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Kardashians’ Longtime Bodyguard Mason Haynes Dies in Motorcycle Crash Two Days Before His 53rd Birthday

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Hal Williams

Mason Haynes, a veteran celebrity bodyguard who spent years providing close protection to the Kardashian-Jenner family and other high-profile clients, has died following a motorcycle accident. He was 52.

Haynes died on July 4, according to a GoFundMe campaign organized on behalf of his family, just two days before what would have been his 53rd birthday. His death was confirmed through the fundraiser and through tributes shared by his employer and loved ones in the days that followed.

“Two days before what would have been his 53rd birthday, Mason’s life was taken far too soon in a tragic road traffic accident,” the fundraiser’s description read. “He leaves behind his devoted wife Fay, his daughter Brooke, his son Noah, a loving family, and an extraordinary circle of friends spread across the world.”

The campaign, which aims to help cover memorial costs and ease the financial strain on his family during their grief, described Haynes in warm terms as someone whose presence extended well beyond his professional role. “Some people pass through life. Others leave a mark on everyone they meet,” the fundraiser stated. “Mason Haynes was one of those rare, exceptional people.” It went on to call him “a man who made people feel welcome from the moment they met him,” someone “who would cross countries to help a friend,” and “who never let a loved one down and who saw the deep qualities in people that others often overlooked.” The tribute added that he was remembered as “a protector,” “a mentor” and “a prankster,” calling him “a giant in every sense of the word, with an even bigger heart.”

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Haynes’ employer, Trojan Security UK, also paid tribute to him on Instagram on July 6, sharing a photo of him alongside Kris Jenner. “We would like to pay homage to an absolute legend in the Close Protection game,” the company wrote. “Big Mason. Gone too soon. Rest easy and fly high Brother.”

Haynes built a decades-long career in the close protection industry after deciding to work in security full-time following college. Speaking to London Now in a 2018 interview, he traced the origins of his path in the field back to his early adulthood, when he needed work to help pay for his education. “I then found a full-time job in Scorpion Security, who were the security company hired by Café De Paris in London, among others,” he said. “Because there were a number of celebrity patrons, I started doing what you might call ‘close protection,’ which became permanent contracts with several celebrities.”

The Kardashian-Jenner family became among his earliest and most prominent clients. “Initially, I worked with the Kardashian family, namely Kim, Kris, Kendall and Kanye too,” Haynes told the outlet. His client list eventually expanded well beyond the family, and he went on to provide security for comedian Kevin Hart, singer Charlie Puth, Formula 1 driver Lewis Hamilton and rapper Nicki Minaj. “Additionally, I was one of Kevin Hart’s bodyguards,” he said. “Currently I’m Charlie Puth’s personal protection, as well as Lewis Hamilton’s, and recently went to Dubai with him and Nicki Minaj.”

Haynes’ work with the Kardashian family placed him at the center of one of its most harrowing episodes. He was part of the security detail protecting Kim Kardashian during her armed robbery in Paris in October 2016, an incident that drew international headlines and prompted the family to significantly overhaul its approach to security in the years that followed. Asked in the 2018 interview whether any job had ever left him injured, Haynes pointed to that night. “Most prominently you’d have to talk about the Paris robbery on Kim Kardashian,” he said, before adding, “although I can’t go into much detail about that, I was part of that team, and that incident was simply a set of unfortunate circumstances which led to something bad happening.”

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Beyond his work protecting celebrities, Haynes was also known for founding Bodyguards Against Bullying, an international personal-safety initiative aimed at extending some of the awareness and protective instincts of his profession into broader public life.

Tributes to Haynes have continued to circulate in the days since news of his death became public, with friends, colleagues and members of the entertainment security community remembering him as a steady, deeply trusted presence who worked behind the scenes for some of the most photographed families in the world while maintaining close, lasting relationships with the people he protected. Photos shared alongside the tributes, including images of Haynes with Kris Jenner at Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris in 2015 and with Kim Kardashian and Kanye West earlier in his career, reflected the length and closeness of his ties to the family.

The GoFundMe campaign remains active as Haynes’ family works through funeral arrangements and the broader financial and emotional toll of his sudden death. Organizers have framed the fundraiser as an effort to give Haynes “the send-off he truly deserves” while easing what they described as the immediate financial pressures that often follow a sudden and devastating loss.

Haynes is survived by his wife, Fay, and his two children, Brooke and Noah. Friends and colleagues from across the entertainment and personal security industries have continued to share memories of him in the days following his death, describing a man whose reputation in the close protection field was matched by the personal loyalty he showed to the people in his life, both on and off the job.

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Australian Shares Slide 0.70% to 8,778 as Miners and Energy Stocks Track Overnight Wall Street Losses

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Australia Housing Market 2026: Two-Speed Boom Persists as Prices Hit

SYDNEY — Australian shares closed lower Friday, with the S&P/ASX 200 falling 62.2 points, or 0.70%, to 8,778.5, as weakness in mining and energy stocks weighed on the benchmark index following a rough overnight session on Wall Street.

The decline extended a softer patch for the local market after Thursday’s session, when the index gave back early gains to finish only marginally lower at 8,840.7 points. Friday’s open had already been expected to be soft, with futures pricing in a roughly 26-point, or 0.3%, decline heading into the session after major U.S. indexes fell sharply overnight. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed down 0.3%, the S&P 500 fell 0.6%, and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.5% as chip stocks led losses on Wall Street, souring sentiment heading into the Australian trading day.

Gold miners were among the hardest hit sectors on the local bourse. Overnight, gold futures fell 1.8% to $3,979 an ounce, driven by growing expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve could deliver a further interest rate increase, which tends to reduce demand for the precious metal by raising the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets. That pullback in gold prices weighed heavily on ASX-listed gold miners, including Evolution Mining and Newmont Corporation, both of which were tipped for a difficult finish to the trading week.

Energy stocks similarly struggled after oil prices retreated overnight. According to Bloomberg data, West Texas Intermediate crude fell 0.7% to $79.05 a barrel, pressuring shares of Santos and Woodside Energy Group as investors weighed the impact of softer crude prices on the sector’s near-term earnings outlook.

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Not every corner of the market moved lower. Retail giant Harvey Norman Holdings drew a bullish note from Bell Potter, which retained its buy rating on the stock while trimming its price target to $6.00, implying potential upside of roughly 26% from current levels. The broker also pointed to an expected dividend yield above 6% for the 2027 financial year, noting that despite a more challenging retail environment expected in the first half of that year, Harvey Norman’s shares continued to trade at what the broker considered an attractive forward earnings multiple of around 13 times, even as analysts anticipated a recovery weighted toward the second half of the coming financial year.

Elsewhere in company-specific news, aluminum producer Alcoa cut its 2026 alumina production guidance, lowering its forecast to a range of 9.5 million to 9.6 million tonnes, down 0.2 million to 0.3 million tonnes from prior guidance, while trimming its shipment forecast to a range of 11.5 million to 11.6 million tonnes. The company’s aluminium production guidance was left unchanged. The revised outlook, announced after the U.S. market close, sent Alcoa shares down 2.5% in after-hours trading, a move that rippled into sentiment around Australian-listed alumina and aluminium producers given the close ties between the two markets.

REA Group also made headlines Friday after confirming a deal to sell its Housing.com business in India to Aurum PropTech. Under the terms of the agreement, REA Group’s Indian unit, REA India, will receive Aurum shares valued at approximately $68 million as consideration for the sale, rather than a cash payment. The transaction will lift REA India’s equity stake in Aurum to 24.9% from 5.5% upon completion, with that stake to be accounted for by REA Group as a financial asset going forward. The company said it expects to book an overall loss on the divestment of approximately $110 million, reflecting a goodwill impairment and associated transaction costs. The sale follows a broader strategic review of REA Group’s Indian operations, which had already seen the company sell its PropTiger business to Aurum and close its Housing Edge unit earlier in the current financial year.

Corporate Travel Management also featured in Friday’s trading updates, though not for a positive reason. The company announced that Shelley Sorrenson will step down as Company Secretary and Group Chief Legal Officer effective August 14, with the company saying it would update the market once a replacement had been appointed. Corporate Travel Management’s shares have remained suspended from trading on the ASX since August 22 last year, when the company first requested a trading halt before moving into a voluntary suspension days later while it investigated potential issues requiring the rectification and restatement of prior financial statements.

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In broader merger and acquisition news, Coles confirmed it would not proceed with a potential acquisition of veterinary care business Greencross, walking away from a deal that had been the subject of market speculation since news of a potential transaction first emerged on July 1. Private equity firm TPG Capital originally acquired Greencross in 2019 for approximately $675 million, and reports had suggested the business could command a price closer to $4 billion in a potential sale this time around, a substantial sum relative to Coles’ roughly $30 billion market capitalization that likely would have required the supermarket giant to take on additional debt or pursue a capital raising to fund the purchase. News of the potential deal had already triggered a negative reaction in both Coles and rival Woolworths shares earlier in the month.

Friday’s session capped a mixed week for Australian equities, with the benchmark index oscillating within a relatively narrow band as investors weighed a combination of global interest rate expectations, commodity price swings and company-specific developments across the mining, retail and travel sectors. With gold and oil prices both under pressure and Wall Street sentiment souring heading into the weekend, traders said the local market would likely remain sensitive to further shifts in U.S. Federal Reserve rate expectations and any additional developments affecting commodity prices in the sessions ahead.

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Telstra reveals cause of 'unacceptable' network outage

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Telstra reveals cause of 'unacceptable' network outage

Telstra says it is “deeply sorry” after revealing the cause of a service outage that left train networks in disarray and customers unable to dial triple zero.

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Is OpenAI Signaling That Robots Are Next?

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Is OpenAI Signaling That Robots Are Next?

cyborg with robot

PhonlamaiPhoto/iStock via Getty Images

By Christopher Gannatti, CFA

There is a version of the OpenAI (OPENAI) story that runs through language, with the company that gave the world ChatGPT, GPT-4 and the agentic systems now beginning to reshape knowledge work. That

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Arrow shares rise following update

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Arrow shares rise following update

Shares in David Flanagan-led Arrow Minerals rose by more than 65 per cent on Friday, following a significant update relating to its operations in Guinea.

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Taco Bell Lettuce Supplied by Taylor Farms Investigated as Source of US Cyclospora Outbreak Nationwide

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Taco Bell Lettuce Supplied by Taylor Farms Investigated as Source

Shredded iceberg lettuce supplied by Taylor Farms and sold at select Taco Bell restaurants has been identified as a potential source of a growing multistate outbreak of cyclosporiasis, according to multiple people familiar with the investigation, as case counts continue to climb across the country.

The link was first reported by The Washington Post on July 16, citing two people familiar with the ongoing investigation. CNN separately confirmed the connection through a source familiar with the matter. Neither the Food and Drug Administration nor the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has publicly confirmed Taylor Farms or Taco Bell as the source, and officials have continued to describe the link as a potential one rather than a confirmed cause.

The outbreak, caused by a microscopic parasite that leads to cyclosporiasis, has expanded rapidly since it began in May. According to CDC data published Tuesday, nearly 7,000 cases have been confirmed or are under investigation nationwide since May 1, with confirmed cases running more than six times higher than they were at the same point last year. At least 141 hospitalizations have been reported, though no deaths have been linked to the outbreak. Separate reporting has cited slightly different case tallies, with one count putting confirmed cases at 1,645 and more than 5,100 additional cases still under investigation, underscoring how quickly the numbers have been shifting as health officials continue gathering data.

While cases have been reported across the country, the outbreak connected to the lettuce is considered a regional cluster centered in the Midwest. The CDC has identified at least 400 cases tied specifically to this cluster across four states — Michigan, Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky — corresponding to where the affected Taco Bell locations are believed to be located, according to a source who spoke with CNN. Officials cautioned that the lettuce supplied to those restaurants may have also been distributed to other locations beyond the four states currently linked to the cluster.

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Michigan has emerged as the epicenter of the outbreak, with the state’s health department reporting more than 4,300 cyclospora cases as part of its investigation, a tally that exceeds the CDC’s own case count for the broader outbreak. State health officials said they had interviewed more than 1,000 people as part of their investigation and had previously flagged lettuce or salad greens as a potential source even before the specific link to Taylor Farms and Taco Bell was reported. The department acknowledged some uncertainty in attributing every illness to a single source, saying it could not say with certainty that every case was connected to the same exposure, but noted that the sharp, concentrated rise in cases strongly suggested that the vast majority of the illnesses stemmed from a shared outbreak. If confirmed, health officials said the cluster would represent the largest cyclospora outbreak recorded in the United States.

Taco Bell responded to the growing scrutiny with a statement Thursday, saying the company had taken proactive steps in response to conversations with public health officials. “Based on ongoing conversations with public health officials, and out of an abundance of caution, Taco Bell has taken immediate action to voluntarily remove potentially impacted lettuce from a supplier in select states,” the company said. The chain added that the ingredient in question was being permanently removed from its supply chain nationwide and would be replaced within 24 hours in the affected states. In an earlier statement issued Tuesday, a Taco Bell spokesperson said the company had voluntarily and temporarily removed limited ingredients from some restaurants as a precaution, while noting that public health officials had not at that point confirmed a link to Taco Bell or to any specific ingredient, supplier, restaurant or retailer.

Taylor Farms did not respond to requests for comment from multiple news outlets, including CNN and NBC News, regarding the investigation. Yum Brands, the parent company of Taco Bell, also did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Cyclosporiasis is caused by consuming food or water contaminated with the cyclospora parasite and is not typically spread through direct person-to-person contact. The illness has previously been linked to fresh produce in past outbreaks, according to the CDC. Symptoms of the infection can include watery diarrhea, cramping, bloating, loss of appetite and low-grade fever, with symptoms sometimes persisting for weeks if untreated.

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Federal health officials have said multiple investigations are currently underway related to the broader rise in cyclospora cases this year, including some tied to the large Midwest cluster, some limited to individual states, and others involving cases that have not yet been connected to any identified cluster. The CDC has also noted that case counts are likely to continue rising as more data comes in, citing a reporting lag of up to six weeks between when a person first becomes ill and when their case is officially reported to health authorities.

This is not the first time Taylor Farms has been connected to a foodborne illness investigation. The company was linked to a 2013 cyclosporiasis outbreak that sickened more than 600 people across roughly two dozen states, with many of those illnesses concentrated in Iowa and Nebraska among people who had eaten at other restaurant chains. That outbreak was eventually traced to a salad mix produced at a Taylor Farms processing facility in Mexico. The company has also been connected to a more recent E. coli outbreak tied to sliced onions in 2024.

Taylor Farms supplies grocery stores and restaurants across the country, and it remains unclear exactly how many of its products or locations may ultimately be tied to the current outbreak. Health officials have said the investigation remains active and that additional details, including formal confirmation of the outbreak’s source, are expected as testing and interviews continue in the coming days.

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Canadian Factory Sales Rise 1.3% to Record in May

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Canadian Factory Sales Rise 1.3% to Record in May

OTTAWA—Factory sales in Canada reached a record high in May, extending the recovery by the country’s manufacturers despite lingering trade concerns that supports a rebound for the economy after recent weakness.

Manufacturing shipments rose 1.3% from the month before to a seasonally adjusted 78.09 billion Canadian dollars, the equivalent of about US$55.55 billion, Statistics Canada said Wednesday. Compared with a year earlier, sales were up 13.4%.

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Gold set for biggest weekly fall in six as Iran war fans inflation worries

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Gold set for biggest weekly fall in six as Iran war fans inflation worries
Gold rebounded on Friday but was set for its biggest weekly loss in six, as renewed U.S.-Iran clashes lifted oil prices, stoked inflation concerns and strengthened expectations that interest rates could stay higher for longer.

FUNDAMENTALS

Spot gold gained 0.5% to $3,988.57 per ounce by 0103 GMT, having touched its lowest since July 1 earlier in the session. U.S. gold ‌futures for ⁠August ⁠delivery were steady at $3,992.70.

Iran and the United States exchanged intensifying fire on Thursday in a week-long escalation that has largely unravelled last month’s truce.

Oil prices have jumped about 12% so far this week as the escalating U.S.-Iran conflict stoked supply concerns.

Non-yielding gold typically struggles when interest rates are high because investors favour investments that offer better returns. The metal is down over 3% ⁠for the ‌week so far.

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Dallas Federal Reserve President Lorie Logan became the first of Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh’s new colleagues to call publicly for ⁠a rate hike.
Fed Vice Chair Philip Jefferson also suggested he would be open to raising rates if there is no near-term improvement in inflation.
Inflation is proving persistent across a broad range of goods and services, and remains the focus of monetary policy given a stable labour market, Kansas City Fed President Jeff Schmid said.
The number of Americans filing claims for unemployment benefits fell last week.

U.S. retail ‌sales increased marginally in June as lower gasoline prices weighed on receipts at service stations.

China can stabilise economic growth this year by accelerating already-budgeted national infrastructure investment projects, ⁠economists and one government adviser said, reducing the likelihood of large-scale fiscal stimulus.

Britain on Thursday targeted what it said were illicit gold and finance networks fuelling Sudan’s war, imposing sanctions on 11 individuals and entities.

Elsewhere, spot silver gained 0.2% to $55.60 per ounce, platinum eased 0.1% to $1,616.10 and palladium rose 0.4% to $1,254.62. All three metals were headed for a weekly loss.

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DATA/EVENTS (GMT)

0701 China Total Social Financing Jun

0701 China M2 Money Supply YY Jun

0702 China New Yuan Loans Jun

1230 US Housing Starts Number Jun

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1230 US Import Prices YY Jun

1315 US Industrial Production MM Jun

1400 US U Mich Sentiment Prelim Jul

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Negative Breakout: These 8 stocks cross below their 200 DMAs

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The Economic Times

In the Nifty500 pack, eight stocks’ close prices crossed below their 200 DMA (Daily Moving Averages) on July 16, according to stockedge.com’s technical scan data. Trading below the 200 DMA is considered a negative signal because it indicates that the stock’s price is below its long-term trend line. Traders use the 200 DMA as a key indicator to determine the overall trend in a particular stock. Take a look:​

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U.S. burrito chain Chipotle opens first eatery in Mexico

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U.S. burrito chain Chipotle opens first eatery in Mexico

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US appeals court keeps in place Pentagon’s escort policy for journalists

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US appeals court keeps in place Pentagon’s escort policy for journalists

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