Alan Halsall admits he’s gutted to lose his I’m A Celebrity ‘wife’ Tulisa after her shock evictionSouth Korea’s Yoon declares martial law in shock political moveBryce Young Says He Appreciates Rod Wave Reaching Out Following BenchingWA News Don't miss out on the headlines from WA News. Followed categories will be added to My News. Andre Zachary Rebelo, the man accused of killing his mother for money, has been found guilty of her murder in the WA Supreme Court. A 12-person jury unanimously decided Rebelo murdered Colleen Rebelo in her Bicton home, in Perth’s south on May 25, 2020. His father Antonio Rebelo was in the packed courtroom as Rebelo was led into the dock to hear the verdict on Thursday afternoon. While Ms Rebelo’s death was sudden and unexpected, it was never treated as suspicious by first responders who attended her home on the day she died. An autopsy conducted on her body was unable to identify what caused her death. Colleen Rebelo’s son Andre Zachary Rebelo has been found guilty of her murder in May 2020. It wasn’t until an employee at an insurance company suspected the crypto currency day trader was fraudulently trying to claim life insurance against his mother. Police began investigating the circumstances surrounding Ms Rebelo’s death following a report of suspected fraud from the insurer. Police discovered Mr Rebelo had taken out three life insurance policies against his mother in the week before she died. Mr Rebelo made himself the sole beneficiary of those policies and stood to gain $1.15m from his mother’s death. Days after she died he started claiming against those polices and hounded one worth $500,000. In his pursuit of half a million dollars, Mr Rebelo provided the insurer with fake records about his mother’s death and health. He gave the insurer phony copies of a coroner’s report, a medical report from his mother’s psychologist and her last will and testament. He also left the insurer a voicemail message he created with an AI voice generator pretending to be his mother’s psychologist. Andre Zachary Rebelo, who has a child with model Gracie Piscopo, has been found guilty of murdering his mother. Picture: Instagram Mr Rebelo pleaded guilty to fraud charges, but denied he killed his mother, on the first day of the trial. The prosecution painted a detailed picture of the “plastic fantastic” lifestyle Mr Rebelo portrayed on social media with his former partner model Grace Piscopo. The court was told Mr Rebelo tried to keep up with Ms Piscopo who was a successful influencer with more than one million followers on social media, but was unable to repay his debts. The jury heard the couple had a combined debt of $121,000 and funded their glamorous lifestyle with personal loans and credit cards. State Prosecutor Brett Tooker argued Andre Rebelo had killed his mother to gain money from life insurance policies he setup against her in the days before she died. Picture: NewsWire/Philip Gostelow But Mr Rebelo could not keep up with his financial obligations and was being pursued by debt collection agencies at the time his mother died. The prosecution argued this led Mr Rebelo to taking out the life insurance policies against his mother then killed her to gain money from the premiums. “To the outside world they were rich and beautiful, but the truth was different,” state prosecutor Brett Tooker said. “Andre was in dire financial trouble, he had lived his life on credit, he had a personal loan and credit card debt of more than $40k he was being pursued by debt collection agencies at the time of his mother’s death. “He was crypto currency day trader ... he had bankrolled his social media profile. “By May 2020 he must have thought his world was closing in around him.” Andre Rebelo’s father, Antonio Rebelo, told reporters he was very saddened by the outcome as he left court following his son’s verdict. Picture: NewsWire Mr Tooker said when Mr Rebelo had to pay for premiums on all three life insurance policies he took out against his mother he needed to act. “Which is why five days later he killed his mother, then three days later started pursuing policies,” Mr Tooker told the court. Mr Rebelo’s father Antonio later told reporters he was very saddened by the outcome as he left court. Andre Rebelo was remanded in custody until April 4 next year when he will be sentenced in the WA Supreme Court for the murder of Colleen Rebelo and several counts of fraud. Originally published as Accused mum killer Andre Zachary Rebelo learns fate in WA Supreme Court More related stories Real Life ‘S**t’: Controversial vegan targeted at home Dozens of teenagers, some wearing balaclavas, have allegedly targeted a well-known vegan activist, hurling offensive slurs outside her Perth home. Read more Environment Aussies in for months of hot nights Millions across the country are being warned to brace for more hot and sweaty nights this summer. Read more
( MENAFN - PR Newswire) NEW YORK, Dec. 13, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Monteverde & Associates PC (the "M&A Class Action Firm"), has recovered millions of dollars for shareholders and is recognized as a Top 50 Firm by ISS Securities Class Action Services Report. We are headquartered at the Empire State Building in New York City and are investigating: ACT NOW. The Shareholder Vote is scheduled for December 20, 2024. Click here for more . It is free and there is no cost or obligation to you. Click here for more . It is free and there is no cost or obligation to you. Click here for more information: . It is free and there is no cost or obligation to you. Click here for more . It is free and there is no cost or obligation to you. NOT ALL LAW FIRMS ARE THE SAME. Before you hire a law firm, you should talk to a lawyer and ask: About Monteverde & Associates PC Our firm litigates and has recovered money for shareholders...and we do it from our offices in the Empire State Building. We are a national class action securities firm with a successful track record in trial and appellate courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court. No company, director or officer is above the law. If you own common stock in any of the above listed companies and have concerns or wish to obtain additional information free of charge, please visit our website or contact Juan Monteverde, Esq. either via e-mail at [email protected] or by telephone at (212) 971-1341. Contact: Juan Monteverde, Esq. MONTEVERDE & ASSOCIATES PC The Empire State Building 350 Fifth Ave. Suite 4740 New York, NY 10118 United States of America [email protected] Tel: (212) 971-1341 Attorney Advertising. (C) 2024 Monteverde & Associates PC. The law firm responsible for this advertisement is Monteverde & Associates PC ( ). Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome with respect to any future matter. SOURCE Monteverde & Associates PC MENAFN13122024003732001241ID1108991736 Legal Disclaimer: MENAFN provides the information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.A judge in Delaware on Monday once again blocked a massive, multibillion dollar pay package for Tesla CEO Elon Musk, siding with the plaintiffs who argued that Musk’s salary was not in company shareholders' best interest. Delaware Chancery Court Chancellor Kathaleen McCormick ruled that Musk's pay package—which is based on the company's stock price and is currently valued at around $101 billion—was negotiated by a board that was too close to Musk. “There were undoubtedly a range of healthy amounts that the Board could have decided to pay Musk,” McCormick wrote in her opinion, according to CNN . “Instead, the Board capitulated to Musk’s terms and then failed to prove that those terms were entirely fair.” The news comes as Musk has been trying to be Donald Trump’s best buddy, even abandoning his 12 children from three different women to spend Thanksgiving with Trump at the garish Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Florida. In fact, Musk has spent most of his time since the Nov. 5 election at Mar-a-Lago, acting as a sort of shadow president , sitting in on Trump’s calls with world leaders and trying to influence Trump’s administration picks. Trump has been publicly embracing Musk, tasking him with finding ways to slash the federal budget. Trump created the Department of Government Efficiency for Musk, which is basically a glorified advisory committee that has a super cringe name that plays off Musk's crypto coin called Doge. But privately Musk's super-cringey, socially awkward behavior (he’s calling himself the “ first buddy ,” yes, really) seems to be wearing thin . The Washington Post reported in November that “people are not happy” with Musk acting as a “co-president” to Trump. Trump even made a backhanded joke at Musk’s expense, with The Hill reporting that Trump said on Nov. 14: “Elon won’t go home. I can’t get rid of him. Until I don’t like him.” Musk's time in the Trump orbit may go the way of his Tesla pay package: up in smoke.On the morning after last month’s presidential election, Americans woke up into sharply divided camps of strong emotions. Some felt joy, a giddiness that the nation’s Democratic political elite had been swept away in one giant stroke, by a candidate they deemed a hero. Others awoke to a deep sense of dread, a fear that the nation had just taken a turn that might destroy democracy itself. A lot of other Americans just went about their lives and didn’t really think much about it at all. After more than a year of nonstop campaigning, the American voters have spoken. Donald Trump has won the presidency (though with a popular majority half that of Joe Biden’s four years ago). But what have we really said? Some things seem clear. Huge numbers of working class Americans wanted Joe Biden, Kamala Harris and the Democrats out of power. Despite the hesitations many of them had about Donald Trump’s relentless lies, criminal convictions and instabilities, the hope for lower prices took on a higher priority. As my wife observed afterward, the vote was a giant scream of anger at an economy that is not working for millions of Americans. People are angry about inflation — about high rent, gas and grocery prices. No lofty Democratic arguments about how great the economy is doing were going to convince people otherwise. Many voters are also angry at Democrats for spending their tax money on things like housing immigrants in hotels and doling out billions of dollars to cancel other people’s student loans. The truth about presidential elections in the U.S. is actually pretty simple. Nearly every election for the past century has been a pass-fail exam on how people see their economic lives. If people think times are good, they vote for the party in power. If they think times are bad, the voters boot them out. Last week was no different. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, a Democratic Congresswoman from Washington state, has it right. Before she was elected two years ago, she worked in a family-owned auto repair shop. On Nov. 5, she won a second term in a deeply conservative district. She said afterward, “People are putting their groceries on their credit card. No one is listening to anything else you say if you try to talk them out of their lived experiences with data points from some economists.” There are few forces in a democracy more powerful than public anger channeled in a common direction. Donald Trump made himself the voice of that anger, in both word and style. Kamala Harris and her politics of joy never stood a chance. What is less clear is whether everyone who cast their vote for Donald Trump really supports every part of his plans. A vote for president is like a Thanksgiving dinner. We come for the turkey, the dressing and the mashed potatoes. But we may not care at all for that ambrosia and Jell-O casserole. Americans voted for Donald Trump last week for the main course, his promises to bring economic prosperity and to stop the flow of immigrants into the country. But his political agenda also comes with some huge side dishes that many who voted for him might not like the taste of much at all. I don’t think that the Americans who voted for Trump’s promise to fix inflation also signed on to repeal the Affordable Care Act, and return us to a time when insurance companies could refuse to cover people with pre-existing health conditions. I don’t think that everyone who voted for Trump’s tighter controls at the border are eager for Trump’s big plans to hunt down undocumented immigrants in their workplaces and homes, forcibly deporting millions of people who have been here for years, including mothers and fathers supporting their families and paying taxes. It also seems doubtful that all those Americans who like Trump’s promises to drain the swamp are just fine with his plans to let corporate polluters run wild. Mr. Trump and his blind loyalists will insist that Americans voted for all these things when they voted for him — the whole meal. But there are many who voted for Trump who aren’t going to like all the trimmings. For those readers who woke up Nov. 6 with a feeling of dread, I understand that. My advice is move through it as quickly as you can, to a place of determination. We have a lot of work to do, as American citizens, to prevent the worst of what might be ahead. Americans did vote for Donald Trump to be president. But they did not vote to give him a blank check to now do whatever he pleases. Jim Shultz is the founder and executive director of the Democracy Center and an occasional CNHI columnist. Reach him at jimshultzthewriter@gmail.com .
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Ruben Amorim warned “the storm will come” eventually as Manchester United’s head coach tried to temper expectations ahead of the trip to Arsenal. The 39-year-old has been a breath of fresh air since succeeding Erik ten Hag, with his personality and approach, coupled with promising early performances, bringing hope back to Old Trafford. Amorim has been touched by his warm welcome but repeatedly urged fans to avoid jumping the gun, having followed a draw at Ipswich with home wins against Bodo/Glimt and Everton. Wednesday’s trip to Arsenal is comfortably his biggest challenge yet and victory would see United move within three points of the Premier League title contenders. Put to Amorim it will be hard to manage expectations if they won in the capital, the head coach said: “I would like to say different things, but I have to say it again: the storm will come. “I don’t know if you use that expression, but we are going to have difficult moments and we will be found out in some games. “And I know that because I’m knowing my players and I know football and I follow football, so I understand the difference between the teams. “We are in the point in that we are putting simple things in the team, without training, and you feel it in this game against Everton, they change a little bit the way they were building up. “They are very good team, and we were with a lot of problems because we cannot change it by calling one thing to the captain. A midweek trip to the capital awaits 🚆 #MUFC || #PL pic.twitter.com/1e6VrILJW3 — Manchester United (@ManUtd) December 3, 2024 “So, we don’t have this training, so let’s focus on each game, on the performance, what we have to improve, trying to win games. And that is the focus. “I know it’s really hard to be a Manchester United coach and say these things in press conferences. We want to win all the time. No matter what. “We are going to try to win, but we know that we are in a different point if you compare to Arsenal. “So, it is what it is and we will try to win it and we go with confidence to win, but we know that we need to play very well to win the next football match.” The trip to Arsenal is the second of nine December matches for United, who are looking to avoid suffering four straight league defeats to the Gunners for the first time. The Red Devils have not won a Premier League match at the Emirates Stadium since 2017, but Amorim knows a thing or two about frustrating Mikel Arteta’s men. Arsenal thrashed Sporting Lisbon 5-1 in the Champions League last week, but in 2022-23 he led the Portuguese side to a Europa League last-16 penalty triumph after a 1-1 draw in London made it 3-3 on aggregate. “Arsenal this year, they play a little bit different,” Amorim said. “They are more fluid. “For example, two years ago when we faced them with Sporting, you knew how to press because you can understand better the structure. “Now it’s more fluid with (Riccardo) Calafiori and (Jurrien) Timber in different sides. One coming inside, the other going outside. Also (Martin) Odegaard changed the team, and you can feel it during this season. “So, you can take something from that game, especially because I know so well the opponent so you can understand the weakness of that team. “But every game is different, so you take something, but you already know that you are going to face a very good team.” This hectic winter schedule means Amorim sidestepped talk of January transfer business ahead of facing Arsenal, although he was more forthcoming on Amad Diallo’s future. The 22-year-old, who put in a man of the match display in Sunday’s 4-0 win against Everton, is out of contract at the end of the season, although the club holds an option to extend by a year. Diallo has repeatedly spoken of his desire to stay at United and it has been reported an agreement is close. Amorim said: “I think he wants to stay, and we want him to stay. So that is clear and we will find a solution.”
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TORONTO, Nov. 22, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- European Residential Real Estate Investment Trust (“ ERES ” or “ the REIT ”) (TSX:ERE.UN) announced today an update on the expected closing of its previously disclosed strategic dispositions, and timing of its anticipated special distribution and distribution reduction, as announced in its press release dated September 16, 2024. Strategic Dispositions As disclosed on September 16, 2024, ERES Limited Partnership (“ ERES LP ”) and certain other subsidiaries of ERES have entered into an agreement with an entity owned by a consortium of parties that includes TPG Angelo Gordon, Dream Unlimited Corporation, Stadium Capital Partners, and several co-investment partners (the “ Purchaser ”), to sell certain entities owning 2,947 residential suites in the Netherlands for proceeds, net of certain estimated adjustments, of approximately €695 million (the “Disposition I” ). Approval for Disposition I has been received from the Dutch competition authority (ACM), and the Purchaser has notified ERES of an expected closing date of December 16, 2024. Also as previously announced, certain other subsidiaries of ERES have entered into a separate agreement to sell 232 residential suites in the Netherlands for gross proceeds of approximately €44 million (the “Disposition II” , and together with Disposition I, the “Dispositions” ), which ERES expects will close on December 2, 2024. There can be no assurance that all requirements for closing of the Dispositions will be obtained, satisfied or waived, nor that the Dispositions will close on the dates disclosed herein. Special Distribution Subject to the completion of the Dispositions in accordance with the terms and timing described above, ERES intends to declare a special cash distribution of an estimated €0.75 per Unit and ERES LP’s exchangeable Class B LP Unit (equivalent to an estimated C$1.10 based on the foreign exchange rate of 1.47 on November 21, 2024), payable to holders of the REIT’s Units and ERES LP’s Class B LP Units of record at the close of business on December 23, 2024, with payment on December 31, 2024 (the “Special Distribution” ). For Canadian income tax purposes, the Special Distribution is estimated to be comprised of a return of capital in the range of approximately 55-65%. The Special Distribution will not qualify for the REIT’s Distribution Reinvestment Plan. It is expected that the Toronto Stock Exchange will implement its “due bill” trading procedures with respect to the Special Distribution. Further details relating to the Special Distribution, if declared, will be provided at a later date. The Special Distribution has not yet been declared and there can be no assurance as to the timing, quantum or composition for Canadian income tax purposes of any such distribution. Distribution Reduction Furthermore, as previously announced, given the expected completion of the sale of approximately half of the REIT’s residential suites in 2024 and payment of the Special Distribution, the Board of Trustees intends to reduce its monthly distribution by approximately 50% (the “ Distribution Reduction ”) to better align distributions with ERES’s remaining portfolio. Subject to the completion of the Dispositions in accordance with the timing described above, and subsequent to the payment of the Special Distribution, ERES expects the Distribution Reduction to become effective for its January 2025 distribution, payable in February 2025. Further details relating to the Distribution Reduction, if implemented, will be provided at a later date. There can be no assurance as to the timing or magnitude of any future distributions by the REIT. Property Management Update In addition, with the significant decrease in portfolio size upon anticipated closing of the Dispositions and the associated diseconomies of scale, ERES announced that it has entered into an approximately fee-neutral agreement to transfer property management services for the REIT’s remaining portfolio in the Netherlands to a third party, expected to enter into effect on or about January 15, 2025. Canadian Apartment Properties Real Estate Investment Trust will continue to act as the REIT’s asset manager. Proposed Netherlands Tax Amendment Finally, ERES provided an update on the Dutch government’s legislative proposal to amend the earnings stripping rule (by abolishing the €1 million threshold for real estate entities), as published on September 17, 2024. Further to previous disclosure, on November 14, 2024, the Dutch House of Representatives passed an amendment to the legislative proposal pursuant to which the taxable EBITDA threshold would be increased to 24.5% and the €1 million threshold for real estate entities would, however, be retained. Such amendment would maintain the current ability of the REIT’s subsidiaries to deduct net financing expenses for Dutch corporate income tax purposes. The revised legislative proposal is subject to approval by the Dutch Senate, expected by mid-December, and is projected to become effective as of January 1, 2025. There is no assurance that the potential amendment will ultimately be enacted by the Dutch government or enter into force as per the timeline indicated. As such, it is subject to change, and such change (and the impact of such change on the REIT) may be significant. Should the potential amendment be implemented as described above, and after adjusting for the estimated effect of previously disclosed dispositions, the REIT’s forecasted current income tax expense for the year ending December 31, 2025 for the remaining portfolio is approximately €4 million. This assumes ongoing rental operations, however, ERES will continue to explore all available opportunities to drive value, including the possibility for future strategic property sales, which would alter the estimated current income tax expense for the REIT’s residual portfolio. ABOUT ERES ERES is an unincorporated, open-ended real estate investment trust. ERES’s Units are listed on the TSX under the symbol ERE.UN. ERES is Canada’s only European-focused multi-residential REIT, with a current portfolio of high-quality, multi-residential real estate properties in the Netherlands. As at September 30, 2024, ERES owned approximately 6,300 residential suites, including approximately 3,200 suites classified as assets held for sale, and ancillary retail space located in the Netherlands, and owned one commercial property in Germany and one commercial property in Belgium, with a total fair value of approximately €1.6 billion, including approximately €0.7 billion of assets held for sale. For more information about ERES, its business and its investment highlights, please visit our website at www.eresreit.com and our public disclosure which can be found under our profile on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca . CAUTIONARY STATEMENTS REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING INFORMATION Certain statements contained in this press release constitute forward-looking information, future-oriented financial information, or financial outlooks (collectively, “forward-looking information”) within the meaning of applicable Canadian securities laws, which reflect ERES’s current expectations and projections about future results. Forward-looking information generally can be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology such as “outlook”, “objective”, “may”, “will”, “expect”, “intent”, “estimate”, “anticipate”, “believe”, “consider”, “should”, “plans”, “predict”, “estimate”, “forward”, “potential”, “could”, “likely”, “approximately”, “scheduled”, “forecast”, “variation” or “continue”, or similar expressions suggesting future outcomes or events. The forward-looking information in this press release relates only to events or information as of the date on which the statements are made in this press release. Actual results and developments are likely to differ, and may differ materially, from those expressed or implied by the forward-looking information contained in this press release. Any number of factors could cause actual results to differ materially from this forward-looking information. Although ERES believes that the expectations reflected in forward-looking information are reasonable, it can give no assurance that the expectations of any forward-looking information will prove to be correct. Such forward-looking information is based on a number of assumptions that may prove to be incorrect, including regarding the expected completion and timing of the Dispositions, the satisfaction of closing conditions with respect to the Dispositions, the amount, timing and composition of the Special Distribution, the amount and timing of the Distribution Reduction, the expected externalization of property management services, the expected enactment of the proposed tax amendment, and the timing and details of the potential legislation (including that the amendment to the earnings stripping rule will include only the increase of the maximum interest expense deductibility to 24.5% of the taxpayer’s taxable EBITDA, effective January 1, 2025) . Accordingly, readers should not place undue reliance on forward-looking information. Forward looking information in this press release is subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could result in actual results differing materially from this forward-looking information, including with respect to the expected closing of the Dispositions, the payment of the Special Distribution, and the implementation of the Distribution Reduction. Risks and uncertainties pertaining to ERES are more fully described in regulatory filings that can be obtained on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca. Except as specifically required by applicable Canadian securities law, ERES does not undertake any obligation to update or revise publicly any forward-looking information, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, after the date on which the information is provided or to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events. This forward-looking information should not be relied upon as representing ERES’s views as of any date subsequent to the date of this press release. For more information, please contact:The 39-year-old has been a breath of fresh air since succeeding Erik ten Hag, with his personality and approach, coupled with promising early performances, bringing hope back to Old Trafford. Amorim has been touched by his warm welcome but repeatedly urged fans to avoid jumping the gun, having followed a draw at Ipswich with home wins against Bodo/Glimt and Everton. Wednesday’s trip to Arsenal is comfortably his biggest challenge yet and victory would see United move within three points of the Premier League title contenders. Put to Amorim it will be hard to manage expectations if they won in the capital, the head coach said: “I would like to say different things, but I have to say it again: the storm will come. “I don’t know if you use that expression, but we are going to have difficult moments and we will be found out in some games. “And I know that because I’m knowing my players and I know football and I follow football, so I understand the difference between the teams. “We are in the point in that we are putting simple things in the team, without training, and you feel it in this game against Everton, they change a little bit the way they were building up. “They are very good team, and we were with a lot of problems because we cannot change it by calling one thing to the captain. A midweek trip to the capital awaits 🚆 #MUFC || #PL pic.twitter.com/1e6VrILJW3 — Manchester United (@ManUtd) December 3, 2024 “So, we don’t have this training, so let’s focus on each game, on the performance, what we have to improve, trying to win games. And that is the focus. “I know it’s really hard to be a Manchester United coach and say these things in press conferences. We want to win all the time. No matter what. “We are going to try to win, but we know that we are in a different point if you compare to Arsenal. “So, it is what it is and we will try to win it and we go with confidence to win, but we know that we need to play very well to win the next football match.” The trip to Arsenal is the second of nine December matches for United, who are looking to avoid suffering four straight league defeats to the Gunners for the first time. The Red Devils have not won a Premier League match at the Emirates Stadium since 2017, but Amorim knows a thing or two about frustrating Mikel Arteta’s men. Arsenal thrashed Sporting Lisbon 5-1 in the Champions League last week, but in 2022-23 he led the Portuguese side to a Europa League last-16 penalty triumph after a 1-1 draw in London made it 3-3 on aggregate. “Arsenal this year, they play a little bit different,” Amorim said. “They are more fluid. “For example, two years ago when we faced them with Sporting, you knew how to press because you can understand better the structure. “Now it’s more fluid with (Riccardo) Calafiori and (Jurrien) Timber in different sides. One coming inside, the other going outside. Also (Martin) Odegaard changed the team, and you can feel it during this season. “So, you can take something from that game, especially because I know so well the opponent so you can understand the weakness of that team. “But every game is different, so you take something, but you already know that you are going to face a very good team.” This hectic winter schedule means Amorim sidestepped talk of January transfer business ahead of facing Arsenal, although he was more forthcoming on Amad Diallo’s future. The 22-year-old, who put in a man of the match display in Sunday’s 4-0 win against Everton, is out of contract at the end of the season, although the club holds an option to extend by a year. Diallo has repeatedly spoken of his desire to stay at United and it has been reported an agreement is close. Amorim said: “I think he wants to stay, and we want him to stay. So that is clear and we will find a solution.”
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