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The 2020 rape judgment of Harvey Weinstein is overturned by a New York appellate court.

The decision by the state Court of Appeals reopens a sad chapter in America’s reckoning with prominent people’s sexual misconduct—a period that started in 2017 with a barrage of accusations against Harvey Weinstein.

Harvey Weinstein’s 2020 rape conviction was reversed by New York’s highest court on Thursday. The court determined that the judge at the historic #MeToo trial unfairly favored the former movie tycoon by making incorrect decisions, including letting women testify about allegations that were unrelated to the case.
The State Court of Appeals’ decision reopens a difficult chapter in America’s history dealing with prominent people’s sexual misconduct—a period that started in 2017 with a wave of accusations against Harvey Weinstein. The judge mandated a fresh trial. On the witness stand, his accusers might be made to relive their horrors once more.

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Following his conviction on charges of criminal sex act for forcing a TV and film production assistant to perform oral sex on him in 2006 and rape in the third degree for attacking an aspiring actress in 2013, Weinstein, 72, has been serving a 23-year term in a New York jail.
He was found guilty of a second rape in Los Angeles in 2022 and given a 16-year prison sentence; as a result, he will remain behind bars. Regarding allegations involving one of the women who testified in New York, Weinstein was found not guilty in Los Angeles.
Weinstein’s attorneys contended that the prosecution’s victories against Judge James Burke’s decisions had made the trial into 1-800-GET-HARVEY.

The reversal of Weinstein’s conviction is the second major #MeToo setback in the last two years after the US Supreme Court refused to hear an appeal of a Pennsylvania court decision to throw out Bill Cosby’s sexual assault conviction.

Weinstein’s conviction stood for more than four years, heralded by activists and advocates as a milestone achievement, but dissected just as quickly by his lawyers and, later, the Court of Appeals when it heard arguments on the matter in February.

April is National Earthquake Preparedness Month: Let’s Get Ready!

Hello there, April is National Earthquake Preparedness Month—did you know that? It serves as a reminder that earthquakes can occur anywhere, at any moment, and that being ready can make all the difference in the world. The following are some important points to remember:

Earthquake today

Checking out if you live in an earthquake-prone location is crucial. Earthquakes today can still happen without warning, so it’s better to be safe than sorry.

New York Earthquake

Earthquake New York One of the biggest earthquakes ever recorded in New Jersey, with a magnitude of 4.8 magnitude earthquake, rocked citizens of neighboring states as well as New York City on Friday morning.

The United States Geological Survey detected the earthquake at around 10:23 a.m. on Friday, approximately 5 miles north of Whitehouse Station, New Jersey. There were reports of shaking floors and furniture in New York City, which was roughly 45 miles away from the epicenter.

Earthquakes NYC in this region are uncommon but not unexpected. It’s likely people near the epicenter are going to feel aftershocks for this earthquake in the magnitude 2-3 range, and there’s a small chance there can be an earthquake as large or larger, following an earthquake like this,” Paul Earle, a seismologist at the USGS Earthquake Hazards Program told reporters. “In terms of our operations, this is a routine earthquake … Immediately we knew this would be of high interest and important to people who don’t feel earthquakes a lot.”

After 4.8 earthquake shakes New York, schools continue operations as normal

New York Earthquake

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On Friday morning, a 4.8 earthquake rocked New York City and the surrounding areas, sending schools reeling.

According to the city’s Education Department, as of about midnight, no injuries had been reported in the city’s schools, and officials had not received any information suggesting that any school facilities were penetrated.

Following the incident at 10:23 a.m., officials indicated that schools throughout the city were operating as usual.

Families received texts from many schools on Friday morning reassuring them that their children were safe. Recess at some schools was relocated indoors due to a city emergency alert advising people to stay inside. (A further advisory noted that while aftershocks might be felt, residents of New York could go about their regular business.)

Schools Chancellor David Banks stated during a news conference with other city agencies that he was at a function at Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts when the earthquake occurred.

“All of our school principals have been instructed to carry on with regular operations and dismissals,” stated Banks. “We ask that all of our students and children see the schools, staff, and families as role models for maintaining composure.”

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New Jersey earthquake thought the sound from the earthquake was an explosion

New Jersey earthquake: Madeline Nafus had just finished feeding her 7-week-old baby when, simultaneously, she was thrown off balance and the loudest sound she’d ever heard rang out.

“I thought it was either an explosion or a bombing because of how loud it was,” said Nafus, who lives in Long Valley, New Jersey, a few miles from the earthquake’s epicenter. “It was just terrifying.”

The 29-year-old Nafus saw her light fixtures swing and framed pictures, wine glasses, and a 6-foot-tall elk head smash into the floor. Her “house was going to crumble,” she thought as she picked up her infant son, gathered some blankets, and went outside. Olivia, Nafus’s trembling little golden doodle, was lifted by her pal who had come dashing downstairs in the meantime.

The rumble stopped after about fifteen seconds, and there were just sporadic, mild tremors left. Nafus first phoned their two-year-old’s daycare, then her husband, who was at the time teaching a golf lesson.

She remarked, “They said the kids were all confused and asking a lot of questions, but they were okay.”