Sunday, November 17, 2024
27 C
Brunei Town

LA man allegedly kills wife, her parents, hiding body parts in trash

PHOTO: ENVATO

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A Los Angeles man was charged Monday with murder for allegedly killing his wife and her parents, then stuffing dismembered body parts into a trash bag, prosecutors announced Monday.

Samuel Haskell, 35, was charged with three counts of murder with special circumstances of committing multiple murders and could face life in prison without the chance of parole if convicted, the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office said in a statement.

During a court appearance, Haskell’s arraignment was postponed and he was ordered held without bail. An email seeking comment from Joseph Gutierrez, an attorney who represented him in court Monday, wasn’t immediately returned.

Haskell lived in the Tarzana neighborhood of the San Fernando Valley with his wife, their three young children and her parents.

He was arrested last week after a human torso was found in a bag in a dumpster, police said.

Mei Li Haskell, 37, and her parents, Gaoshan Li, 72, and Yanxiang Wang, 64, were last seen on or about Nov. 6, the DA’s office statement said.

“On November 7, Haskell allegedly hired four day-laborers to take away several heavy black plastic trash bags from his home in Tarzana,” the statement said. “One of the labourers opened one of the bags and allegedly observed human body parts. They called 911 and reported the incident.”

They returned the bags and money, but the bags weren’t there when police arrived, authorities have said.

The same day, Haskell was caught on video dumping something in a dumpster in nearby Encino, authorities said. He was arrested the next day after someone rummaging through trash in that dumpster found a woman’s torso in a trash bag and called 911, prosecutors said.

The torso is suspected to be that of Haskell’s wife, police have said. However, they haven’t been officially identified, the Los Angeles County medical examiner’s department told KNBC-TV.

“We suspect that the torso…is the body of Mei Haskell,” Deputy District Attorney Beth Silverman said Monday. “No other bags containing body parts or remains have been recovered to date but I don’t need a body to charge a murder.”

“There were items of evidence in the house that indicated he dismembered the bodies,” Silverman said.

This undated photo combination provided by the Los Angeles Police Department shows Mei Haskell (left) and her parents, YanXiang Wang and Gaoshan Li. PHOTO: AP

Midwestern Jews demand end to ‘Israeli apartheid system

Jews supporting Palestinians demand an immediate ceasefire in Gaza at Chicago's Ogilvie Transportation Centre on Monday. PHOTO: AP

CHICAGO (AP) — Hundreds of Jewish peace activists and their allies converged at a major train station in downtown Chicago during rush hour Monday morning, blocking the entrance to the Israeli consulate and demanding US support for an Israel cease-fire in northern Gaza.

Midwestern Jews and allies travelled to Chicago from Iowa, Missouri, Minnesota, Michigan, Indiana, Wisconsin and Illinois for the demonstration, organisers said.

The Israeli consulate in Chicago is in a building connected to the Ogilvie Transportation Center, a major commuter rail station.

Over 100 protesters who had blocked escalators leading to the consulate were arrested for misdemeanor trespassing and escorted out of the building, according to Ben Lorber, who helped organise the protest led by Chicago chapters of Jewish Voice for Peace, IfNotNow, and Never Again Action. That information was not confirmed by Chicago police, who could not immediately provide information on the number and reasons for arrests, and how many demonstrators participated.

Israel was triggered by Hamas’ October 7 retaliative surprise attack, whose response has led to thousands of deaths — and much destruction — across Gaza.

Advocacy group Jewish Voice for Peace led a similar sit-in in New York City’s Grand Central Station on October 27, where a sea of protesters filled the main concourse during evening rush hour, chanting slogans and unfurling banners demanding a cease-fire as Israel intensified its bombardment of the Gaza Strip. At least 200 demonstrators were detained by New York police officers.

And more than 300 people were arrested in Washington, DC on October 19 for illegally demonstrating, and three people were charged with assaulting police after protesters descended on Capitol Hill to call for a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas.

The Chicago rally is unique from the previous Jewish Voice demonstrations because in the Midwest, “progressive Jewish communities are far smaller and separated by distance,” according to an emailed press release from organisers.

Chicago protesters cheered Monday as police led demonstrators from the building with hands zip-tied behind their backs, many in black T-shirts that read, “Not in our name.”

“We will not let a genocide happen in our name,” said Clara Belitz of IfNotNow Chicago during an Instagram livestream of the protest. “Our Jewish values compel us to speak out.” IfNotNow describes itself as a movement of American Jews organising to end US support of “the Israeli government’s apartheid system.”

A spokesperson for Metra, the city’s commuter rail system, said that trains continued to run normally, but protesters blocked the southern exit and commuters were forced to leave the station through other doors.

“They shut down access to our platforms from the 500 West Madison building,” where the consulate is located, said Meg Reile, a spokesperson for Metra. “Trains continued to run throughout.”

The Israeli consulate in Chicago did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Jews supporting Palestinians demand an immediate ceasefire in Gaza at Chicago’s Ogilvie Transportation Centre on Monday. PHOTO: AP

Exxon aims to lead lithium supply for EVs

An excavator moves lithium ore at the Sigma Lithium Xuxa mine near Itinga, Minas Gerais state, Brazil on June 14. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

ARKANSAS (BLOOMBERG) – Exxon Mobil Corp plans to become a top supplier of lithium for electric vehicles, marking the oil giant’s first major foray outside of fossil fuels in decades.

Exxon will extract the metal from underground saltwater reservoirs in the Smackover Formation in southern Arkansas, employing a novel method called Direct Lithium Extraction not currently deployed at scale. Exxon aims to produce its first lithium by 2027 and ramp up output to the equivalent of 1 million electric vehicles annually by 2030.

That level of production would amount to about 100,000 tons a year, Dan Ammann, president of Exxon’s Low Carbon Solutions business, said during an interview Monday. It would also make Exxon one of the top ten producers globally.

“We’re producing lithium here domestically instead of importing it from China and elsewhere,” Ammann said. “We’re going to do that with a much smaller environmental footprint and we’re going to build a profitable and high-growth business.”

Although lithium is not geologically scarce like other battery metals such as cobalt and nickel, mining high-grade quantities at scale is a major challenge.

Exxon believes DLE has several advantages over the hard-rock mining techniques and brine ponds currently in use, including smaller surface-land use. Ammann also sees similarities between DLE and pumping oil, making the company “quite confident in the production approach.”

DLE’s success could be a game-changer for worldwide lithium production. It would unlock vast resources of the silvery-white metal in North America, reducing the need for imports. It may also prove cheaper and greener than traditional production in South America, home to roughly half the world’s reserves.

Ammann also said the company will evaluate expanding lithium production globally as the market develops.

Exxon scientists led by Dr Stanley Whittingham invented the lithium-ion battery in the 1970s, paving the way for a rechargeable energy source now commonly used in everything from laptops to large-scale power storage. At that time, Exxon also had extensive investments in uranium mining and nuclear technology as part of an initiative to branch out beyond fossil fuels.

Exxon didn’t provide specific capital-expenditure forecasts. The first lithium module would cost in the “hundreds of millions” of dollars and spending would likely reach “billions” by 2030, Ammann said.

The project would help Exxon win a large share of a market it expects to quadruple by 2030 and help mitigate losses from the expected reduction in gasoline and diesel demand over the coming decades. The oil giant has held talks with Tesla Inc, Ford Motor Co, Volkswagen AG and other automakers this year as it seeks to build a business around the metal, Bloomberg News reported in July, citing people familiar with the matter.

Talks with customers are “extremely positive,” Ammann said, without confirming the identities of prospective counterparties. “People are excited to see a company of the scale and capability of Exxon Mobil come into this space which is currently comprised mostly of small- to medium-sized companies.”

Spot lithium prices have tumbled this year due to a slowdown in China and concern over the affordability of EVs in the US and Europe. Still, the long-term picture looks healthy. BloombergNEF expects global demand for lithium to grow almost five times by the end of the decade.

Occidental Petroleum Corp and SLB, the world’s biggest oil-services provider, also have said they’re exploring brine-based lithium production.

An excavator moves lithium ore at the Sigma Lithium Xuxa mine near Itinga, Minas Gerais state, Brazil on June 14. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

India weighs EV import tax cuts to woo Tesla

Automobiles produced by Tesla Inc sit dockside after arriving on the Glovis Courage vehicles carrier vessel at the Port of Oslo in Oslo, Norway. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

NEW DELHI (BLOOMBERG) – India is considering tax cuts on imports of completely-built units of electric vehicles, for up to five years, as it tries to entice the likes of Tesla Inc to sell and eventually make its cars in the country.

The Indian government is working on an electric vehicle policy that would allow international car manufacturers to import battery-powered vehicles on concessional duty rates if they commit to eventually building them in India, people familiar with the matter said.

A final decision is yet to be taken on the policy’s contours, the people said, asking not to be identified as the discussions are private. Spokesmen from India’s heavy industries and commerce ministries did not immediately respond to emails seeking comment.

In 2021, the Austin-based EV manufacturer had sought duty cuts on import of electric vehicles. It was hoping to have the rates reduced to 40 per cent from the current range of 70 to 100 per cent for its vehicles, depending on their import value.

Tesla’s Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk is likely to meet Indian Trade Minister Piyush Goyal later this week to discuss the company’s plans to set up a factory in the South Asian nation. Goyal is in San Francisco to attend the ministerial engagements of Indo-Pacific Economic Framework and the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation.

Tesla is seeking to break into one of the world’s most promising auto markets where the demand for electric vehicles is rising among the country’s burgeoning middle class. For India, Tesla’s investment would aid the government’s push to increase the share of manufacturing in the nation’s GDP while also creating jobs.

India’s electric car market is currently at a nascent stage with EVs accounting for just 1.3 per cent of the total passenger vehicles sold last year, according to BloombergNEF. The adoption of EVs in the country has been held back by the high cost of cars, a dearth of options and lack of charging stations.

Opening up the EV segment could speed up the adoption of cleaner transport in a country that currently has the world’s most toxic air. The government launched a USD3.1 billion incentive program in 2021 to boost local EV production.

Automobiles produced by Tesla Inc sit dockside after arriving on the Glovis Courage vehicles carrier vessel at the Port of Oslo in Oslo, Norway. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

Stellantis offer packages to US workers

The Stellantis logo is seen at the North American International Auto Show on September 13 in Detroit. PHOTO: AP

DETROIT (AP) — Stellantis said Monday it will offer buyout or early retirement packages to about 6,400 nonunion US salaried employees as the auto industry faces what the company is calling challenging market conditions.

The automaker, formed in the 2021 merger of Fiat Chrysler and PSA Peugeot of France, said it is taking the action “to protect our operations and the company.”

The offers, which include what the company said is a favorable benefits package, will go to workers who would like to leave the company or retire to pursue other interests.

Workers with five to nine years of service would get three months of base pay under the offers, while those with 10 to 14 years would get six months. Workers with 15 to 19 years would get nine months of base pay and those with 20 or more years would get a full year, the company said.

Stellantis said it has about 12,700 US salaried workers who are not union members.

It said the buyouts will help prepare the company for the transition to electric vehicles.

Stellantis made buyout offers to groups of white-collar and unionised employees in the US and Canada in April. It was hoping to cut the hourly workforce by about 3,500 people but wouldn’t say how many salaried workers it was targeting.

The company posted net income of just over USD12 billion in the first half of the year. But it said a 44-day strike by the United Auto Workers union this fall cost it USD795 million.

The Stellantis logo is seen at the North American International Auto Show on September 13 in Detroit. PHOTO: AP

Hyundai join Toyota, Honda in US wages hike

Employees inspect vehicle frames inside the Hyundai Motor Manufacturing Alabama facility in Montgomery. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

ALABAMA (BLOOMBERG) – Hyundai Motor Co will give workers in Alabama and Georgia a 25 per cent raise over the next four years, following moves by Japan’s Toyota Motor Corp and Honda Motor Co to increase pay and ward off possible inroads by the United Auto Workers union.

The “new wage structure” will affect roughly 4,000 production workers at its assembly plant in Alabama along with a new plant being built near Savannah, Georgia, that is scheduled to start production in 2025, the Korean automaker said in a statement Monday.

Last week, Honda told employees it would hike the pay of some US workers 11 per cent, matching the raise UAW members will get in the first year of their more-than-four-year contract, if it’s ratified. Toyota also plans to increase the highest wage for most assembly line workers by 9.2 per cent in January, Bloomberg reported this month.

Hyundai’s move comes as it pours billions into the US market to build electric vehicles and expand its market share. The automaker has come under pressure from labor and civil rights groups in Georgia after a Department of Labour investigation last year uncovered child labour violations at several Alabama companies supplying the Korean automaker.

Employees inspect vehicle frames inside the Hyundai Motor Manufacturing Alabama facility in Montgomery. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

Biden hails US-Indo ties

President Joe Biden meets with Indonesia's President Joko Widodo in the Oval Office of the White House on Monday. PHOTO: AP

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden celebrated a “new era” in the relationship between the United States and Indonesia as he met with Indonesian President Joko Widodo at the White House on Monday, formalising closer ties with the world’s third largest democracy and a heavyweight player in Southeast Asia.

The announcement is a reflection of US commitment to the region before Biden heads to San Francisco for a summit of Asian leaders, where he’s scheduled to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Washington and Beijing have been jockeying for influence in Southeast Asia, which is a critical crossroads for trade and a potential flashpoint for global conflict.

“This will mark a new era in relations between the United States and Indonesia across the board,” Biden said, sitting next to Widodo.

He added that Widodo, the leader of a tropical archipelago, mentioned that he was cold when he stepped out of his vehicle at the White House. Biden joked, “I told him I could take care of that immediately,” and there was a roaring fire in the Oval Office fireplace.

Biden and Widodo are expected to share an afternoon tea and meet with top advisers as part of their new strategic partnership. Also on the agenda will be expanding the trade of critical minerals like nickel, which can be used to produce electric vehicle batteries. Indonesia is the world’s largest producer of nickel.

Widodo described the US as one of Indonesia’s most important partners, and he said they must give “real meaning” to their strengthened relationship.

But there were also signs of friction over the war between Israel and Hamas. Indonesia is the world’s most populous Muslim country, and Widodo arrived in Washington after attending a summit in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, where leaders criticised the Israeli bombardment and invasion of Gaza.

Widodo urged the US “to do more to stop the atrocities in Gaza and have a ceasefire for the sake of humanity.”

Biden has resisted calls for a ceasefire, although he’s asked Israel to show more restraint in its military operations and called for pauses in the fighting that would allow the delivery of humanitarian aid or the release of hostages held by Hamas.

The White House has cultivated ties with Indonesia in recent years. Biden attended the Group of 20 summit in Bali last year, and Vice President Kamala Harris attended a regional summit in Jakarta in September.

Before visiting the White House, Widodo stopped at Georgetown University, which is planning a new program in Indonesia. Widodo has described improving educational opportunities as critical for his country’s development.

He said that a closer relationship with the US could pay dividends because “the United States is a big country, and its influence to any other country is also very big.”

But he also was careful to emphasise Indonesia’s neutrality at a time of tension between Washington and Beijing.

“Indonesia is always open to cooperate with any country, and not to take the side of any power, except to take the side of peace and humanity,” he said.

Widodo also raised alarms about the death toll in Gaza, mentioning estimates that a child is killed every ten minutes.

“Human life seems meaningless, but for me, every life is precious,” he said. “This is a humanitarian problem, and to end it requires global solidarity, global leadership which prioritises humanity.”

President Joe Biden meets with Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo in the Oval Office of the White House on Monday. PHOTO: AP

First Starship passenger makes other plans

Yusaku Maezawa with Elon Musk at the SpaceX headquarters in Hawthorne, California, in 2018. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

TOKYO (BLOOMBERG) – As Elon Musk prepares to test his Starship rocket for the first time since an April takeoff ended in flames, the Japanese billionaire tapped to lead its debut passenger flight is looking at other space companies.

Yusaku Maezawa, founder of online clothing retailer Zozo Inc, hoped to travel around the moon this year aboard Starship with a hand-picked group of singers, painters and other pop-culture artists.

Selected by Musk in 2018 for the Starship flight, Maezawa has conceded that the party will have to wait.

“We were planning for our lunar orbital mission ‘dearMoon’ to take place in 2023, but seems like it will take a little longer,” the billionaire posted on X, the Musk-owned platform formerly known as Twitter, on November 9.

He didn’t provide information about a new launch date.

Space Exploration Technologies Corp aims to launch a second test Starship flight – with no people on board – as early as this week, if it can receive approval from US regulators.

The delay may give Maezawa, who travelled to the International Space Station aboard a Russian rocket in 2021, more time to focus on other space goals, including cleaning up junk in orbit and creating a virtual Earth with satellite data.

In February, Maezawa invested USD23 million in Astroscale Holdings Inc, a Japanese startup tackling problems posed by old rocket parts, dead satellites and other man-made debris orbiting Earth.

Investors participating in a fundraising round worth more than USD76 million included Mitsubishi Corp, Mitsubishi Electric and Development Bank of Japan.

“I want to protect the future of space travel, so I’ve decided to contribute to Astroscale’s mission to reduce orbital debris,” he said in a statement at the time of the investment.

While technical problems delay Maezawa’s Starship lunar mission, his space-junk partners are hoping for better luck with a launch by one of Musk’s top rivals, Rocket Lab USA Inc.

Astroscale last month shipped a debris-inspection satellite to Rocket Lab’s launch complex in New Zealand, moving closer to what it calls the world’s first debris inspection mission.

The two companies scheduled the launch to take place before the end of the year on one of Rocket Lab’s Electron rockets, but launches were suspended after a failure in September.

Rocket Lab expects to resume Electron flights as early as November 28, the company announced last week.

In August 2022, Maezawa also invested an undisclosed amount in Space Data Co, a Tokyo-based startup that wants to take data collected from satellites and develop artificial intelligence “that reproduces the Earth in virtual space.”

Yusaku Maezawa with Elon Musk at the SpaceX headquarters in Hawthorne, California, in 2018. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

Prince’s wardrobe up for auction

Prince performs at the Forum on February 18, 1985, in Inglewood, California. PHOTO: AP

BOSTON (AP) — Fans of Prince, who was known nearly as much for his extravagant wardrobe as for his chart-topping hits, will have a chance to bid on some of the late musician’s sartorial splendour in an online auction this week.

The collection, including more than 200 lots up for sale, was assembled by a French collector who initially hoped to open a museum celebrating the musician but later scrapped the plan, according to RR Auction of Boston, which is overseeing the sale.

The collector had reached out to individuals who worked closely with Prince to gather the items, believing that the trendsetting artist, who died in 2016, was not only a musical virtuoso but also a fashion icon, according to the auction house.

One of the highlights of the auction is a white ruffled shirt worn by Prince during his 1985 American Music Awards performance of the song “Purple Rain.”

The auction house estimated its value at USD15,000.

The auction traces Prince’s evolution in music and fashion from his “Purple Rain” era through to his death, according to Bobby Livingston of RR Auction.

“What this auction really does is it shows the influence and legacy of Prince with his fashion choices and how it relates today, when you see all these artists on tour, you know, different costumes, different outfits, reinventing themselves for each tour,” he said.

Also up for auction is the outfit Prince wore from “Under the Cherry Moon,” a 1986 film starring Prince that also marked his debut as a director. The auction house placed an estimated value on the outfit of USD45,000.

Other items up for bid include a pair of high-heeled blue boots from the Act I Tour valued at USD20,000; a custom-made gold stage outfit with love symbols estimated at USD10,000 and a blue Schecter ‘Cloud’ Guitar played by Prince, valued at USD4,000; and a chain hat.

In addition to fashion, this auction includes original Polaroid photographs, master tapes of hit albums, and official documentation about his films and music videos.

Bidding for the auction closes Thursday.

Earlier this year, Prince’s home state of Minnesota honored him by renaming a stretch of highway after him that runs past his Paisley Park home. The ink the governor signed the renaming bill in was purple — Prince’s signature color.

Prince performs at the Forum on February 18, 1985, in Inglewood, California. PHOTO: AP

Nepal bans TikTok for ‘social harmony’

A file photo of the TikTok app logo. PHOTO: AP

KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) — Nepal’s government on Monday banned the popular social media app TikTok, saying it was disrupting “social harmony” in the country.

The announcement was made following a Cabinet meeting. Foreign Minister Narayan Prakash Saud said the app would be banned immediately.

“The government has decided to ban TikTok as it was necessary to regulate the use of the social media platform that was disrupting social harmony, goodwill and flow of indecent materials,” Saud said.

He said that to make social media platforms accountable, the government has asked the companies to register and open a liaison office in Nepal, pay taxes and abide by the country’s laws and regulations.

It wasn’t clear what triggered the ban or if TikTok had refused to comply with Nepal’s requests. The company did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

TikTok, owned by China’s ByteDance, has faced scrutiny in a number of countries because of concerns that Beijing could use the app to harvest user data or advance its interests. Countries including the United States, Britain and New Zealand have banned the app on government phones despite TikTok repeatedly denying that it has ever shared data with the Chinese government and would not do so if asked.

Nepal has banned all pornographic sites in 2018.

A file photo of the TikTok app logo. PHOTO: AP