Actor Sean Penn Regrets El Chapo Interview

A picture of Sean Penn and “El Chapo” displayed on Rolling Stone’s website after the magazine published an interview by the actor after the drug lord’s arrest.

“Let me be clear. My article has failed.” -Sean Penn 

Oscar-winning actor Sean Penn on Friday rejected Mexico’s claim that his secret meeting with Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman was crucial to the drug kingpin’s recapture, saying officials were trying to put him in the crosshairs of the feared cartel.

Penn also told talk show host Charlie Rose that he regrets the fallout from the Rolling Stone article based on his interview with Guzman. 

Their meeting in a jungle hideout was the first interview anyone scored with the fugitive drug lord, and Penn said he had hoped it would spur a broader discussion on the drug war.

In Penn’s first major television interview about the meeting, Rose asked the actor whether he believed Mexico President Enrique Pena Nieto’s government had deliberately sought to credit him with Guzman’s capture to put him at risk from the Sinaloa Cartel.

“Yes. There is this myth about the visit that we made, my colleagues and I with El Chapo, that it was… ‘essential’ to his capture. We know the Mexican government, they clearly were humiliated by the notion that someone found him before they did.” 

Read more about Sean Penn’s controversial meeting that may have taken down Mexico’s most powerful cartel boss on Fortune

Canadian Police Accused Of Impersonating Journalists

Red Power Media, Staff's avatarRED POWER MEDIA

Garry Sault, middle, talks with the media after questioning Six Nations protesters as they guard the front entrance of a housing development in Hagersville, Ont., just south of the 15-month aboriginal occupation at Caledonia on Wednesday, May 23, 2007. CP PHOTO/Nathan Denette Garry Sault, middle, talks with the media after questioning Six Nations protesters as they guard the front entrance of a housing development in Hagersville, Ont., just south of the 15-month aboriginal occupation at Caledonia on Wednesday, May 23, 2007. CP PHOTO / Nathan Denette

By Tania Kohut | Global News, Jan 15, 2016

Ontario police officers still have the right to impersonate journalists for investigative purposes, but have agreed to guidelines for doing so.

But defence lawyer Peter Rosenthal says the guidelines will do little to change police behaviour. Rosenthal represented Shawn Brant, an aboriginal activist who was filmed by a police officer posing as a journalist during the aboriginal day of action protests in 2007.

“When they make an announcement…that they’ll continue it but only under certain circumstances, it doesn’t really help,” said Rosenthal. “It doesn’t say, don’t do it or you’re going to be punished.”

After a years-long legal battle, the Ontario Provincial…

View original post 622 more words

NY Woman Raped By eHarmony Date 

  
According to CBS News:

A woman arranged to meet a man she met on the dating site eHarmony by taking a bus into the city.

The woman got to the terminal and the man said he had a weapon and forced her to downstairs under the Port Authority. The man eventually took the woman to an abandoned subway tunnel to attack her.

The woman went found her way out after the alleged attack and contacted a nearby firefighter. The firefighter then contacted police.

The woman was treated at a nearby hospital.

eHarmony said in a statement that they have not been contacted by authorities about the case, but that they would cooperate, if asked.

We were shocked and saddened to learn about this tragic situation and are in the process of looking into it,” the statement said. “We use industry-leading technologies and a team of experts to screen potential users with the objective of keeping those with ill intent out of our ecosystem.