#federalcourt

4 posts · Last used 4h

Back to Timeline
@TheBadPlace@mastodon.ozioso.online · 4h ago
qwant news | Jeffrey Epstein’s Possible Suicide Note Reportedly Locked In a Courthouse AI generated summary, Read the full article for complete information. A New York Times report says a possible suicide note written by Jeffrey Epstein was found in July 2019 by his cellmate, Nicholas Tartaglione, after Epstein survived an initial suicide attempt and weeks before his death; the note, allegedly torn from a yellow legal pad and hidden in a graphic novel, reportedly reads “time to say goodbye” and contains remarks about investigators finding nothing. The note was sealed by Judge Kenneth M. Karas in White Plains and later ordered returned to the court amid a protracted dispute among Tartaglione’s lawyers, with an outside attorney appointed to investigate and one lawyer disqualified. Tartaglione, a former police officer serving four life sentences for a quadruple homicide and maintaining his innocence, claims his attorneys used handwriting experts to authenticate the note, but the court has declined to comment, keeping related filings sealed to protect attorney‑client privilege. Read more: https://www.mediaite.com/politics/jeffrey-epsteins-possible-suicide-note-reportedly-locked-in-a-courthouse/ #JeffreyEpstein #NicholasTartaglione #KennethKaras #NYTimes #Federalcourt #JessicaReedKraus #KennethMKaras #JohnWieder
0
0
0
@TheBadPlace@mastodon.ozioso.online · 10h ago
Times of India | 'Time to say goodbye' :Jeffrey Epstein's suicide note revealed via former cellmate account, remains sealed by court AI generated summary, Read the full article for complete information. Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced financier who died by suicide in a New York federal jail in 2019, is reported to have written a note shortly before his death, according to his former cellmate Nicholas Tartaglione. Tartaglione says he found the yellow‑paper note tucked in a graphic novel left in their cell after Epstein was moved in July 2019; the handwritten message, which reads “Time to say goodbye” and includes a defiant “What do you want me to do, bust out crying?” suggests Epstein maintained his innocence despite an ongoing investigation. Handwriting experts later verified the note as Epstein’s, and Tartaglione turned it over to his lawyers, who submitted it to a federal court where a judge sealed it. The sealed document has not been released to investigators or the public, was omitted from the Justice Department’s 2023 review of Epstein’s death, and remains confidential even as questions linger over the jail’s security failures surrounding his suicide. Read more: https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/us/time-to-say-goodbye-jeffrey-epsteins-suicide-note-revealed-via-former-cellmate-account-remains-sealed-by-court/articleshow/130650700.cms #JeffreyEpstein #NicholasTartaglione #NewYork #Federalcourt
0
0
0
@TheBadPlace@mastodon.ozioso.online · Apr 09, 2026
undefined | Anthropic loses appeals court bid to temporarily block Pentagon blacklisting A federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., rejected Anthropic’s request for an emergency stay that would have halted the Department of Defense’s decision to label the AI company a “supply‑chain risk” and effectively blacklist its technology. The court said the balance of equities favored the government, noting that the alleged harm to Anthropic was largely financial, whereas the DOD’s action involved protecting vital AI capabilities during an active military conflict. Consequently, the court denied the motion for a stay while the case proceeds on its merits. The Pentagon’s designation, issued in early March, obliges defense contractors to certify that they do not use Anthropic’s Claude models in any work for the military. Anthropic argued that the label was an unconstitutional, arbitrary retaliation that threatened its free‑speech rights and could cause irreparable damage. While the judges acknowledged the company could suffer some immediate harm, they concluded that its interests were primarily financial and that “substantial expedition is warranted” for the government’s national‑security concerns. The legal battle follows a separate San Francisco federal court ruling that granted Anthropic a preliminary injunction blocking the Trump administration’s ban on using the Claude AI system. The company’s efforts to secure a broader injunction against the DOD’s blacklist have thus far been unsuccessful, and the dispute now moves forward in the appellate system. The case highlights the growing tension between emerging AI firms and U.S. defense agencies over control, access, and the ethical use of powerful generative‑AI technologies. Read more: undefined #anthropic #pentagon #departmentofdefense #appealscourt #federalcourt
0
0
1
@TheBadPlace@mastodon.ozioso.online · Mar 27, 2026

qwant news | Apollo, BlackRock Deny Asking Kirkland To Abandon Optimum - Law360

Apollo, BlackRock Deny Asking Kirkland To Abandon Optimum
By Tracey Read – March 27, 2026, 3:40 PM EDT

Apollo, Ares, BlackRock and other major financial firms have denied the allegations made by Optimum Communications. Optimum claims the firms “bully‑ed” the law firm Kirkland & Ellis LLP into withdrawing as its transaction counsel in a telecommunications deal, seeking retaliation for a separate collusion lawsuit that Optimum filed in a New York federal court.

The dispute centers on whether the financial firms improperly pressured Kirkland & Ellis to step aside, thereby influencing the outcome of Optimum’s transaction and undermining its legal strategy. Optimum argues this conduct was meant to punish the company for its antitrust claims, while the defendants assert that no such coercion occurred. The case highlights ongoing tensions between large financiers and corporate counsel in high‑stakes litigation.

Read more: https://www.law360.com/articles/2458582/apollo-blackrock-deny-asking-kirkland-to-abandon-optimum

#apollo #blackrock #kirkland&ellis #federalcourt #antitrust

0
0
0

You've seen all posts