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THE PUSH ALERTS TO HELP YOU PLAN AHEAD. NOW TO THE INVESTIGATION INVOLVING A MILWAUKEE PUBLIC DEFENDER RECENTLY CHARGED IN A PROSTITUTION RING FOR THE FIRST TIME, 12 NEWS HAS ACCESS TO HUNDREDS OF PAGES OF NEWLY UNSEALED SEARCH WARRANTS IN THE CASE AGAINST TRAVIS SCHWARTZ, NEW RECORDS SHOW HE MAY HAVE PAID AT LEAST THREE CLIENTS WOMEN HE REPRESENTED FOR SEX 12 NEWS KENDALL KEYS. WITH THAT STORY. TRAVIS SCHWARTZ, ACCORDING TO INVESTIGATORS, MADE A NAME FOR HIMSELF AS A PUBLIC DEFENDER IN MILWAUKEE FOR HIS WORK IN HUMAN TRAFFICKING AND SEX CASES. BUT NOW ITS THE MILWAUKEE POLICE DEPARTMENT HUMAN TRAFFICKING TASK FORCE THATS INVESTIGATING HIM. LAST MONTH, PROSECUTORS CHARGED SCHWARTZ IN A SWEEPING PROSTITUTION RING OF A NEAR WEST SIDE APARTMENT BUILDING. AND NOW IN A SERIES OF NEWLY UNSEALED SEARCH WARRANTS. DETECTIVES SAY IT APPEARS SCHWARTZ PAID AT LEAST THREE OF HIS OWN CLIENTS FOR SEX. COURT RECORDS SHOW DETECTIVES SCOURED SCHWARTZS PHONE FINDING SEXUALLY EXPLICIT PHOTOS AND SAY SCHWARTZ REPRESENTED SEVERAL OF THE WOMEN IN CRIMINAL CASES AS THEIR PUBLIC DEFENDER. ALSO IN HIS PHONE, A TRAIL OF VENMO AND PAYPAL TRANSACTIONS TO THOSE WOMEN, PAYMENT DESCRIPTIONS LIKE JOY, JUST US AND JUSTICE, RANGING FROM $20 TO $1500, ONE WOMAN TOLD INVESTIGATORS THAT MOST OF THE TIME THEY TALKED ABOUT HER CASES WAS AT MIDNIGHT. WHILE BOTH WERE LYING IN BED. INVESTIGATORS SAY SCHWARTZ INVITED A KEY WITNESS IN A HOMICIDE TRIAL TO CULVERS FOR LUNCH TO DISCUSS HER CASE, AND THEN THE NEXT MONTH, SCHWARTZ RENTED A ROOM AT THE AMBASSADOR HOTEL, WHERE INVESTIGATORS SAY HE PAID HER FOR SEX. THE COURT DOCUMENTS SHOW. SCHWARTZ KNEW SHE WAS A SEX TRAFFICKING VICTIM. SCHWARTZS ATTORNEY TELLS ME HE DOES NOT HAVE A COMMENT AT THIS TIME. NOW, THERE ARENT ANY NEW CHARGES TONIGHT. RIGHT NOW, HE FACES TWO FELONY CHARGES FOR SOLICITING PROSTITUTES AND MAKING FALSE REPRESENTATION TO QUALIFY FOR ASSIGNMENT OF COUNSEL. IN THE NEWSROOM, KENDALL KEYS WISN 12 NEWS. WISCONSINS RULES OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT FOR ATTORNEYS PROHIBITS LAWYERS FROM HAVING SEXUAL RELATIONSHIPS WITH CLIENTS, UNLESS THAT RELATIONSHIP EXISTED BEFORE THE LEGAL REPRESENTATION. FIVE OTHER MEN ARE CHARGED WITH MISDEMEANOR SOLICITATION IN THIS INVESTIGATION. THEY ARE A RETIRED JUDGE, A FIREFIGHTER, A FUNERAL HOME DIRECTOR, AND AN INVESTMENT BANKER, AND A FORMER ATTORNEY ALL FACE UP TO NINE MONTHS IN PRISON AND A MAXIMUM FINE OF $10,000. THEY ARE SCHEDULED T
Ghanaian entertainer turned politician A Plus, who was elected to represent Gomoa Central, says Mahama should let NPP MPs work from home instead of parliament.
Some public servants are pushing back on a hybrid work model introduced three months requiring employees to work from the office at least three days a week.
Winter weather is expected tonight through Saturday morning for the Omaha region. Here’s what you should expect for road conditions, timing and impacts.
Ed Miliband, once infamous for the way he ate a bacon sandwich, has given his verdict on Kemi Badenochs opinions regarding lunch. The Conservative leader told the Spectator that sandwiches are not real food and declared lunch as for wimps. Whats a lunch break? Lunch is for wimps. I have food brought in and I work and eat at the same time. Theres no time Sometimes I will get a steak Im not a sandwich person, she added. The energy secretary weighed in on the debate, saying he needed to persuade Ms Badenoch of the delights of a bacon sandwich.
FREEZING RAIN: Here’s when it arrives in your neighborhood Friday, making for dangerous travel and icy roads.
Mission Slim-Possible Owner and Trainer Jaliyla Tillman stops by LION Lunch Hour with friends to showcase a fun rock the holiday bells workout.
Wanted posters with the names and faces of health care executives have been popping up on the streets of New York. Hit lists with images of bullets are circulating online with warnings that industry leaders should be afraid.Related video above: In an interview with CNN, security services firm talks efforts to protect CEOsThe apparent targeted killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson and the menacing threats that followed have sent a shudder through corporate America and the health care industry in particular, leading to increased security for executives and some workers.In the week since the brazen shooting, health insurers have removed information about their top executives from company websites, canceled in-person meetings with shareholders and advised all employees to work from home temporarily.An internal New York Police Department bulletin warned this week that the online vitriol that followed the shooting could signal an immediate elevated threat.Police fear that the Dec. 4 shooting could “inspire a variety of extremists and grievance-driven malicious actors to violence,” according to the bulletin, which was obtained by The Associated Press.Wanted posters pasted to parking meters and construction site fences in Manhattan included photos of health care executives and the words Deny, defend, depose similar to a phrase scrawled on bullets found near Thompsons body and echoing those used by insurance industry critics.Thompson’s wife, Paulette, told NBC News last week that he told her some people had been threatening him and suggested the threats may have involved issues with insurance coverage.Investigators believe the shooting suspect, Luigi Mangione, may have been motivated by hostility toward health insurers. They are studying his writings about a previous back injury, and his disdain for corporate America and the U.S. health care system.Mangiones lawyer has cautioned against prejudging the case. Mangione, 26, has remained jailed in Pennsylvania, where he was arrested Monday. Manhattan prosecutors are working to bring him to New York to face a murder charge.UnitedHealthcares parent company, UnitedHealth Group, said this week it was working with law enforcement to ensure a safe work environment and to reinforce security guidelines and building access policies, a spokesperson said.The company has taken down photos, names and biographies for its top executives from its websites, a spokesperson said. Other organizations, including CVS, the parent company for insurance giant Aetna, have taken similar actions.Government health insurance provider Centene Corp. has announced that its investor day will be held online, rather than in-person as originally planned. Medica, a Minnesota-based nonprofit health care firm, said last week it was temporarily closing its six offices for security reasons and would have its employees work from home.Heightened security measures likely will make health care companies and their leaders more inaccessible to their policyholders, said former Cigna executive Wendell Potter.And understandably so, with this act of violence. Theres no assurance that this wont happen again, said Potter, whos now an advocate for health care reform.Private security firms and consultants have been in high demand, fielding calls almost immediately after the shooting from companies across a range of industries, including manufacturing and finance.Companies have long faced security risks and grappled with how far to take precautions for high-profile executives. But these recent threats sparked by Thompson’s killing should not be ignored, said Dave Komendat, a former security chief for Boeing who now heads his own risk-management company.The tone and tenor is different. The social reaction to this tragedy is different. And so I think that people need to take this seriously, Komendat said.Just over a quarter of the companies in the Fortune 500 reported spending money to protect their CEOs and top executives. Of those, the median payment for personal security doubled over the last three years to just under $100,000.Hours after the shooting, Komendat was on a call with dozens of chief security officers from big corporations, and there have been many similar meetings since, hosted by security groups or law enforcement agencies assessing the threats, he said.It just takes one person who is motivated by a poster who may have experienced something in their life through one of these companies that was harmful,” Komendat said.___Associated Press reporters Wyatte Grantham-Philips in New York and Barbara Ortutay in San Francisco, contributed to this report.
Wanted posters with the names and faces of health care executives have been popping up on the streets of New York. Hit lists with images of bullets are circulating online with warnings that industry leaders should be afraid.Related video above: In an interview with CNN, security services firm talks efforts to protect CEOsThe apparent targeted killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson and the menacing threats that followed have sent a shudder through corporate America and the health care industry in particular, leading to increased security for executives and some workers.In the week since the brazen shooting, health insurers have removed information about their top executives from company websites, canceled in-person meetings with shareholders and advised all employees to work from home temporarily.An internal New York Police Department bulletin warned this week that the online vitriol that followed the shooting could signal an immediate elevated threat.Police fear that the Dec. 4 shooting could “inspire a variety of extremists and grievance-driven malicious actors to violence,” according to the bulletin, which was obtained by The Associated Press.Wanted posters pasted to parking meters and construction site fences in Manhattan included photos of health care executives and the words Deny, defend, depose similar to a phrase scrawled on bullets found near Thompsons body and echoing those used by insurance industry critics.Thompson’s wife, Paulette, told NBC News last week that he told her some people had been threatening him and suggested the threats may have involved issues with insurance coverage.Investigators believe the shooting suspect, Luigi Mangione, may have been motivated by hostility toward health insurers. They are studying his writings about a previous back injury, and his disdain for corporate America and the U.S. health care system.Mangiones lawyer has cautioned against prejudging the case. Mangione, 26, has remained jailed in Pennsylvania, where he was arrested Monday. Manhattan prosecutors are working to bring him to New York to face a murder charge.UnitedHealthcares parent company, UnitedHealth Group, said this week it was working with law enforcement to ensure a safe work environment and to reinforce security guidelines and building access policies, a spokesperson said.The company has taken down photos, names and biographies for its top executives from its websites, a spokesperson said. Other organizations, including CVS, the parent company for insurance giant Aetna, have taken similar actions.Government health insurance provider Centene Corp. has announced that its investor day will be held online, rather than in-person as originally planned. Medica, a Minnesota-based nonprofit health care firm, said last week it was temporarily closing its six offices for security reasons and would have its employees work from home.Heightened security measures likely will make health care companies and their leaders more inaccessible to their policyholders, said former Cigna executive Wendell Potter.And understandably so, with this act of violence. Theres no assurance that this wont happen again, said Potter, whos now an advocate for health care reform.Private security firms and consultants have been in high demand, fielding calls almost immediately after the shooting from companies across a range of industries, including manufacturing and finance.Companies have long faced security risks and grappled with how far to take precautions for high-profile executives. But these recent threats sparked by Thompson’s killing should not be ignored, said Dave Komendat, a former security chief for Boeing who now heads his own risk-management company.The tone and tenor is different. The social reaction to this tragedy is different. And so I think that people need to take this seriously, Komendat said.Just over a quarter of the companies in the Fortune 500 reported spending money to protect their CEOs and top executives. Of those, the median payment for personal security doubled over the last three years to just under $100,000.Hours after the shooting, Komendat was on a call with dozens of chief security officers from big corporations, and there have been many similar meetings since, hosted by security groups or law enforcement agencies assessing the threats, he said.It just takes one person who is motivated by a poster who may have experienced something in their life through one of these companies that was harmful,” Komendat said.___Associated Press reporters Wyatte Grantham-Philips in New York and Barbara Ortutay in San Francisco, contributed to this report.
Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell is still suffering from the effects of a fall in the Senate earlier this week and is missing votes on Thursday due to leg stiffness, according to his office
Officials have been hard at work for expansion efforts at the Ogden-Hinckley airport since announcing commercial flights would return.