News
Terrifying footage shows judge cowering under his desk as he’s shot dead by sheriff inside chambers
DISTURBING surveillance video shows the moment a judge cowered behind his desk before the town sheriff shot him to death in his own chambers.
Former Kentucky sheriff Shawn “Mickey” Stines, 43, could now face the death penalty for murdering District Judge Kevin Mullins in a shocking scene on September 19.
Prosecutors played the terrifying video clip of Stines allegedly opening fire on Mullins during the ex-sheriff’s preliminary court hearing on Tuesday in Letcher County, Kentucky, which is about 150 miles southeast of Lexington.
Mullins, 54, died at the scene from multiple gunshot wounds. Stines surrendered to police after the shooting.
The footage, which has no audio, showed a man who cops identified as Stines pulling out a gun and pointing it at Mullins, who sat at his desk.
The judge appeared to fall to the floor and the gunman walked around the desk to fire at him while Mullins tried to take cover in the room’s corner. Stines shot the judge eight times.
Video from the hearing revealed that viewers in the courtroom sobbed and groaned as the clip played in court.
Stines, who stepped down as sheriff on Monday, pleaded not guilty to the murder last week. He reportedly looked down while the video played in court, according to the Associated Press.
Police haven’t shared a motive for the killing, but court officials revealed that Stines and Mullins, who served as a judge for 15 years, had lunch together earlier that day.
Kentucky State Police Detective Clayton Stamper said that the two men ate with several other people at a restaurant near the courthouse.
Mullins was reportedly heard asking Stines if they needed to meet privately in his chambers, Stamper reported.
The detective said he reviewed footage of the sheriff and judges’ meeting in Mullins’ chambers before the gunfire rang out.
“Sheriff Stines uses his telephone to make some phone calls,” Stamper described the moments before the shooting.
“He then borrows Judge Mullins’ cellphone and appears to make a call on that.”
Stamper reported that Stines’ daughter’s phone number was confirmed to be recently called on the judge’s phone at the time of his death.
He said that it’s unclear who Stines called and what was said during the conversations.
What we know about the sheriff and judge
Letcher County Sheriff Shawn “Mickey” Stines and District Judge Kevin Mullins were reportedly friends for years before Stines allegedly shot Mullins to death in September.
The two even had lunch together on the day of the shooting, police said in court.
Before he was brutally murdered, Mullins served as the district judge of the 47th Judicial District, which presides over Letcher County, for 15 years.
According to his obituary, the judge is survived by his wife and two daughters.
Local residents say Stines served as a bailiff in Mullins’ court for years before he was elected sheriff in 2018, according to the Courier Journal.
Stines is a dad to a teenage daughter, whose phone number was on Mullins’ phone at the time of the shooting, cops confirmed in court on Tuesday.
Stines resigned from his position as sheriff on Monday after Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear publicly called for him to step down.
He is currently being held at the Leslie County Jail.
“It occurred after a phone call was made,” Stamper said about the shooting.
“I don’t know what was said.”
The judge’s phone was later found on his desk. Stines’ phone was with him when he was arrested.
SHERIFF’S CHILLING PLEA
The sheriff came out of the courtroom with his hands up in surrender after the shooting, Stamper testified.
“He was mostly calm, I thought,” Stamper said.
“I talked to him but he didn’t say nothing about why this had happened.
“Basically all he said was ‘treat me fair.’”
Stamper also added that Stines told police at his arrest, “They’re trying to kidnap my wife and kid.”
PAST LEGAL TROUBLES
Stines is being held at jail in another Kentucky county. He could serve 20 years to life in prison for the murder.
Because he’s accused of killing a public official, Stines could potentially face the death penalty. Prosecutors haven’t said if they’re seeking the death penalty for the former cop.
Three days before the shooting, Stines was removed from a federal lawsuit vaguely related to Mullins.
In a 2022 lawsuit filed by two women, one alleged a deputy sheriff forced her to have sex with him inside Mullins’ private chambers for six months in exchange for keeping her out of jail.
The court document alleged that Stines had “deliberate indifference in failing to adequately train and supervise,” the accused deputy, according to local outlet the Courier Journal.
Stines fired the deputy after the suit was filed in 2022, the outlet reported.
Court officials said it wasn’t clear if the lawsuit was related to last month’s shooting.
The U.S. Sun has reached out to the Kentucky State Police for comment.
The Courier Journal reported local residents said Mullins and Stines were friends for years.
Stines served as a bailiff in Mullins’ court for several years before he was elected sheriff in 2018, according to the Journal.
If you or someone you know is affected by any of the issues raised in this story, call RAINN (Rape, Abuse, & Incest National Network) at 800-656-HOPE (4673).
Business
FT Crossword: Number 17,858
FT Crossword: Number 17,858
Money
Major update after 100,000 state pensioners underpaid £10,000 each due to error
A MAJOR update has been issued after tens of thousands of married female retirees were underpaid the state pension due to a government error.
The Parliamentary Ombudsman confirmed this week that it will launch a full investigation into the issue.
Failings in the old state pension system left potentially more than 100,000 married women without the payments they were due.
These women have been contacted and informed that a “detailed investigation” has begun into this group of complaints.
If successful, the Government could be forced to hand out hundreds of millions of pounds in state pension arrears to all of the women who missed out.
This could include thousands of women who died without ever being paid the correct pension.
Read more on the state pension
Former Pensions Minister Sir Steve Webb criticised the previous system, calling it “archaic and sexist”.
“This is a major milestone in a long-running campaign for justice for thousands of married women,” he said.
“The fact that they did not know this was needed indicates a system which let them down and has cost them in many cases thousands of pounds through no fault of their own.”
These women did not ignore official correspondence and would clearly have made a claim had they realised it was needed one their husband retired, he added.
Sir Steve estimates that some of these women will have lost out by £10,000 or more in the period since their husband retired.
How did the error happen?
Prior to a rule change in March 2008 married women could claim the state pension at age 60.
This was initially awarded purely based on their own National Insurance record, which showed how many years they had made contributions.
If they had spent time at home raising a family or had other gaps in their employment history then their state pension could be very low.
For many, this could be as little as 25% of the full basic pension.
But when their husband claimed his state pension married women could get an increase in the amount they would receive.
If their husband had made enough contributions then the amount of state pension they would receive could increase to as much as 60% of the full basic pension.
How does the state pension work?
AT the moment the current state pension is paid to both men and women from age 66 – but it’s due to rise to 67 by 2028 and 68 by 2046.
The state pension is a recurring payment from the government most Brits start getting when they reach State Pension age.
But not everyone gets the same amount, and you are awarded depending on your National Insurance record.
For most pensioners, it forms only part of their retirement income, as they could have other pots from a workplace pension, earning and savings.
The new state pension is based on people’s National Insurance records.
Workers must have 35 qualifying years of National Insurance to get the maximum amount of the new state pension.
You earn National Insurance qualifying years through work, or by getting credits, for instance when you are looking after children and claiming child benefit.
If you have gaps, you can top up your record by paying in voluntary National Insurance contributions.
To get the old, full basic state pension, you will need 30 years of contributions or credits.
You will need at least 10 years on your NI record to get any state pension.
But this uplift only happened if they made a further state pension application once their husband retired.
Tens of thousands of married women assumed that because they had already applied for the state pension they would be paid the correct amount.
Those who did not make a second claim would remain on the low pension indefinitely.
If they found out about the potential uplift later they could only backdate their claim by one year, leaving them thousands of pounds out of pocket.
In cases seen by Sir Steve Webb some women potentially missed out on more than a decade of increased pension payments.
More shockingly still, many women were only notified of what they needed to do to claim if their husband ticked a box on his state pension pack.
Doing so would mean that two state pension claims forms were sent to him, one of which was to be given to his wife.
Failure of the husband to tick the box or to pass on the form to his wife would mean that she missed out.
Meanwhile, she could also be unfairly penalised if the DWP only sent one form rather than two.
When did the rule change?
The system was changed in March 2008 so that married women received a state pension uplift automatically without needing to make a further claim.
But women who had made a claim before 2008 did not benefit from the rule change.
During the investigation, the Ombudsman will ask the Department for Work and Pensions for all of the information available to married women when the letters were sent.
It will then share its preliminary findings with the DWP and those making a claim before it reaches a final recommendation.
What can I do about it?
You can contact the DWP directly and query whether you have been affected.
Another option is to use an online tool or advice site to see whether they can help.
An online tool launched by Sir Steve Webb on behalf of actuarial firm LCP can help married women check if they might be affected.
You can then contact the pension service to get your state pension entitlement reviewed.
What are state pension errors?
STEVE Webb, partner at LCP and former Pensions Minister, explains what state pension errors are and how they can occur:
The way state pensions are worked out is so complicated that many thousands of people have been paid the wrong amount for years without even realising it.
The amount of retirement pension you get usually depends on your National Insurance (NI) record.
One big source of errors has been cases where NI records have been incorrect, particularly for years spent at home with children.
This is a system known as ‘Home Responsibilities Protection’.
Alternatively, particularly for older pensioners, the amount you get can depend on the NI contributions made by your spouse.
Errors have arisen where the Government has failed to adjust the pensions of married women when their husbands retired or failed to increase pensions when someone was bereaved and lost a husband or wife.
Although the Government has spent years trying to fix these problems, there are still many thousands of people – many of them older women – on the wrong pension.
If you have always thought that your pension seems low, then it is worth contacting the Pensions Service to ask them to check, especially if you spent time at home raising children or if you were widowed and your pension didn’t change when your spouse died.
Do you have a money problem that needs sorting? Get in touch by emailing money-sm@news.co.uk.
Plus, you can join our Sun Money Chats and Tips Facebook group to share your tips and stories
News
Shocking moment US World War 2 bomb explodes on runway at Japanese airport – leaving huge crater as flights halted
THIS is the shocking moment a World War II bomb exploded on an airport runway – bringing flights to a screeching halt.
An airport in regional Japan shut on Wednesday after an bomb buried under Miyazaki Airport unexpectedly blasted a hole in the runway.
Footage recorded by a nearby aviation school showed the blast spewing pieces of tarmac into the air.
The explosion left a crater about 23ft wide and 3ft deep on the runway, with more than 80 flights cancelled.
No aircrafts were nearby when the bomb exploded, according to Land and Transport ministry officials. No causalities were reported.
A bomb disposal team from Japan’s Self-Defense Forces confirmed a 500lb US bomb had been the source of the blast after they had been called to the site.
A transport minister said they could not confirm when the bomb was dropped, local media reported it was likely during World War Two.
Chief cabinet secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi said: “There is no threat of a second explosion, and police and firefighters are currently examining the scene.
He added the airport aimed to reopen on Thursday.
Miyazaki Airport was built in 1943 as a former Imperial Japanese Navy flight training field from which some kamikaze pilots took off on suicide attack missions.
Multiple unexploded bombs have previously been found at Miyazaki airport, a transport ministry official said.
More than 79 years since the end of the war, unexploded bombs from the intense airstrikes are still found across Japan.
Meanwhile, the tyres of a Ryanair flight exploded during landing, leaving the jet and passengers stuck on the runway.
Departing and arriving flights were suspended at Bergamo Orio al Serio airport, near Milan, Italy, following the horror scare.
It is understood the flight was coming from Barcelona when its tyres popped, L’Eco Di Bergamo reports.
The reason behind the accident is not yet known.
No injuries have been reported as passengers disembarked the aircraft via mobile stairs on the runway.
Two emergency vehicles from the Bergamo headquarters and five from the airport responded right away.
It comes after a Ryanair flight to Ibiza had to be diverted after violence broke out when a drunken Brit downed neat vodka then assaulted cabin crew and other passengers.
The plane carrying holidaymakers from Manchester landed in Toulouse, where police hauled the sozzled traveller and his ex-girlfriend off the plane.
Video of the attack showed the boozed-up travellers shouting and swearing at French cops, before assaulting a fellow holidaymaker as he was being escorted off the flight.
Passengers say trouble broke out after the man booked himself onto the plane after learning his ex-girlfriend and her brother were going to be on the same flight.
Business
The man behind Japan’s $170bn bid to prop up the yen
For several years, Masato Kanda hardly slept.
“Three hours a night is an exaggeration,” he laughs as he speaks to the BBC from Tokyo.
“I slept for three hours consecutively before being woken up but I then went back to bed, so if you add them up, I got a bit more.”
So why was this 59 year-old bureaucrat’s schedule so punishing?
Until the end of July, he was Japan’s vice finance minister for international affairs, the country’s top currency diplomat, or yen czar.
Key to the role was fending off currency market speculators that could trigger turmoil in one of the world’s largest economies.
Historically, authorities intervened to weaken the value of the Japanese currency. A weak yen is good for exporters like Toyota and Sony as it makes goods cheaper for overseas buyers.
But when the yen plummeted during Mr Kanda’s time in office it increased the cost of importing essential items like food and fuel, causing a cost of living crisis in a country more used to seeing prices fall rather than rise.
In his three years in the role, the value of the yen against the US dollar weakened by more than 45%.
To control the yen’s slide, Mr Kanda unleashed an estimated 25 trillion yen ($173bn) to support the currency, marking Japan’s first such intervention in almost a quarter of a century.
“The Bank of Japan and the Ministry of Finance are very clear. They intervene not at a particular level of the currency, but they intervene when market volatility is too much,” says economist Jesper Koll.
Japan now finds itself on the US Treasury’s watchlist of potential currency manipulators.
But Mr Kanda argues that what he did was not market manipulation.
“Markets should move based on fundamentals but occasionally they fluctuate excessively because of speculation, and they don’t reflect fundamentals which don’t change overnight,” he says.
“When it affects ordinary consumers who have to buy food or fuel, that is when we intervened.”
While countries like the US and UK can raise interest rates to boost the value of their currencies, Japan had for years been unable to put up the cost of borrowing due to the weakness of its economy.
Professor Seijiro Takeshita of the University of Shizuoka says Japan had no other option other than to intervene in the currency markets.
“It is not the right thing to do, but in my opinion it is the only thing they can do.”
The irony is that the yen’s value jumped in recent months without Mr Kanda or his successor lifting a finger after the Bank of Japan surprised the markets with a rate hike, and the country got a new prime minister.
So was the $170bn bid to prop up the yen a waste of money?
No, says Mr Kanda and points out that his interventions actually made a profit although he emphasises that it was never a goal.
On whether or not his actions were ultimately successful he says: “It is not up to me to evaluate, but many say our exchange management stopped the excessive level of speculation.”
Markets or historians should be the final judges, he adds.
After decades of economic stagnation, Mr Kanda also sounds an optimistic note about Japan’s prospects.
“We are finally seeing investments and wages rising, and we have a chance to go back to a normal market economy,” he says.
A more surprising legacy for this “humble public servant” is him becoming a star on the internet after Japanese social media users celebrated his ability to surprise financial markets with a series of AI generated dancing videos.
Money
Pension fund pooling model is a ‘paradigm shift’ for UK property
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News
Parole rescinded for former LA police detective convicted of killing her ex-boyfriend’s wife in 1986
LOS ANGELES (AP) — A chance for parole was rescinded Wednesday for a former Los Angeles police detective serving a sentence of 27 years to life in the cold-case killing of her ex-boyfriend’s wife in 1986.
Stephanie Lazarus was convicted in 2012 of killing Sherri Rasmussen, a 29-year-old nurse who was bludgeoned and shot to death in the condo she shared with her husband of three months, John Ruetten. She wasn’t arrested until 2009.
The state Board of Parole Hearings heard arguments from lawyers on both sides during a hearing Wednesday that lasted about 90 minutes. The three commissioners then met privately and returned with a decision to rescind a previous grant of parole, according to attorney John Taylor, who represents the Rasmussen family.
Taylor said the family was relieved by the decision.
“Lazarus had her parole time up front, evading arrest for 23 years after the murder. She has expressed no remorse for the cold-blooded execution of Sherri Rasmussen committed while she was an LAPD officer. It’s unfair to the family that she should now go free and enjoy her life while receiving her LAPD pension,” Taylor said in a statement following the board’s decision.
A select committee of the parole board determined last November that Lazarus was eligible for parole. The full board took up her case in May but the final decision was delayed until this week. An attorney for Lazarus couldn’t be located Wednesday.
Rasmussen’s sisters and widower gave emotional testimony during May’s hearing about their pain and described Lazarus as a conniving criminal who used her police training to cover up the killing.
At her trial 12 years ago, prosecutors focused on the romantic relationship between Lazarus and Ruetten after they graduated from college. They claimed Lazarus was consumed with jealousy when Ruetten decided to marry Rasmussen.
The case hinged on DNA from a bite mark prosecutors say Lazarus left on Rasmussen’s arm.
Lazarus was not a suspect in 1986 because detectives then believed two robbers who had attacked another woman in the area were to blame for Rasmussen’s death.
No suspects were found and the case went cold until May 2009, when undercover officers followed Lazarus and obtained a sample of her saliva to compare with DNA left at the original crime scene, police said.
Prosecutors suggested Lazarus knew to avoid leaving other evidence, such as fingerprints.
Lazarus rose in the ranks of the Los Angeles Police Department, becoming a detective in charge of art forgeries and thefts.
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