Pope Leo XIV urges over 1 million Catholic young people to spread faith and enthusiasmNew Foto - Pope Leo XIV urges over 1 million Catholic young people to spread faith and enthusiasm

ROME (AP) —Pope Leo XIVon Sunday urged more than a million Catholic youths to "spread your enthusiasm and the witness of your faith" when they return home to some 150 countries, during a Mass closing a weeklong encounter with the next generation of faithful. "Aspire to great things, to holiness, wherever you are,'' Leo urged the young faithful. "Do not settle for less. You will then see the light of the Gospel growing every day, in you and around you." The young people camped out in sprawling fields southeast of Rome overnight after attending a vigil service for theJubilee of Youthon Saturday,also presided by Leowho has been ferried to and from Vatican City by helicopter. The Vatican said more than 1 million young people were present, along with 7,000 priests and 450 bishops. The special Jubilee celebration is part of the Holy Year that is expected to draw 32 million people to the Vatican for the centuries-old pilgrimage to the seat of Catholicism. The week has been a joyous gathering marked by bands of youths singing hymns as they move down cobblestoned streets, praying rosaries in piazzas and standing for hours at the Circus Maximus to confess their sins to priests offering the sacrament in a dozen languages. Leo also shared tragic news on Saturday. Two young people who had made the pilgrimage to Rome had died, one reportedly of cardiac arrest, while a third was hospitalized. Rain overnight awakened the faithful but didn't dampen their spirits. "At least we were a little covered, but we still got a bit wet. We lost our voices a little. It was cold, but we woke up to a beautiful sun and view,'' said Soemil Rios, 20, from Puerto Rico. "Despite the difficulties, it was very nice and very special to have been part of this historic moment." Sister Giulia De Luca of Rome acknowledge that "waking up was a bit tough," but that she was looking forward to seeing the pope again. "It will be very nice to conclude a very intense week together. Definitely a lot of fun, but also very challenging in many ways," she said. ___ Barry reported from Milan

Pope Leo XIV urges over 1 million Catholic young people to spread faith and enthusiasm

Pope Leo XIV urges over 1 million Catholic young people to spread faith and enthusiasm ROME (AP) —Pope Leo XIVon Sunday urged more than a mi...
Russian and Chinese navies carry out artillery and anti-submarine drills in Sea of JapanNew Foto - Russian and Chinese navies carry out artillery and anti-submarine drills in Sea of Japan

MOSCOW (Reuters) -The Russian and Chinese navies are carrying out artillery and anti-submarine drills in the Sea of Japan as part of scheduled joint exercises, the Russian Pacific Fleet was quoted as saying on Sunday. The drills are taking place two days after U.S. President Donald Trump said he had ordered two nuclear submarines to be positioned in "the appropriate regions" in response to remarks by former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev. However, they were scheduled well before Trump's action. Interfax news agency quoted the Pacific Fleet as saying Russian and Chinese vessels were moving in a joint detachment including a large Russian anti-submarine ship and two Chinese destroyers. It said diesel-electric submarines from the two countries were also involved, as well as a Chinese submarine rescue ship. The manoeuvres are part of exercises titled "Maritime Interaction-2025" which are scheduled to end on Tuesday. Interfax said Russian and Chinese sailors would conduct artillery firing, practise anti-submarine and air defence missions, and improve joint search and rescue operations at sea. Russia and China, which signed a "no-limits" strategic partnership shortly before Russia went to war in Ukraine in 2022, conduct regular military exercises to rehearse coordination between their armed forces and send a deterrent signal to adversaries. Trump said his submarine order on Friday was made in response to what he called "highly provocative" remarks by Russia's Medvedev about the risk of war between the nuclear-armed adversaries. Russia and the United States have by far the biggest nuclear arsenals in the world. It is extremely rare for either country to discuss the deployment and location of its nuclear submarines. Trump's comments came at a time of mounting tension with Moscow as he grows frustrated at the lack of progress towards ending the Ukraine war. (Reporting by Reuters; writing by Mark Trevelyan; Editing by Toby Chopra)

Russian and Chinese navies carry out artillery and anti-submarine drills in Sea of Japan

Russian and Chinese navies carry out artillery and anti-submarine drills in Sea of Japan MOSCOW (Reuters) -The Russian and Chinese navies ar...
Trump administration won't release the Epstein files, but what would they contain?New Foto - Trump administration won't release the Epstein files, but what would they contain?

The White House has continued to resist calls from Congress andPresident Donald Trump's own base to releasethe FBI's investigative files on Jeffrey EpsteinInstead, it has asked courts to release grand jury testimony and has interviewed convictedEpstein co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwellto try to satisfy demands for transparency. So far, those alternatives haven't satisfied conservatives who believe − as Trump allies suggested for years − that Epstein was involved in a sex-trafficking conspiracy with many other rich and powerful people. Top Trump officials came into office promising a new level oftransparency in the Epstein case,and many Trump supporters maintain the administrationshould release all of the files it has. But what exactly is in those sought-after files? What would the public learn from their release? To answer those questions, USA TODAY talked to former FBI agents and prosecutors. They said the files are likely to be much more expansive than what's in the grand jury testimony, including records on witness interviews and investigative trails. "It could be an enormous universe of original documents, interview notes, memos of analysis," said Michell Epner, a former New Jersey federal prosecutor who handled sex-trafficking cases. Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Kentucky, and Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colorado, co-sponsored legislation this monthto release the government's Epstein records, with redactions to protect victims, active investigations, and the national defense.House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-Louisiana, announced on July 22 that he wasshutting down the House early for its summer recessto avoid a vote on releasing the Epstein files. Here's a look at what sorts of material the government is keeping hidden and the arguments for and against transparency: The FBI's investigation into Jeffrey Epstein, who died in a Manhattan federal jail cell in 2019 while awaiting a federal sex-trafficking trial, goes back decades, and could include a wide swath of material. Around 2006, federal investigators looked into allegations that Epstein was paying several minor girls to perform sex acts with him. That probe led to what many regard as a sweatheart deal for Epstein, in which he pleaded guilty in 2008 to two Florida state prostitution charges, avoided a sex-trafficking charge, and served just 13 months in a local jail. The case related to criminal activities inEpstein's Palm Beach mansion, which wasabout two miles away from Trump's Mar-a-Lago club. The federal prosecutor who negotiated the deal, Alex Acosta,became the secretary of Labor in Trump's first administration, but resigned after fallout from a2018 Miami Herald investigationthat revealed Acosta's role in the deal. In July 2019, the convicted sex offender was arrested on the more serious charge of sex trafficking a minor. That same day, the FBI raided Epstein's Manhattan mansion, collecting computer hard drives and other potential evidence. After Epstein died, law enforcement also raided his property in the U.S. Virgin Islands. Those investigations would have produced a range of materials and documents, according to former law enforcement officials. It would include records of various witness interviews and details that could span well beyond information that was relevant to the criminal charges brought against Epstein and Maxwell. "People volunteer whatever they want and and sometimes people are very vocal, and they tell you personal things that have nothing to do with the investigation," saidKatherine Schweit, a former FBI special agent and former Illinois state prosecutor. That could mean the files contain information or allegations dealing with third parties who have never been charged with a crime. Ina February press release, the Justice Department said it planned to release "thousands of pages" of never-before-disclosed documents after reviewing and redacting them to protect the identities of Epstein's victims. However,in a July memothe department reversed course,saying no further disclosure was warranted. Trump was reportedly told in May that he isnamed multiple time in the files. Trump and Epstein were friends for many years,living near each other and partying togetheras far back as the early 1990s. Archived video footage andphotos revealed by CNNJuly 22 show Epstein attending Trump's wedding to his second wife, Marla Maples, at the Plaza Hotel in 1993. The two men's friendship ended in about 2004, around the time they battled over an oceanfront Palm Beach mansion,according to the Washington Post. Trump recently said he banned Epstein from his Florida Mar-a-Lago clubbecause Epstein "stole" staffersfrom the spa, including Virginia Giuffre, a well-known victim of Epstein whodied by suicide earlier this year. The grand jury transcripts requested by the Justice Department probably amount to just a small sliver of what the FBI has in its possession, according to Epner. "Grand jury testimony – while it could be, in theory, very broad – in this case, is very narrow," Epner said. A federal judge in Florida already rejected the Justice Department's request for the release of grand jury transcripts from around 2006. Two separate requests for the grand jury transcripts that led to charges against Epstein and Maxwell in New York more than a decade later are still pending. Epner explained that grand jury materials are just a subset of the work product that the FBI and DOJ likely put together in the course of their Epstein-related investigations. And the Justice Department isn't even seeking all grand jury materials – only the grand jury transcripts. That wouldn't include, for instance, bank records obtained through a grand jury subpoena. Theoretically, a list of grand jury witnesses can be long. Prosecutors may call many witnesses before a grand jury so they can be confident of what the witnesses will say under oath at trial. Some grand juries also conduct investigations and call a wide range of witnesses for that purpose. However, that's not what happened in Maxwell and Epstein's New York criminal cases.Only two witnesses testifiedbefore the grand juries, according to the Justice Department. They were an FBI agent and a New York police detective who, at the time, was working with the FBI's Child Exploitation and Human Trafficking Task Force. Those witnesses summarized what interview subjects said. That means the transcripts wouldn't include direct testimony from victims. It also suggests the grand jury processes in the two cases were streamlined, rather than sprawling. In addition, if the Manhattan federal court agrees to release the transcripts, the Justice Department has said itplans to redact not just victim-related information, but also "other personal identifying information." That may mean blocking out identifiers for third parties tied to Epstein – the type of people whom members of the public may want to investigate as potential clients of Epstein. "I don't think the people that are behind all this, people that are have so much of an outcry about this, that they're going to be satisfied with just grand jury information, unless they don't know what it is," said Rick Smith, a former FBI special agent who today provides investigative services to law firms. That doesn't mean the grand jury transcripts couldn't contain some revelations. Schweit noted that court rules that restrict testimony at trial are relaxed before grand juries, so the jurors who charged Maxwell and Epstein may have heard things that weren't discussed at Maxwell's public trial in 2021. "You might include in a grand jury somebody's criminal background, or ask questions about where they went to college and who their roommates were, and did they know this person or that person? Some things that in a regular court might be hearsay, it might be secondary information," Schweit said. There are arguments against releasing the files.The Justice Department has saidits review of the files didn't produce evidence to justify investigating anyone who hasn't been previously charged. Assuming that was a fair assessment of the evidence, releasing the files could unfairly tie third parties to Epstein's alleged crimes. "The thing that happens with something like this is there are a lot of people out there that are scared to death of this thing, who had nothing to do with anything untoward," Smith said. Trump isn't the only famous person who has already been tied to Epstein in ways that fueled speculation – without proof – of Epstein-related criminal conduct. Former President Bill Clinton flew repeatedly on Epstein's private jet, according to flight logsreported on by the Palm Beach Post. Former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak met with Epstein dozens of times and also took flights on the jet,according to a Wall Street Journal investigation. Others may simply have been present at one of the manyglamorous parties Epstein attendedin his social heyday. If the Justice Department one day finds new evidence and concludes investigating someone else is appropriate, releasing the evidence it has could also jeopardize that investigation. There is no statute of limitations that would restrict federal prosecutors from going after someone else for sex trafficking. "We want to ensure that we can continue to truthfully look for whether somebody is guilty or innocent, whether further investigation needs to be done," Schweit said. Still, releasing the files could also clear people who have come under suspicion in some corners of the court of public opinion. Actor Kevin Spacey, who –according to Law & Crime– acknowledged in court testimonyflying on Epstein's planealong with Clinton, wants the files released in order to clear his name. "Release the Epstein files. All of them," Spacey, 65,posted on X July 15. "For those of us with nothing to fear, the truth can't come soon enough. I hate to make this about me – but the media already has." And part of what makes the Epstein-related investigations different is the level and spread of conspiracy theories surrounding how Epstein died and who may have also been involved in his crimes. Several members of Trump's own administrationfanned the flames of those conspiracy theories for years. Now, those same officials are facing a wide segment of the public that doesn't trust that all investigative leads have been followed. "If there wasn't so much of an outcry that there was a conspiracy, I don't think we'd be where we are right now," Smith said. "But now that the people that had the most say about it are in the position to do something about it, it becomes a problem." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:If Epstein files were released, what would be in them?

Trump administration won't release the Epstein files, but what would they contain?

Trump administration won't release the Epstein files, but what would they contain? The White House has continued to resist calls from Co...

 

AB MAG © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com