Kamis, 01 Juli 2021

Jasmine Hartin claims she was abandoned by Andrew Ashcroft's family over fears about 'bad press' - Daily Mail

'I can't believe how I've been treated': Socialite Jasmine Hartin, 32, claims she has been abandoned by Andrew Ashcroft's family over fears about 'bad press' and that she wasn't allowed to speak to her children

  • Jasmine Hartin claimed the Ashcrofts were told to keep their 'distance' from her
  • The former partner of Andrew Ashcroft said she was 'shocked' by her treatment
  • Hartin, 32, was released from jail after a family friend posted her $30,000 bail
  • The mother claimed she wasn't allowed to speak to her children while in prison
  • She is awaiting trial for the shooting of Supt Henry Jemmott in May with his pistol

The Canadian socialite who shot dead a police chief on a beach in Belize has accused her partner and his family of abandoning her.

Jasmine Hartin claims no-one from the family of her former partner Andrew Ashcroft visited her while she was on bail over the shooting because they had been told they couldn't have 'bad press associated with their reputation'.

The mother-of-two, 32, was released from jail on bail yesterday as she awaits trial for shooting Superintendent Henry Jemmott, a father-of-five, with his own service pistol in May, which she says was an accident.

Speaking to 7 News Belize's Cherisse Halsall, Hartin said the Ashcroft family was told to 'distance' themselves from her, adding that she wasn't allowed to speak to her infant twins while she was in Belize Central Prison.

She said although she has had a 'complicated' seven-year relationship with Ashcroft - the son of Lord Ashcroft - with many 'ups and downs', she has been 'shocked' about the Ashcroft family's treatment of her since her arrest.

She added: 'Even with all of that though, I can't believe how I've been treated.'  

Jasmine Hartin (pictured) claimed she did not have any familial visitors in jail after the family of her former partner Andrew, the son of Lord Ashcroft, were told they couldn't have 'bad press'

Jasmine Hartin (pictured) claimed she did not have any familial visitors in jail after the family of her former partner Andrew, the son of Lord Ashcroft, were told they couldn't have 'bad press'

It is unclear whether the family accept the claims. They have been approached and asked to provide a comment.

In the new interview following her release on bail on Wednesday, Hartin said: 'From what I've been told by the family, they were instructed to distance themselves from me immediately.

'That they couldn't have bad press associated with their reputation, so therefore, I wasn't - I didn't have any family come to visit me in jail, I didn't have any family call me. 

'Instead a couple of friends came to see me, but never once was I allowed to speak to the children during that time.'

Hartin said that her brother tried to call her from Canada while her mother was 'worried sick' while she was in jail, but claimed that Ashcroft told them that she had visitors every single day - which she said was 'exaggerated'. 

Hartin, 32, said the Ashcroft family were told to 'distance' themselves from her, claiming that she wasn't allowed to speak to her young twins while she was in Belize Central Prison

Hartin, 32, said the Ashcroft family were told to 'distance' themselves from her, claiming that she wasn't allowed to speak to her young twins while she was in Belize Central Prison

Hartin said although she has had a 'complicated' seven-year relationship with Andrew Ashcroft (pictured), she is still 'shocked' about her treatment from Ashcroft family since her arrest

Hartin said although she has had a 'complicated' seven-year relationship with Andrew Ashcroft (pictured), she is still 'shocked' about her treatment from Ashcroft family since her arrest

Her full interview with the local news channel will air on 7 News Belize's evening television programme on Thursday. 

Her comments came after a family friend, who is believed to have secured her release from prison by posting bail for her, claimed Hartin had been 'thrown to the wolves'.

Wendy Auxillou told MailOnline that Hartin has been denied access to her children and locked out of her home.

Auxillou said she posted Hartin's $30,000 bail by supplying the title to a property she owns as collateral, according to The Times.

Auxillou, who works as a lawyer, added Hartin is 'being psychologically and emotionally abused'.

Hartin is awaiting trial for shooting Supt Jemmott with his own service pistol last month.

Jemmott, a highly-rated officer tipped as a future leader of his country's police force, was struck behind his right ear by a 9mm round from his own Glock 17 service pistol.

According to a criminal complaint he had been 'socializing' and drinking alone with Hartin on a secluded hotel pier in Ambergris Caye, a tropical island haven for millionaire expats. 

A security guard heard a 'loud bang' at 12.45am and police arrived to find Canadian national Hartin 'covered in red substance as that of blood' and Jemmott, 42, floating dead on his back 30ft from the shore. 

An expended shell casing was still lodged inside the gun which was found on the Mata Rocks hotel pier along with a magazine, live bullets and a pool of blood. 

After spending the weekend behind bars, Hartin gave a statement saying the off-duty officer was showing her how to handle his firearm as the pair drank and hung out. 

Before her release yesterday, Hartin had previously been out on bail but was re-arrested and charged with assaulting a hotel worker last week.

Her bail had originally been covered by the manager of the resort where she had lived with Ashcroft but he withdrew it following her re-arrest. 

When previously out on bail, Hartin was turned away by security when she tried to access her family apartment at the Grand Colony resort to see her young twins. 

According to The Times, Auxillou said: 'In the beginning, people viewed her as some type of rich entitled kid, basically. 

The former partner of Lord Ashcroft's son Andrew is awaiting trial for shooting Superintendent Henry Jemmott (pictured), a father-of-five, with his own service pistol last month

The former partner of Lord Ashcroft's son Andrew is awaiting trial for shooting Superintendent Henry Jemmott (pictured), a father-of-five, with his own service pistol last month

'After what transpired with her being locked out of her house and kept away from her kids and all that, she's now being viewed with a bit of sympathy.'

It has not been specified whether Auxillou is part of her legal team, which is being led by high-profile attorney Richard 'Dickie' Bradley as Hartin awaits trial over the shooting of Superintendent Henry Jemmott, which she claims was an accident.

Authorities at the Central Prison received confirmation of Hartin meeting requirements for bail and she was released as of 3pm yesterday, according to Breaking Belize News.

Her conditions for bail reportedly include daily reports to the police station, a daily curfew, not leaving the jurisdiction, not interfering with witnesses, and maintaining good behaviour. 

Hartin's legal team is being led by high-profile attorney Richard 'Dickie' Bradley, after an apparent split with Godfrey Smith - the former attorney general of Belize who was hired on her behalf in the hours after Jemmot's shooting.

It comes after Hartin's mother Candace Castiglione claimed that her daughter's treatment amounted 'persecution from the Ashcroft family'. 

Hartin pleaded not guilty last week when she appeared in court in San Pedro accused of assaulting the hotel worker during a clash with her former partner. 

The mother-of-two (pictured) was released from prison yesterday after her family friend, lawyer Wendy Auxillou, posted her $30,000 bail

The mother-of-two (pictured) was released from prison yesterday after her family friend, lawyer Wendy Auxillou, posted her $30,000 bail

The court heard she had attempted to push Sandra Grisham, the general manager of the Alaia, however, Hartin representing herself, pleaded not guilty and denied attacking anyone. 

Frank Habet, a manager of a resort, then withdrew her bail funds saying he was worried he would lose his 60,000 Belizean dollars ($30,000/£22,000) if Hartin did not show up for trial.

He said he decided to pull the plug after the accused mother was turned back by security on Tuesday when she tried to access her family apartment at the Grand Colony resort to see her young twins.

Habet said: 'Miss Hartin appeared at Grand Colony resort behaving in a disorderly and abusive manner and creating great disturbance at the hotel in the presence of guests.

'I now think Miss Hartin is quite capable of not showing up for trial and I therefore wish to immediately withdraw my cash deposit.'

Videos showed Hartin, 32, chasing her partner Andrew Ashcroft into the neighboring Alaia Belize hotel, which the couple ran together before the Jemmott shooting.

Hartin took the videos on her own cell phone and could be heard repeatedly asking Ashcroft why he allegedly wouldn't give her access to Ellie and Charlie, four. 

Auxillou, who works as a lawyer, also claims Hartin (pictured) is 'being psychologically and emotionally abused'

Auxillou, who works as a lawyer, also claims Hartin (pictured) is 'being psychologically and emotionally abused'

 In an exclusive interview with DailyMail.com, she reiterated her version of events, saying the gun went off unexpectedly in her hands as she tried to re-insert a clip and hand it back.

'Henry was my friend. It was an accident, I didn't flee the scene. The first thing I did was call the police myself,' she said. 

'There's literally not a day that goes by when I don't cry and my frigging chest doesn't hurt and ache for his kids, for his family, for him.' 

Hartin (pictured) re-told her version of events that led to Jemmott's death, saying the gun went off unexpectedly in her hands as she tried to re-insert a clip and hand it to him

Hartin (pictured) re-told her version of events that led to Jemmott's death, saying the gun went off unexpectedly in her hands as she tried to re-insert a clip and hand it to him

She also revealed for the first time that the reason she was practicing with the gun was because an unnamed man had tried to rape her at a party six days earlier. 

Three days after Jemmott's death Hartin was charged with manslaughter by negligence after prosecutors opted against murder or full-fledged manslaughter on the strength of her witness statement insisting it was an accident. 

The offense carries a maximum prison sentence of nine months or a fine of around 10,000 Belizean dollars ($5,000 in US money).

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2021-07-01 15:14:25Z
52781707804255

Emmanuel Macron shamed by top French court - president hit by 'case of century' - Daily Express

Macron says France is the 'most attractive country' in Europe

France's top administrative court found President Macron's government ineffective in its fight against climate change. The court ordered the French leader to take "all necessary measures to curb the curve of greenhouse gas emissions".

In a stern ultimatum that could cause Mr Macron some headaches just a month before the next Presidential elections, the court told the French leader he must comply with the ruling before March 31, 2022.

If the French government fails to comply, then France may face hefty fines.

This ruling comes after the city of Grande-Synthe in northern France, along with environmental NGOs, filed a complaint in 2018 over insufficient climate action.

Green MEP and former mayor of Grande-Synthe, Damien Careme, said the ruling was "historic".

He told Politico: "For the first time in France, the judiciary forces the state to act for climate."

emmanuel macron climate change 2022 french court

Emmanuel Macron was told he's not doing enough against climate change by top French court (Image: GETTY•PA)

Mr Careme said similar legal actions should be encouraged in other EU countries.

Germany and the Netherlands have also been urged to take more radical decisions to combat climate change by their respective courts.

The French MEP added: "At a time when the European Commission is about to propose a revision of the legislation related to climate action in its fit for 2030 package, this ruling should give the Commission pause to think on how it must come out with proposals that are fit for the challenges ahead."

In February, President Macron received a damning attack from over 100 NGOs over his proposed climate change laws.

READ MORE: EU states demand Boris be hauled in front of European judges

In an open letter to the French President, 110 NGOs, including Greenpeace, ActionAid and WWF, said Mr Macron "lacked ambition" with his legislation aimed at tackling climate change.

In the letter, the environmentalists attacked the French leader for "depriving our country of a tremendous potential to exit from climate, health, economic and social crises".

The NGOs argued the package of laws failed to address all points raised by the assembly.

They wrote: "You have initiated an innovative approach through the Citizen's Climate Convention aiming to involve citizens in the evolution of the law to keep our climate commitments in a spirit of social justice.

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emmanuel macron climate change laws france

Emmanuel Macron was told to comply with anti-climate change targets by March 2022 (Image: GETTY)

"While the citizens' proposals were to be transcribed into law, it is clear that the account is not there. The impact study accompanying the bill drawn from the Citizen's Convention thus recognises that the proposed measures will not, as they stand, meet the objectives of reducing emissions by 40 percent by 2030. And this, whereas this target is in itself insufficient given the new objective of -55 percent adopted last December at the European level.

"As for the Economic, Social and Environmental Council (CESE) and the National Council for Ecological Transition (CNTE), recently consulted for an opinion on the bill, their opinions converge. They are indeed both worried about the inadequacy of the measures taken to achieve our objectives of reducing greenhouse gas emissions, but also about the weakness of the mechanisms to reduce social inequalities.

"The EESC thus indicates that 'the numerous measures of the bill, which are generally relevant, often remain limited, deferred or subject to conditions such that their implementation in the short term is uncertain'.

"This bill largely gives way to incitement and simple encouragement to change practices where government intervention is required.

"However, the expected benefits of the measures proposed by the 150 citizens are numerous: fewer people living in energy sieves, reduced air pollution, healthier food that is accessible to all, a mobility offer that emits less and more. inclusive, more jobs in key sectors of ecological transition, etc."

The French President was also found guilty of inaction in the fight against climate change by a French court in February.

France's government is at fault for not doing enough to combat climate change, a French court said on February 3, in what environmental campaigners called a landmark ruling that could ramp up pressure on other countries to act on global warming.

The ruling has been dubbed "the case of the century".

It was brought by four NGOs who accused the French state of not living up to its own commitments - including a multi-year plan to cut carbon emissions - or to the 2015 Paris Climate accord.

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2021-07-01 13:54:00Z
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Top Trump Organization executive surrenders to New York authorities - Financial Times

Allen Weisselberg, the chief financial officer for the Trump Organization, has surrendered to New York authorities ahead of criminal charges expected to be announced later on Thursday against him and the former president’s company.

The anticipated charges mark a decisive turn in a nearly three-year investigation of Donald Trump’s business by Cyrus Vance, the Manhattan district attorney, in tandem with New York attorney-general Letitia James.

They concern fringe benefits paid to Weisselberg and other top executives for things such as private school tuition, car leases and apartment rent, according to people briefed on the matter. Lawyers involved in the case were waiting for the charges to be unsealed later in the day to see the precise details of the case.

The Trump Organization issued a blistering statement, accusing prosecutors of using Weisselberg, “a loving and devoted husband, father and grandfather”, as “a pawn in a scorched earth attempt to harm the former president”.

“This is not justice; this is politics,” it added.

Lawyers for Weisselberg, 73, said he “intends to plead not guilty and he will fight these charges in court.” He reportedly entered the court complex through a back entrance early on Thursday morning. The Manhattan DA and the attorney-general did not comment.

Trump is not expected to be charged, nor are his three adult children who have served as senior executives at the Trump Organization: Donald Jr, Ivanka and Eric. Trump has repeatedly derided the investigation as a witch-hunt perpetrated by his political foes. Both Vance and James are Democrats.

The former president’s lawyers had tried in recent days to persuade prosecutors to stand down. As it became clear Vance and James were moving towards charges, a lawyer for Trump, Ronald Fischetti, promised a vigorous defence.

“In my more than 50 years of practice, never before have I seen the district attorney’s office target a company over employee compensation or fringe benefits,” Fischetti said last week.

In recent months, Weisselberg has become a focus of prosecutors, who hoped to convince the man who once described himself as Trump’s “eyes and ears” to aid their investigation into a private business that features hundreds of byzantine partnerships.

The former president’s business was already struggling, with revenue falling at some of its hotels and golf courses due to the coronavirus pandemic. Some partners such as the Professional Golfers’ Association have cut ties in protest at his role in the January insurrection at the US Capitol.

The Trump Organization has about $900m in debts coming due over the next four years, about a third of which are personally guaranteed by Donald Trump.

Vance, who leaves office at the end of this year, will have to hand any case on to a successor. His current probe has been overshadowed by criticism for dropping a previous investigation of the Trump Organization, in 2012, which stemmed from condominium-buyer complaints that Donald Jr and Ivanka had misled them. The parties later settled.

Vance launched the current investigation in 2018 in response to reports that Trump’s former fixer, Michael Cohen, had made hush-money payments to two women who claimed to have had extramarital affairs with the-then presidential candidate. Cohen later told Congress he arranged with Weisselberg to be reimbursed by the Trump Organization through monthly payments listed as legal fees.

The investigation expanded to consider possible bank and insurance fraud, according to court filings. Under examination is whether the Trump Organization inflated the value of certain properties to secure bank loans and insurance while minimising them for tax purposes, according to people briefed on the matter.

The investigation had been hampered by Trump’s refusal to hand over tax records. Vance prevailed in a legal fight that went to the Supreme Court and ultimately took possession of the documents in February.

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2021-07-01 14:07:27Z
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Jasmine Hartin claims she was abandoned by Andrew Ashcroft's family over fears about 'bad press' - Daily Mail

'I can't believe how I've been treated': Socialite Jasmine Hartin, 32, claims she has been abandoned by Andrew Ashcroft's family over fears about 'bad press' and that she wasn't allowed to speak to her children

  • Jasmine Hartin claimed the Ashcrofts were told to keep their 'distance' from her
  • The former partner of Andrew Ashcroft said she was 'shocked' by her treatment
  • Hartin, 32, was released from jail after a family friend posted her $30,000 bail
  • The mother claimed she wasn't allowed to speak to her children while in prison
  • She is awaiting trial for the shooting of Supt Henry Jemmott in May with his pistol

The Canadian socialite who shot dead a police chief on a beach in Belize has claimed that the Ashcroft family was told to 'distance' themselves from her and didn't visit her in prison.

Jasmine Hartin claimed she did not have any familial visitors in jail after the family of her former partner Andrew, the son of Lord Ashcroft, were told they couldn't have 'bad press associated with their reputation'.

The mother-of-two, 32, was released from jail on bail yesterday as she awaits trial for ' shooting Superintendent Henry Jemmott, a father-of-five, with his own service pistol in May, which she says was an accident.

Speaking to 7 News Belize's Cherisse Halsall, she said the Ashcroft family were told to 'distance' themselves from her, claiming that she wasn't allowed to speak to her infant twins while she was in Belize Central Prison.

It is unclear whether the family accept the claims. They have been approached and asked to provide a comment.

Jasmine Hartin (pictured) claimed she did not have any familial visitors in jail after the family of her former partner Andrew, the son of Lord Ashcroft, were told they couldn't have 'bad press'

Jasmine Hartin (pictured) claimed she did not have any familial visitors in jail after the family of her former partner Andrew, the son of Lord Ashcroft, were told they couldn't have 'bad press'

In the new interview following her release on bail, she explained: 'From what I've been told by the family, they were instructed to distance themselves from me immediately.

'That they couldn't have bad press associated with their reputation, so therefore, I wasn't - I didn't have any family come to visit me in jail, I didn't have any family call me. 

'Instead a couple of friends came to see me, but never once was I allowed to speak to the children during that time.'

Hartin said that her brother tried to call her from Canada while her mother was 'worried sick' while she was in jail, but claimed that Andrew told them that she had visitors every single day - which she said was 'exaggerated'.

She said although she has had a 'complicated' seven-year relationship with Andrew with many 'ups and downs', she has been 'shocked' about the Ashcroft family's treatment of her since her arrest.

She added: 'Even with all of that though, I can't believe how I've been treated.' 

Hartin, 32, said the Ashcroft family were told to 'distance' themselves from her, claiming that she wasn't allowed to speak to her young twins while she was in Belize Central Prison

Hartin, 32, said the Ashcroft family were told to 'distance' themselves from her, claiming that she wasn't allowed to speak to her young twins while she was in Belize Central Prison

Hartin said although she has had a 'complicated' seven-year relationship with Andrew (pictured), she is still 'shocked' about her treatment from Ashcroft family since her arrest

Hartin said although she has had a 'complicated' seven-year relationship with Andrew (pictured), she is still 'shocked' about her treatment from Ashcroft family since her arrest

Her full interview with the local news channel will air on 7 News Belize's evening television programme on Thursday.

MailOnline has contacted Lord Ashcroft's office for comment. 

Her shocking comments came after her family friend, who is believed to have secured her release from prison, claimed she had been 'thrown to the wolves'.

Wendy Auxillou, who is understood to be Hartin's family friend, claimed to MailOnline that she has been denied access to her children and been locked out of her home.

Auxillou said she posted Hartin's $30,000 bail by supplying the title to a property she owns as collateral, according to The Times.

Auxillou, who works as a lawyer, condemned Hartin's apparent treatment and claimed that she is 'being psychologically and emotionally abused'.

Before her release yesterday, Hartin had previously been out on bail but was re-arrested and charged with assaulting a hotel worker last week.

She was then sent back to Central Belize Prison after the manager of the resort where she had lived with Andrew decided he was no longer willing to cover her bail money following the incident.

While previously out on bail, Hartin was turned away by security when she tried to access her family apartment at the Grand Colony resort to see her young twins. 

According to The Times, Auxillou said: 'In the beginning, people viewed her as some type of rich entitled kid, basically. 

The former partner of Lord Ashcroft's son Andrew is awaiting trial for shooting Superintendent Henry Jemmott (pictured), a father-of-five, with his own service pistol last month

The former partner of Lord Ashcroft's son Andrew is awaiting trial for shooting Superintendent Henry Jemmott (pictured), a father-of-five, with his own service pistol last month

'After what transpired with her being locked out of her house and kept away from her kids and all that, she's now being viewed with a bit of sympathy.'

It has not been specified whether Auxillou is part of her legal team, which is being led by high-profile attorney Richard 'Dickie' Bradley as Hartin awaits trial over the shooting of Superintendent Henry Jemmott, which she claims was an accident.

Authorities at the Central Prison received confirmation of Hartin meeting requirements for bail and she was released as of 3pm yesterday, according to Breaking Belize News.

Her conditions for bail reportedly include daily reports to the police station, a daily curfew, not leaving the jurisdiction, not interfering with witnesses, and maintaining good behaviour. 

Hartin's legal team is being led by high-profile attorney Richard 'Dickie' Bradley, after an apparent split with Godfrey Smith - the former attorney general of Belize who was hired on her behalf in the hours after Jemmot's shooting.

It comes after Hartin's mother Candace Castiglione claimed that her daughter's treatment amounted 'persecution from the Ashcroft family'. 

Hartin had previously been out on bail as she awaited trial over the shooting of Henry Jemmott, which she says was an accident, but was then sent back to prison.

She was charged with assaulting a hotel worker during a clash with her former partner and appeared in court in San Pedro to plead not guilty to assault, but was remanded in prison.

The mother-of-two (pictured) was released from prison yesterday after her family friend, lawyer Wendy Auxillou, posted her $30,000 bail

The mother-of-two (pictured) was released from prison yesterday after her family friend, lawyer Wendy Auxillou, posted her $30,000 bail

The court heard she had attempted to push Sandra Grisham, the general manager of the Alaia, however, Hartin representing herself, pleaded not guilty and denied attacking anyone. 

Frank Habet, a manager of a resort, then withdrew her bail funds saying he was worried he would lose his 60,000 Belizean dollars ($30,000) if Jasmine Hartin did not show up for trial.

He said he decided to pull the plug after the accused mother was turned back by security on Tuesday when she tried to access her family apartment at the Grand Colony resort to see her young twins.

Frank Habet said: 'Miss Hartin appeared at Grand Colony resort behaving in a disorderly and abusive manner and creating great disturbance at the hotel in the presence of guests.

'I now think Miss Hartin is quite capable of not showing up for trial and I therefore wish to immediately withdraw my cash deposit.'

Videos showed Hartin, 32, chasing her partner Andrew Ashcroft into the neighboring Alaia Belize hotel, which the couple ran together before the Jemmott shooting.

Hartin took the videos on her own cell phone and could be heard repeatedly asking Ashcroft why he allegedly wouldn't give her access to Ellie and Charlie, four.

The incident prompted Habet, the general manager of Grand Colony - another Ashcroft-operated property – to demand back his $30,000 cash deposit and cancel a further surety of $30,000.

Auxillou, who works as a lawyer, also condemned Hartin's (pictured) apparent treatment and claimed that she is 'being psychologically and emotionally abused'

Auxillou, who works as a lawyer, also condemned Hartin's (pictured) apparent treatment and claimed that she is 'being psychologically and emotionally abused'

'Ms Hartin appeared at Grand Colony Resort behaving in a disorderly and abusive manner and creating great disturbance at the hotel in the presence of guests,' Habet wrote. 

'I now think Ms Hartin is quite capable of not showing up for trial and I wish to immediately withdraw my cash deposit and revoke the surety form I signed as I simply cannot afford the financial loss should this occur.' 

Hartin had been released on bail of $1,000 Belizeans dollars before being transferred by boat to the Supreme Court in Belize City - where she then learned about Habet's sudden u-turn.

Hartin is currently awaiting trial for shooting Superintendent Henry Jemmott, a father-of-five, with his own service pistol last month.

Jemmott, a highly-rated officer tipped as a future leader of his country's police force, was struck behind his right ear by a 9mm round from his own Glock 17 service pistol.

According to a criminal complaint he had been 'socializing' and drinking alone with Hartin on a secluded hotel pier in Ambergris Caye, a tropical island haven for millionaire expats. 

A security guard heard a 'loud bang' at 12:45am and police arrived to find Canadian national Hartin 'covered in red substance as that of blood' and Jemmott, 42, floating dead on his back 30ft from the shore. 

An expended shell casing was still lodged inside the gun which was found on the Mata Rocks hotel pier along with a magazine, live bullets and a pool of blood. 

Last week, Hartin (pictured) re-told her version of events that led to Jemmott's death, saying the gun went off unexpectedly in her hands as she tried to re-insert a clip and hand it to him

Last week, Hartin (pictured) re-told her version of events that led to Jemmott's death, saying the gun went off unexpectedly in her hands as she tried to re-insert a clip and hand it to him

After spending the weekend behind bars, Hartin gave a statement saying the off-duty officer was showing her how to handle his firearm as the pair drank and hung out.

In her exclusive interview on Thursday with DailyMail.com, she reiterated her version of events, saying the gun went off unexpectedly in her hands as she tried to re-insert a clip and hand it back.

'Henry was my friend. It was an accident, I didn't flee the scene. The first thing I did was call the police myself,' she said. 

'There's literally not a day that goes by when I don't cry and my frigging chest doesn't hurt and ache for his kids, for his family, for him.' 

She also revealed for the first time that the reason she was practicing with the gun was because an unnamed man had tried to rape her at a party six days earlier. 

Three days after Jemmott's death Hartin was charged with manslaughter by negligence after prosecutors opted against murder or full-fledged manslaughter on the strength of her witness statement insisting it was an accident. 

The offense carries a maximum prison sentence of nine months or a fine of around 10,000 Belizean dollars ($5,000 in US money).

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2021-07-01 12:48:10Z
CAIiENCsWhxb7m7iZmDyym-D0MoqGQgEKhAIACoHCAowzuOICzCZ4ocDMO7xqQY

China's Xi Jinping issues 'bloodshed' warning to foreign powers at Communist Party centenary event - Sky News

It was a long wait for the Party's party. 

The thousands of people awarded a ticket to Tiananmen Square had left their quarantine hotels at 3am for an 8am start, passing through security check after security check.

To pass the time, they sang old red songs - Socialism is Good and other such classics - and practised vigorous flag waving. It's all in the wrist.

Xi Jinping warned foreign powers of 'broken heads and bloodshed' if they try to oppress or bully China
Image: Xi Jinping warned foreign powers of 'broken heads and bloodshed' if they try to oppress China
Chinese President Xi Jinping waves next to Premier Li Keqiang and former president Hu Jintao at the end of the event marking the 100th founding anniversary of the Communist Party of China, on Tiananmen Square in Beijing, China July 1, 2021. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins
Image: President Xi stood out in a Mao-style suit

But cometh hour, cometh the man. Xi Jinping took to the rostrum. All the other leaders on stage were wearing Western business suits.

Xi alone was wearing a grey Mao suit.

A racket of helicopters approached from the east, in formation to spell out '100'. China's newest stealth jets roared after them.

People during the Chinese Communist Party's 100th birthday party
Image: The square was filled with the party faithful
Helicopters spelled out the characters '100'
Image: Helicopters spelled out '100'

And then the artillery gave a 100-gun salute, the echoes thumping around the corners of Tiananmen in turn.

More on China

It was an impressive but fairly modest display by the standards of China's vast military.

The real star was Xi, the president of China but - much more importantly - the general secretary of the Communist Party. He gave a long speech.

There was a large military presence at Tiananmen Square
Image: There was a large military showing in the square
Thousands of people were awarded tickets to the event
Image: Thousands of people were awarded tickets

Some of it was celebration, some of it justification for a regime that allows no opposition: "Only socialism can save China, and only socialism with Chinese characteristics can develop China," Xi said.

The ideology can be a bit dry but the Party knows which red meat to throw these days, leaning on nationalism as much as Marxism to gee up enthusiasm

So this line prompted the biggest cheer of the day: "The Chinese people will absolutely not allow any foreign force to bully, oppress or enslave us and anyone who attempts to do so will face broken heads and bloodshed in front of the iron Great Wall of the 1.4 billion Chinese people."

The crowd loved it. And playing those nationalist credentials will be crucial to the Party's future success.

But the ceremony was a display of the CCP's remarkable survival. Thousands of people filling Tiananmen Square in neat rows, playing their part.

One hundred years ago it was a handful of subversives meeting in secret in Shanghai. They were chased into the mountains and hid out in caves for years.

Then triumph in a bloody civil war, and the beginning of uninterrupted one-party rule.

Top officials from the Chinese Communist Party were in attendance
Image: Top officials from the Communist Party looked down on the spectacle
People had to leave their hotels at 3am before attending the parade in Tiananmen
Image: People left their hotels at 3am to take their place at the event

That rule has had its catastrophes. The Great Leap Forward led to a famine which killed tens of millions. The terror of the Cultural Revolution followed.

And in 1989, in the same square used today for the pageantry of the Party, the Tiananmen student demonstrators asked for greater freedom - and were met with bullets in the surrounding streets.

The square still remembers them, even if the Party cares not to.

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2021-07-01 09:53:30Z
52781697295986

Rabu, 30 Juni 2021

Canada heatwave: Trudeau pays respects to dozens of victims - BBC News

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has offered condolences to the dozens of people who have died in a record-setting heatwave.

"Our thoughts are with people who have lost loved ones" to the heat, he said, calling the recent weather a reminder of the need to address climate change.

Abnormally high temperatures have been recorded across North America.

Mr Trudeau's comments come after Canada saw a new record - 49.6C (121.3F) - for the third day in a row.

At least 486 sudden deaths were reported over five days during the heatwave, officials in the western province of British Columbia said on Wednesday.

The toll represented a 195% increase on the 165 sudden deaths that would normally occur over that period, chief coroner Lisa Lapoint said.

"While it is too early to say with certainty how many of these deaths are heat-related," she said in a statement, "it is believed likely that the significant increase in deaths reported is attributable to the extreme weather BC has experienced and continues to impact many parts of our province."

The heat over western parts of Canada and the US has been caused by a dome of static high-pressure hot air stretching from California to the Arctic territories. Temperatures have been easing in coastal areas but there is not much respite for inland regions.

Janice Houldsworth, who lives in the British Columbia community of Castlegar, told the BBC she had not ventured outdoors for four days. "I've never experienced anything like this in all my 70 years," she said.

"We have blackened out all the windows, have fans running 24/7 constantly spraying with mist, cold foot baths, and showers and [are] drinking tons of liquid."

In Calgary, a worker installing air conditioning units says that typically the highest temperatures do not hit until later in the summer.

The rate of new installations "is about four times what we typically see," says Ryan Wandler.

Vancouver has seen the temperature fall since earlier this week
Getty Images

At an affordable housing event in Kanata, Ontario, Mr Trudeau paid tribute to the victims and described heatwaves as a growing problem.

"The federal government, as always, is here to help in any way we can," he said.

In Vancouver alone, heat is believed to have been a contributing factor in the deaths of 65 people since Friday.

Mr Trudeau said that prolonged periods of high temperatures had been growing more common in recent years, "so realistically we know this heatwave won't be the last".

He then went on to talk about Canada's commitment to combat climate change to "make our air, and our economy, cleaner for now and for future generations".

Canada's southern neighbour, the United States, has also seen extreme heat.

In the US Pacific Northwest on Monday, temperatures hit 46.1C in Portland, Oregon, and 42.2C in Seattle, Washington, the highest levels since record-keeping began in the 1940s, the National Weather Service said.

US President Joe Biden said this latest heatwave was linked to climate change in a speech on Tuesday.

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Can the heat be linked to climate change?

Analysis box by Matt McGrath, environment correspondent

I've heard from scientists who say that in just a few days they'll be able to determine just how much human driven warming has contributed to the searing temperatures seen in British Columbia.

One interesting piece of evidence is the lack of respite that night brings - recent temperatures at midnight in BC have been 2C warmer than the normal summer daytime figure.

Researchers say this combination of day and night-time heat is very dangerous for humans - a study published last year indicated that these compound events are closely linked to emissions of greenhouse gases.

Natural variability and local factors such as sea breezes can raise or limit the impacts of extreme heat. But the bigger picture is the rising thermometer of global heating is impacting all events.

"Every heatwave occurring today is made more likely and more intense by human-induced climate change," Dr Friederike Otto from the University of Oxford told the BBC.

"Climate change is definitely one of the drivers of the intensity of this Canadian heatwave - but it is not the only one and determining how much it impacts it, is a work in progress."

Even if they can't directly attribute this heatwave to climate change, experts say the fingerprints of global heating are all over it.

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Risk of fire

Both Mr Trudeau and Mr Biden have warned of another consequence of the heatwave - increased chances of wildfires.

On Wednesday Mr Biden met with governors of western US states and fire officials, as the annual North American wildfire season begins.

Mr Trudeau expressed a similar fear on Wednesday.

"The temperatures recorded this week are unprecedented. Lives have been lost and the risk of wildfires is at a dangerously high levels," he said.

Jodi Hughes, weather presenter at Global News Calgary, told the BBC that firefighters were extremely concerned at the possibility of wild fires, possibly sparked by thunderstorms that could occur as the weather pattern changes.

The infrastructure problem

At least a dozen deaths in Washington and Oregon are believed to be linked to the heatwave.

Many homes in British Columbia do not have air conditioning as temperatures are usually far milder during the summer months.

One Vancouver resident told AFP news agency that hotels seemed to be sold out, as people flocked there for air conditioning, adding: "I've never seen anything like this. I hope it never becomes like this ever again."

Officials in British Columbia have warned residents against leaving their doors open, after a spate of bears wandering into people's home.

In Vancouver, residents have reported car windows cracking and melting, even when they are not parked in the sun.

The city has seen 98 sudden deaths since Friday, with 53 recorded on Tuesday alone.

About two-thirds of the deaths have been in people over the age of 70, according to Vancouver police.

The country's weather service, Environment Canada, has issued heat warnings for the provinces of British Columbia and Alberta, along with areas of Saskatchewan, the Northwest Territories and Manitoba.

An electrical utility in Spokane, Washington, has also introduced rolling blackouts to cope with huge power demand as residents run air conditioners.

People rest at the Oregon Convention Centre cooling station in Oregon, Portland
AFP via Getty Images

Amazon allowed members of the public into areas of its Seattle headquarters as a cooling-off location on Monday, while people in Portland also flocked to cooling centres.

The heat has been intense enough to melt cables, shutting down the Portland Streetcar Service on Sunday.

Mr Biden's comments about climate change on Tuesday came as he pitched his plan to update the country's infrastructure network.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter

Dozens of officers have been redeployed in the city, while the increased volume of emergency calls has created a backlog and depleted police resources.

Hospital officials have likened the surge in hospital visitations due to the heat to the early days of the coronavirus pandemic.

"The air is like fire," Sergiou Riverso told CTV News during a visit to Lytton, the Canadian village that recorded the all time highs.

"It's pretty crazy hot," added Lytton resident Erin Aleck.

"As soon as you come outside, it's like a punch in the throat," she said.

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2021-06-30 23:26:02Z
52781693816491

Donald Rumsfeld, US defence chief during Iraq war, dies at 88 - Al Jazeera English

Donald Rumsfeld, who served as former United States President George W Bush’s defence secretary and was the architect of the US wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, has died at the age of 88, his family announced on Wednesday.

His stint as Bush’s defence secretary from 2001-2006 was his second, after serving as the youngest secretary of defense in US history under former President Gerald Ford from 1975-1977.

Rumsfeld “was surrounded by family in his beloved Taos, New Mexico”, his family said in a statement posted on Twitter, without saying when he died. “We will remember his unwavering love for his wife Joyce, his family and friends, and the integrity he brought to a life dedicated to country,” they said.

In a separate statement, Bush praised Rumsfeld as “a man of intelligence, integrity, and almost inexhaustible energy” who “never paled before tough decisions, and never flinched from responsibility”.

But many observers responded to the news of Rumsfeld’s passing on Wednesday by pointing out his central role in the US invasions of Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003, the deaths of thousands of people in both countries, and the use of torture.

Iyad el-Baghdadi, president of the Kawaakibi Foundation, a research and activist group focused on liberty in the Arab world, said “Donald Rumsfeld was a war criminal who presided over illegal wars that involved wholesale massacres of civilians, systemic torture and plunder, and massive corruption”.

“The country he helped break has still not recovered. This is his legacy. May he burn in hell for all eternity.”

Rumsfeld oversaw the US invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 and the 2003 overthrow of Saddam Hussein in Iraq, but failed to maintain law and order in the aftermath, and Iraq descended into chaos with a bloody rebellion and violence between Sunni and Shia Muslims. US troops remained in Iraq until 2011, long after he left his post.

Many historians and military experts blamed Rumsfeld for decisions that led to difficulties in Iraq and Afghanistan. For example, Rumsfeld insisted on a relatively small invasion force in Iraq in 2003, rejecting the views of many generals. The force was then insufficient to stabilise Iraq when Hussein’s government fell.

As he did in Iraq, Rumsfeld, in 2001, sent a small force to Afghanistan, quickly chased the Taliban from power and then failed to establish law and order or capture Osama bin Laden, who remained elusive for another decade.

Iraq War

Rumsfeld played a leading role before the war in Iraq, in making the case to the world for the March 2003 invasion. He warned of the dangers of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction but no such weapons were ever discovered.

Critics faulted Rumsfeld for dismissing the pre-invasion assessment of the US Army’s top general, Eric Shinseki, that several hundred thousand allied troops would be needed to stabilise Iraq.

Rumsfeld also was accused of being slow to recognise the emergence of the rebellion in 2003 and the threat it posed.

In a 2011 interview with Al Jazeera, Rumsfeld was asked about whether the initial size of the Iraq invasion force and the Bush administration policies regarding the war were “responsible for the killing of innocent Iraqis”.

“You keep making assertions which are fundamentally false,” a combative Rumsfeld responded. “No one in the Pentagon said they (number of troops) were not enough.”

The wars in Iraq killed hundreds of thousands, including tens of thousands of US military members. The total number of Iraqi civilian deaths is unknown. The Iraq Body Count project places the number of deaths since 2003 between 185,724 and 208,831, as of June 30.

Afghanistan

Rumsfeld also oversaw the US invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 to remove the Taliban leaders who had harboured the al-Qaeda leaders responsible for the September 11 attacks on the US.

US forces during Rumsfeld’s tenure also were unable to track down Osama bin Laden. The al-Qaeda chief slipped past a modest force of US special operations troops and CIA officers, along with allied Afghan fighters, in the Afghan mountains of Tora Bora in December 2001. US forces killed him in 2011.

Critics have argued that had Rumsfeld devoted more troops to the Afghan effort, bin Laden may have been taken. But as he wrote in, Rumsfeld’s Rules, his compilation of truisms dating to the 1970s: “If you are not criticized, you may not be doing much.”

Rumsfeld twice offered his resignation to Bush in 2004 amid disclosures that US troops had abused detainees at Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison – an episode he later referred to as his darkest hour as secretary of defence.

Not until November 2006, after Democrats gained control of Congress by riding a wave of antiwar sentiment, did Bush finally decide Rumsfeld had to go. He left office in December, replaced by Robert Gates.

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2021-06-30 22:41:15Z
52781705868129