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qbcm The charges facing Donald Trump and what happens next
« le: Janvier 18, 2025, 10:41:21 am »
Bvfr US tabloid called out for  stalking  Gene Hackman, netizens are furious
 JACKSON, Miss. 鈥?The chief executive officer of a biotech company with ties to the largest public corruption case in Mississippi history pleaded guilty Wednesday to one count of wire fraud for improperly using welfare funds intended to develop a concussion drug.         Biotech company s CEO pleads guilty in Mississippi welfare fraud case     Jacob VanLandingham entered the plea at a hearing in Jackson before U.S. District Judge Carlton W. Reeves, according to court records. A sentencing date was not immediately set. Possible penalties include up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.     A lawsuit filed by the state Department of Human Services alleges that $2.1 million of welfare money paid for stock in VanLandingham s Florida-based companies, Prevacus and PreSolMD, for Nancy New and her son, Zachary New, who ran nonprofit groups that received welfare money from Human Services.   Prosecutors said the Mississippi Co stanley flasche mmunity Education Center, which was run by the News, provided about $1.9 million, including federal money from the Temporary Assistance to Needy Families program, to Prevacus. The money was purportedly for the development of a pharmaceutical concussion treatment. But, prosecutors said in a bill of information that VanLandingham misused  a substantial amount of these funds for his  stanley cup pers stanley bottles onal benefit, including, but not limited to, gambling and paying off personal debts,  according to the bill.   Former NFL star Brett Favre is named in the Human Services lawsuit a Ofln Moderna vaccine results  stunningly impressive,  says Anthony Fauci
 At the centre of the raging South Sudan conflict is not oil or territory but cattle, which, Indian UN peacekeepers posted to the African nation say, are considered  more precious  than humans.        A Japanese soldier part of the last group of Japanese soldiers from the United Nations Mission in South Sudan. REUTERS     A young Indian commanding officer of the United Nations Mission in South Sudan  UNMISS  said i stanley website n the worlds youngest nation, made up largely of pastoral communities, the centrality of cattle is such that justice, even for a murder, may be served in terms of cows.   Speaking over video conf stanley cup nz erence from Bor, around 190 km from the countrys capital Juba, Mayur Shekatkar, the officer, explained how cattle also happen to be a form of dowry. The size of a cattle herd, with the benchmark being at least 200 animals, often determines if a young man is eligible for marriage or not, he said. Brigadier K S Brar, the National Senior for the Indian Contingent, described the UNMISS as the  second most dangerous  posting after Syria, where fighting is  relentless , in the absence of any ceasefire.  The clashes are not over usual resources like territory or land. They  tribes  fight over cattle, which are considered more precious than human beings. And with the proliferati stanley canada on of weapons, the situation has become more complex,  Brar said. Till now, the UNMISS has claimed the lives of seven Indians -- one officer, three Junior Commissioned Officers  JCO  and three others -- Brar s