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- Middle East War: How Iran Could Attack the U.S. Navy's Aircraft Carriers
- US sanctions Maduro's son as it raises pressure on Venezuela
- Hedge-Fund Heir Found Guilty of Murdering Father After Allowance Was Cut
Middle East War: How Iran Could Attack the U.S. Navy's Aircraft Carriers Posted: 29 Jun 2019 08:18 AM PDT Recent events, particularly the downing of a U.S. Navy MQ-4 Triton by Iranian military forces, again raise the possibility of war between the United States and Iran. The on again, off again standoff between Washington and Tehran, now in its fourth decade is periodically instigated by both sides, and each time Iran grows stronger. If Iran decides to stage an attack against a larger target, such as an American destroyer or even aircraft carrier, how might it use its missile force to do so? Iran has invested considerable resources in its ballistic missile forces over the past forty years, for the same reason China and North Korea did: military aviation is an expensive proposition, and developing and maintaining an air force to rival the United States is very expensive indeed. Ballistic missiles offer a relatively inexpensive way to launch conventional, chemical, biological, and even nuclear payloads long distances. As an added bonus intercepting such missiles is complex and itself an expensive undertaking. All three countries developed large ballistic missile arsenals of varying sophistication, occasionally trading in illicit information among themselves and others. This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
US sanctions Maduro's son as it raises pressure on Venezuela Posted: 29 Jun 2019 02:20 AM PDT The Trump administration on Friday announced sanctions on the son of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in a move to increase pressure on family members of top officials backing the socialist leader and suspected of corruption. The action by the U.S. Treasury Department freezes any U.S. assets belonging to Nicolas Maduro Jr. and prohibits American from doing business with him. "Maduro's regime was built on fraudulent elections, and his inner circle lives in luxury off the proceeds of corruption while the Venezuelan people suffer," said Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin. This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
Hedge-Fund Heir Found Guilty of Murdering Father After Allowance Was Cut Posted: 28 Jun 2019 11:20 PM PDT Thomas Gilbert Jr., the adult son of a successful New York City hedge-fund manager, has been found guilty of the 2015 murder of his father after an alleged dispute over his weekly allowance.The New York jury reportedly found him guilty of three out of four charges, including "second-degree murder and weapon possession charges." Gilbert's five-week trial had been delayed in the years since the murder in order to determine whether or not he was mentally fit to stand trial.After undergoing four mental evaluations, one of which came back inconclusive, Gilbert, now 34, was eventually deemed fit to stand trial. He declined to appear in person for much of the trial, but was present for closing arguments on Wednesday.According to the New York Post, he faces up to life in prison and is set to be sentenced on Aug. 9.Is This Hedge-Fund Heir Insane or a Stone-Cold Killer?On January 4, 2015, Thomas Gilbert Jr. unexpectedly arrived at his parents' posh apartment in Manhattan's Turtle Bay neighborhood, just hours after his father had told him that he was slashing his weekly allowance to $300. He told his mother, Shelley Gilbert, that he needed "to talk business" with his dad, Thomas Gilbert Sr., a founding managing partner at Wainscott Capital, a lucrative New York hedge fund. He then sent his mother out of the apartment to fetch him a sandwich and a Coke. Gilbert allegedly knew his mom didn't keep the soda in the apartment, so she would have to go out to get it—leaving him alone with his dad. When his mother returned, she found the elder Gilbert shot in the head with a gun on his chest. His left hand was on the handle, "as if someone wanted it to appear it was suicide," Craig Ortner, an assistant district attorney with the Manhattan District Attorney's Office, said during the trial. Surveillance video shows the younger Gilbert, wearing a hoodie and carrying a gym bag, enter and leave his parent's apartment building within a 15-minute span.After Shelley Gilbert discovered her husband shot in their apartment, and her son nowhere to be found, she called 911."My husband is, I think, dead," she told the operator, audibly distraught. When the operator asked her who had shot her husband, Gilbert responded: "My son—who is nuts. But I didn't know he was this nuts," she said. "I had no idea he was this nuts."Gilbert Jr.'s former therapist, Susan Evans, who saw him for several years before the shooting, testified during the trial that he suffered from paranoid thoughts that were "interfering" with his ability to function. In the months before the incident, Evans recommended that he be screened for paranoid schizophrenia. Other former doctors testified that they prescribed him antipsychotic medication, but Evans said that Tommy did not take the medications regularly.Prosecutors argued that while he may have had issues, none of the doctors who had treated Tommy over the years had ever recommended anything in addition to therapy and medication.The jury was tasked with deciding whether Gilbert was unable to distinguish right from wrong at the time he shot and killed his father, a fact that was not disputed by the defense. Clothes, Sponges Stained With Missing Mom Jennifer Dulos' Blood Found in Trash Cans: PoliceBefore his father's murder, Gilbert Jr. lived a comfortable life by any measure. He attended prep school in Manhattan, boarding school in Massachusetts, and graduated as a legacy from Princeton University. His psychological problems allegedly began after he graduated from college. According to Ortner, Gilbert spent most of his post-grad life in the Hamptons, "surfing, playing tennis, working out, and partying." His parents paid the rent at his apartment in Manhattan's expensive Chelsea neighborhood, took care of his car payments, auto insurance, and "even paid his parking tickets for him." All on top of a whopping $1,000 per week allowance.In an attempt to make his son financially independent, the elder Gilbert began reducing his son's weekly allowance in 2014. Around that same time, according to prosecutors, Gilbert Jr.'s computer history shows he began searching online for a hit man.The deposits first shrunk from $1,000 to $800, then to $600. Hours before he was killed, Gilbert Sr. cut his son's allowance down to $300.Read more at The Daily Beast.Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast hereGet our top stories in your inbox every day. Sign up now!Daily Beast Membership: Beast Inside goes deeper on the stories that matter to you. Learn more. This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
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