto the actress' daughters she shares with husbandRyan Reynolds, has even featured the couple's kids in her music. Lively and Reynolds' daughterJames has a voice cameoin Swift'sReputationtrack "Gorgeous," whileJames, Inez and Betty are all named-dropped inFolklore. Swift's upcoming albumThe Life of a Showgirlreleases Oct. 3. Read the original article onPeople

Taylor Swift and Blake Lively 'Aren't Speaking' as Fans Speculate About Singer's Song 'Ruin the Friendship’ (Source)

Taylor Swift and Blake Lively 'Aren't Speaking' as Fans Speculate About Singer's Song 'Ruin the Friendship' (Source)...
Alison Sweeney Recalls This 'Horrible' Part of Hosting 'The Biggest Loser'New Foto - Alison Sweeney Recalls This 'Horrible' Part of Hosting 'The Biggest Loser'

The Biggest Loseris getting the documentary treatment withFit for TV: The Reality of The Biggest Loser. Over the course of three episodes, those closely involved with the NBC competition series reveal behind-the-scenes secrets and the show's most controversial aspects. Alison Sweeneybegan hostingThe Biggest Loserin Season 4, taking over forCaroline Rhea. "As host of the show, it was my job to be there for the contestants and encourage them to talk about some of the harder things that are embarrassing and hard to talk about," Sweeney said in the documentary. The show chronicled the journey of overweight contestants as they competed to lose weight and win a cash prize.The Biggest Loserfaced loads of criticism for its approach to weight loss. One of the most shocking components of the show was the temptation challenges, wherecontestantsfaced off to see who could eat the most calories in five minutes. Whichever participant won would receive a prize, which could include an extra training session before a weigh-in or an opportunity to see their family. "The temptation challenges were the hardest part of the show for me," theDays of Our Livesstar admitted. "It was horrible." TrainerBob Harpercalled the temptation challenges "so dumb" and placed blame on cocreator Dave Broome and executive producerJ.D. Rothfor allowing those types of challenges to see the light of day. In Episode 3, the documentary touched on the Season 15 controversy where trainerJillian Michaelsgave her team caffeine pills in order to have an advantage at the weigh-in. Once the show discovered Michaels had violated the show's rules, Sweeney confronted the trainer in an episode. When Sweeney watched the moment back, she said it was "terrifying" to revisit. The host was shocked that she had to be the one to address Michaels and give her team a four-pound disadvantage. (Michaels did not participate in the documentary.) Fit for TV: The Reality of The Biggest Loser, Streaming Now, Netflix Read the latest entertainment news onTV Insider.

Alison Sweeney Recalls This ‘Horrible’ Part of Hosting ‘The Biggest Loser’

Alison Sweeney Recalls This 'Horrible' Part of Hosting 'The Biggest Loser' The Biggest Loseris getting the documentary treat...
Pete Davidson Reveals 1 Tattoo He's Keeping amid His $200,000 Ink-Removal ProcessNew Foto - Pete Davidson Reveals 1 Tattoo He's Keeping amid His $200,000 Ink-Removal Process

Steven Ferdman/WireImage; Virisa Yong/BFA.com/Shutterstock Pete Davidson opened up about one tattoo he's choosing to keep amid the lengthy, expensive and painful ink removal process he began in 2020 TheSaturday Night Livealum admitted onThe Breakfast Club Power 105.1radio show that his "tattoos sucked," which is why he's decided to get rid of them Davidson had upwards of 200 tattoos on his body that he got within a span of two years in his early 20s Pete Davidsonisn't getting rid ofallhis ink. TheSaturday Night Livealum, 31, is in the process of removingupwards of 200 tattoosthat he had inked all over his body, however, he recently opened up about one in particular that he confirmed he's keeping. Davidson shared onThe Breakfast Club Power 105.1that his "feelings changed" about the large amount of tattoos he got done "in a span of two years" in his early 20s, admitting that he's not a fan of them now like he used to be when he was younger. "My tattoos sucked. They were all drug-fueled," he told the hosts of the radio show on Wednesday, Aug. 13, explaining that his time in rehab ultimately gave him second thoughts about his prior ink decisions. Dia Dipasupil/Getty "I just looked at myself in rehab for the first time when I was sober and was just like, 'Oh no. What did I do'?" recalled Davidson, who'scurrently expecting his first babywith his girlfriend,Elsie Hewitt, 29. Don't get the comedian wrong, though! He said on the radio show that he "thinks tattoos are cool," however, tattoos that have "meaning" to them. He admitted his did not necessarily have any particular significance when he got them done at the time. "Mine just weren't," theBupkisactor said of his tattoos' lack of meaning. "So I just started burning them off. Burning them off sucks," he added of the lengthy and painful removal process. There is one tattoo, specifically, that Davidson excitedly spoke about keeping on his body: Hillary Clinton. "Hillary's staying, I love Hillary. I got Hilary after she lost," he told the radio hosts of the 2016 presidential candidate whom he got inked on his right leg in December 2017. https://people-app.onelink.me/HNIa/kz7l4cuf "One, I know her personally and she's a lovely lady," he said of Clinton. "But also ... she's tough, man. She was really at the forefront of some bulls--- and as someone who's been at the forefront of some bulls---, I just wanted to, like, cheer her up a little bit." When asked what Clinton said about Davidson's tattoo, the comic revealed that "she loves it," and even dialed him to inquire if her inspired ink would be a part of his removal process. Bobby Bank/GC Images/Getty; Reformation "What was cute was when I got them removed, she hit me up and was like, 'You're not removing me are you'?" he recalled of the politician's concern. "I was like, 'Of course not!'," he recalled, making clear, "Hillary stays." Davidson then shared advice for those who are considering permanently inking themselves, suggesting that they put a good amount of thought into the decision prior to getting it done. "It sucks. If anyone is thinking of getting a tattoo, I would recommend thinking about it for a couple years, 'cause your feelings change." Davidson previously said he plans to only keep "two or three" of his tats. Earlier in the interview, the Staten Island native revealed that his "Wu-Tang" tattoo is staying when talking about the hip-hop group — which also hails from the New York City borough — he has inked on his shoulder above his Verrazzano Bridge tattoo. Of the Wu-Tang tattoo, the comedian previously toldComplex, "They are Staten Island. That's what Staten Island is." He also added: "Mushrooms is a fun thing to do," when the interviewer complimented the tattoo. In January, a source told PEOPLE that theSNLstar spent $200,000 to undergo the process of having his multiple inkings removed from his body. "He just woke up one day and wanted them gone, and it's been a years-long process," the source said of the procedure. A second source added that the tattoo removal is also marking a fresh start for Davidson, who "has been sober since September, and gained 20 pounds." "Things are going really well for him," the insider told PEOPLE at the time. "Things are heading in the right direction." Davidson started the long-term journey ofremoving his tattoos in 2020. Read the original article onPeople

Pete Davidson Reveals 1 Tattoo He's Keeping amid His $200,000 Ink-Removal Process

Pete Davidson Reveals 1 Tattoo He's Keeping amid His $200,000 Ink-Removal Process Steven Ferdman/WireImage; Virisa Yong/BFA.com/Shutters...

 

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