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Saturday, June 21, 2025

Khalil returns, holds telling press conference with AOC

 Anti-Israel protester Mahmoud Khalil said he plans to continue his pro-Palestinian advocacy work and bashed the US government upon landing in New Jersey Saturday on his way home to New York City after being held in a Louisiana immigration detention facility for three months.

“I just want to go back and just continue the work that I was already doing, advocating for Palestinian rights – speech that should actually be celebrated rather than punished, as this administration wants to do,” Khalil said Saturday at a press conference at Newark Liberty International Airport.

“The US government is funding this genocide, and Columbia University is investing in this genocide,” he added. “This is what I was protesting. This is what I will continue to protest with everyone of you, not only if they threaten me with detention, even if they would kill me, I would still speak up again.”

Mahmoud Khalil arrives at Newark airport, a day after being released from immigration custody, in Newark, New Jersey, U.S.REUTERS

Khalil, 30, was arrested by federal immigration authorities on March 8 and spent 104 days at the rural detention center as the Trump administration fought to deport the Syrian-born permanent resident.

The administration said Khalil engaged in activities “aligned to Hamas,” the Palestinian terrorist group responsible for the deadly Oct. 7, 2023, attacks on Israel, while he was studying at Columbia.

Columbia University graduate student Mahmoud Khalil speaks to the press next to U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.REUTERS

Khalil was joined by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez at Newark on Saturday.

“We will continue to resist the politicization and the continued political persecution that ICE is engaged in,” she told reporters.

Khalil was released on bail Friday after New Jersey US District Judge Michael Farbiarz ruled Friday that the government had “clearly not met” the standards for detention.

Columbia University graduate student Mahmoud Khalil gestures next to his wife Noor Abdalla.REUTERS

He was flown to Newark Airport en route to New York, where he was expected to reunite with his wife and infant son who was born while he was detained.

Farbiarz said it was “highly, highly unusual” for the government to continue detaining a legal resident who was unlikely to flee and hadn’t been accused of violence.

Khalil was released on conditions including the surrender of his passport and travel restrictions limiting him to New York, New Jersey, Michigan, Washington, DC, and Louisiana, where his immigration proceedings will continue, according to reports.

https://nypost.com/2025/06/21/us-news/anti-israel-protestor-mahmoud-khalil-makes-emotional-return-home-embraces-wife-and-holds-telling-press-conference-with-aoc/

Nuclear diplomacy stuck, Israel says it killed top Iran commander



Iran deems European proposals to curb its nuclear programme unrealistic and a hurdle to agreement, a senior Iranian official said on Saturday, while Israel said it killed a veteran Iranian commander during attacks by both sides.

The more than week-long air war between longtime foes Israel and Iran continued with reports of strikes on an Iranian nuclear facility. The U.S. was weighing whether to back Israel in the conflict while other powers urged de-escalation.




Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi met British, French and German counterparts, plus the EU, on Friday in Geneva in search of a path back to diplomacy and a possible ceasefire.

But proposals made by the European powers were "unrealistic", the senior Iranian official told Reuters, saying that insistence on them would not bring agreement closer.

"In any case, Iran will review the European proposals in Tehran and present its responses in the next meeting," the official said, adding that zero enrichment was a dead end and Tehran would not negotiate over its defensive capabilities.

Israel launched attacks on June 13 saying Iran was on the verge of developing nuclear weapons, while Iran says its atomic programme is only for peaceful purposes. Israel is widely assumed to possess nuclear weapons, which it neither confirms nor denies.




Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said that Saeed Izadi, who led the Palestine Corps of the Quds Force, the Iranian Revolutionary Guards' overseas arm, was killed in a strike on an apartment in the city of Qom.

Calling his killing a "major achievement for Israeli intelligence and the Air Force", Katz said Izadi had financed and armed the Palestinian militant group Hamas ahead of its October 7, 2023, attack on Israel, which triggered the war in Gaza.

The Revolutionary Guards said five of its members died in attacks on Khorramabad, according to Iranian media. They did not mention Izadi, who was on U.S. and British sanctions lists, but said Israel had also attacked a building in Qom, with initial reports of a 16-year-old killed and two people injured.

HUNDREDS KILLED



At least 430 people have been killed and 3,500 injured in Iran since Israel began its attacks, Iranian state-run Nour News said, citing the health ministry.


In Israel, 24 civilians have been killed by Iranian missile attacks, according to local authorities, in the worst conflict between the longtime enemies.

At a meeting of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) in Istanbul, Araqchi said Israel's aggression, which he said had indications of U.S. involvement, should stop so Iran can "come back to diplomacy".

"It is obvious that I can't go to negotiations with the U.S. when our people are under bombardments under the support of the U.S," he told reporters on the sidelines, before meeting Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan.



The top Iranian diplomat said U.S. involvement in the conflict would be "very dangerous". Araqchi is set to visit Moscow, Iran's ally, on Monday.

President Donald Trump has said he would take up to two weeks to decide whether the United States should enter the conflict on Israel's side, enough time "to see whether or not people come to their senses", he said.

Iran would be able to have a nuclear weapon "within a matter of weeks, or certainly within a matter of months", he said on Friday, adding: "We can't let that happen."

Yet in March, Tulsi Gabbard, his national intelligence director, testified to Congress that the U.S. intelligence community judged that Tehran was not working on a nuclear warhead.


The International Atomic Energy Agency said that a centrifuge manufacturing workshop at the Isfahan nuclear facility, one of Iran's biggest, was hit - but added it contained no nuclear material.

Gulf Cooperation Council ambassadors expressed concerns to U.N. nuclear watchdog chief Rafael Grossi about the safety of nuclear facilities close to their countries and "dangerous repercussions" of targeting them, Qatar state news agency said.

Israel said it was attacking military infrastructure.

INTERCEPTIONS OVER TEL AVIV

Early on Saturday, air raid sirens were triggered across parts of central Israel and in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, with missile interceptions visible over Tel Aviv and explosions echoing. There were no reports of casualties.

The Human Rights Activists News Agency, a U.S.-based rights organisation that tracks Iran, gave a higher death toll than Tehran, saying Israeli attacks have killed 639 people there.

Those killed in Iran include the military's top echelon and nuclear scientists. Israel said it also killed a second commander of the Guards' overseas arm, whom it identified as Benham Shariyari, during an overnight strike.

Iran's health minister, Mohammadreza Zafarqandi, said Israel has attacked three hospitals during the conflict, killing two health workers and a child, and has targeted six ambulances, according to Fars.

Asked about such reports, an Israeli military official said that only military targets were being struck, though there may have been collateral damage in some incidents.



An Iranian missile hit a hospital in the southern Israeli city of Beersheba on Thursday.

Turkey, Russia and China have demanded immediate de-escalation.

Despite the downbeat assessment from the senior Iranian official, French President Emmanuel Macron said he and Iranian counterpart Masoud Pezeshkian agreed on a Saturday call to accelerate talks.

Israel says it will not stop attacks until it dismantles Iran's nuclear programme and ballistic missile capabilities, which it views as an existential threat, saying this could take more than a few weeks.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/iran-israel-launch-attacks-tehran-015832749.html

Aflac customer data breached by cybercriminals in latest hit on US insurance industry

 Aflac’s customer data has been breached in the latest cyberattack on the US insurance industry – potentially jeopardizing Social Security numbers, insurance claims and health information, the company said Friday.

It’s the largest insurance company yet to fall victim to a major hacking, with tens of millions of customers and a $55 billion market cap.

“This attack, like many insurance companies are currently experiencing, was caused by a sophisticated cybercrime group,” Aflac said Friday.

Aflac logo on a blue glass building.
Aflac said Friday that its network had been hacked by cybercriminals.yu_photo – stock.adobe.com

Aflac — long known for its quacking duck TV commercials — said it is unable to determine the total number of impacted individuals and the specific data stolen.

Its systems were not affected by ransomware, so it is fully operational, and the company has engaged third-party cybersecurity experts, Aflac added.

It said it stopped the intrusion on June 12 hours after it noticed suspicious activity.

Erie Insurance and Philadelphia Insurance Companies have also reported hacks this month.

Both of those cases led to widespread disruptions across their IT systems.

All three of the major hacks are consistent with techniques used by a group of young cybercriminals known as Scattered Spider, sources familiar with the investigation told CNN.  

Aflac said the hackers used “social engineering” tactics to breach their network, manipulating employees to gain access to a company system and often posing as tech support workers over the phone — a trademark of Scattered Spider.

System hacked alert.
All three of the major hacks are consistent with methods used by Scattered Spider, sources told CNN.Montri – stock.adobe.com

In the past, these hackers have posed as company help desk staffers to obtain credentials from employees or tricked workers into installing tools on their devices that will hand over network access, according to the US Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency.

Scattered Spider is believed to be made up of teens and young adults in the US and UK and is known for aggressively extorting victims.

Its members recently targeted Marks & Spencer and other UK retailers, and famously carried out a hacking spree across Las Vegas casinos in September 2023.

Cybersecurity executives have sounded the alarms over the group’s attack on the US insurance industry, warning companies to tell their employees to be wary of suspicious phone calls.

Aflac did not mention Scattered Spider by name in its press release.

https://nypost.com/2025/06/20/business/aflac-customer-data-breached-by-cybercriminals-in-hit-to-us-insurers/

Accenture Shares Fall on Bookings Decline, Concerns over Federal Government Contract

 Accenture reported a drop in bookings in the latest quarter, prompting investor concern amid a more uncertain relationship with the federal government.

The 6% drop in bookings, a closely watched metric that measures future revenue based on contracts, came as the consulting firm on Friday posted higher sales and profit in the third quarter.

Shares declined 7.3% to $284.20, putting them on pace for the largest percentage decrease since March 21, 2024. The stock, which touched a new 52-week low of $273.19 earlier in the session, is currently the worst performer in the S&P 500.

Some of the challenges stem from the expectation that the Trump administration's cost-cutting focus will hit consulting firms with big businesses advising governments. Accenture and other consulting firms have already offered billions in cuts to their contracts in response to the administration's request for price concessions.

Accenture executives said they expect a 2% headwind in its federal business in the current quarter, after seeing an immaterial impact in the latest quarter. Chief Executive Julie Sweet said that seven of Accenture's 13 industries grew at a high single-digit rate or better in the third quarter.

Asked whether the headwind should be seen as a baseline scenario going forward, Sweet said it was too early to be making any assumptions. "This is our best data point we have right now," she said.

While Accenture manages its federal book of business, Sweet said that executives at many companies it consults with are taking a different approach these days after earlier uncertainty brought on by the tariffs.

"Our clients have moved from pause to focus and leapfrog," Sweet said. "Tech, data and AI are really rewiring organizations working in new ways, being future ready so that no matter where they are on their curve, we're helping them get to the point where they can use AI."

To meet the growing changes and adoption of artificial intelligence, Accenture said it was combining several of its services into one business unit, effective Sept. 1. The company will bring its strategy, consulting, song, technology and operations services into a single unit called Reinvention Services, which Manish Sharma, the company's current chief executive officer of the Americas, will lead as chief services officer.

John Walsh, Accenture's current global chief operating officer, will become CEO of the Americas, succeeding Sharma. Kate Hogan, the current chief operating officer of the Americas, will become the global COO, succeeding Walsh.

Kate Clifford, currently CHRO of the Americas, will become the global chief leadership and human resources officer, succeeding Angela Beatty, who has decided to leave Accenture to pursue other opportunities.

Accenture logged net income of about $2.2 billion, or $3.49 a share, for the third quarter ended May 31, compared to $1.93 billion, or $3.04 a share, in the prior-year period. Analysts polled by FactSet expected $3.32 a share.

Revenue rose to $17.73 billion from $16.47 billion. Analysts polled by FactSet expected $17.31 billion.

New bookings for the third quarter came in at $19.70 billion, a decrease of about 6% in dollars and down 7% in local currency compared to the prior-year period.

For the fourth quarter, Accenture forecast revenue between $17 billion and $17.6 billion. Analysts polled by FactSet expected $17.06 billion.

For the fiscal year, Accenture now expects revenue growth to be between 6% and 7% and earnings per-share in the range of $12.77 and $12.89. The company previously forecast revenue growth between 5% and 7% and earnings per-share in the range of $12.55 and $12.79.

https://www.morningstar.com/news/dow-jones/202506205917/accenture-shares-fall-on-bookings-decline-concerns-over-federal-government-contract-3rd-update

'Two days of terror: How the Minnesota shooter evaded police and got caught'

 Vance Boelter's disguise wasn't perfect. The silicone mask was somewhat loose-fitting and his SUV's license plate simply read "POLICE" in black letters. But it was good enough on a poorly lit suburban street in the dead of night.

At 2:36 a.m. on Saturday, 30 minutes after authorities say Boelter shot and seriously injured Minnesota State Senator John Hoffman and his wife, he paused behind the wheel of the SUV near the home of another senator, Ann Rest, in the city of New Hope.

The SUV was stocked with weapons, including AK-47 assault rifles, as well as fliers advertising a local anti-Trump rally scheduled for later Saturday and a written list of names of people he appeared to be targeting. Senator Rest, prosecutors would later say, was among those Boelter set out to kill on June 14.

But when she attempted to speak to him - one officer greeting another - she got no response. Instead, the man inside the SUV with police markings simply stared ahead. The New Hope officer drove on, deciding to go ahead and check on Rest.

Rest would later say the New Hope officer's initiative probably saved her life, an opinion shared by New Hope Police Chief Timothy Hoyt.

"With limited information, she went up there on her own to check on the welfare of our senator," Hoyt told Reuters. "She did the right thing."

The brief interaction in New Hope underscored the carefully planned nature of Boelter's pre-dawn rampage and how his impersonation of a police officer, including body armor, a badge and a tactical vest, confounded the initial attempts to stop him.

After the encounter with the New Hope officer, Boelter, 57, drove away from the scene, moving on to his next target. Police would pursue him for another 43 hours. In the process, they would draw in a phalanx of state and federal agencies, in what ranks as the largest manhunt in Minnesota history and added to the sense of disorientation in a nation already grappling with protests over immigration, the forcible removal of a U.S. Senator from a press conference and a rare military parade in Washington.

Federal prosecutors say they may seek the death penalty for Boelter, who has been charged with murdering two people and trying to kill two others, in what Governor Tim Walz has called a "politically motivated" attack.

Prosecutors said they are still investigating the motive and whether any others were involved. Boelter has yet to enter a plea. Manny Atwal, a public defender representing Boelter, said he was reviewing the case and declined to comment.

This reconstruction of the manhunt is based on court documents, statements by law enforcement officials, and interviews with a Boelter friend, local police officers, lawmakers, and residents of the impacted neighborhoods.

While the events unfolded like something out of a TV crime drama, there were parallels with past shooting sprees, criminal justice experts said. James Fitzgerald, a former FBI criminal profiler, said he would not be surprised if Boelter studied a mass shooting in Canada in 2020, when a gunman posing as a police officer killed 22 people in the province of Nova Scotia.

"These guys always do research beforehand. They want to see how other killers were successful, how they got caught," said Fitzgerald, who helped the FBI capture the "Unabomber" Ted Kaczynski in 1996. "And, of course, a way you're going to buy yourself some time is to pose as a police officer."

HOFFMAN SHOOTING

The violence began at the Hoffman's brick split-level home in Champlin, a leafy, middle-class suburb of Minneapolis. With his emergency lights flashing, Boelter pulled into the driveway just after 2:00 a.m. and knocked on the door.

"This is the police. Open the door," Boelter shouted repeatedly, according to an FBI affidavit.

Senator Hoffman and his wife, Yvette, soon determined Boelter was not a real police officer. Boelter shot Senator Hoffman nine times, and then fired on Yvette, who shielded her daughter from being hit.

As Boelter fled the scene, the daughter called 911.

The Hoffmans were on a target list of more than 45 federal and state elected officials in Minnesota, all Democrats, acting U.S. Attorney Joseph H. Thompson told a briefing on Monday.

Boelter voted for President Donald Trump, was a Christian and did not like abortion, according to his part-time roommate, David Carlson. Carlson said Boelter did not seem angry about politics.

Thompson said Boelter "stalked his victims like prey" but that the writings he left behind did not point to a coherent motive. "His crimes are the stuff of nightmares," he said.

"His crimes are the stuff of nightmares," Thompson said.

After the Hoffman's, the next address plugged into Boelter's GPS system was a lawmaker about 9 miles away in the Minneapolis suburb of Maple Grove.

Surveillance cameras from the home of State Representative Kristin Bahner show a masked Boelter ringing the doorbell at 2:24 a.m. and shouting "Open the door. This is the police. We have a warrant," the FBI affidavit says.

Bahner and her family were not at home.

From there, Boelter moved on to New Hope and the close encounter with the officer who had dispatched to Rest's home. After that, he wasn't seen by police again until he arrived at the residence of Melissa Hortman, the top Democrat in the state House, in Brooklyn Park.

Sensing that Hortman might be a target, Brooklyn Park police officers had decided to check on her. When they arrived at 3:30 a.m. they saw a black Ford Explorer outside her house, its police-style lights flashing. Boelter was near the front door.

When Boelter saw the officers exit their squad car, he fired at them. He then ran through the front door on the house, where he killed Melissa and Mark Hortman, her husband.

'DAD WENT TO WAR'

When Boelter left the Hortman's home, he abandoned his fake-police SUV. Inside the car, police found a 9mm handgun, three AK-47 assault rifles, fliers advertising a local anti-Trump "No Kings" rally and a notebook with names of people who appear to have been targets, according to court documents.

From that point, Boelter was on the run. Little has been revealed about his movements during the period, although police say he visited his part-time residence in north Minneapolis. He also sent texts. In one, to his family's group chat, Boelter writes, "Dad went to war last night". In another, to a close friend, Boelter says he may be dead soon.

Police also know that by early morning on Saturday Boelter had met a man at a Minneapolis bus stop who agreed to sell him an e-bike and a Buick sedan for $900. The two drove to a bank where Boelter withdrew $2,200 from his account. A security camera shows Boelter wearing a cowboy hat.

But it took until 10:00 a.m. on Sunday for authorities to close in. Police searching the area near Boelter's family home in the rural community of Green Isle, discovered the abandoned Buick, along with a cowboy hat and handwritten letter to the FBI in which Boelter admitted to the shootings, prosecutors said.

Law enforcement scrambled to set up a perimeter surrounding the area, SWAT teams and search dogs were deployed, and drones were put in the air.

It was the trail camera of a resident, however, that provided the final clue, capturing an image of Boelter around 7:00 p.m., allowing officers to narrow their search.

Two hours later, the pursuit ended with Boelter crawling to police. He was armed but surrendered without a fight.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/two-days-of-terror-how-the-minnesota-shooter-evaded-police-and-got-caught/ar-AA1H9aon

Novo’s Latest Obesity Drug Shows 24% Weight Loss in Small Trial

 


Novo Nordisk A/S’s latest experimental obesity drug helped patients lose as much as 24.3% of their weight in a small study, showing its potential as a next-generation treatment in the hyper-competitive market.

The drug known as amycretin showed signs of improving blood sugar levels with side effects generally in line with other powerful obesity medicines, researchers said in a pair of trials published in The Lancet and due to be presented at the American Diabetes Association conference in Chicago. The 24.3% weight loss came over 36 weeks in a study of the shot version of the compound.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-06-20/novo-nordisk-s-latest-obesity-drug-shows-24-weight-loss-in-early-study

Lilly expects orforglipron obesity results in third quarter

 Eli Lilly said on Saturday its experimental pill orforglipron helped diabetics lose weight and lower their blood sugar, and the company aims to announce in the third quarter trial results for the drug in overweight and obese people without diabetes.

Lilly expects to submit the non-diabetes Phase 3 data to global regulatory agencies by the end of the year, said Ken Custer, head of cardiometabolic health at the company. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration typically makes new drug approval decisions 10 months after a manufacturer’s submission.

Lilly said it plans to file for regulatory approvals for orforglipron as a diabetes treatment in 2026.

Full results of the diabetes trial were presented at the annual meeting of the American Diabetes Association in Chicago.

The Phase 3 study showed that type 2 diabetes patients taking the highest dose of daily orforglipron lost nearly 8% of their body weight over 40 weeks. That compares favorably with Novo Nordisk (NYSE:NVO)’s injected drug Ozempic, for which trials showed that diabetic patients on the highest dose lost roughly 6% of their body weight.

Lilly’s pill, which can be taken without food or water, lowered blood sugar levels by an average of 1.3% to 1.6% across doses.

The company said the most frequently reported side effects were gastrointestinal and similar to other GLP-1 drugs, including diarrhea and vomiting.

Custer said Lilly’s goal in its non-diabetes trials is to achieve weight loss consistent with GLP-1 drugs that are currently available. Ozempic was shown in trials to lead to weight loss of 15% for people without diabetes over 68 weeks.

He said orforglipron, which has a simpler production process than injected GLP-1 drugs such as Ozempic or Lilly’s Zepbound and does not require cold storage, could mean wider global access to weight-loss drugs.

"This is the type of molecule that is going to allow us to reach the broader globe," Custer said.

The executive declined to comment on pricing plans for orforglipron.

https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/lilly-expects-orforglipron-obesity-results-in-third-quarter-4104658