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  • Pensioner swindled out of £340K by fraudster who wanted ‘to live Premier League lifestyle’

    Pensioner swindled out of £340K by fraudster who wanted ‘to live Premier League lifestyle’

    A pensioner was tricked into handing over £340,000 to a semi-professional footballer turned fraudster who wanted to live a “Premier League lifestyle”.

    Abdul Ibraheem, 36, used the money swindled from 84-year-old Alan Potter on first class flights, a stint living in a £3million mansion, and an £800 bonsai tree.


    The 36-year-old also conned a letting agent out of another £100,000 – taking deceitful gains to £447,700.

    Ibraheem convinced the 84-year-old to sign over his bank cards and give him more than £200,000, Potter had previously been the victim of a boiler room scam in 2022 and Ibraheem told him that he could recover the money for a fee.

    Ibraheem

    Abdul Ibraheem, 36, conned 84-year-old Alan Potter out of £340,000

    Sussex Police

    This first began with a payment of £50,000, however this quickly grew to over £300,000, with the pensioner being left on “the verge of possible bankruptcy” and fearing that he may need to sell his home.

    Ibraheem spent the fraudulent money on a number of high-end goods, including a £14,000 piano, a £3,000 marble kitchen, and a limited edition Banksy print.

    He also took his family on a luxury holiday to Greece, flew first class to Ibiza and joined a private members club before police clocked on and raided his home.

    Ibraheem claimed to be a semi-professional footballer and coach on the books of Chelsea FC.

    MORE LIKE THIS:

    The 36-year-old admitted to nine charges with another two left on file at Lewes Crown Court in Brighton and was jailed for more than five years in March of this year.

    However, a proceeds of crime hearing has now been told that only £34,651 has been recovered from Ibraheem to pay back Potter and the letting agent.

    Judge Mark Van Der Zwart told Ibraheem at a hearing in Hove: “From the available amount, compensation has to be made from the confiscated money.”

    In his victim impact statement, Potter said: “I found him persuasive and believable in everything he said.

    Lewes Crown Court in Brighton

    The 36-year-old admitted to nine charges with another two left on file at Lewes Crown Court in Brighton

    Wikimedia Commons

    “When the full realisation of his activities and the lifestyle he was living on my money fully came home to me, I was embarrassed.”

    Nicholas Mather for the Crown said that the 36-year-old exploited vulnerable people by stealing from them in a professional manner.

    “Knowing Mr Potter had previously been the victim of fraud, the defendant used the money extracted from Mr Potter to fund his own lavish lifestyle. He benefited substantially from his fraudulent conduct.”

    Mather added: “He was not taking money to give to others. He was benefiting and living a luxury lifestyle due to his fraudulent activity.”

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  • Olympic snowboarder wanted by FBI for cocaine distribution and murder | Snowboarding

    A former Olympic snowboarder for Canada has been charged with running a drug trafficking ring that shipped vast amounts of cocaine across the Americas and killed four people, authorities said Thursday.

    The FBI is offering a $50,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and extradition of Ryan James Wedding, a Canadian citizen who was living in Mexico and is considered a fugitive. The 43-year-old is charged in the United States with running a criminal enterprise, murder, conspiring to distribute cocaine and other crimes, US prosecutors said.

    US authorities said Wedding’s group moved large shipments of cocaine from Colombia through Mexico and California to Canada and other locations in the United States using long-haul semi-trucks. Wedding, who also faces years-old charges in Canada, is one of 16 people charged in connection with a ring that moved 60 tons of cocaine a year, and four of them remain fugitives, said Martin Estrada, US attorney in Los Angeles.

    “He chose to become a major drug trafficker and he chose to become a killer,” Estrada told reporters.

    A photo of former Canadian Olympic snowboarder Ryan Wedding, 43, who is a fugitive, is seen top left, with 15 other defendants who have been charged with allegedly running and participating in a transnational drug trafficking operation, is displayed on a video monitor at a news conference at the FBI offices in Los Angeles on Thursday. Photograph: Damian Dovarganes/AP

    Krysti Hawkins, FBI special agent in charge in Los Angeles, said a dozen people were arrested in Florida, Michigan, Canada, Colombia and Mexico in connection with the case.

    US authorities allege the group killed two members of a family in Canada in retaliation for a stolen drug shipment in what officials there said was a case of mistaken identity as well as two other people, according to officials and federal court filings. Authorities said they seized cocaine, weapons, ammunition, cash and more than $3m in cryptocurrency in connection with their investigation.

    Wedding competed for Canada in the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, authorities said.

    Wedding faces separate drug trafficking charges in Canada that date back to 2015, said Chris Leather, chief superintendent with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. “Those charges are very much unresolved,” Leather said.

    Wedding previously was convicted in the US of conspiracy to distribute cocaine and was sentenced to prison in 2010, federal records show. Estrada said US authorities believe that after Wedding’s release, he resumed drug trafficking and has been protected by the Sinaloa Cartel in Mexico.

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  • ‘I’d always wanted to die, but I wasn’t ready to go’: How depression and a near-death experience made him appreciate life, Lifestyle News

    ‘I’d always wanted to die, but I wasn’t ready to go’: How depression and a near-death experience made him appreciate life, Lifestyle News

    To mark World Mental Health Day on Oct 10, AsiaOne shines the spotlight on mental health advocates and looks at how Singaporeans cope with mental health issues in their lives.


    Noel Boyd was just eight years old when he made a desperate plea to the universe.

    “I prayed to God to take my life away,” said the 45-year-old emcee and content creator.

    His feelings of helplessness were triggered by bullying, not just from his fellow classmates but also teachers who were abusive towards him, he said.

    “I remember asking myself, ‘Is this how it’s going to be for the rest of my life?’”

    Being only one of two non-Chinese pupils in the school, Noel often felt like he didn’t fit in. He also didn’t have many friends.

    Confiding in one teacher about the heavy-handed physical punishment he suffered from another teacher proved to be a mistake.

    “It got even worse the next day after the teacher told the other about it. So I was like, ‘What the s***?’ I trusted that one person.”

    From that point on, he shared that his trust of adults “went from little to zero”.

    Noel did not tell his parents about the incident, which in hindsight he felt he should have. 

    Fortunately, his secondary school days turned out to be a far cry from the torment he’d experienced in primary school.

    Being a born entertainer, Noel was drawn to the stage and it was there that he uncovered his innate talent for engaging a crowd.

    “I started emceeing when I was in secondary two or three. And I was in the lion dance troupe, so I was a pretty popular kid in school,” he mused.

    But beneath this chatty and extraverted exterior that he presented was another side to his personality few were aware of.

    ‘If you don’t love yourself, how can you love somebody else?’

    Noel was diagnosed with clinical depression as an adult, but the diagnosis happened only in his 30s, after a suicide attempt in 2018.

    Before this, he’d tried to take his life several times. It was only after this last attempt that he finally made the decision to see a therapist regularly, and still does to this day.

    Many of his depressive episodes in his 20s to 30s were triggered by relationship issues or a bad breakup.

    It was only in therapy that he uncovered the reason why these relationships affected him so badly when they went south.

”I had been after love in order to feel loved. So whenever a breakup happened, it felt like I wasn’t loved at all,” he shared.

    There was also no open discussion of mental health at the time, so Noel would keep his problems to himself.

    It didn’t help that he would feel that he was troubling others if he reached out to friends who didn’t know what to say.

    “When they’d say, ‘Oh my god, again?’ I felt that I was troubling them or letting them down.

    “As an entertainer, it gets even worse because people always expect you to be the happy, lively one,” said Noel.

    “But looking back, a lot of that [persona] was fake,” he admitted. Only his ex-girlfriends were privy to Noel’s more vulnerable side, which made it seem like a betrayal whenever they left.

    But Noel holds no blame or resentment towards his exes. “I wasn’t a good partner to them,” he stated bluntly.

    “Ultimately, I didn’t love myself,” said Noel, citing the phrase, “If you don’t love yourself, how do you love somebody else?” 

    Neighbour saved his life

    Noel’s lifestyle at the time was fuelled by nights out and alcohol. This went on for “many years”.

    “Whenever I got into a funk, I would turn to alcohol. It was my best friend,” he admitted.

    Unfortunately, the situation would also get worse whenever he opened up about his troubles to friends, some of whom would respond with, “Come, let’s go for a drink.”

    Despite having been in therapy for several years by then, Noel shared that he suffered a relapse in October 2021.

    At the time, Noel and his wife were heading for a separation, which he shared was triggered by his depression as well as other issues brought about by the Covid-19 pandemic.

    “I wasn’t thinking clearly, and the suicidal thoughts were very strong,” said the father of a one-year-old girl and a newborn daughter then.

    Unexpectedly, what pulled him back from the brink was a neighbour living on the first floor of his condominium.

    Noel had bumped into him as he was going out to buy what he thought would be his “last pack of cigarettes”.

    “He asked me if I was okay and where I was going, and then he said, ‘Okay, I’ll talk to you when you get back’. Obviously, I had no intention of talking to him,” said Noel.

    As luck would have it, the neighbour was waiting for him when Noel returned.

    “He just told me, ‘Come into my house, we’ll talk’,” said Noel.

    What happened next was something Noel had never experienced before.

    It was as if a dam within him broke and a torrent of emotions was released.

    “I was just crying and crying and nobody could make me stop,” he stated.

    A friend then had to send him to the Institute of Mental Health (IMH) but as hospitals were still under Covid-19 restrictions at the time, his friend could only leave him at the door. 

    Opening up about his struggles

    Till this day, Noel is not sure what compelled the neighbour to reach out to him.

    “I knew he had his own mental health issues as well and we had talked about my journey before. But I’m thankful that he was home at the right time, and he saw me.”

    The episode, however, also marked a sea change in terms of how Noel viewed his mental health.

    Rather than hide it from others as usual, Noel decided to openly share his struggle with depression for the first time on social media.

    When asked why he made the brave decision to do a tell-all, Noel said the reasons were manifold.

    “Firstly, when I was in IMH, there were people there who recognised me,” said Noel, who had made a name for himself on social media as a paranormal investigator; he had also hosted several broadcast TV shows around the same theme.

    “I didn’t want anyone to be spreading stories about me, so I decided I might as well be open about it,” he added.

    In his post on Oct 31, 2021, Noel shared about his admission to IMH and his “relapse with depression”.

    He added then: “There’s no shame in not being okay. I hope my honesty helps someone you know get the help he or she needs.”

    https://www.facebook.com/noel.boyd/posts/pfbid034DJWzmaCkvg298KD5RdhGjThy2yPQwnSXejHuH22bJAJz4hbQd3vXwvNjnjQKKKyl

    It’s still what he believes in today.

    “I get upset when people don’t understand what clinical depression is. When people hear the term, they think ‘Oh, this person is always sad’, but that’s not true. It’s a chemical imbalance [in the brain] and there’s nothing the person can do,” said Noel.

    He admitted, however, that there was a part of him that feared making the public admission.

    “I didn’t know if potential clients would be watching the video. And if they don’t understand the subject, they’re just going to say, ‘I think it’s better not to hire him’,” he stated.

    And unfortunately, to Noel’s knowledge, it happened with at least one client.

    On the flip side, however, it allowed him to “gain some really good clients who have also gone through stuff”.

    “One of them hugged me and told me, “Bro, I know exactly what you’re going through,” said Noel. “Not only is he a client, he’s now a good friend.”

    Other friends whom he’d “not heard of from a long time” made contact because of this and even some celebrity friends reached out to him to share that they were going through the same thing.

    “Mental health affects a lot of people in the creative world,” he reflected.

    He also surmised that dealing with depression might also be harder for men due to the stoic front that they’re expected to put on.

    The rhetoric that “a man has to appear strong” is one that Noel strongly disagrees with.

    “It’s okay [for men] to cry; it’s okay to have emotions,” said Noel, even as he admitted paradoxically that he wasn’t like this before.

    Following the last depressive episode where he was admitted to IMH, however, Noel has allowed himself to let his guard down.

    “I’ve allowed people to see the vulnerable side of me.”

    That side shows up unexpectedly too, during our interview when the conversation flowed to Noel’s children.

    The process of divorce had affected him badly and he took to the bottle heavily during a period of time in 2022.

    It took a heart attack in October 2023 to make him realise that he wasn’t ready to give up on life.

    “My heart stopped in the ambulance and they had to revive me. Everything changed that day, everything,” said Noel.

    But the heart attack was far from a negative event in his eyes.

    Life-changing near-death experience

    To others who’d ask, he always told them that “it was a great thing” to have happened as the time spent in the ICU allowed him the space to think clearly for the first time in a long while.

    “I’d always wanted to die, but I wasn’t ready to go,” shared Noel of the realisation.

    “I’ve got two beautiful young girls that I want to see grow up, and I want to make an impact on their lives because I love them so much,” said Noel, turning emotional.

    After that, living alone while recuperating also made him realise how strong he can be. At the time, even doing the simplest things such as going out to buy a meal would be a chore that’d leave him winded.

    In January this year, Noel was at a hawker centre when he started bleeding profusely from his nose and mouth. “It took five hours to stop the bleeding [in the hospital],” said Noel.

    It got so bad that one of the doctors had whispered in his ear to “think of the person you love the most to help you through this time”, he shared.

    “I thought of my two girls, because I thought I would never see them again.”

    Thankfully, the bleeding eventually stopped. But till date, Noel is unsure about why it had happened.

    Noel describes himself as being in a much better place now, rating his mental health at a “nine out of 10”.

    But he understands the fragility of this state.

    “Sometimes when the going gets tough, a bad thought may pop up. You have to acknowledge that it’s there and then move on.”

    He has also improved his relationship with alcohol and made a pact with himself to steer clear from it if he feels down.

    “I won’t lie and say that I’ve quit drinking, but now I only drink when I’m happy.”

    For him, what has helped is “listening to daily affirmations and going for long walks in nature”.

    “I’m not shy to share with people how I feel, but that being said, I’m also very selective of who I hang out with now.”

    Shedding old friends who weren’t such a positive influence was part of the healing process and what he “had to do” for himself.

    His experience has also made him more aware of how he wants to show up for his children if they turn to him with their issues.

    “Parents need to talk to their children and not just brush things aside when they share their problems.

    “What’s small to you as a parent could be huge for the child.”

    And as for how to speak to someone who is struggling, it is to “just sit with them and listen” and not dismiss it or attempt to divert their focus to something else. 

    Regrets, he’s had a few

    Noel readily admits that he is regretful when it comes to his marriage and children.

    “I love [my ex-wife] to this day, and it pains me that I can’t be with my daughters every day.

    “I cannot turn back time but I obviously wish that things were different. I would have done better with this current mindset.”

    And what is this current mindset?

    “I’ve learnt to love myself, and appreciate myself for who I am. I no longer feel sorry for myself like I used to.”

    According to him, his friends and closest people around him have also seen a change.

    “They see me laughing and smiling again, behaving like a clown,” said Noel.

    He’s also more mindful about what he does to protect his mental health.

    This also means staying away from “paranormal stuff” that brings along “negative energy” if he has to do research on it, unless it’s something he thinks is interesting or worth doing.

    That may include restarting his podcast, where he invites people to share their spooky encounters, he tells us.

    He’d also recently started his own events business, Noel Boyd Productions, doing work that drives him.

    “I love doing events, whether it’s being on stage or planning an event. It’s an honour to make people forget all their problems for just that one day or four hours, say for an event or dinner and dance. To me, it’s a powerful responsibility.”

    Despite being in the best mental shape he’s been in years, Noel doesn’t just wonder if his depressive episodes will come back again. In fact, he knows it will.

    “But I’m better equipped to deal with it now because I’ve got the right circle of people around me, a therapist whom I can speak to, and I’ve put in the work [to better prepare myself].”

    His message to those who are struggling is that “there’s a light at the end of the tunnel, even if you don’t see it”.

    “There’s a reason why you’re here, but you’ve got to find that reason.

    “And you’ve got to believe that you’re so much stronger than you think you are.”

    SINGAPORE HELPLINES

    • Samaritans of Singapore: 1-767
    • Singapore Association for Mental Health: 1800-283-7019
    • Care Corner Counselling Centre (Mandarin): 1800-353-5800
    • Institute of Mental Health’s Mental Health Helpline: 6389-2222
    • Silver Ribbon: 6386-1928

    ALSO READ: ‘I was hearing voices in my head’: Young woman shares how she’s seeking help and preparing herself to return to workforce

    candicecai@asiaone.com

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  • One Tech Tip: Ever wanted to quit Elon Musk’s X platform? Here’s how you can do it

    One Tech Tip: Ever wanted to quit Elon Musk’s X platform? Here’s how you can do it

    LONDON — Since Elon Musk acquired Twitter, renamed it X, fired much of its staff and made other big changes, a steady stream of celebrities, public figures, organizations and ordinary people have quit the social media platform.

    Some blame Musk for turning a place that used to be fun into one that’s chaotic and toxic, pointing to moves like allowing polarizing figures such as Donald Trump back in. Others are turned off by Musk’s juvenile humor or by how he’s increasingly barging into their feeds with his posts, often to amplify far-right tropes.

    They’re defecting to rival sites like BlueSky, Mastodon, Meta’s Threads, and Reddit. Some even are — gasp — quitting social media altogether.

    So if you’ve decided it’s time to exit X, here’s what you need to do:

    Begin by deactivating your account, which starts a 30-day countdown until your account is deleted permanently. Go to settings and privacy, then to the Account tab and click Deactivate your Account, enter your password and confirm you want to proceed.

    Once you go ahead, your profile and username will be hidden from public view. If you change your mind, you can stop the process by logging in at any point during the 30-day period.

    If you’ve signed up for a subscription, like a premium account, cancel that if you don’t want to make another payment. Subscriptions are only automatically canceled when the account is deleted.

    If your account somehow gets reactivated even though you didn’t want to, X says on its help pages that it might be because you’ve granted access to third-party apps. These are built by other software developers and can do things like read and make posts or access direct messages on your behalf.

    To see which third-party apps you’ve given access to, head to the settings menu, then Security and Account Access. Click Apps and Sessions, and then Connected Apps. You can revoke access to individual apps by tapping or clicking on each one.

    If you suspect that a rogue app still has access to your account, try changing your password for X.

    Before you leave for good, you can download an archive of all your data from your time on Twitter and X. It could be useful if you want to look up a memorable post you wrote, refer back to direct messages you traded with other users, or find the accounts that you followed or were following you.

    In the settings menu, you’ll need to enter your password to request the data, which will come in a zip file. When I requested my archive, which amounted to 211 megabytes of data, it was available to download about 24 hours later.

    What happens to that data once you’re gone for good? X says on its privacy page that it keeps users’ profile information and content “for the duration of your account.” It holds on to other “personally identifiable data” for up to 18 months, without being more specific on what that data is.

    It has become a ritual for X users to announce they’re departing the platform. Politicians and celebrities have used their final post to take a parting shot at Musk, warn that the site is becoming too toxic, or let their followers know about the other social media venues they’re using. Then, their statements usually disappear because their account is deleted.

    Users who aren’t famous have drafted heartfelt farewell letters, on X, their blogs or platforms like LinkedIn, explaining their reasons for leaving. It’s not necessary, though it might help you achieve closure.

    Are you sure you want to leave, permanently? If you’re not ready to commit to full deletion, you could instead lock down your account.

    Go to the privacy section in your settings, then click on Your posts and then tick the boxes to protect your posts and videos.

    Protecting your posts means that only people who follow you already will be able to see them. Any other users will see a padlock. If they try to follow you, you’ll get a notification requesting access.

    ___

    Is there a tech challenge you need help figuring out? Write to us at onetechtip@ap.org with your questions.

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  • New home ‘has everything we wanted in an old house’ for a quintessential New Orleans lifestyle | Home/Garden

    New home ‘has everything we wanted in an old house’ for a quintessential New Orleans lifestyle | Home/Garden

    When Charlene Moreau Hazen returned home to New Orleans, the city that she’s loved from her birth, she brought with her a soon-to-be indoctrinated California-born partner, Chris Hazen. 

    Married in 2018, the Hazens were under contract in 2019 for a house in Newport Beach when the arrival of the COVID-19 pandemic ushered in the freedom to work remotely. “It occurred to us simultaneously,” said Charlene Hazen. “What the hell are we doing here?”







    Hazen 53 August 30, 2024

    Charlene and Chris Hazen at their Uptown home.




    So, while others were leaving cities for the safety of the suburbs, the Hazens reversed the trend. They rented a place off of State Street and spent their evenings walking around, thinking of finding the perfect 300-year-old house. “It’s just part of the deal,” Charlene Hazen said.

    But it was Chris Hazen who found a 3,100-square-foot house of new construction with a design aesthetic inspired by a four-bay Greek Revival Creole townhouse, complete with cast-iron balustrades, in an Uptown neighborhood.

    The house was in a location perfect for a couple with a young son.

    Driving passions

    Charlene Hazen is a former private chef, designer of luxury hotel spaces, and the current vice president of brand strategy for a global advertising agency with headquarters in New York and Paris. Chris Hazen is a senior vice president for a financial technology company. 







    Hazen 1 exterior

    The design of the 3,100-square-foot new house is inspired by a four-bay Greek Revival Creole townhouse, complete with cast iron balustrades.




    The Hazens are people who have learned to accommodate and encourage each other’s passions. (She favors wearing designer cocktail dresses “statement pieces,” bare feet and fine French heirloom jewelry to greet guests on a random, rainy, Friday morning.)

    The couple met online while living in California, and the relationship rapidly progressed, with them moving in together into Chris Hazen’s Newport Beach digs within months.

    When they first combined households, she brought with her few possessions, save for a battered oak midcentury breakfront cum entry table, and a broken settee that made no sense at all to Chris Hazen. The settee was non-negotiable to the woman who would soon become his bride.







    Hazen 58 August 30, 2024

    The repaired and reupholstered settee that Charlene Hazen has long loved.




    The settee‘s peculiar presence in their lives soon became a source of contention.

    “It just kept moving around with us everywhere we went,” said Chris Hazen. “All I could ever ask was ‘why’?’ The thing was horrible, a pile of junk,” he said, side-eying his wife. The offensive settee has since undergone a meticulous restoration at the hands of Aguilar’s Upholstery on Oak Street.







    Hazen 7 August 30, 2024

    A Carrera marble island with waterfall edges highlights the gleaming kitchen, which can be entered from either side, through the dining room or entry hall. It opens into a great room that overlooks the yard.   




    Charlene Hazen’s passion for New Orleans (if not for the settee) soon became a shared one.

    “I brought him home to New Orleans. He was blown away. I knew he was The One when we were seated for breakfast at Brennan’s and he asked where we were going to lunch, then dinner. He had yet to figure it out, but I knew right away he was one of us.

    “I do my share of online shopping. It turns out my husband was the best thing I ever found online.”

    Building a community

    Frequent entertainers, the house’s location inside the “box” that locks down much of Uptown throughout Carnival was a selling point.

    “Living in a 300-year-old city in a new house was odd for me at first,” said Charlene Hazen, “but I came to realize that every house here was once a new house, and it took care and time to build a natural patina and make its place in its neighborhood. That’s really the phase we are in now.”







    Hazen 56 garden

    Mandevilla plants in the front garden were gifts from Charlene Hazen’s mother and grandmother. Passersby often stop to take photos.




    Their son Jack is in school nearby. “I can wave to the children during fire drills, and we can be an emergency pickup for so many of our neighbors. We are so proud to be able to do that,” she said.

    “We just planted fruit trees along the street so students can grab a satsuma on their walk home. We also put in a variegated pink lemon and a lime tree. We got a postcard from someone in the neighborhood saying thank you for doing that for the community. That really filled my heart. Someone saw and felt what we are trying to make here.”

    Two Mandevilla plants in the front — each a gift from her mother and grandmother — seem to have a following as well, with people stopping on walks to take photos, she added.







    Hazen 9 August 30, 2024

    The formal dining room stars a neoclassical style Russian rosewood table with an ornate gold-leaf pedestal base. The art is a series by local artist Josh Hailey depicting the sun, moon and stars. 




    New build, old soul

    Designed and constructed by Crescent City Developers, the home’s architecture fits right in with the neighborhood while offering every modern amenity. The living space is situated around a central area for entertaining with an open kitchen and a great room looking into the back yard.

    “The fact that he found this house and we get to be a part of this neighborhood just leaves me gobsmacked,” Charlene Hazen said. “It has everything we wanted in an old house — heart pine floors, up and down front galleries, high ceilings, a formal dining room — but the house even came with a home warranty. That’s unheard of in New Orleans.”

    She is responsible for the design aesthetic in the home. Her approach is to blow the bank on something splendid, pay it off, and do it again and again. All Chris Hazen can do is hold on and trust his wife.







    Hazen 16 August 30, 2024

    Doorman Designs created the four-poster bed, based on its design for those in the Henry Howard Hotel, where the Hazens held their four-day wedding weekend.




    “I know she’s got this,” he said.

    The result is a home stocked 100 percent with full silk draperies made by Leslie Walters, the same person who created draperies for Gallier Hall; a neoclassical style Russian rosewood dining room table with an ornate gold-leaf pedestal base; and a bed custom made by Doorman Designs to mimic the one in the room they shared at the Henry Howard Hotel on Prytania Street, where they hosted their four-day wedding weekend.

    “He gets his lawn of zoysia grass,” Charlene Hazen said of her husband’s prized front lawn. “He worked particularly hard to learn the way of the Southern yard, coming from California. We got an anonymous note about the glory of the lawn, and it’s among his prized possessions.

    “It is a running joke with Chris and all of his dad friends. His yard is superior to all. So now the student has become the teacher.”

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  • Indonesia arrests a fugitive former Filipino town mayor wanted for illegal online gaming scams

    Indonesia arrests a fugitive former Filipino town mayor wanted for illegal online gaming scams

    JAKARTA, Indonesia — A dismissed town mayor who fled the Philippines after being accused of helping establish an illegal online gaming and scam center catering mostly to clients in China has been arrested near Indonesia’s capital, officials said Wednesday.

    Indonesian authorities arrested Alice Guo at a house in Jakarta’s satellite city of Tangerang just before midnight on Tuesday, according to Khrisna Murti, chief of the international division of the National Police.

    Guo was in custody and awaiting deportation to the Philippines, Murti said, adding that her arrest was the result of “cooperation between Indonesian and Filipino’s police.”

    Filipino President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. thanked the Indonesian authorities.

    “Let this serve as a warning to those who attempt to evade justice,” Marcos said and added that arrangements were being made to bring Guo back to the Philippines where she faces a slew of criminal charges.

    After Guo fled the Philippines in July, she was tracked in Malaysia and Singapore before turning up in Indonesia. Two companions, who reportedly slipped out of the Philippines with her without going through normal immigration and clearing procedures, were recently arrested in Indonesia.

    Guo ran as a Filipino candidate in 2022 elections and won as mayor of the rural town of Bamban in Tarlac province north of Manila. She was accused of helping establish a massive complex with several buildings near the town hall as a hub for an illegal online gambling and scam outfit that catered mostly to clients in China, where gambling is forbidden.

    A Senate committee ordered Guo arrested after she refused to appear in hearings looking into the illegal gambling business that flourished under Marcos’s predecessor, Rodrigo Duterte, who nurtured cozy ties with Chinese President Xi Jinping while often criticizing the United States and European countries.

    Guo has also been accused of concealing her Chinese nationality to run for public office, which is reserved for Filipino citizens only. At the time, a few senators suggested she may be working as a Chinese spy.

    Guo has denied any wrongdoing but was dismissed from her post for grave misconduct by the Ombudsman, an agency that investigates and prosecutes government officials accused of crimes, including graft and corruption.

    In July, Marcos ordered an immediate ban on widespread and mostly Chinese-run online gaming operations, accusing them of involvement in human trafficking, torture, kidnappings and murder.

    The crackdown on the Chinese-run online gambling outfits — estimated to number more than 400 across the Philippines and employing tens of thousands of Chinese and Southeast Asian nationals — was backed by Beijing.

    It resulted in the shutdown in the Philippines of sprawling complexes, where authorities suspect thousands of Chinese, Vietnamese and other nationals mostly from Southeast Asia have been illegally recruited and forced to work in dismal conditions.

    Philippine senators say the massive online gambling industry has flourished largely due to corruption in government regulatory agencies and big payoffs to officials.

    Indonesia and the Philippines signed an extradition agreement in 1976.

    ___

    Gomez reported from Manila, Philippines. Associated Press writer Niniek Karmini in Jakarta, Indonesia, contributed to this report.

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