A police officer has been injured after a night of violent protests outside an asylum hotel in Dublin – with six arrests made.The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News
A police officer has been injured after a night of violent protests outside an asylum hotel in Dublin – with six arrests made.The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News
If you eat beef, and ever stop to wonder where and how it’s produced, Jonathan Chapman’s farm in the Chiltern Hills west of London is what you might imagine. The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News
A White House official has said there is “zero truth” to a report that Donald Trump is considering commuting Sean “Diddy” Combs’s prison sentence as early as this week.The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News
Heavy rain and winds of up to 75mph are set to batter the UK this week, affecting southern England on Wednesday evening, spreading northeast, and likely to persist until late on Thursday, according to the Met Office.The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News
You know bad economic news is looming when a Chancellor of the Exchequer tries to get their retaliation in first.The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News
“No one can listen to our calls?” a manager from Clarion, the UK’s largest housing association, asks one of her team on a recording that has been leaked to Sky News.The Latest News from the UK and Around the World | Sky News

NOTN- The City and Borough of Juneau certified its municipal election Today, finalizing the results and officially welcoming Nathaniel “Nano” Brooks to the Assembly.
Mayor Beth Weldon said Brooks has already begun onboarding following his narrow victory in the District 2 race.
“Mr. Brooks will be on the assembly, we’ve already done our onboarding with him,” Said Weldon “Part of my week will be looking at committees and liaisons and putting people where I think they should go for this year. That will be exciting.”
The city’s reorganization meeting is scheduled for Oct. 27, when Assembly members will finalize committee appointments.
Weldon said the city’s election team had been busy preparing the results for certification.
The official results of this month’s Election are as follows;
The Assembly and School Board races saw the following candidates elected:
The results of the ballot proposition are summarized below. Exact language for each proposition is available in the sample ballot (PDF).
Proposition 1 – Mill Rate Cap Amendment
Proposition 1 was a citizen’s initiative petition to amend Section 9.7 of the CBJ Charter. It proposed capping the property tax rate at 9 mills, down from the previous rate cap 12 mills. Additional millage would be permissible to pay for general obligation debt. Any property tax rate above the new cap would require voter approval at a future election. The proposition passed with 5,163 YES votes and 5,006 NO votes.
Proposition 1 is scheduled to take effect on November 20, 2025, 30 days after enactment, however the impacts of the rate cap will not be reflected until the Fiscal Year 2027 municipal budget.
Proposition 2 – Sales Tax Exemptions
Proposition 2 was a citizen’s initiative petition to amend the City and Borough of Juneau (CBJ) Code to create new sales tax exemptions for both essential food (as defined by the federal Food and Nutrition Act of 2008) and non-commercial essential utilities. The proposition passed with 7,099 YES votes and 3,100 NO votes.
Proposition 2 is scheduled to take effect on November 20, 2025, 30 days after enactment. The citizen’s initiative was modeled after the existing senior sales tax exemption and will require several steps by City, merchants and service providers, as well as members of the public to implement. The CBJ Finance Department will assist merchants with this change, however, seniors with sales tax exemption cards should continue to carry their cards until the transition is complete.
More information on this process will be provided over the next 30 days.
Proposition 3 – Seasonal Sales Tax
Proposition 3 proposed amending the CBJ Sales Tax Code to implement a new permanent seasonal sales tax structure. The measure proposed the introduction of a 2% sales tax from October 1 through March 31 and a 6.5% sales tax from April 1 through September 30 of each year, while repealing both the current permanent 1% and temporary 3% sales taxes. The existing temporary 1% sales tax would have remained unchanged. The proposition failed with4,365 YES votes and 5,853 NO votes.
A more detailed report with election statistics will be provided at the October 27 Assembly Reorganizational Meeting, to be held at 6 p.m. in person at Centennial Hall Ballroom #3 and remotely via Zoom webinar.

NOTN- Juneau Sen. Jesse Kiehl says the ongoing federal government shutdown is harming public workers and citizens rather than politicians.
Speaking on KINY last week, Kiehl said that despite one party holding control of Congress and the White House, U.S. Senate filibuster rules make it difficult to reach a budget deal.
“Federal rules are a little bit different than the state; there’s the old saying in the U.S. Senate that there are only two rules, there’s unanimous consent and total exhaustion.” Kiehl said, “Breaking a filibuster means bringing in cots and sleeping there until somebody finally falls over. The U.S. Senate is not a bunch of spring chickens, so they don’t like to do that second part. So they’re trying to get to a deal, or rather, if they don’t get to a deal, we end up here.”
Kiehl, recalling Alaska’s own brief partial shutdown during his time in the Legislature, said the consequences of budget impasses fall hardest on workers and the public.
“The pain doesn’t end up with the folks who do the voting, we really have to keep an eye on who’s affected, and it’s the citizens.” Kiehl said, “It’s the people who try to go to work and do the job for the public every day, and that’s what we’re seeing. It’s a doggone shame.”
As of October 21, 2025, the government has been shut down for 21 days, with over 700,000 federal employees furloughed, on October 22, 2025 the shutdown will become the second longest, the longest funding lapse was 35 days in 2018 and 2019.
Republicans and Democrats seem no closer to an agreement on how to resolve the ongoing budget dispute.
Under the U.S. system, the different branches of government have to agree on spending plans before they become law.
“Everybody needs to focus back up and remember that services to Americans are what’s getting cut here.” Kiehl said, “This is destructive.”

The bloody mob war that is the focus of the new Netflix series “Mob War: Philadelphia vs. The Mafia,” which premieres Oct. 22, 2025, is full of the murder and mayhem, treachery and deceit that have been the hallmarks of the nation’s Cosa Nostra family conflicts.
What was different in Philadelphia was that the FBI had it all wired for sound.
Electronic surveillance has been a major tool in the government’s highly successful war against the Mafia nationwide, but nowhere has its impact been felt more dramatically than in Philadelphia.
As a reporter for The Philadelphia Inquirer, I covered this mob war in real time from 1994 through 2000. Now I teach a course at Rowan University on the history of organized crime, using the war as a case study, and I was a consultant on the Netflix series.
The war pitted one faction of the Philadelphia mob, headed by Sicilian-born John Stanfa, against a rival faction led by Joseph “Skinny Joey” Merlino. The issues were control of all illegal operations in the underworld – gambling, loan-sharking, drug-dealing and extortion. Money was the bottom line, but there also was a cultural and generational divide that had Stanfa and, for the most part, his group of older wiseguys facing off against Merlino and his crew of young South Philadelphia-born mobsters.
But only after indictments were handed down and evidence was introduced at trials did the extent of the electronic surveillance operation become known.
Mobsters, speaking in unguarded moments and unaware that the feds were listening, buried themselves.
So here was mob boss Stanfa discussing with an associate plans to lure Merlino and two of his two lieutenants to a meeting where they would be killed:
“See, you no gotta give a chance,” the Sicilian-born Stanfa said in his halting English. “Bam, bam … Over here is best, behind the ear.”
Or here was Salvatore Profaci, a New York mobster brought in to quietly settle a dispute that had gone public after mob lawyer Salvatore Avena filed a multimillion-dollar lawsuit against his mobbed-up business partner in a trash-hauling business.
“Goodfellas don’t sue goodfellas,” Profaci said in a line that couldn’t have been written any better by “The Godfather” author Mario Puzo or delivered more effectively by the award-winning actor Robert De Niro. “Goodfellas kill goodfellas.”
The most staggering piece of the investigation, which was made known only after Stanfa and more than 20 of his associates had been indicted and arrested, was that the FBI had received court authorization to plant listening devices in the Camden, New Jersey, law offices of Salvatore Avena, Stanfa’s defense attorney.
A judge approved the highly unusual authorization after the feds argued that Stanfa was using the shield of attorney-client privilege to conduct mob meetings in Avena’s office while a mob war raged on the streets of South Philadelphia.
More than 2,000 conversations were recorded during the two-year electronic surveillance operation, with FBI agents and an assistant U.S. attorney manning a listening post in the basement of the federal courthouse a block away from Avena’s office. Whenever Stanfa and his associates got together, the feds were listening. Many of those conversations were then introduced as evidence at the racketeering trials that followed.
The conversations proved to be a treasure trove not only for investigators but also for journalists who covered the story as it unfolded and later got access to the tapes that were made public when the cases went to trial.
Two of the books I’ve written about the Philadelphia mob, “The Last Gangster” in 2004 and “The Goodfella Tapes” in 1998, are built around those tapes and the investigations they spawned.
Anyone who has written true crime knows that part of the problem with nonfiction storytelling is coming up with dialogue. In writing books about the Philadelphia mob wars that are the focus of the new Netflix series, that was never a problem.
Mobsters from Philadelphia, South Jersey, New York and the Scanton-Wilkes Barre area of Pennsylvania ended up on the recordings, which offered not only details about the war but also included philosophical ramblings and personal asides that provided a glimpse into the world of organized crime as good as or better than any fictionalized story line from “The Godfather” or “The Sopranos.”
Throughout the conflict, as bodies piled up and blood ran in the streets of the City of Brotherly Love, Stanfa and several of his associates were picked up plotting murder and mayhem, bemoaning the loss of honor and loyalty that had once been the hallmark of Cosa Nostra, and belittling their street-corner rivals, the “little Americans” who hadn’t a clue about what it meant to be a real mafioso.
“When you’re a dwarf they could put you on a high mountain, you’re still a dwarf,” Avena told Stanfa in one of several conversations mocking Merlino and his associates.
“I was born and raised in this thing (Cosa Nostra) and I’m gonna die in this thing,” said Stanfa at another point, bemoaning the state of the Philadelphia mob. “But with the right people. Over here is like kindergarten.”

Electronic surveillance was used again and again in racketeering trials in which the feds not only dismantled but judicially eviscerated the Philadelphia crime family.
Stanfa is currently serving life in prison. Several of his top associates were jailed for more than 20 years. In a second prosecution, Merlino and most of his top associates were convicted of racketeering and jailed for sentences ranging from seven to 14 years.
Dozens of conversations were played for the juries that sat in judgment during the racketeering trials that followed. Again and again the mobster’s own words were turned against them.
Another highlight was an FBI surveillance video of a mob hit picked up on a hidden camera as it occurred. A surveillance camera located across the street from a deli run by then-Stanfa underboss Joseph Ciancaglini Jr. picked up the early morning shooting in which four shadowy figures burst into the deli and opened fire. An audio bug hidden inside the deli provided the sound effects – gunshots, shouting and the screams of a waitress. The shooting occurred shortly after 6 a.m. and just moments after Ciancaglini and his waitress had arrived and begun setting up for business.
Cooperating witnesses were also part of the trial, but defense attorneys frequently undermined their testimony by providing a litany of the crimes – often including murders – that the witnesses had admitted to as part of their plea deals.
You can attack the credibility of a cooperating witness by focusing on his own crimes and his need to say whatever the government wants in order to win a lenient sentence, a defense attorney once explained to me. What you can’t do, he said, “is cross-examine a tape.”
Jurors got to hear mobsters in their own words discussing the mob war. And there was nothing the defense could do to counterattack the impact of those words.
One classic discussion underscored the mobsters’ concern about electronic surveillance and demonstrated their inability to do much about it.
Stanfa consigliere Anthony Piccolo was talking with Avena about the problem with cooperators and phone taps. Both men agreed it was important to be cautious. Avena then told Piccolo that he’d had an electronic anti-bugging expert come into his office over the weekend and had swept the rooms. It had cost him $500, Avena said.
“It’s money well spent,” said Piccolo as the undetected FBI listening device beamed the conversation back to the listening post.
Read more of our stories about Philadelphia and Pennsylvania, or sign up for our Philadelphia newsletter on Substack.
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George Anastasia is the owner of G&A Media LLC, the company through which he served as consultant for the series and through which he was paid, .
Politics + Society – The Conversation
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Amy Duggar King once felt a connection to Josh Duggar.
That connection is long gone.
But their former bond also made learning his true nature that much more chilling.
The Duggar cousin is opening up about confronting Josh — and his harrowing response.

In 2015, the world learned that Josh Duggar had molested four of his younger sisters and another underage girl — a babysitter.
This monstrous revelation led to TLC canceling 19 Kids and Counting, though it would go on to platform the Duggar family for years after this through Counting On.
Speaking to Fox News Digital, Amy Duggar King reveals that she learned of Josh’s unforgivable crimes just like everyone else — from the news.
After the news broke, she drove to Jim Bob’s house to confront her evil cousin. She wanted answers.
“He was extremely passive, non-responsive,” Amy recalled about Josh’s initial response.

“[He was] looking down at the floor for the longest time, didn’t have much to say at all,” Amy described.
She, however, was a flurry of emotion.
“I was furious and red in the face, crying,” she admitted. “Just my heart beating so fast out of my chest.”
Eventually, however, Josh spoke up. And his haunting statement will haunt her for life.
“He looked at me right into my eyes and said, ‘I knew better,’” Amy shared. “And it was the creepiest smile I’ve ever seen.”

In her book, Holy Disruptor: Shattering the Shiny Facade by Getting Louder with the Truth, she goes into further detail.
“As I continued to stare directly into his eyes, a slow smile spread across his face,” Amy Duggar described in her memoir.
“It was the kind of smile that sent shivers down my spine,” she admitted.
Amy characterized his expression as “a twisted grin that was unlocking a world of chaos, suffering, and pain that was yet to come for my family.”
There was an interruption in the confrontation, however. And it was by the same man who shielded Josh from legal consequences for his crimes until the statute of limitations ran out.

According to Amy, “just as the tension reached its peak,” Jim Bob burst into the room.
“Now, Amy, let’s not stir up contempt,” he allegedly told Amy, his voice dripping with condescension.
That would be an unhinged statement under any context. But, we must remember that we’re talking about people in a cult.
Many subcultures have unique turns of phrase. It is not always sinister. But these people make up their own phrases so that language alone separates the in-group from the out-group.
“His son was a predator, and yet he was more worried about my language and tone of voice,” Amy remarked.

When speaking to Fox News Digital, Amy admitted that she felt like her uncle was experiencing some form of denial.
“This is just my opinion, we’ll just put that out there, [but] I think the reality was too much,” she admitted.
“I think the harsh reality was heartbreaking, and it was too much,” Amy reiterated.
“But I don’t know what was going through his mind,” she emphasized. “I can’t really speak for my uncle, and I’m not going to, but I just know that if I were in that situation, I would have parented very differently.”
For one thing, Amy says that she would have gotten help for Josh’s victims. But that would require seeing the girls as both victims and full human beings, rather than as temptresses and property — as the cult perceives them.

Truth be told, Jim Bob’s thoughts may have been denial. But they could also have been a natural extension of the cult’s beliefs.
Historically, one of the theological selling points of Christianity has been a divine forgiveness. Through different mechanisms (according to denomination), Christians believe that their wrongdoings can be expunged.
So, though Josh cost the family their (first) reality show and had to resign in disgrace as a lobbyist for noted hate group the Family Research Council, Jim Bob may have truly seen Josh’s heinous crimes as irrelevant due to divine intercession.
Whatever his family believes happened to him on a spiritual level, Josh obviously did not change. The crimes behind Josh’s prison sentence prove that.
A belief in forgiveness-through-faith brings comfort to many. But regardless of creed, there are many people in this world who will use this concept as a cover to continue to prey upon the helpless and the trusting.
Amy Duggar Recalls Josh’s ‘Twisted Grin’ After Molestation Scandal Came … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.
The Hollywood Gossip