Stars convene for amfAR gala to raise millions for AIDS researchNew Foto - Stars convene for amfAR gala to raise millions for AIDS research

ANTIBES, France (AP) — Artwork by Adrien Brody and James Franco and a chance to sit courtside at a Knicks game with director Spike Lee were among the starry offerings at theannual amfAR Galato raise money for AIDS research. Held at the famous Hotel Du Cap-Eden-Roc in Antibes on Thursday, the evening attracted scores of celebrities in the area for the Cannes Film Festival. Guests included Brody, Lee,Colman Domingo,Michelle Rodriguez, Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez, and Heidi Klum. This year's top items for sale included a Dodge Charger that featured in "Fast X," sold off by Rodriguez, raising 475,000 euros ($536,843). There were also some Chopard pear shaped yellow diamond earrings that reached 400,000 ($452,005) euros in the bidding. During the meal guests were also entertained with musical performances from Ciara, who opened the night, Adam Lambert and headlining the dinner with Duran Duran. Guest shimmied from their tables to the front of the room to stand in front of the stage and sing along to hits like "Notorious" and "View to a Kill" (which wouldn't be the only James Bond reference of the night). The sale included artwork from Brody — sold for 375,000 euros ($423,755) with lunch with the star thrown in — and Franco — (sold for 325,000 euros ($367,254) also with a lunch offered with the winning bid. Another highlight was a May 2025 George Condo painting that raised 1.15 million euros ($1.26 million). Lee came to the stageand offered a surprise lot, a walk-on part in his next movie. Part of the way through the bidding he added tickets to sit next to him courtside at a New York Nicks game next season, driving the price up to 400,000 euros ($452,005). Thefashion showis a regular feature of the auction curated by Carine Roitfeld, this year was Bond-inspired and saw 27 models turn the middle of the dinning room into a catwalk as they paraded through the room waving at guests they recognized and posing for photos on route. The collection made 450,000 euros ($508,505) for the charity, auctioned off as one complete lot. The Foundation for AIDS Research, is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the support of AIDS research, HIV prevention, treatment education, and advocacy. Since 1985, amfAR has raised nearly $950 million (841 million euros) in support of its programs and has awarded more than 3,800 grants to research teams worldwide. ___ Louise Dixon hascovered the amfAR galafor more than a decade. Among most memorable items she's seen sold at auction are a game of soccer with David Beckham and his friends, a private dinner performance from Andrea Bocelli at his family home and lunch with Robert De Niro that combined have raised more than 2 million euros. ___ For more coverage of this year's Cannes Film Festival, visit:https://apnews.com/hub/cannes-film-festival

Stars convene for amfAR gala to raise millions for AIDS research

Stars convene for amfAR gala to raise millions for AIDS research ANTIBES, France (AP) — Artwork by Adrien Brody and James Franco and a chanc...
Diddy trial replay: What did Kid Cudi say about alleged break in, car explosion?New Foto - Diddy trial replay: What did Kid Cudi say about alleged break in, car explosion?

This story contains graphic descriptions that some readers may find disturbing. Rapper Kid Cudi took the stand inSean "Diddy" Combs' federal sex-crimes trial, levelingallegationsthat Combs broke into his home and locked his dog in a bathroom – and that his vehicleblew up in another incident– after the embattled mogul found out he was datingCassie Ventura Fine. The rapper, whose real name is Scott Mescudi, dated Ventura Fine briefly in 2011. But she told the court last week that when Combs learned of their relationship, helunged at her with a corkscrewand kicked her in the back. On May 22, jurors heard Mescudi's recollection of Combs' alleged abuse. The incidents are just some of the violent acts prosecutors say Combs undertook during a 20-year scheme to coerce women, including Ventura Fine, to take part in drug-fueled sex partiesknown as "freak offs"and prevent them from leaving his orbit. Jurors also heard fromGeorge Kaplan, a former assistant who alleged he saw Combs physically abuse multiple women during his time working for the rapper. Mylan Morales, a celebrity makeup artist, also told the court she saw injuries on Ventura Fine. Combs, 55, wasarrested in September 2024and charged with sex trafficking, racketeering and transportation to engage in prostitution. He has pleaded not guilty. Diddy on trial newsletter:Step inside the courtroom as music mogul faces sex-crimes charges. Following Mescudi's testimony, Morales, a celebrity makeup artist who worked for both Combs and Ventura Fine, recalled aviolent January 2010 incident. Morales remembered falling asleep on a couch in a suite at the Beverly Hills Hotel, where she was staying with Ventura Fine the weekend of the Grammy Awards. She woke up when Cassie entered the hotel room, and Combs later burst in and demanded to know where Ventura Fine was. He went into the bedroom and shut the door, and Morales told jurors she heard"yelling and screaming." "I was just frantic, and I didn't know what to do," Morales said, adding Combs then opened the door and stormed out. She didn't see any injuries on Combs, but she said Ventura Fine "had a swollen eyeand a busted lip and knots on her head." She said Ventura Fine seemed "distraught, upset" but refused to go to a hospital. Asked why she didn't call the police, Morales said shefeared for her life, and she never spoke about the incident with Combs or Ventura Fine. More:What Kid Cudi revealed Cassie told him about Diddy Mescudi testifiedthat Combs broke into his home after learning of his relationship with Ventura Fine. The "Pursuit of Happiness" rapper said the incident started after he received a call in December 2011 from Ventura Fine, whosounded "scared"and told him Combs had found out about them. "I didn't think she was still dealing with him," Mescudi said, adding that he picked up Ventura Fine and took her to a hotel because he wanted to make sure she was safe. The musician said he received a call fromCombs' former assistant Capricorn Clarklater in the day, saying the rapper was inside Mescudi's Los Angeles house. Mescudi said he began driving to his home and called Combs on the way, asking if he was inside. Combs, who sounded "calm," responded that he was waiting for Mescudi to arrive and that he wanted to speak to him. Mescudi said no one was ultimately inside. But his dog was locked up in the bathroom, whereas he normally lets his dog roam around the house freely. Some gifts he received from the luxury brand Chanel had also been opened. Mescudi told the court he reacted to the alleged break in by getting back in his car and calling Combs again because he wanted to "confront" and "fight him." Combs said he was willing to meet, but after Mescudi reconsidered "the gravity of the situation,"he decided against it. "I didn't know who he was with," he said. "I didn't know what his intentions were." Mescudi saidhe called the policeand made a report. After the incident, he also said he saw changes in his dog's behavior, as the animal became "jittery and on edge all the time." In January 2012, Mescudi said he got a call from his dogsitter saying that his car was on fire.Mescudi told the courtthat by the time he returned home, law enforcement officers were on the scene and hesaw a Molotov cocktailand the major damage to his vehicle. Jurors were then shownphotos of the destroyed Porsche. There was a large hole in the roof of the car and smoke damage on the doors and interiors. The testimony is setting the stage for an expected argument that Combs orchestrated the explosion. The incident came weeks after Mescudi said hewent to Connecticut with Ventura Fineto visit her family for Christmas. During that time, Combs texted him a couple times, wanting to speak and "get to the bottom of it." Combs had he was "in the dark" about his relationship with Ventura Fine, but Mescudi responded: "You broke into my house. You messed with my dog. I don't really wanna talk to you." During cross-examination, Mescudi said he left his door unlockedthe day of the alleged break-inand that there was no forced entry or damage to furniture, just opened Christmas gifts and his dog in the bathroom. He confirmed that Combs was calm on the phone when they spoke after the alleged incident, not cursing at or threatening him. Asked whether he thought Combs would return to his homewith a firearm,Mescudi said "at that point I didn't know. Maybe he would … This crossed a line." Asked about Ventura Fine's reaction to the alleged break in, Mescudi said his one-time girlfriend was "just really shook by the circumstance of him finding out about us," he said. Mescudi confirmed that Ventura Fine had told him aboutCombs' alleged physical abuse, "that he would hit her, sometimes kick her." When asked whether he was in love with her, Mescudi said "yeah." "Ms. Ventura was leading two different lives," defense lawyer Brian Steel said, to which Combs gave a slight nod. "She played you. That's your words," Steel said, implying that Ventura Fine had made both Combs and Mescudi believe they were the only person she was seeing. Mescudi nodded and said yes. When asked about their breakup, Mescudi said they ended things because of "the drama." "It was just getting out of hand" he said, adding he "just wanted to give it some space, for my safety and for her safety." One strange delay in Combs' daily legal proceedings: There was a long exchange between prosecutors and defense lawyersabout Mescudi's dog. The defense wanted to make sure thatMescudi didn't testifyabout the long-term effects the alleged break-in may have had on the dog or how the pup might have been "traumatized." "There might be some dog lovers on the jury,"defense lawyer Brian Steelexplained, adding jokingly "He's not going to testify about what the dog thought …it's a serious issue." Combs laughed at exchange, and the lawyers agreed there would be no testimony about the dog's apparent emotions, but prosecutors could ask about the immediate effects after the break-in. See photos:Kid Cudi's Porsche damaged in explosion allegedly orchestrated by Diddy Mescudi's testimonywas mostly soft-spoken as he recalled a brief courtship with Ventura Fine – and thealleged ire it drew from Combs.Mescudi didn't appear affected by the packed courtroom and frequently asked the prosecution to repeat questions. Kid Cudi did quip back at Combs' attorneys during his cross-examination. One lawyer asked whether Mescudi and Cassie had an "intimate relationship" and said they did everything together. That included hiking, to which Mescudi retorted, "Exercised? No, no. We watched a movie or two." Steel said they did drugs together, and Mescudi responded with a mocking, puzzled expression. "When you say drugs, what do you mean?" he asked, adding "we smoked some weed, yeah." The rapperwas calm throughout his testimony, even while describing concerns for his own safety. "Why did you have safety concerns?" Mescudi was asked by Combs' attorneys about his relationship with Cassie, to which hit back "Because I knewSean Combs was violent." Combs, sitting at the defense table, appeared unphased by Mescudi's testimony, staring forward and not reacting to thefellow rapper's statements. He briefly looked at the photos of the car show to the jury and at one point held his hand up to his mouth, appearing to yawn. Frederic Zemmour, the general manager of the L'Ermitage Beverly Hills luxury hotel, took the stand as jurors saw activity logs for Combs' stays there. For one of Combs' stays in 2015, the hotel's documents said that the rapper "ALWAYS spills candle wax on everythingand usesexcessive amounts of oil," and that his room should be placed "out of order upon departure for deep cleaning." The notes also said to "please authorize an extra $1000 when guest stays with us to cover any room damages." A housekeeping note said to "monitor outside his room/down the hall to spray air freshener." On one occasion, the record showed there was "candle wax on carpetsand night stands" and that a charge of $500 should be added for damage and cleaning. George Kaplan,a former assistant for Combs, testified that he witnessedCombs physically abuse Ventura Finewhile they were all traveling to Las Vegas on a private plane. He recalled hearing glass break and shatter during the flight and looking back to see Combs standing over Ventura Fine, holding a whisky glass above her. Ventura Fine was on her back with her legs up, trying to create space, and Combs was "angry," he said. There was a "tremendous commotion," Kaplan testified, and Ventura Fine screamed, "Isn't anybody seeing this?" Kaplan said no one on the planedid anything to help her,and he feared checking on Ventura Fine would jeopardize his career. In another instance in 2015, Kaplan said he walked into the bedroom at Combs' home and found Ventura Finelying on the bed crying,appearing to have a bruise above her right eye. Kaplan said Combs "asked me to pick up several over-the-counter lotions," including witch hazel, which Kaplan later learned they used to create an anti-swelling mixture. Kaplan said he resigned at the end of 2015 because he wasn't "comfortable or aligned with the physical behavior I had seen" and felt guilty about covering up alleged abuse. Kaplan also recalled an incident at Combs' Miami house where the rapper "threw a bunch of green apples" atmodel Gina Huynh. The apples were in a decorative bowl displayed near the entrance of the house. Combs was "very angry," Kaplan said, throwing the apples "hard" as Huynh was "trying to shield herself." Despite seeing the violence, Kaplan said he left and assumed the behavior was normal for the entertainment industry. The same night, Kaplan said he heard a commotion near the front gate of the home between Huynh and other male voices who were screaming. Huynh reportedly dated Combs on-and-off during the late 2010s. The court saw a text message that Kaplan sent to Combs in 2018 that featured a photo of Kim Porter on horseback on a beach. The text read: "No possible words rn. I am so so sorry and sending all of my condolences. Please hang in there. Love you." Porter was Combs' on-and-off partner from the 1990s into the 2000s. She died in 2018 of pneumonia, and she's the mother offour of Combs' seven children. When asked howPorter compared to other girlfriends, such as Ventura Fine, Kaplan said, "she was a special figure to him," and "she was vaunted above" the title of mere girlfriend. Kaplan praisedCombs' childrento the jurors and repeatedly spoke highly of the professional opportunities the rapper gave him in his former role. Still, he said, he only showed up to the courtroom because he was subpoenaed by federal officials. "I desperately did not want to come here," he said, and he and Combs nodded to each other as he walked by on this way out. Combs is facing federal sex-crimes and trafficking charges in a sprawling lawsuit that has eroded his status as a power player and kingmaker in the entertainment industry. He wasarrested in September 2024and has been charged with racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution. He haspleaded not guiltyto all five counts. Racketeering is the participation in an illegal scheme under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Statute, or RICO, as a way for the U.S. government to prosecute organizations that contribute to criminal activity. Using RICO law, which is typically aimed attargeting multi-person criminal organizations,prosecutors allegethat Combs coerced victims, some of whom they say were sex workers, through intimidation and narcotics to participate in "freak offs" — sometimes dayslong sex performances that federal prosecutors claim they have video of. The trial will not be televised, as cameras are typically not allowed in federal criminal trial proceedings. USA TODAY will be reporting live from the courtroom. Contributing: USA TODAY staff;Reuters If you are a survivor of sexual assault,RAINNoffers support through the National Sexual Assault Hotline at 800.656.HOPE (4673) andHotline.RAINN.organd en EspañolRAINN.org/es. If you or someone you know is a victim of domestic violence, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233 or text "START" to 88788. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Diddy trial replay: Kid Cudi alleges Combs broke in, locked away dog

Diddy trial replay: What did Kid Cudi say about alleged break in, car explosion?

Diddy trial replay: What did Kid Cudi say about alleged break in, car explosion? This story contains graphic descriptions that some readers ...
Jenna Bush Hager Recalls Pranking Dad George W. Bush with a Fake Tattoo: 'He Believed Me'New Foto - Jenna Bush Hager Recalls Pranking Dad George W. Bush with a Fake Tattoo: 'He Believed Me'

Nathan Congleton/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Jenna Bush Hager revealed that she once pranked her dad with a fake tattoo TheJenna & Friendshost noted that the tattoo was placed on her lower back and featured a Texas Longhorn, drawn by her twin sister, Barbara Bush Bush Hager noted that the former president expressed disappointment with her tattoo choice Jenna Bush Hagerinherited the pranking gene from her family and couldn't resist trying a few trickson her father, George W. Bush. On theMay 21 episode ofJenna & Friends, Bush Hager chatted withTodayhost Savannah Guthrie and revealed that she enlisted her twin sister, Barbara Bush, to play a joke on their father. "Barbara drew a Texas Longhorn in Sharpie right here," Bush Hager said while gesturing at her lower back, referring to the logo of her alma mater, the University of Texas at Austin. "I showed my dad and pretended I got one," she added. Guthrie remarked, "He believed you ... of course," to which Bush Hager agreed: "He believed me and he was like, 'OK, when you're 80, you know what that's going to look like.'" Nathan Congleton/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. A real tattoo is still a possibility for Hager, as Guthrie asked her to join her at her next tattoo appointment. "Would you get a tattoo with me?" Guthrie asked. "I think I would," Bush Hager answered hesitantly. "I might — I would maybe ... I didn't say no. I think I would, but I'm not 100% sure." Earlier this month, the former president's daughter detailedBush's unlikely friendship with Michelle Obamain an episode withJenna & Friendsand reveal that they strike a bond because they love humor. Discussing how jokes and teasing make their way into the Bush family, Bush Hager said, "We love to tease my dad. And he likes it, usually, if he's in a good mood. But also, I just realized why my dad and Mrs. Obama are friends! They have the same love language." Shealah Craighead/The White House via Getty The PEOPLE Appis now available in the Apple App Store! Download it now for the most binge-worthy celeb content, exclusive video clips, astrology updates and more! Bush Hager also shed light on what her mother, Laura Bush, is like with her dad. "My mom laughs hysterically at my dad," she said of former first lady. "My dad mainly makes fun of himself. He's self-deprecating, but my mom thinks he's the funniest person in the entire world." Read the original article onPeople

Jenna Bush Hager Recalls Pranking Dad George W. Bush with a Fake Tattoo: 'He Believed Me'

Jenna Bush Hager Recalls Pranking Dad George W. Bush with a Fake Tattoo: 'He Believed Me' Nathan Congleton/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via G...
Orleans Parish DA blasts inmate search delays as prosecutors face safety worriesNew Foto - Orleans Parish DA blasts inmate search delays as prosecutors face safety worries

NEW ORLEANS − Orleans Parish District Attorney Jason Williams stood at the windows of his office looking toward the nearby jail, where thebrazen May 16 jailbreakhas rattled his office like never before. Five inmates were still on the lam, including one escapee whose convictions on second-degree murder charges had led two of his prosecutors to flee the state. He had to request added security for his office. And he knew anxious residents wanted the men apprehended – and quickly. But Williams was also focused on another problem: Unraveling who may have aided an escape that he said appeared to be an "inside job." Already, one jail maintenance worker has been arrested. As he spoke to USA TODAY on May 21 in a paneled office with a leather sofa and political memorabilia, an aide whispered in his ear. He quickly headed for the exit, passing a detective who had worked the case of one escaped inmate. She handed him a miniature religious figure for protection. Williams climbed into the back of a waiting Lincoln SUV, riding the short distance to the sprawling Orleans Parish Prison, the jail run by the Orleans Parish Sheriff's Office and the catalyst for a massive manhunt that hasput this city on edge. He was there to meet a New Orleans police crime lab unit that was gathering evidence. New Orleans jail escape:Maps and videos show how it happened Earlier that morning, Williams said he asked the New Orleans Police whether the Sheriff's Office had requested crime lab staff collect evidence – including fingerprints and DNA – from where the inmates had escaped. He was told no formal request had been made. "I am deeply concerned that there was not an immediate request by the sheriff to our local crime lab to get in there and examine, document, preserve and collect all of the forensic evidence that was available there," he said. His office also asked the sheriff to preserve records such as emails and text messages to and from jail staff and contractors as well as surveillance camera footage, according to a copy of the request. A spokesperson for Sheriff Susan Hutson's office did not immediately respond to a message from USA TODAY seeking comment. But Huston, who has suspended her reelection campaign in the wake of the jailbreak, said in a statement on May 20 that she took "full accountability for this breach that occurred under my leadership. We've taken immediate action, including suspensions, an arrest, and full cooperation with the Attorney General's investigation." Already,three people have been charged with helpingthem: the maintenance worker who allegedly shut off a water pipe that facilitated the escape, and two women accused of helping the escapees with transportation or food afterward. An arrest affidavit for the maintenance worker said one of the inmates threatened to stab him with a "shank" − a homemade knife. Officials have said the men escaped by ripping out a toilet and climbing through a hole in the wall. Then they slipped onto a loading dock, shed their uniforms, scaled a wall and sprinted across Interstate 10, disappearing into the night. But not before leaving behind a mocking message on the wall that read: "To Easy LoL." On May 21, Michael Kennedy, a lawyer for maintenance worker Sterling Williams, told USA TODAY that his client argues he didn't know the men were planning to escape. Rather, he said his client told him that he responded to a request by a deputy, whose name he didn't remember, to unclog a toilet. That required him to shut off the water. The threat to "shank" him was just "prison vernacular," muttered without a directive to help them escape, Kennedy said. "He learned about the escape when he got to work Friday morning," Kennedy said. As the Orleans Parish district attorney works to untangle how the inmates pulled off the escape, and the Louisiana attorney general and other agencies are taking on their own reviews, an air of anxiety hangs over the city here as authorities hunt for thefive inmates still at large. It also worries Williams. The highest profile escapee is Derrick Groves, 27, who was convicted of two charges of second-degree murder and two charges of attempted second-degree murder in October in connection with a shooting during Mardi Gras in 2018, according to a statement from the district attorney's office. Groves has been awaiting sentencing on a manslaughter charge since October, according to a news release from the governor's office. Williams and two colleagues who left the state tried the second-degree murder case against Groves. Williams would not say if his office had gotten any credible threats. But the potential dangers have led the two attorneys to flee for their safety. "They're young. They've got families," he said. "They don't deserve to be in a situation." His office reached out to the victims and witnesses in the cases of the escapee and found "some of whom wanted to be relocated." New Orleans, he said, is too small to go unnoticed. He worries the dangers following the escape will chill people's willingness to testify and serve on juries in other cases. For now, his work is cut out for him. After a news conference outside the jail, Williams climbed into his SUV and headed off, with the fallout from the now-notorious jailbreak still yet to crest. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:New Orleans jailbreak: DA blasts search delays, raises safety worries

Orleans Parish DA blasts inmate search delays as prosecutors face safety worries

Orleans Parish DA blasts inmate search delays as prosecutors face safety worries NEW ORLEANS − Orleans Parish District Attorney Jason Willia...
Mahmoud Khalil and his attorneys tell judge his life, his family's would be at risk if he's deportedNew Foto - Mahmoud Khalil and his attorneys tell judge his life, his family's would be at risk if he's deported

Columbia University student Mahmoud Khalilshould be protected from deportation, which could put his life at risk, his attorneys argued Thursday. Ahead of a critical court hearing before an immigration judge in Louisiana that focused on whether Khalil was entitled to relief from deportation, including through asylum, Khalil met and held his newborn son for the first time. The Trump administration had sought to have the two separated by a plexiglass barrier. "His life is at stake," Khalil's attorney, Marc Van Der Hout, said. Khalil testified before the judge for more than two hours Thursday, describing his life from his childhood and journey to Columbia University to his campus activism, where he was a prominent pro-Palestinian voice during last year's demonstrations. "I spent a good time of my life fleeing from harm and advocating for the marginalized. That's what put me in danger," he said. "That is what I was protesting, that is what I will continue to protest. This is what everyone should protest." He also said his own safety and his family's would be in jeopardy if they were removed from the United States. Khalil said that returning to Syria "would be suicide." "I've been targeted for my political beliefs," he said. "The president labeled me as a terrorist sympathizer." When asked what he was afraid of if he were to be deported, Khalil said, kidnapping, assassination, torture or targeting of his family. He said he is most concerned about his family, because if he were deported, he would not want them to come with him for fear of their safety. "I've only spent one hour in one month of my son's life, and that was this morning," he said. Khalil was targeted for deportation by the Trump administration after he helped organize pro-Palestinian rallies on Columbia's campus. He has been detained at a facility in rural Jena, Louisiana, since March. Khalil is an Algerian citizen of Palestinian descent; he was born in a Palestinian refugee camp in Syria. He was a green card holder when he was detained. Trump Administration officials invoked a rarely used provision in immigration law saying the Secretary of State has the authority to deport someone who is determined to have "serious adverse foreign policy consequences for the United States." Immigration Judge Jamee Comans asked that the testimony Thursday focus on Khalil's application for asylum. "All I want to hear is why he can't go to Syria or Algeria," she said during the hearing. His attorneys called multiple expert witnesses on the Middle East and North Africa to testify that Khalil could be targeted by foreign governments, suffer persecution or torture if he were deported to Algeria or Syria. If the judge denies Khalil's applications for relief and reaffirms that he is removable from the U.S., Khalil's legal team can appeal. Before Thursday's hearing, Khalil's attorneys submitted hundreds of pages of new evidence opposing his deportation, which NBC News has reviewed. The evidence included several expert declarations from organizations and academics stating that Khalil's life would be in danger if he were deported to Algeria or Syria. In a letter from Amnesty International, the organization said it "oppose all forced returns of Syrian nationals and former habitual residents of Syria, including Palestinians, to any part of Syria," adding the situation there "remains incredibly volatile." In another letter, Muriam Haleh Davis, an Algerian historian and associate professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz, said Khalil would also be at risk in Algeria, writing that "Israel has a well-known history of assassinating pro-Palestinian intellectuals and politicians in North Africa." "Mr. Khalil, due to his visibility and the false allegations of his involvement with Hamas, could very well be a target," Davis said. Ahead of the hearing, Khalil was allowed to meet and hold his one-month old son, Deen, for the first time and meet with his wife, Dr. Noor Abdalla, for the first time since he was detained from his New York City apartment lobby. Initially, Trump administration officials declined Khalil's request for a "contact visit," citing a "no-contact" visitation policy at the Central Louisiana ICE Processing Center and security concerns. After negotiations, officials agreed to a "contact visit," Khalil's legal team said. Khalil's wife and newborn were also in the courtroom later Thursday. The baby occasionally fussed, and Khalil turned around and smiled at his wife and son. "Khalil had a contact visit with his wife and child this morning before his court hearing. But we're offering him even more: use the CBP Home app to self-deport," Department of Homeland Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said Thursday night. "The United States is offering illegal aliens $1,000 apiece and a free flight to self-deport now, which Kahlil can take advantage of by scheduling his departure through CBP Home." Khalil has not been accused of criminal conduct, but the Trump administration has argued it has the authority to deport him because he "led activities aligned to Hamas, a designated terrorist organization," a claim which Khalil and his legal team deny. NBC News reviewed more than 100 pages of documents the federal government submitted in its effort to deport Khalil, which showed that thegovernment appeared to rely on unverified tabloid articles about him. In April, Comans affirmed theTrump administration's argumentthat Khalil's beliefs threaten national security and justify his deportation. Khalil's attorneys on Thursday asked the judge to terminate the immigration proceedings, arguing that he was arrested without a warrant. However, the judge denied the motion. After hours of testimony, the judge instructed both parties to submit written closing arguments by June 2. As of now, Khalil will remain detained in Louisiana.

Mahmoud Khalil and his attorneys tell judge his life, his family's would be at risk if he's deported

Mahmoud Khalil and his attorneys tell judge his life, his family's would be at risk if he's deported Columbia University student Mah...

 

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