Category: Security

  • Peter Crombie, a classic comic menace on TV’s ‘Seinfeld,’ dies at 71

    Peter Crombie, the actor who memorably played “Crazy” Joe Davola on TV’s “Seinfeld,” has died. He was 71.

    “It is with shock and extreme sadness that I share my ex-husband died this morning,” announced Crombie’s ex-wife Nadine Kijner on Thursday in an Instagram post, sharing several photos from their wedding. Kijner told TMZ that he died Wednesday from an undisclosed illness.

    “Thank you for so many wonderful memories and being such a good man,” Kijner continued in her post. “Fly free into the unboundless source of light, Peter. May you be greeted with love by your parents and Oliver [Crombie’s pet cat]. So, so many people loved you because you were a kind, giving, caring and creative soul.”

    Raised in Chicago, Crombie is best known for stealing scenes in the fourth season of NBC’s “Seinfeld” as “Crazy” Joe Davola, a psychopath obsessed with terrorizing the titular character (Jerry Seinfeld). Crombie later played Frankenstein’s creature in NBC’s 1997 miniseries “House of Frankenstein.”

    “I’ve gone from terrorizing Jerry, Kramer and Elaine to terrorizing all of Los Angeles,” he told Entertainment Weekly in 1997 of the two roles. Though he spent his career playing “tormented people,” his “Seinfeld” character remained his most well-known, thanks to the series’ syndication. “I can always tell when they’re airing it because I’ll be walking down the street and someone will go, ‘Hey, Joe!’”

    A graduate of Yale Drama School, Crombie also appeared in the films “Se7en,” “My Dog Skip,” “The Doors,” “Born on the Fourth of July,” “Natural Born Killers” and 1988’s remake of “The Blob,” as well as the TV shows “Law & Order,” “Star Trek: Deep Space Nine,” “L.A. Law,” “Get Smart” and “NYPD Blue,” among others. His last onscreen performance is credited as a 2000 episode of “Walker, Texas Ranger.”

    Friends and colleagues of Crombie paid tribute to the late actor on social media. “Am heartbroken by the death of my good friend,” comedian Lewis Black wrote on X. “He was a gifted artist. Not only was he a wonderful actor but an immensely talented writer. More importantly he was as sweet as he was intelligent and I am a better person for knowing him.”

    “For those who knew him, he was a gentle and loyal friend of soft words and expressive work as an actor and a writer,” director and photographer Bill Stetz wrote on Facebook. “Rest in peace, Peter.”

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    © 2024 Los Angeles Times

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC



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  • Russia, N Korea further beef up ties amid arms trade allegations

    This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin has met North Korea’s Foreign Minister Choe Son Hui in Moscow, and vowed to “closely collaborate and coordinate their efforts to jointly ensure peace and stability both regionally and globally,” marking the latest efforts between two countries to bolster their bilateral relations.

    During their meeting in Moscow on Tuesday, the two agreed to “drive the dynamic development of overall bilateral relations,” the North’s state-run daily Rodong Sinmun said Thursday, labeling their relationship as “strategic” and “traditionally friendly.” 

    Choe made a visit to Moscow from Monday through Wednesday, following an invitation from her Russian counterpart, Sergey Lavrov.

    The North Korean minister’s visit to Russia came amid accusations that Pyongyang and Moscow are engaged in arms trading, with Ukraine alleging that North Korean missiles have been used in Russia’s aggression against Ukraine – a claim that both Pyongyang and Moscow have denied. 

    According to South Korea’s National Intelligence Service briefings in November, however, Moscow has likely offered Pyongyang technological advice for its satellite launch, as it has received more than 1 million artillery shells from North Korea since early August. 

    Meanwhile, Rodong Sinmun reported separately on Thursday that the two nations agreed to form a united front to address international security matters.

    Choe and Lavrov on Tuesday “specifically discussed issues related to strengthening strategic and tactical cooperation among foreign policy institutions,” the North Korean daily said, adding that the ministers reached a consensus on “actively enhancing joint actions in addressing various regional and international issues.”

    Moscow also officially announced its will to further concrete its relations with Pyongyang on all fronts, including “sensitive” areas, according to Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov Wednesday.

    “We have repeatedly said – and I am ready to reiterate it – that North Korea is an important partner for us and we intend to boost relations in all areas, including sensitive ones,” Peskov told reporters in Moscow, as cited by Russian news agency, Tass.

    Putin and his North Korean counterpart Kim Jong Un met at the symbol of Russia’s space prowess, the spaceport of Vostochny Cosmodrome, in September where they vowed to boost their comprehensive cooperation, spanning from the economy to military. 

    While the two leaders did not publicly comment on any ammunition deal during the summit, Ukraine had alleged that North Korea’s missiles have been used in Russia’s attack against the country.

    In September, the Kremlin had also said that it would cooperate with North Korea in “sensitive areas that can’t be disclosed,” raising suspicions that Pyongyang may provide ammunition to Russia.



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  • US citizen arrested in Russia

    A United States citizen was arrested in Moscow last Tuesday in connection with drug charges that could lead to a 20-year prison sentence.

    Reuters reported that Moscow’s Ostankino District Court announced that 32-year-old Robert Romanov Woodland was arrested on January 6 and will remain in custody until March 5. Moscow’s Ostankino District Court noted that the U.S. citizen was charged with the illegal acquisition and possession of drugs.

    According to Mash, a Russian news outlet, prosecutors denied a request by Woodland’s lawyers to have the 32-year-old transferred to house arrest. The news outlet also reported that Woodland has been accused of allegedly being involved in a major illegal drug operation.

    Woodland was born in Perm, Russia, according to The Hill. After Woodland was placed in an orphanage, he was adopted by U.S. citizens and was raised in America.

    Woodland later returned to Russia in order to locate his birth mother and was ultimately reunited with his birth mother on Russian television. According to The Hill, Woodland worked as an English teacher near Moscow.

    READ MORE: Russia expels U.S. diplomats

    The arrest of a U.S. citizen in Moscow comes as the United States State Department has issued warnings to Americans currently residing in Russia as a result of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, which has caused heightened tension between the U.S. and Russia. The State Department’s website warns, “U.S. citizens residing or traveling in Russia should depart immediately. Exercise increased caution due to the risk of wrongful detentions.”

    In a statement obtained by The Hill, the State Department addressed the situation in Russia after Woodland’s arrest, saying, “The U.S. Department of State has no greater priority than the safety and security of U.S. citizens overseas.” The State Department added, “Whenever a U.S. citizen is detained overseas, our embassies and consulates stand ready to provide all appropriate consular assistance.”



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  • Boeing and US aerospace set back by Alaska Airlines fuselage blowout

    When a door-sized section of a 737 MAX 9 fuselage exploded out into the void 16,000 feet over Portland, Boeing’s once-solid reputation, already staggered by the two MAX crashes in 2018 and 2019, took another heavy blow.

    The gaping hole that opened up and the violent decompression were terrifying and traumatic for the passengers and crew aboard Alaska Airlines Flight 1282.

    Though no one died, and air travel still remains by far the safest form of transportation, this close call on a U.S. flight drew intense attention across the nation.

    Everything points to a mistake in installing and inspecting a door plug, the part that blew out — it was assembled by Spirit AeroSystems of Wichita, Kan. — and a failure by Boeing to oversee the work of its supplier or catch the defect when the completed fuselage came to Renton for final assembly.

    “It escaped their factory but then it escaped ours too,” Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun said on CNBC.

    Bjorn Fehrm, an expert engineering analyst with aviation consulting firm Leeham.net, says the details of how the door plug is held in place make it likely that four critical bolts were either not secured with a nut or, more likely, he said, not installed at all — a startling possibility.

    This part, a 2-foot by 4-foot plug that covers a hole sometimes used to accommodate an additional emergency exit, is meant to be permanently fixed in place on most MAX 9s.

    Longtime aviation analyst Richard Aboulafia, of AeroDynamic Advisory, said in an interview that the buck ultimately stops at Boeing.

    “This isn’t a Spirit jet. It’s a Boeing jet,” he said. “Whoever installed it, whoever built it, Boeing is more responsible.”

    And Aboulafia said fixing it means more than inspecting all the door plugs on every MAX 9 and calling it good.

    Although all 171 of the grounded aircraft could well be back flying again within a month, inspecting and fixing those parts is now not enough for anyone to feel secure and safe again. The public needs reassurance that the entire aviation manufacturing system can be restored to producing quality airplanes without random life-threatening defects.

    “It’s a cultural fix,” Aboulafia said. “That’s much harder.”

    The Federal Aviation Administration has a new boss, former airline executive and pilot Michael Whitaker, who now faces tough questions from lawmakers about the safety agency’s failed oversight of the manufacturing work.

    Spirit has a new boss too, the hands-on former Boeing executive Pat Shanahan. After the previous CEO was fired, he was appointed to revamp Spirit’s production quality, particularly at its 737 factory in Wichita.

    That the Alaska Airlines blowout is only the latest in a long train of setbacks at Boeing means heads may eventually roll there too to make way for new leadership.

    Meanwhile, until further notice United and Alaska Airlines cannot fly the dozens of MAX 9s in their fleets, leaving jittery air travelers to face a chaos of canceled flights.

    Alaska has been canceling between 110 and 150 flights per day, and scrambling to put passengers on alternative flights.

    As the airlines awaited the approval of inspection instructions needed to move forward, on Friday Alaska and United canceled all MAX 9 flights through Tuesday, as well as removing some MAX 9 flights in the days after that.

    Forward momentum halted

    At the end of last year, though Boeing was still slogging through repairs on long-parked 787s and 737 MAXs, it was finally ramping up new 737 MAX production and deliveries again after pauses forced by a litany of quality defects in 2023.

    The jet maker appeared primed to move forward. It had big sales wins at the Dubai Air Show in November. In December, it won new orders for more than 300 MAXs and delivered 44 of the jets.

    But the hope of a brighter 2024 that would speed Boeing’s recovery from almost five years of constant bad news blew away with the door plug on Alaska Flight 1282.

    If the incident had happened at cruise altitude when some passengers had unbuckled, someone could have been sucked out of the plane. If the door plug that blew off had struck and damaged the horizontal tail or the tail fin, the pilots could have lost control and the jet could have crashed.

    Boeing escaped that but still faces an accounting, this time not for a system design flaw as in the MAX crashes, but for a serious quality control lapse that produced a manufacturing defect.

    Aboulafia placed blame firmly on CEO Calhoun and Boeing’s longtime focus on cost cutting and financial metrics.

    In particular he cited the strategy Boeing euphemistically dubbed “Partnership for Success” that former CEO Jim McNerney pushed: squeezing suppliers with ever lower pricing for their parts.

    That led Spirit in particular into a spiral of losing money in making parts for Boeing.

    In June, Spirit was $3.7 billion in debt. Its cumulative losses on the 787 Dreamliner program alone amounted to a colossal $1.4 billion, or about $1 million per airplane.

    “The idea of demanding more for less endlessly and leaving it to suppliers to worry how they’re going to stay alive, that was just not a viable formula,” Aboulafia said.

    By October, the financial distress came to a head, and after Shanahan came in Boeing finally was persuaded to recognize it must pay Spirit more to save it.

    It agreed to give Spirit better pricing, with one provision having Boeing pump in an additional $455 million over the next two years to build 440 Dreamliners — about $1 million per airplane.

    Aboulafia said unless Boeing returns its focus to engineering and manufacturing, further quality problems will inevitably follow.

    “It’s gonna keep happening until they change their culture,” he said. “And that change is not coming from the top.”

    “The message from Calhoun and company has been we’ll turn on the free cash flow again, investors will be happy. That’s it,” Aboulafia said.

    Since the Alaska Airlines incident, Calhoun has publicly and internally taken responsibility for the mistake and promised to “fix it and make sure it can never happen again.”

    But this echoed earlier pronouncements. In September, after misdrilled holes were discovered in the aft pressure bulkhead installed at Spirit, the CEO told Wall Street analysts quality checks had been stepped up.

    “I got to tell you,” Calhoun said on the third-quarter earnings call, “these fuselages, man, they have been gone over with a microscope in light of what we’ve experienced here.”

    With one quality lapse after another, the promises that everything will be fixed in the future are wearing thin.

    On Thursday, the FAA said it has opened an investigation to determine if Boeing “failed to ensure completed products conformed to its approved design and were in a condition for safe operation.”

    And lawmakers are stepping up pressure on the FAA to enforce safety regulations and apply penalties.

    On Thursday, Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., chair of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, sent a letter to FAA chief Whitaker calling on the agency to produce relevant documents from the past two years’ worth of audits of both Boeing and Spirit.

    “We want to know what the FAA has done, what legal enforcement action have they taken,” Cantwell said in an interview. “We need to know whether … we have serious enough actions taken by the FAA.”

    Speaking on CNBC Friday, Whitaker said the FAA will increase oversight by auditing the manufacturing process at both Boeing and Spirit.

    He added that “we need to look at who’s got authority to make approvals,” and that the FAA will review the current system whereby Boeing personnel sign off on much of their own work.

    It seems likely the FAA may now at least delay granting the exemption from safety regulations Boeing requested in December to get the MAX 7 certified.

    That could push out the entry into service of both final MAX models, the MAX 7 and MAX 10, blocking some of the cash flow Boeing has promised investors.

    Can Spirit be fixed?

    Defects at Spirit plagued the MAX program last year.

    In April, MAX deliveries were delayed after fittings used to attach the vertical fin were found defective. In August, more MAX deliveries were delayed after discovery of the aft pressure bulkhead defect.

    The job of turning Spirit around was handed to Shanahan on Sept. 30. At Boeing he was known as a hard-driving Mr. Fix-It, focused on manufacturing operations. After he left Boeing he served as deputy defense secretary under President Donald Trump.

    On Friday, Shanahan, who met with Boeing executives in Renton earlier in the week, released a video message to the Spirit workforce about the Alaska Airlines incident.

    He noted that Spirit fabricates 10,500 parts for each 737 fuselage and uses 240,000 rivets to assemble each one.

    “Hundreds of thousands of pieces and each part and each installation and each piece must be right,” Shanahan told the workforce.

    A person familiar with Shanahan’s approach since he arrived at Spirit — who asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the National Transportation Safety Board investigation — said getting the Wichita factory running smoothly is “a monster undertaking.”

    He added Shanahan is pushing a “a zero-defect mindset” and has instituted a “thorough feedback process” so that when defects are found a robust process is developed to prevent recurrence.

    “I’m confident in Pat,” Calhoun told CNBC. “I know that Pat knows the seriousness. … He knows how to interrogate a manufacturing process.”

    The jet with the defective door plug was delivered to Boeing at the end of October, the month Shanahan took his position. Now he will have the FAA looking more closely over his shoulder.

    No bolts installed?

    The door plug that blew out is a panel used to seal a fuselage cutout where a few airlines install an extra emergency exit door so they can add more seats. Most airlines, including Alaska and United, don’t have a door there, instead installing the plug, which appears to passengers inside as just another window.

    The plug is secured during flight by the air pressure in the cabin. Six small metal brackets on either side of the door plug — 12 in all, called “stop fittings” — line up with 12 similar “stop pads” on the door frame.

    With these pressed tightly together, the stop pads hold the plug in.

    The only way for the plug to have blown out is if the plug moved up so the stop fittings were no longer aligned with the stop pads.

    For maintenance on the ground, that’s how the plug is opened. A mechanic raises it upward a couple of inches so the plug stop fittings are above those on the door frame. The plug then opens outward on a bottom hinge.

    Four bolts, two at the top of the plug and two at the bottom, are inserted to where the plug is attached to the frame to make such upward movement impossible in normal operation.

    These bolts have a head at one end and a nut secured with a lock wire at the other to ensure they don’t come out. There’s no stress on the bolts; their purpose is simply to prevent inadvertent upward movement of the door.

    After the Flight 1282 blowout, the stop pads on the door frame were intact, as were the stop fittings on the door plug, found last Sunday in a Portland backyard. Somehow, the plug had moved up.

    In an NTSB news conference Monday, structures specialist Clint Crookshanks said those four bolts that prevent upward movement have not been found, “and we have not yet determined if they existed there.”

    Fehrm, the engineering analyst, explained that even if just one of the four bolts were in place, the door couldn’t move up. With that, and the intact condition of the stop fittings, “my conclusion is there were no bolts in the holes,” he said.

    How could the plane, just a couple of months old, have been flying since November without the bolts in place?

    Fehrm said there’s no way the plug can move up while the plane is at altitude because the air pressure keeps it tight against the stop pads. Even on the ground, while springs at the bottom counterbalance the weight of the plug, there’s no force tending to shove the door up.

    He surmises that when the cabin was not pressurized, for example when landing or at takeoff, if those bolts were missing then vibrations and bumps could have caused the plug to gradually work itself upward over time.

    There are metal alignment pins pushed through the door plug stop fittings. Those are not fixed into the corresponding stop pads on the door frame and the tips of the pins could slide up.

    NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy said Monday that the agency’s lab in Washington, D.C., will examine the plug and the connected door frame components and will be able to definitively say whether the bolts were installed by examining the holes for marks.

    Inside a different Alaska Airlines MAX 9, parked Wednesday evening outside the airline’s maintenance hangar at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, the cabin sidewalls had been removed to get ready for inspection and the door plug could be minutely examined.

    As is the case on the plug that blew out, an inscription written in marker on the side of the plug gave the part serial number and the words “Made in Malaysia.”

    All four bolts to prevent upward motion, each maybe 3 inches long, as well as all the roughly inch-long centering pins on the stop fittings, were snugly in place. It was clear that it would immediately be obvious from a visual inspection if any were missing.

    Adding to the mystery, The Air Current aviation news website reported Thursday that during final assembly of the MAX 9 involved in the accident, Boeing mechanics did find some loose bolts in the door frame — different from the four bolts discussed above — around the plug on the right side that did not blow out, and had tightened them.

    In typical final assembly operations, despite some reports to the contrary, Boeing doesn’t remove and reinstall the plug. Renton mechanics would touch it only if something were seen to be amiss.

    But if it’s true the mechanics tightened some loose bolts around a plug on one side of the airplane, wouldn’t they also have checked the plug on the other side?

    The NTSB preliminary report, expected within a month, should tell us if indeed the bolts were never installed.

    Another aspect of that investigation will be to assess how well the Flight 1282 cabin crew handled the emergency.

    When the cabin decompressed and the oxygen masks dropped, the flight attendants focused on supporting the couple of unaccompanied minors on board and several babies on laps.

    But NTSB Chair Homendy said they found it difficult to communicate with one another and understand what had happened. Some of them were unaware there was a large hole in the fuselage.

    Analysis of the systems and procedures involved may help draw lessons for similar emergencies in the future.

    With both Boeing and the FAA under scrutiny, that leaves the NTSB — a government agency with fewer than 440 employees — as the entity most trusted for an independent investigation of the Flight 1282 close call.

    “Our entire mission is not just what happened but why it happened, to prevent it from reoccurring,” Homendy said.

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    (c) 2024 The Seattle Times

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC



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  • Japan successfully launches reconnaissance satellite into orbit

    The H-2A Launch Vehicle No. 48 carrying the government’s Information-Gathering Satellite “Optical-8” blasted off at 1:44 p.m. Friday from the Tanegashima Space Center in Kagoshima Prefecture. The launch was marked a success after the satellite separated from the rocket and went into orbit.

    An Information-Gathering Satellite (IGS) is de facto a reconnaissance satellite which monitors military facilities in North Korea and elsewhere but is also used to assess disaster-stricken areas.

    There is a total of 10 IGS currently in operation, including optical satellites that capture high-resolution daytime imagery and radar satellites that can take images at night and in bad weather. The Optical-8 was launched as a successor to an optical satellite currently in operation beyond its design life.

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    (c) 2024 the Asia News Network

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Lynn Yamada Davis, TikTok chef known for playful ‘Cooking With Lynja’ videos, dies

    Lynn Yamada Davis, a social media star known for her fast-paced and kooky “Cooking With Lynja” online tutorials, has died.

    Hannah Shofet, Davis’ eldest daughter, confirmed Friday to The Times that her mother died Jan. 1 at Riverview Medical Center in New Jersey from esophageal cancer. She was 67.

    In a phone interview, Shofet celebrated Davis for being a “real poster child of having a family and also pursuing your dreams.” She also praised her mother for representing older women and Japanese culture on social media.

    “When she would go to award shows or was invited to these amazing things, it’s kinda cool that she was this older … Asian American woman that was doing these things in the spotlight,” Shofet said.

    In a tribute published Friday on Davis’ YouTube channel, her son Tim Davis recalled her “peaceful” final moments and shared several photos of the social media sensation throughout her life.

    Holding a recent photo of his mother, Tim said she looked “so intelligent and elegant in this picture.”

    “When I think of my mom, this is who I think of,” he said. “The Internet’s grandma. She was the best. So glad you guys got to experience how wonderful of a person she was and that you guys treated her so well.”

    Davis, a third generation Japanese American, was a maverick when it came to bite-sized cooking tutorials on social media platforms including TikTok, Instagram and YouTube. In 2020, Davis started her “Cooking With Lynja” YouTube channel, in collaboration with Tim, who was a freelance videographer at the time. Amid the heat of the COVID-19 pandemic, she served up mouth-watering recipes and Gen Z humor in the form of wacky, over-the-top edits and cheeky jokes. She amassed a following of more than 9.6 million subscribers on YouTube, 2.2 million Instagram followers and 17.6 million TikTok followers.

    An MIT alumna and former engineer, Davis said in 2021 that stay-at-home orders during the pandemic offered an opportunity to share her family recipes. Her first videos were straightforward (and relatively calm) instructional clips that walked her followers through the process of “deconstructed sushi,” keto hamburgers and lasagna. But like a true content creator, Davis adapted to the changing trends of social media.

    Expanding to Instagram and TikTok, “Lynja” took her cooking videos to new heights — and audiences.

    Davis’ shorter-form Instagram and TikTok videos tackled trending foods with flair, sharing her takes on McDonald’s “Rick and Morty” Szechuan sauce, strawberry tanghulu and fellow food creator Emily Mariko’s viral salmon bowl. Stylized quick cuts, miniature “Lynjas,” blown-out audio and the throwing of ingredients into her backyard quickly became staples of Davis’ later videos.

    In recent years, Davis collaborated with a number of other food content creators including YouTube star Nick DiGiovanni. Their super-sized collaborations broke several Guinness World Records — the world’s largest cake pop, chicken nugget and sushi roll among them. The duo also documented their travels to Japan, and most recently, Italy.

    DiGiovanni, 27, honored Davis by celebrating another side of the internet star. In a video posted on his Instagram account Friday, DiGiovanni shared his favorite memories with Davis — including their Guinness successes, ice-skating and go-kart racing.

    “Love you Lynja,” he said at the end of the video.

    Cooking influencers including Ahmad Alzahabi, Alessandra Ciuffo and Sam Way also paid tribute to Davis on Instagram.

    In 2021, Davis earned her first food nomination for the Streamy Awards, which recognize online content creators. The next year, she won her first Streamy. She was nominated again in 2023, but the prize went to YouTube star MrBeast and his video with actor Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson.

    Forbes also honored Davis on its Top 50 Creators list in 2022.

    Davis was open about her battle with cancer, telling her fans (the “Lynja-turtles”) in May 2021 that she was diagnosed with throat cancer in 2019. She said the cancer caused her voice to sound like a number of animated characters, including Marge Simpson from “The Simpsons” and Nintendo’s Toad. In 2021, she was diagnosed with esophageal cancer, but also completed treatment that year.

    “Long story short, I’m doing great and I love making these videos for you,” she said. “If I have any advice for you, it’s get check-ups annually, drink lots of water and stay close to your friends and family. Lynja out!”

    In addition to Shofet, Davis is survived by husband Keith Davis, daughter Becky Steinberg, sons Tim Davis and Sean Davis and siblings Jay Yamada and Karen Yamada Dolce.

    Davis was laid to rest in California during an intimate funeral service on Jan. 9, her son Sean Davis said on Instagram. The family noted that fans can donate to the Monmouth County, N.J., SPCA or the Monmouth & Ocean chapter of food charity FulFill in Davis’ honor.

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    © 2024 Los Angeles Times

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • New Yorker to become highest ranking African American woman in the US Coast Guard’s 233-year history

    Capt. Zeita Merchant, commander of The Port of New York, will make history in April when she attains the rank of rear admiral, becoming the highest-ranking African American woman in the U.S. Coast Guard’s (USGC) 233-year history.

    After a lengthy confirmation process, Merchant was approved in December 2023 by Congress and will assume the rank during the Coast Guard’s Change of Command exercises in April. At that time, she will assume a new position in USCG Headquarters in Washington, D.C

    At the USCG Sector One, based in Rosebank, Merchant is commander of one of the nation’s busiest port complexes, managing more than 1,000 personnel in 12 commands daily over an area spanning more than 6,000 square miles. She and her staff are tasked with keeping the waters of New York and New Jersey safe daily for both travelers and hundreds of billions of dollars in cargo.

    Calling the USCG a close-knit family, Merchant thanked her superior officers along the way, praising the “climate for success” fostered in the nation’s only military branch in the Department of Homeland Security.

    She said working in New York City has been the “assignment of a lifetime,” one she could never have envisioned herself in as a young college kid from the South, who admittedly joined the Coast Guard solely for college debt assistance.

    “When I joined, I was focused on the three-year obligation, and even that was hard to swallow,” she says with a laugh, recalling how she then quickly recognized the impact she could have on the nation’s homeland defense every day — and all that changed.

    “Those years went by so fast, and the impact I was making (with) my unit was one that I wanted to continue to experience,” she recalled. “I remember having the conversation . . . ‘What do I have to do to stay in?’ “

    Today, she’s considered one of the USCG’s top certified emergency managers leading large-scale, multi-jurisdictional incident responses.

    BREAKING BARRIERS

    Merchant has quickly ascended the USCG ranks during her nearly 27-year career. She also continued her education and earned a great many commendations — while tearing through color and gender barriers along the way.

    In most of her leadership roles in the USCG she’s either been the first minority or the first woman to hold the position — and most times she was both.

    Merchant quickly praises the many who have understood her vision during her career.

    “At any point there could have been a barrier, but I was truly blessed to have people that supported me and gave me a climate in which I could bring my best self to work every day,” she said. “That’s my goal: to give others the same environment.”

    Her promotion, she hopes, will shine a light on the Coast Guard for young African American women who are unfamiliar with it, as she was while growing up in Mississippi.

    “People on the outside then get to consider the Coast Guard because they see someone that looks like them . . . and are, in turn, inspired by it,’ she said. “That is what I see. I’m giving them something that I didn’t have.”

    Her current position is also historic for the Coast Guard, as she’s the first-ever minority to hold the position of captain of the Port of New York.

    A graduate of Tougaloo College, Merchant holds a master’s degree in public administration from The George Washington University and both a master’s degree and a doctorate from the former National Graduate School at New England Institute of Business.

    She’s also graduate of the Harvard Kennedy School of Government’s Executive Education Leadership in Homeland Security Course, and is a Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Seminar XXI National Security and Foreign Affairs Fellow.

    During her career, she’s commanded maritime operations at Marine Safety Unit Chicago, served as executive officer of Marine Safety Unit Texas City, chief of port operations at Sector Miami and as a marine inspector and port operations officer at the Marine Safety Office in New Orleans.

    She’s also received personal military honors, including three Meritorious Service Medals, six Coast Guard Commendation Medals, three Coast Guard Achievement Medals, three Military Outstanding Volunteer Service Medals and four Commandant’s Letters of Commendation, among others.

    And Merchant was recently named a Hero of the Harbor by the non-profit Waterfront Alliance, which celebrates the importance of coastline decision makers. She also was honored as a Woman Who Moves the Nation by the Conference of Minority Transportation Officials for her contributions to the nation’s transportation industry.

    As she eyes the next chapter of her career, her fourth move to the nation’s capital, Merchant is enthusiastic.

    “I’m excited about the opportunity to serve at the senior executive level for the Coast Guard, really making a difference,” she said. “It really is a pinnacle for me.”

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    (c) 2024 Staten Island Advance

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • New study finds nanoplastics in water from three common bottled H2O brands

    You’ve likely heard of microplastics. Enter nanoplastics, which are even smaller and, new research shows, might just be swimming in your plastic water bottle.

    A study from Columbia University has found hundreds of thousands of micro- and nanoparticles in water from plastic water bottles. The quantity is 10 to 100 times more than has been previously reported.

    Considerably smaller than the diameter of a human hair, nanoplastics are of particular concern because they’re tiny enough to penetrate human cells, travel throughout the bloodstream and cross the blood-brain barrier. Nanoparticles have also been shown to cross the blood-placenta barrier: A 2022 study by Rutgers University scientists found that nanoparticles of the metal titanium dioxide crossed the placenta in rats.

    Plastic use is ubiquitous across the world, and especially in the United States. One estimate found that the U.S. produced 42 million metric tons of plastic waste in 2016, or 287 pounds per person. From Tupperware to frozen dinners to water bottles, it’s a part of the great majority’s daily lives.

    “Plastic has been used for 50 years, 100 years, and has been posing serious environmental issues because plastics are essentially non-degradable, or (they) take hundreds if not thousands of years to degrade,” said Wei Min, a professor of chemistry at Columbia and senior author on the paper, which was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Science on Monday.

    When plastic does break down, it does so into micro- and nanoparticles. And using a new method, the Columbia scientists found about 240,000 micro- and nanoparticles of plastic in one liter of water. (A standard plastic water bottle is about 17 ounces, or half a liter). Testing for seven common plastics, researchers found not only that those seven were present in the water of all three brands, but that the tested plastics only accounted for 10% of total particles they saw. Detected plastic polymers include three they tested for: polystyrene, polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and PET.

    “Environmental scientists have been chasing these small particles for decades,” said Min. “But nanoplastics are almost impossible to study with traditional technologies.”

    Min’s team, along with other Columbia researchers and Phoebe Stapleton, the senior author of the aforementioned Rutgers paper, created a new way to detect these tiny pieces of plastic.

    Traditional technology involves shooting a laser at particles and measuring the energy they release. Each particle gives off an energy “signature,” telling the scientists how much of which particle exists in the sample. But nanoplastics are so small that their signatures, as measured by previous technology, were too weak to detect.

    So the team added another laser, and the two lasers interacted to amplify the signal by multiple orders of magnitude, picking up on very sensitive signatures.

    “This new tool opens up a new window for us,” said Beizhan Yan, an associate research professor of geochemistry at the Columbia Climate School, and one of the study authors.

    When they first saw the results, they didn’t believe it, said Yan. How could all three water bottle brands result in multiple kinds of plastic ending up in the water?

    “This is clearly a common and recurring issue,” said Yan. He hypothesized that it could be in part from the process of water treatment and purification, representing a systemic problem among multiple brands, which is why they chose not to disclose the three brands tested.

    When Carla Ng read the study, she said the results were close to what she expected. Ng, an associate professor of civil and environmental engineering at the University of Pittsburgh, specializing in per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances — commonly known as PFAS and “forever chemicals” — said this confirms a lot of what’s already known about storing things in plastic.

    “We know for additives in plastic, those chemicals can readily leach out into the water,” she said. “It is concerning to acknowledge these plastics chemically, because we know they can penetrate cells.”

    But as of right now, it’s important not to jump to conclusions. Yan and Min’s study identified the existence of nanoplastics in water from plastic bottles, but their results don’t directly link to toxicity of the nanoplastics.

    “There is a lot of research that needs to be done,” said Yan. “But these (new) tools are providing a great platform for us to do that.”

    There’s a concept in science called a dose-response curve, which means that a drug or substance will affect the body at specific doses. When studying the health impacts of nanoplastics on the body, the same principle applies: Whether you drink from single-use plastic bottles every now and then, versus every day for 50 years, probably matters when looking at what those nanoplastics might do.

    “To me, it’s more like a numbers game,” said Min. “Our job is to find out what that probability is.”

    Ng, who does study the health impact from small plastic particles and chemicals, said she could see herself using data that emerges from studies like this.

    “The biggest open question now is, ‘What are the implications of these findings?’” she said. “We know that the intrusion of foreign material into cells can cause inflammation. … And scientists are trying to understand the impact (of plastic exposure) over a lifetime.”

    Yan and Min plan to use the new sensitive laser technology for future studies and examine other sources of water, such as tap or groundwater.

    “We are doing the work right now to collect tap water from different areas of the U.S. and set up basically a baseline of nanoplastics in those waters,” said Yan.

    While the public waits for more information, alternatives exist to single-use plastic. All scientists interviewed recommended stainless steel or glass reusable water bottles instead. And if it’s safe to drink your tap water, research shows it tends to have fewer microplastics than bottled water.

    “Don’t heat stuff up in plastic Tupperware, please,” said Ng. And if you want to use a thicker reusable plastic bottle like a Nalgene, wash it regularly and avoid leaving it out in the sun, as UV rays can degrade plastic.

    ___

    (c) 2024 the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

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  • Colorado murder victim’s family raises alarm as co-defendant is up for parole just months after receiving 6-year sentence

    The family of a Jefferson County man who was murdered almost five years ago is alarmed that a woman who helped dispose of the victim’s dismembered body is being considered for parole just months after she was sentenced to six years in prison.

    Lila Atencio, 22, is scheduled to go before the Colorado State Board of Parole on Wednesday, five years almost to the day after Joseph Brinson was shot to death at his rural Jefferson County home on Jan. 16, 2019.

    Atencio, who was 17 at the time, was not present during the slaying but helped two men load Brinson’s dismembered body into trash bags and then dump the remains in a remote part of eastern Arapahoe County.

    “Justice has not been served for Joe when it comes to Lila,” said Amy Frost, Brinson’s aunt. “The other two perpetrators, they’re in prison. One is spending life in prison; one has 46 years in prison. That is all good. That is not what keeps me up at night. What keeps me up at night is Lila. And the fact no one is holding her responsible for what she has done and she can continue to break the law.”

    The killing

    In the winter of 2018, tensions were rising between Joseph Brinson, 28, and his roommate, William Irvine, then 26. The pair rented a single family home on Mica Mine Gulch Road, in the foothills southwest of Littleton.

    A simmering argument between the two grew until Irvine began to make comments to his friends — Atencio and Blake Quinlan, who was 18 at the time — about killing his roommate. The teenagers frequently hung out at Brinson and Irvine’s home.

    Atencio would later tell police she initially thought Irvine’s comments were jokes. He spoke about poisoning Brinson, or shooting him with his own gun and staging the scene to look like a suicide, according to an affidavit filed in the case. Then, in the weeks before the killing, Irvine, Quinlan and Atencio went to Home Depot and bought sheets of plastic, latex gloves and a hand saw.

    Atencio and Quinlan covered the home’s basement in plastic from floor to ceiling a couple days before the killing. They later told police they were going to use the materials to set up a marijuana grow. But that never happened.

    On Jan. 16, 2019, the two roommates argued again. When Brinson stepped outside to smoke a cigarette, Irvine told Quinlan to “do it,” according to an affidavit. Quinlan took Brinson’s gun, waited while Brinson used the bathroom, and then shot Brinson in the head when he emerged from the toilet. Brinson died immediately.

    Irvine and Quinlan dragged Brinson’s body to the plastic-covered basement, where Quinlan said he chopped the body up with the hand saw.

    Around 3 a.m. on Jan. 17, 2019, Quinlan called Atencio and told her “it happened,” she told investigators. He asked her to come help him clean up, and to bring trash bags. Atencio stopped by a Walmart in Westminster and purchased the “biggest, thickest” trash bags she could find, along with some drinks, and drove out to the home, according to an affidavit. There, she held the trash bags while Quinlan put other bags — full of Brinson’s body parts — into the bags she held. She helped to tie up the bags.

    Later that day, Quinlan and Atencio drove out to an area south of Byers, east of Denver, and ditched the bags under a large pine tree. That night, the pair went to an Applebee’s restaurant and paid with Brinson’s credit card, court records show.

    Later, Atencio grew concerned that Brinson’s head could be used to identify him. She returned to the dump site and removed Brinson’s head from the trash bags. She tried to pull out his teeth with pliers, and then ran over the head with her car before moving it alone to a new site about a half-mile away from the rest of Brinson’s body, court records show.

    Brinson’s family reported him as missing a few days after the killing. On Feb. 7, 2019, Quinlan and Atencio were pulled over for a traffic stop in Texas. Quinlan gave the officer a fake identity and then drove away, leading police on a pursuit that ended when he crashed. Investigators later found Brinson’s blood and a pistol in the vehicle.

    A Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office investigator interviewed Quinlan while he was in jail in Texas on April 3, 2019, and he confessed, claiming he acted alone, according to an affidavit.

    “I did it, I killed Joe,” he said, according to an affidavit filed against him.

    The fallout

    All three — Quinlan, Atencio and Irvine — eventually were arrested in connection with Brinson’s slaying. After significant delays because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Quinlan was convicted of first-degree murder at a jury trial in 2021 and sentenced to life in prison. Irvine pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in 2022 and was sentenced to 46 years in prison.

    Atencio cooperated with authorities. She led investigators to Brinson’s head and testified against Quinlan during his jury trial as part of a plea agreement. She pleaded guilty to two felonies in 2020: being an accessory to a crime and conspiring to tamper with a body, and her sentencing was delayed until after she testified against the two men.

    As part of the plea deal, she was sentenced in May 2022 to serve two years of work-release as well as six years of probation, court records show.

    However, she went on to violate the terms of her work-release and probation, and this fall returned to court to be re-sentenced. Prosecutors with the First Judicial District Attorney’s Office requested she be sentenced to six years on each count to run consecutively, for a total of 12 years in prison, spokeswoman Brionna Boatright said.

    Jefferson County District Court Judge Meegan Miloud instead sentenced Atencio to six years in prison on Sept. 8. Just weeks after the sentencing, prison officials alerted Brinson’s family that Atencio was coming up for parole.

    Most prisoners in Colorado are eligible for parole after serving 50% of their sentence. Atencio had more than two years worth of pre-sentence confinement credit when she was sentenced in September, and that time served counted as part of her six-year sentence.

    It’s common for defendants to receive credit for time served when they are sentenced, though the large amount of credit Atencio received is a bit out of the ordinary and reflects the two-year delay between her plea and her sentencing, Boatright said.

    Because of that credit, Atencio is eligible for parole in April, just seven months after the re-sentencing.

    The attorneys who represented Atencio did not return requests for comment.

    Brinson’s relatives feel she should not be released from prison, and Boatright said the district attorney’s office shares their concern.

    “For the family, it’s just been devastation all over again, every single time,” Frost said. “It just seems as if she is never punished for anything.”

    She remembered Brinson as a “sweet, kind guy,” who enjoyed riding dirt bikes, hiking and music. He’d been having a rough time before he was killed, she said, in large part because his brother died about 18 months earlier.

    She plans to speak against Atencio’s release on parole at the Jan. 17 hearing.

    “She should definitely not be in public at all,” she said. “Someone who is capable of doing this, who has zero remorse — it’s not like she did this and then just broke down in tears and said, ‘I’m sorry, I was messed up on drugs and alcohol and I made a horrible decision.’ Nothing.”

    ___

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  • North Korea conducts first ballistic missile test of year

    North Korea fired a mid-range ballistic missile into the sea east of the Korean Peninsula on Sunday afternoon, according to South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff.

    This was the North’s first ballistic missile launch of the year, with the previous one on Dec. 18.

    “At approximately 2:55 p.m. on this day, a single intermediate-range ballistic missile was fired from the vicinity of Pyongyang toward the east coast, flying for about 1,000 kilometers before landing in the water,” the South’s JCS said in a release.

    The ballistic missile was detected and tracked from the point of the launch by the South Korean military, which is working in close coordination with the authorities of the US and Japan for a comprehensive analysis on its detailed specifications, it said.

    “We strongly condemn the North Korean missile launch as a clear act of provocation that gravely threatens the peace and stability of the Korean Peninsula,” it said. “We are maintaining a full-readiness posture, and sharing information the North Korean launch with the US and Japanese authorities.”

    South Korean authorities previously warned of the possibility of an imminent test after North Korea reported progress in solid-fuel engines for an IRBM in November last year. Ballistic missiles using solid-fuel engines do not have to be fueled prior to use, unlike liquid-fuel ones, allowing for a quick launch.

    Shin Won-sik, Seoul’s Minister of National Defense, told a pooled interview on Jan. 10 that North Korea “appears to be continuing preparations” for a test launch of the new IRBM.

    “It’s possible the test could take place early this year, if not January,” he said.

    Sunday’s launch comes amid heightened tensions between the Koreas after North Korea canceled a 2018 pact with the South under which the two sides agreed to minimize military measures around the shared border. South Korean military and intelligence officials believe North Korea is likely to ramp up its weapons tests to coincide with the elections in South Korea and the US.

    About a week ago, North Korea fired artillery shells near the South Korean islands close to the sea border for three consecutive days from Jan. 5.

    North Korean state media said on Sunday afternoon that its Foreign Minister Choe Son-hui would visit Russia from Monday, in another development in intensifying ties between the two countries. Her three-day visit comes at the invitation of the Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, it added.

    North Korean and Russia have sought to forge closer ties amid condemnation from the international community for exchanging weapons and military technology, in violation of multiple United Nations Security Council resolutions.

    In September last year, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un held a summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin at a Russian spaceport.

    The US said last week that Russia recently fired additional North Korean ballistic missiles into Ukraine. Both Pyongyang and Moscow have denied accusations of such arms transfers.

    ___

    (c) 2024 the Asia News Network

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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