Strictly star Shirley Ballas’ six figure salary revealed – and it’s WAY more than former head judge Len Goodman’s payDrones, planes or UFOs? Americans abuzz over mysterious New Jersey sightingsBy Holly Yan , CNN He killed a high-profile CEO on a sidewalk in America's largest city, where thousands of surveillance cameras monitor millions of people every day. But the man who killed UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson outside a busy hotel keeps evading capture. Now, authorities say he might have slipped out of New York - meaning the elusive gunman could be anywhere. Aren't there cameras everywhere in New York City? It could take weeks to find and scrub through a massive array of video footage from all the places where the gunman may have traveled. Police believe the suspect arrived in New York City 10 days before the killing - on 24 November, a law enforcement official told CNN. Throughout his stay, the suspect appeared on camera numerous times - but always kept his hood over his head and wore a mask in public places. "He knows he's on camera - it's New York," said John Miller, CNN's chief law enforcement and intelligence analyst. Police are searching for and scouring countless hours of video footage in hopes of finding more clues, such as whether the suspect met with anyone while in the city. "It will take them weeks ... They will build out every step of his trip that's on video," Miller said. "They will create a movie of his every move." While the gunman meticulously planned many parts of his crime and getaway, he might be surprised by "how far the NYPD is going to go in collecting video", said former NYPD Chief of Department Kenneth Corey. "And they're not just going to take it from the crime scene to his escape route," Corey said. "They're actually going to rewind now, and they're going to try to account for all 10 days that he spent in New York City. And I don't think that he anticipates that." Why couldn't they find him in Central Park on the day of the killing? Minutes after Thompson was gunned down Wednesday, surveillance video captured the suspect riding an electric bike into colossal Central Park at 6:48am. Spanning 843 acres (341 hectares), Central Park is larger than the country of Monaco. "It's a big park, and it's complicated terrain," Miller said. The suspect apparently left the park within minutes. After reviewing security footage, police believe he may have left the park through the West 77th Street exit - but without the "distinctive gray backpack" seen on the suspect during the shooting. At 7 am, a man resembling the suspect was spotted riding a bicycle on West 85th Street, private surveillance footage shows. Law enforcement told CNN they have reviewed the video and believe it likely shows the gunman. We now have a photo showing the suspect's unmasked face. How has no one recognised him and come forward to police? Some have portrayed the killer as a man enacting vigilante justice against a health care system they say values profits over patients' lives, which could hinder some people's motivation to report possible sightings of him. The evidence suggests the gunman viewed himself as a "Batman-type figure that was seeking justice on behalf of people that he thinks he's representing", said Bryanna Fox, a professor of criminology at the University of South Florida. The words "delay" and "depose" were written on a live round and a shell casing linked to the shooter, law enforcement sources told CNN. Police are investigating whether those words suggest a motive. The words are similar to a popular phrase about the insurance industry: "delay, deny, defend". Tens of thousands of social media users mocked the death of the health insurance CEO and showed little sympathy after the killing. A post by UnitedHealthcare's parent company mourning Thompson's death received more than 82,000 reactions as of Friday; 76,000 of them were laughing emojis. Can facial recognition technology identify the suspect? An image of the suspect with his mask down - captured during a flirtatious moment with a hostel employee - is the best photo yet to help identify the suspect, authorities said. But contrary to popular belief, facial recognition software doesn't always link a suspect's face and identity, said Donnie Scott, CEO of IDEMIA Group, which specializes in facial recognition technology. "Most Americans may believe that law enforcement has images on everybody in the United States. That's very much not true," he said. "If he happens to not be a resident of New York who happens to not have been arrested before, odds are he's not going to be in their criminal database or their mugshot repository," Scott said. "So what's likely happening across all law enforcement is they're looking for this image in their local systems to see if this perpetrator exists in their galleries." Some believe police can just cross-check a suspect's face with driver's license photos from the Department of Motor Vehicles. But the reality is not that simple. "It's a legal permissioning process. The state of New York does not have access to the DMV database for law enforcement purposes by statute," Scott said. "It requires cooperation and information sharing and a reason and willingness by the respective agencies to be allowed to share that by law." Facial recognition technology should not be used alone to identify a suspect, Scott said. "Our job is really to make law enforcement's job easier. If you think about the real basis and use of facial recognition technologies, it's to sift through the millions and millions of images to get it down to a small, small subset that the expert can use to make the identification," he said. "Face is not a fingerprint. It's not DNA. It's not used for (an) affirmative match. It's used to get to a small enough number where that expert can say, 'Yes, I believe we have an investigative lead here. What other evidence may we have that can match this person to the crime?'" Why is it so hard to get data from a phone? Police are investigating a phone found in an alley the suspect ran through. But extracting data from a phone can be extremely difficult, depending on the model of the phone and the operating system. "This is something that law enforcement at every level has been struggling with for the last 10 years ... and that's because of the ubiquity of end-to-end encryption and these incredibly secure kind of locking programs that we have on most phones," said former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe. During his time in the FBI, he recalled: "When we would take in an iPhone on a significant case, whether or not we could get into it had to do not only with the model of phone that it was, but also the specific iOS version that it was running." For example, "you might be able to get into an iPhone 7 running iOS whatever, but you couldn't get into one if it was running a different iOS", McCabe said. "It's a very complex matrix of hardware and software, and that's kind of what determines whether or not law enforcement has the capability to get past that locking mechanism." Even if authorities can "open up the phone", he said, the technical challenges might not be over. "Once you get into the phone, then you're dealing with the problem of encrypted content," McCabe said. "Some users are not as disciplined, and they keep things like text messages and those sort of records on their phones, so you can read it off the device. But others are better at having messages expire and automatically deleted." Can't they identify the suspect based on DNA from the water bottle? Detectives have recovered possible DNA evidence from the abandoned cell phone and from a water bottle they believe the suspect may have sipped from. The potential DNA evidence was turned over to a lab for testing, a senior law enforcement official told Miller. But the presence of DNA data might not be enough to identify the suspect. If the suspect committed a crime previously and had his DNA entered into a law enforcement database, it may be easier to identify him. But if the suspect had a previously clean record, identifying him through DNA becomes harder. "If they're able to pull DNA ... but there's no match to those DNA (samples), it's going to be very difficult," said Callahan Walsh, co-host of America's Most Wanted. There's a chance the suspect could be isolated using genetic genealogy, if one of his relatives entered their DNA data into a public database. "They can bring in familial DNA, but that takes a little bit longer to process," Walsh said. "There also has to be a match in a database somewhere from one of his family members." Even though the suspect may have left New York, the NYPD will keep searching for clues, Commissioner Jessica Tisch said. "We are right now processing a tremendous amount of evidence in this case," Tisch said Friday. "We already have lots of forensic evidence, fingerprints, DNA evidence," plus a "massive camera canvass" of the suspected shooter's movements through the city, she said. But despite the plethora of evidence, finding the suspect is an arduous task, McCabe said. "It's far more complicated than it seems from the outside." - CNN
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Global stocks mostly fall ahead of ECB, US inflation data
Britain’s economy is stagnating, new figures have shown amid warnings that tax rises in Rachel Reeves’s budget are damaging business confidence. A major survey of businesses found that private sector activity fell to a 13-month low in November as companies cut back on hiring and investment. Economists said that businesses had given a “thumbs down” to Reeves’s budget, particularly her decision to increase employers’ national insurance to raise £25 billion to balance the books and fund public spending. Some of Britain’s biggest retailers have warned that the increase in national insurance will lead to job cuts, price rises and shop closures . Official forecasts suggest that the tax rises will stymie economic growth over the next five years. After the release of the new economic data the pound dropped to its lowest level against the dollar since May and banking stocks also fell.
Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow's home was broken into during Monday Night Football in the latest home invasion of a professional athlete in the US. No one was injured in the break-in, but the home was ransacked, according to a report provided by the Hamilton County Sheriff's Office. Burrow was away playing in a 27-20 win over the Dallas Cowboys in Texas. A person employed by Burrow arrived at the Anderson Township home on Monday night to find a shattered bedroom window and the home in disarray. Deputies weren't immediately able to determine what items were stolen and have reached out to neighbours in an attempt to piece together surveillance footage. The homes of Kansas Chiefs stars Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce were broken into in October. In the NBA, Milwaukee Bucks forward Bobby Portis had his home broken into November 2 and Minnesota Timberwolves guard Mike Conley Jr.'s home was burgled on September 15 while he was at a Minnesota Vikings game. Portis had offered a $40,000 reward for information. Both the NFL and NBA issued security alerts to players after those break-ins, urging them to take additional precautions to secure their homes. In league memos previously obtained by The Associated Press, the NFL said homes of professional athletes across multiple sports have become "increasingly targeted for burglaries by organized and skilled groups." And the NBA revealed that the FBI has connected some burglaries to "transnational South American Theft Groups" that are "reportedly well-organised, sophisticated rings that incorporate advanced techniques and technologies, including pre-surveillance, drones, and signal jamming devices." Some of the burglary groups have conducted extensive surveillance on targets, including attempted home deliveries and posing as grounds maintenance or joggers in the neighborhood, according to officials.When Katja Vogt considers a Jaguar, she pictures a British-made car purring confidently along the Italian coastline — a vision of familiarity that conveys "that dreaming, longing feeling we all love." She's not sure what to think about Jaguar now after the 89-year-old company announced a radical rebranding that featured loud colors and androgynous people — but no cars. Jaguar, the company says, will now be JaGUar. It will produce only electric vehicles beginning in 2026. Bad attention is good attention, Jaguar execs would appear to believe. The car brand has prompted mockery online for posting a glitzy ad without a single car in it. Say goodbye to British racing green, Cotswold Blue and black. Its colors are henceforth electric pink, red and yellow, according to a video that sparked backlash online. Its mission statement: "Create exuberance. Live vivid. Delete ordinary. Break moulds." "Intrigued?" @Jaguar posted on social media. "Weird and unsettled" is more like it, Vogt wrote on Instagram. "Especially now, with the world feeling so dystopian," the Cyprus-based brand designer wrote, "a heritage brand like Jaguar should be conveying feelings of safety, stability, and maybe a hint of rebellion — the kind that shakes things up in a good way, not in a way that unsettles." Jaguar was one of several iconic companies that announced significant rebrandings in recent weeks, upending a series of commercial — and cultural — landmarks by which many modern human beings sort one another, carve out identities and recognize the world around them. Campbell's, the 155-year-old American icon that artist Andy Warhol immortalized in pop culture decades ago, is ready for a new, soupless name. Comcast's corporate reorganization means there will soon be two television networks with "NBC" in their name — CNBC and MSNBC — that will no longer have any corporate connection to NBC News, a U.S. legacy news outlet. CNBC One could even argue the United States itself is rebranding with the election of former President Donald Trump and Republican majorities in the House and Senate. Unlike Trump's first election in 2016, he won the popular vote in what many called a national referendum on American identity. Are we, then, the sum total of our consumer decisions — what we buy, where we travel and whom we elect? Certainly, it's a question for those privileged enough to be able to afford such choices. Volumes of research in the art and science of branding — from "brandr," an old Norse word for burning symbols into the hides of livestock — say those factors do contribute to the modern sense of identity. So rebranding, especially of heritage names, can be a deeply felt affront to consumers. "It can feel like the brand is turning its back on everything that it stood for — and therefore it feels like it's turning its back on us, the people who subscribe to that idea or ideology," said Ali Marmaduke, strategy director with the Amsterdam-based Brand Potential. He said cultural tension — polarization — is surging over politics, wars in Russia and the Mideast, the environment, public health and more, creating what Marmaduke said is known as a "polycrisis": the idea that there are several massive crises converging that feel scary and complex. Campbell's soups "People are understandably freaked out by that," he said. "So we are looking for something that will help us navigate this changing, threatening world that we face." Trump's "Make America Great Again" qualifies. So did President Joe Biden's "Build Back Better" slogan. Campbell's soup itself — "Mmm Mmm Good" — isn't going anywhere, CEO Mark Clouse said. The company's new name, Campbell's Co., will reflect "the full breadth of our portfolio," which includes brands like Prego pasta sauce and Goldfish crackers. None of the recent activity around heritage brands sparked a backlash as ferocious as Jaguar's. The company stood as a pillar of tradition-loving British identity since World War II. The famous "leaper" cat Jaguar logo is pictured in 2019 at the Auto show in Paris, France. Jaguar said its approach to the rebrand was rooted in the philosophy of its founder, Sir William Lyons, to "copy nothing." What it's calling "the new Jaguar" will overhaul everything from the font of its name to the positioning of it's famous "leaper" cat. "Exuberant modernism" will "define all aspects of the new Jaguar world," according to the news release. The approach is thought to be aimed at selling fewer cars at a six-figure price point to a more diverse customer base. The reaction ranged from bewilderment to hostility. Memes sprouted up likening the video to the Teletubbies, a Benetton ad and — perhaps predictably — a bow to "woke" culture as the blowback intersected with politics. Get the latest local business news delivered FREE to your inbox weekly.
Global stocks mostly fall ahead of ECB, US inflation data
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — Amar'e Marshall scored 17 points as Albany beat Puerto Rico-Mayaguez 93-50 on Friday. Marshall also contributed five assists for the Great Danes (4-1). Byron Joshua added 13 points while going 4 of 4 (3 for 3 from 3-point range) while he also had five assists and five steals. Aaron Reddish shot 4 of 7 from the field, including 2 for 3 from 3-point range, and went 2 for 3 from the line to finish with 12 points. Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.