EU chief von der Leyen heads to Scotland for trade talks with TrumpNew Foto - EU chief von der Leyen heads to Scotland for trade talks with Trump

By Andrew Gray and Andrea Shalal BRUSSELS/EDINBURGH (Reuters) -European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen headed to Scotland on Saturday ahead of a meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump on Sunday afternoon, Commission spokespeople said, as officials from both sides said they were nearing a trade agreement. Trump, in Scotland for a few days of golfing and bilateral meetings, told reporters upon his arrival on Friday evening that he was looking forward to meeting with von der Leyen, calling her a highly respected leader. He repeated his view that there was a 50-50 chance that the U.S. and the 27-member European Union could reach a framework trade pact, adding that Brussels wanted to "make a deal very badly." If it happened, he said it would be the biggest trade agreement reached yet by his administration, surpassing the $550 billion accord reached with Japan earlier this week. U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick also departed Washington for Scotland on Saturday to engage in high-level talks with EU officials before the meeting between Trump and von der Leyen, said an administration source who spoke on condition of anonymity. For rolling updates on tariffs, check out our liveblog > "We're cautiously optimistic that there will be a deal reached," the source said. "But it's not over till it's over." The European Commission on Thursday said a negotiated trade solution with the United States was within reach, even as EU members voted to approve countertariffs on 93 billion euros ($109 billion) of U.S. goods in case the talks collapse. EU diplomats say a possible deal between Washington and Brussels would likely include a broad 15% tariff on EU goods imported into the U.S., mirroring the U.S.-Japan deal, along with a 50% tariff on European steel and aluminum. The broad tariff rate would be half the 30% duties that Trump has threatened to slap on EU goods from August 1. To obtain a deal, Trump said the EU would have to "buy down" that 30% tariff rate, although he gave no specifics. He told reporters there was "not a lot" of wiggle room on the 50% tariffs that the U.S. is imposing on steel and aluminum imports, adding, "because if I do it for one, I have to do it for all." It remains unclear if Washington would exempt EU imports from other sectoral tariffs on automobiles, pharmaceuticals and other goods that have already been announced or are pending. Combining goods, services and investment, the EU and the United States are each other's largest trading partners by far. The American Chamber of Commerce in Brussels warned in March that any conflict jeopardized $9.5 trillion of business in the world's most important commercial relationship. (Reporting by Andrew Gray in Brussels and Andrea Shalal in EdinburghEditing by Nick Zieminski and Matthew Lewis)

EU chief von der Leyen heads to Scotland for trade talks with Trump

EU chief von der Leyen heads to Scotland for trade talks with Trump By Andrew Gray and Andrea Shalal BRUSSELS/EDINBURGH (Reuters) -European...
He lived an immigrant's nightmare. One problem: He's a citizen, got his arrest on videoNew Foto - He lived an immigrant's nightmare. One problem: He's a citizen, got his arrest on video

PALM BEACH COUNTY, Florida ‒ Kenny Laynez's cellphone camera capturedevery undocumented immigrant's nightmareon video when he was arrested. One problem: He is a U.S. citizen. The video, shot May 2, showed Florida Highway Patrol officers and Border Patrol agents stopping the 18-year-old landscaper and his three coworkers ‒ one of them his mother ‒ as they drove past luxury buildings to a job. The camera captured officers dragging his coworkers out of their van by their necks and twisting Laynez's arms and pushing him face down to the pavement. The video also recorded an officer shooting one of Laynez's coworkers with a Taser, saying he had resisted arrest. "I have rights. I was born and raised here," Laynez told the officers, according to a copy of the video shared by the Guatemalan-Maya Center ofLake Worth Beach. "You don't have any rights here. You are a 'Migo,' brother," the officer said, referring to his ethnicity. He hurried the 18-year-old into a van. Laynez was released from a Riviera Beach federal facility six hours later, with the video still on his cellphone. His coworkers, including the one who was tased, were undocumented and weren't as fortunate. They were transferred to theKrome Detention Center in Miami. Laynez said they are free on bail but fear they will be arrested if they show up in court. Deportations accelerate:Shock and anger: Florida immigrant communities react to 'Operation Tidal Wave' The Palm Beach Post, part of the USA TODAY Network, recently interviewed Laynez and made multiple attempts to contact FHP, ICE and Border Patrol for comment about the incident and the body-camera footage, as well as multiple requests for copies of the arrest reports. None of them responded. Laynez said he pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of obstruction without violence simply to get the incident over with. He entered a pretrial diversion program on June 4. The state will drop the charges July 30 if he completes the program by then. "They treated us like dogs they picked up in the street," Layzez said. "They are just pulling over people and kidnapping people who are hard-working." "We are not criminals. We were just heading to work." Trump at 'Alligator Alcatraz':Facts on Florida Everglades immigration detention center Videos like Laynez's showing federal agents arresting day laborers have left immigrant families across Palm Beach County and the rest of the country in fear. Even families in which some members are documented have laid low, sometimes not going to school or church. West Palm Beach attorney Jack Scarola has reviewed Laynez's footage and has talked with him about the incident. He said the footage shows how FHP and Border Patrol agents are under "extreme pressure" to meet daily arrest and deportation quotas and that the response has led to a "reckless disregard" of the rights of both undocumented and legal immigrants and even the rights of U.S. citizens. "All of us should be not only offended, but outraged by that misconduct," Scarola said. "And if we fail to appropriately respond to that outrageous disregard of the civil rights of others, all of our civil rights are in serious jeopardy." Kenny Laynez was born in 2005 at St. Mary's Medical Center in West Palm Beach to a Guatemalan single mother who is in the U.S. legally but is not a citizen. He attended Palm Beach Lakes High School and got a job at the landscaping company where his mother drove crews to work sites. Neither Laynez nor his mother works for the company any longer. Laynez said he and his mother met two coworkers on May 2 at a gas station and drove to a landscaping job near North Palm Beach. The coworkers, Esdras and Marroquin, are undocumented but neither had criminal records, Laynez said. The Post is withholding their last names to protect their families. Although his mother wasn't speeding, just after they crossed the bridge on Singer Island, they heard a police siren. An officer rolled down a tinted window and signaled to her to pull over. The officer asked where they were headed. Laynez said they were going to work and the officer took his mother's license and the truck's registration and insurance. The officer returned and said his mother's license was suspended, to all their surprise. Laynez said he asked the officer why he pulled them over. He didn't see how the officer could have known his mother's license was suspended by running the company truck's license plate. Laynez said the officer asked if they were "illegal." Laynez said they were not and asked what that had to do with the license. A van pulled up and more armed agents swarmed the truck. A female officer approached his window and ordered them in Spanish to shut off their phones. Laynez said that at that moment, he started recording with his phone instead: "I assumed something was going to happen." What he captured on video begins with a question. "Who in here is illegal?" The officer asked in Spanish. "Whoever takes longer to answer will get more charges and spend more time in jail." Esdras, who is seen clenching a towel in his hands, raised his hand. The male agent ordered them to open the door. Laynez grabbed onto the handle. "Wait, hold up," Laynez said. "You don't have the right to do that." "I don't have a right?" the officer said with a laugh. He reached inside the car and popped the door open. The video shows an agent grabbing Marroquin by the hair and placing his neck in the crook of his arm. Another agent pulled Esdras, called Kevin by his coworkers, by the leg and tightened his hands around his neck. The video then shows Laynez stepping out of the car,but an officer who had ordered him to get on the ground pushes him from behind, twisting his arms and kneeling him to the pavement. Esdras stood rigidly as three officers tried to force him to the ground. They told him in English to lie down, while Laynez urged him in Spanish not to resist. "Aye! What are you doing? That is not how you arrest people," Laynez said. The video shows an officer pulling out a yellow Taser and firing twice into Esdras' stomach. Laynez saw his body and legs spasm before he slammed onto the pavement, crying. An agent pressed his knee on Laynez's back and forced him face down to the pavement. An officer later ordered Laynez to stand up, but he said he was too scared to move. "I am not going to get up because you are going to do to me whatever you were doing to Esdras," Laynez said. "That is not how you arrest people." "Be quiet," an officer said, cutting him off and picking him up. "I've got the right to talk," Laynez said. "I was born and raised here." "You have no rights here. You are a "Migo," brother," the officer said in a comment Laynez said sounded like racial profiling. Laynez's mother can be heard crying in the background. Laynez's phone continued recording on the sidewalk and captured a conversation between the agents over the next four minutes. "Once she got the proper spread on him, he was done," the officer said. "You're funny, bro." "It was funny," an agent said, laughing. "It was," another chimed in with laughter. Another agent said more people are resisting their immigration arrests. "They are starting to resist now," an agent said. "We're going to end up shooting someone." On the video, an agent recounted how Laynez said they didn't have the right to come in the door and says: "I already told you to come out. If you don't come out, I'll pull you out." "God damn. Wow," the officer cheered. "Nice!" "Just remember you can smell too with a $30,000 bonus," another officer chimes in. It was not immediately clear to what bonus the officer referred. On the tape, an officer is heard saying that Laynez's coworker was resisting arrest, so he should be charged. "He was being a d*** right now. That is why we tased," an agent said. The phone recording stopped shortly after that exchange, its memory out of storage. The agents confirmed Laynez's mother had legal status and issued her a ticket for driving with a suspended license. Laynez said she told them he was a U.S. citizen and showed them a picture of his Social Security card. They still took Laynez into custody. Laynez said that before leaving, the officers held his mother's driver's license to her face and tore it in half. Once at the Riviera Beach facility, Laynez said he saw rows of men. Most spoke Spanish and wore construction clothes like his own. Two looked like they were his age, 17 or 18. Laynez said he appeared to be the only one inside the packed room who spoke English. He said the men told them they had been detained for hours without water or food. Laynez wanted to use the bathroom, but the only toilet available was out in the open, without any doors or covers. After almost four hours, the female officer who detained them took Laynez to a room and asked for his date of birth three times, even though he had already written it down for another officer. Finally, she came out with a ziplocked bag with his phone, wallet and headphones. In Spanish, she asked him to unlock it. Laynez said she told him she needed to see if he had filmed videos of the arrest. Laynez said he unlocked his phone, closed all his apps and locked it again. He said he declined to open it and set it down on the table. He said she told him they would wait in that room until he opened it. She asked again for his date of birth. Laynez said he trembled. That was his password. Laynez said the officer threatened to press charges if he didn't unlock his phone, but then a person who appeared to be a supervisor interrupted them. Laynez said the supervisor said Laynez wasn't supposed to be in that room because he is a U.S. citizen. The supervisor took Laynez's fingerprints and said it was only to leave a record that he had been in the facility. Then he told Laynez he couldn't leave without signing some paperwork and that he would have to show up in court. "What did I do?" Laynez said he asked while signing. "I didn't do anything. Why do I have to present myself in court?" The arrest report said Laynez was being charged with nonviolent police obstruction. In a copy of the report that Laynez provided to The Palm Beach Post, officers wrote that Esdras had resisted his arrest. Laynez is not mentioned. After six hours, Laynez said he walked out the door of the Riviera Beach building and ordered an Uber home. He had almost 100 missed calls from his mother. Laynez said the footage of the arrests haunts him, but he doesn't regret filming. "I would basically have nothing, no evidence," Laynez said. "And no one would believe what happened or how they escalated the situation. "There might be even more happening that is not being recorded." EmailValentina Palmatvpalm@pbpost.comand follow her on X at @ValenPalmB. This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post:ICE raids Florida: Citizen lived immigrant nightmare of being arrested

He lived an immigrant's nightmare. One problem: He's a citizen, got his arrest on video

He lived an immigrant's nightmare. One problem: He's a citizen, got his arrest on video PALM BEACH COUNTY, Florida ‒ Kenny Laynez...
Israel kills dozens in Gaza amid growing famine fueled by restricted aid flowNew Foto - Israel kills dozens in Gaza amid growing famine fueled by restricted aid flow

Israeli gunfire and airstrikes killed more than 50 Palestinians in Gaza on Saturday, including some who were waiting overnight for aid, according to local health officials, continuing a pattern that has drawninternational criticismas the country's"drip-feeding of aid"into the enclave continues to claim lives. Dr. Khalil Al-Daqran, a spokesperson for Gaza's Health Ministry, said at least 61 people were killed in Gaza so far this weekend, including those waiting in line for aid at the Zikim crossing with Israel, "a number of starving children" and a group recovered in southern Khan Younis. In the Zikim area, at least a dozen were killed as they waited for aid trucks, according toThe Associated Press. The Israel Defense Forces did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The latestkillings near an aid distribution sitecome amid what many have described as Israel's"drip-feeding of aid" into Gaza, a tactic that has contributed to more than 120 deaths frommalnutritionand lefta third of the population on the brink of starvation. The criticism is disputed by the Israeli military, which says it has allowed inan average of 70 trucks a day since May. But aid agencies say hundreds more trucks a day are necessary to feed Gaza's starving population. Late Saturday, Israel's Foreign Ministry announced that a "humanitarian pause" will be observed Sunday morning in Gaza to allow aid to reach civilian centers. Five deaths due to malnutrition were recorded in Gaza in the last 24 hours, the Palestinian Health Ministry in the territory said on Saturday. At least 127 people, including 85 children, have died as a result of hunger in the enclave since Oct. 7, 2023, according to the ministry. Earlier this week, 25 countries, including Britain, Japan and a host of European nations, issued a joint statement insisting that the war in Gaza "must end now." The foreign ministers of the nations called therecent killings of Palestinians seeking aid"horrific," which Gaza's Health Ministry and the U.N. human rights officeestimate to be over 800. The latest prior instance involved the killing ofat least 67 peopleas they waited for U.N. aid trucks in northern Gaza on Sunday. Israel said its military had fired warning shots into the crowd to remove "an immediate threat," adding that casualty reports were inflated. The Israeli military, whichcontrols the entry of all aidinto the besieged enclave, blames the U.N. and other aid agencies for failing to distribute the supplies. U.N. spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric told reporters this week that there was "a lack of willingness" from Israel to allow them to distribute aid. Israel has accused Hamas of stealing U.S.-funded aid, citing that as a main rationale, along with the U.S., for proposinga new armed, private aid operation. But an investigation by theU.S. Agency for International Developmentfound "no reports alleging Hamas" benefited fromU.S.-funded supplies. In a statement, the IDF said USAID's report ignores "clear and explicit evidence that Hamas exploits humanitarian aid to sustain its fighting capabilities," and criticizes the military "for routing decisions made specifically to protect humanitarian staff and shipments." "The USAID report represents a striking example of biased framing," the IDF said. "Instead of holding Hamas and other terror groups accountable for looting and obstructing aid from reaching the population, it assigns 'indirect responsibility' to Israel for the actions of armed militants and terror organizations."

Israel kills dozens in Gaza amid growing famine fueled by restricted aid flow

Israel kills dozens in Gaza amid growing famine fueled by restricted aid flow Israeli gunfire and airstrikes killed more than 50 Palestinian...
Johnny Depp Makes Surprise Appearance at Alice Cooper Concert to Perform Ozzy Osbourne TributeNew Foto - Johnny Depp Makes Surprise Appearance at Alice Cooper Concert to Perform Ozzy Osbourne Tribute

Jim Dyson/Getty Alice Cooperpaid tribute toOzzy Osbourneduring his latest performance in London — but not without a little help from some pals, includingJohnny Depp. The rocker, 77, showed love for Osbourne on Friday, July 25, three days after hisfamily announcedhis death at age 76. Cooper surprised the crowd at London's O2 Arena with a special appearance from Depp, 62, as the group performed Black Sabbath's 1970 hit "Paranoid." Depp — who is Cooper's Hollywood Vampires bandmate — walked on stage with a guitar in hand halfway through "Paranoid." Cooper, rocking an Osbourne T-shirt, later raised his fist in the air as the song came to a close, as seen in concert video footage shared onYouTube. Jim Dyson/Getty The performance itself was part of Cooper's sold-out London gig with Judas Priest, timed to the Alice Cooper band's first new album in over 50 years,The Revenge of Alice Cooper. The LP marks the band's first album of new material since 1973'sMuscle of Love. https://people-app.onelink.me/HNIa/kz7l4cuf To celebrate the occasion, Depp stuck around for one final song after the Osbourne tribute, performing "School's Out" with original band members Dennis Dunaway, Neal Smith and Michael Bruce. Cooper and Depp are longtime collaborators themselves, performing in the supergroup Hollywood Vampires alongside Joe Perry and Tommy Henriksen since 2012. They released their most recent studio album together,Rise, in 2019. Jim Dyson/Getty In an interview withPlanet Rockon July 25, Cooper shared memories of Osbourne, whom he said he shared a "mutual respect" for after collaborating and performing at the same shows over the years. "I was on my way to the stage when I heard about [his death]," Cooper said. "And I went, 'Oh, that's not right.' He just did this [show]. And I saw him. He was signing well. But when it finally hit, it was just one of those, 'Yeah.' Even though you know it's coming ... what a shock to the system." "At the end of the show, I just said, 'Everybody, let's say goodnight to Ozzy. And everybody just [chanted], 'Ozzy, Ozzy.' He was a very beloved character in rock," continued the rocker. Cooper also called Osbourne a "lifer" in rock music during an appearance onThe Scott Mills Breakfast Show. "There's certain guys who are lifers. The Stones, The Beatles — that are still doing it," Cooper said. "And doing it amazingly well. And I just felt, 'I'm going to do this til' I can't do it.' And I think Ozzy was the same thing." Osbourne's family announced his death in a statement shared with PEOPLE, revealing that he was "with his family and surrounded by love," five years after the rocker announced in January 2020 that he wasdiagnosed in 2003 with Parkinson's disease. Osbourne was also honored byYungblud, Elton John,Jason Momoa,Gene Simmonsand others following his death. Read the original article onPeople

Johnny Depp Makes Surprise Appearance at Alice Cooper Concert to Perform Ozzy Osbourne Tribute

Johnny Depp Makes Surprise Appearance at Alice Cooper Concert to Perform Ozzy Osbourne Tribute Jim Dyson/Getty Alice Cooperpaid tribute toOz...
Billy Joel Says There Was 'Bad Blood' After Elton John Suggested He Go to Rehab: 'That Really Hurt Me'New Foto - Billy Joel Says There Was 'Bad Blood' After Elton John Suggested He Go to Rehab: 'That Really Hurt Me'

Neilson Barnard/Getty; Steve Granitz/WireImage Billy Joelsays there was once "bad blood" between him andElton John. In the second part of a new two-part HBO documentaryBilly Joel: And So It Goes, the "Piano Man" singer opens up about how the "Your Song" musician's public declaration that he needed rehab caused tension between them. "Elton had made a comment that he thought I needed real rehab," Joel, 76, says in the film, referring to an interview John did withRolling Stonein 2011. "He chalked it up to, 'Oh, he's a drunk.' And that really hurt me." Kevin Mazur/WireImage He continues: "I said wait a minute? Don't you know me better than that? And there was bad blood for a little while. There was a dovetailing of things that happened during that time." Joel and John, 78, are longtime friends and tourmates. Though Joel says in the first part of the film that he once "resented" the comparisons between the two stars, he eventually grew to embrace it, and they toured together on their Face to Face tour starting in 1994. They were fresh off a 2010 leg of their joint tour when John toldRolling Stonethat they'd had "so many cancelled tours because of illnesses and various other things, alcoholism." "He's going to hate me for this, but every time he goes to rehab they've been light... I love you Billy, and this is tough love," John said of Joel, who went to rehab in 2005. Joel notes in the doc that John's comments made him feel "clobbered" and it was "rock bottom" for him. "I was disillusioned with what I thought it was all supposed to mean," he says. "It was like all the signs were pointing to me: Enough. And I wrote this letter to the band. 'I don't want to do this anymore. I'm gonna stop.'" https://people-app.onelink.me/HNIa/kz7l4cuf Joel previously entered rehab at the Betty Ford Center in 2005 as part of an "ultimatum" given to him by then-wife Katie Lee. (They split in 2009 after five years of marriage.) Following his stint at the clinic, the "Vienna" performer took a step back from the spotlight and stopped touring. In 2023, Joel told theLos Angeles Timesthat he quit drinking "a couple of years ago." "I stopped a couple of years ago," he told the outlet. "It wasn't a big AA kick. I just got to a point where I'd had enough. I didn't enjoy being completely inebriated, and it probably created more problems in my life than I needed." The second part of the doc.Billy Joel: And So It Goeswill premiere on July 25. Read the original article onPeople

Billy Joel Says There Was 'Bad Blood' After Elton John Suggested He Go to Rehab: 'That Really Hurt Me'

Billy Joel Says There Was 'Bad Blood' After Elton John Suggested He Go to Rehab: 'That Really Hurt Me' Neilson Barnard/Getty...

 

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