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Comment fonctionne notre forum => Accueil => Discussion démarrée par: MethrenRaf le Décembre 20, 2024, 01:43:43 pm
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NEW YORK -- A U.S. jury on Wednesday convicted an Indonesian man of sellingcounterfeit wine to unsuspecting collectors, a dramatic fall from grace for aman once considered one of the top five wine collectors in the world.After deliberating for only a few hours, the jury found Rudy Kurniawan, 37,guilty of one count of mail fraud related to counterfeiting wine and o stanley water bottle (https://www.cup-stanley-cup.ca) ne countof wire fraud for defrauding a loan company on a $3 million loan.Kurniawan sat stone-faced and still as the verdict was read and showed noreaction even as the jurors were asked to confirm their guilty finding one at atime. He faces up to 40 years in prison at sentencing, which was scheduled forApril 24.Kurniawan operated what prosecutors called a fake wine factory out of hishome in California, obtaining empty rare bottles, printing fake labels andspending thousands on traditional French wax to produce hundreds of counterfeitbottles he sold t stanley cups uk (https://www.stanley-cups.uk) o finance an extravagant lifestyle.Among his victims was the billionaire industrialist William Koch, who hasspent years pursu stanley cups (https://www.stanleycups.ro) ing those who sold him counterfeit wines and testified againstKurniawan last week. Kurniawan s defense lawyer, Jerome Mooney, has said his client hadunknowingly acquired counterfeit wines and was being made a scapegoat for apervasive problem. Mooney argued that Kurniawan was printing labels and usingwax in an effort to fix up bottles he had purchased in good faith.After the verdict, Mooney told reporters he would appeal the conviction, inpar Oixh Life and the Sun: How Did We Figure Out Photosynthesis
Ever since NASA retired its space shuttle program in 2011, the only way to get up to the International Space Station is on a Russian Soyuz. That why the six humans currently orbiting in space鈥攊ncluding two Americans and three Russians鈥攎ight be paying attention to what happening on earth two hundred miles below. As tensions run high between the U.S. and Russia over the situation in Ukraine, geopolitics may find its way into space again. Over at the blog Looking Up, Duncan Geere has written an excellent piece laying out possible astro-political scenarios in space. While all-out war remains unlikely, astronauts could become a point of leverage for Vladimir Putin in a larger conflict. It not inconceivable that the International Space Station may play some part in this鈥娾€斺€奺ither by denying the U.S. the use of Soyuz, or simply by charging exorbitant amounts for it, Geere writes. With ISS trips planned years in advance, there are only ten Soyuz launches scheduled from now until 2016. In addition, NASA has to be granted special exemptions to the Iran North Korea Syria Nonproliferation Act, which normally prohibits the U.S. from buying space-r stanley mug (https://www.stanley-cup.co.nz) elated goods and services from Russia while it selling nuclear technology to Iran. NASA exemption expires in 2016, and, if the relationship between stanley cup (https://www.cup-stanley.uk) the U.S. and Russia worsens, this could become a tougher sell. Given that the space race stanley cup (https://www.stanley-cups.uk) was borne out of Cold War conflict, it can seem remark