Daily Archives: April 11, 2021

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Posted: April 11, 2021 at 6:08 am

April 9, 2021 By Michael Jones Leave a Comment

The reigning, defending American League Champion Tampa Bay Rays open up their home schedule against division rival, New York Yankees on Friday afternoon in St. Petersburg. New York Yankees vs. Tampa Bay Rays Friday, April 09, 2021 03:10 PM EDT atTropicana Field Can The Rays Stop The Bleeding? The Tampa Bay Rays [...]

April 8, 2021 By Craig Brown Leave a Comment

Minnesota is coming off their finest offensive performance of the season while the Blues saw their lengthy losing streak come to a merciful end with a victory over Vegas on Wednesday night. Lets analyze this matchup and determine which side is the sharp side in our NHL picks on Friday night. Minnesota Wild vs. [...]

April 8, 2021 By Willie Miller Leave a Comment

Rivals from the American League West Division collide on Thursdays MLB betting card, and the Oakland Athletics will be looking for some revenge in Houston against the Astros. Oakland Athletics vs. Houston Astros Thursday, April 8, 2021 8:10 PM ET at Minute Maid Park Oakland and Houston were co-favorites for the [...]

April 8, 2021 By Jason Robinson Leave a Comment

With two strong teams about to collide, the Under is the smart NBA pick for Thursdays matchup between the Phoenix Suns and L.A. Clippers. Phoenix Suns vs. Los Angeles Clippers Thursday, April 8, 2021 10:00 PM ET at Staples Center Theres a lot to like about both the Phoenix Suns [...]

April 7, 2021 By Dave Harris Leave a Comment

The UFC on ABC UFC Odds are available. Read on for our complete betting guide and preview on this weekends stacked UFC event, including our favourite contests, updated odds and our free expert betting predictions. Aliaskhab Khizriev vs. Kyle Daukaus UFC Middleweight Main Card Bout Saturday, April 10, 2021 10:05 PM EDTat Apex Centre

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Yahoo Finance – Stock Market Live, Quotes, Business …

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After a volatile first quarter, Q2 has kicked off in style, and the major indexes sit at or hover near all-time highs. The government bond market has also been steadying as yields have pulled back after rising higher earlier in the year, soothing investor fears that inflation could get out of hand. Moreover, the economic recovery seems to be gathering steam at a faster pace than anticipated. We had been expecting the data to improve about this time, and early signals are that the recovery is absolutely on track, said Hugh Gimber, J.P. Morgans global market strategist. This is the period where the forecast of a strong recovery in growth is starting to look more like the fact of a strong recovery in growth. Against this backdrop, the analysts at J.P. Morgan have pinpointed 2 names which they believe are set for strong growth in the year ahead; both are expected to handsomely reward investors with at least 80% of gains over the coming months. We ran them through TipRanks database to see what other Wall Street's analysts have to say about them. Tencent Music Entertainment (TME) Well start in China, where Tencent Music Entertainment is the offspring of Chinas giant online venture company, Tencent, and Spotify, the Swedish streaming company that makes music and playlists easy. Tencent Music has seen consistently strong sales and earnings for the past year, with the top line growing year-over-year in each quarter of 2020. The Q4 report showed $1.26 billion in the top line, the highest in the last two years, along with 12 cents per share in earnings, up 33% year-over-year. Strong streaming revenue, which showed 29% growth, helped drive the results. And, Tencent Music, through its variety of apps, is the top music streaming service in the Chinese online market as shown by the 40.4% yoy increase in paid subscribers during Q4. In its quarterly results, the company reported 4.3 million net new users in Q4, to reach 56 million active premium accounts across its apps. That said, the stock has pulled back sharply recently, as like many other high-flying growth names, worries regarding an overheated valuation have come to the fore. But pullbacks often spell opportunity, and covering the stock for JPM, Alex Yao notes the strong subscription growth, as well as the potential in the companys other businesses, online ads and long-form audio, for monetization. We believe TME is entering a healthy development cycle with successive growth engines: 1) music subscription remains the core revenue driver with consistent paying ratio improvement, 2) ads revenue ramps up quickly, and 3) active investments in long-form audio initiative, which could become a new growth driver in 2022 and afterwards," Yao noted. To this end, Yao puts a $36 price target on TME, suggesting a one-year upside of 84%, to back his Overweight (i.e. Buy) rating on the stock. (To watch Yaos track record, click here) Overall, TME has a thumbs up from Wall Street. Of the 11 reviews on record, 7 are to Buy, 3 are to Hold, and 1 says Sell, making the analyst consensus a Moderate Buy. The shares are priced at $19.50, and their $30.19 average price target implies an upside of 55% for the months ahead. (See TME stock analysis on TipRanks) Y-mAbs Therapeutics (YMAB) The next JPM pick were looking at is Y-mAbs, a late-stage clinical biopharma company with a focus on pediatric oncology. The company is working on the development and commercialization of new antibody-based cancer therapeutics. Y-mAbs has one medication Danyelza approved for use to treat neuroblastoma in children age 1 and over, and a broad and advanced pipeline of drug candidates in various stages of the clinical process, as well as five additional products in pre-clinical research stages. Having an approved drug is a holy grail for clinical biopharmaceutical companies, and in 4Q20 Y-mAbs saw considerable income from Danyelza. The company announced at the end of December that it had agreed to sell the Priority Review Voucher for the drug to United Therapeutics for $105 million. Y-mAbs will retain the rights to 60% of the net proceeds from the sale, under an agreement with Memorial Sloan Kettering. Also in December, the company announced a license agreement with SciClone. The partnership gives Y-mAbs and Danyelza an opening for treating pediatric patients in China. The agreement includes Mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Macau, and is worth up to $120 million for Y-mAbs. The company has entered other agreements making Danyelza available in Eastern Europe and Russia. Danyelza is Y-mAbs flagship product, but the company also has omburtamab in advanced stages of the pipeline. This drug candidate saw a setback in October last year, when the FDA refused to file the company's Biologics License Application, proposed for the treatment of pediatric patients with CNS/leptomeningeal metastasis. Y-mAbs has been in steady communication with the FDA since then, with a new target date for the BLA at the end of 2Q21 or early in 3Q21. These two drugs one approved and one not yet form the basis of the JPM outlook on this stock. Analyst Tessa Romero writes, Our thesis revolves around the de-risked nature of the pediatric oncology pipeline. Our recent KOL feedback is enthusiastic about use of lead asset Danyelza in patients with high-risk neuroblastoma (NB). For second lead asset omburtamab in NB metastatic to the central nervous system (CNS/LM from NB), while the Refuse to File last year and subsequent regulatory delays were certainly disappointing, we still see a high probability of approval for the product in the 2Q/3Q22 timeframe Looking ahead, Romero sees an upbeat outlook for the company: Coupling our anticipation of a healthy launch for Danyelza, with regulatory/clinical momentum expected in the near- to mid-term, we see shares poised to rebound and see an attractive buying opportunity at current levels. The analyst puts a $52 price target on YMAB shares, implying an upside of 86% for the year ahead, and supporting an Overweight (i.e. Buy) rating. (To watch Romeros track record, click here) Overall, the Wall Street reviews break down 3 to 1 in favor of Buys versus Holds on Y-mAbs, giving the stock a Strong Buy consensus rating. The shares have an average price target of $61.25, suggestive of a 121% upside potential this year. (See YMAB stock analysis on TipRanks) To find good ideas for stocks trading at attractive valuations, visit TipRanks Best Stocks to Buy, a newly launched tool that unites all of TipRanks equity insights. Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the featured analysts. The content is intended to be used for informational purposes only. It is very important to do your own analysis before making any investment.

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Yahoo Finance - Stock Market Live, Quotes, Business ...

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Scottish fishing chief warns Ireland as boat found fishing ‘illegally’ in UK – Daily Express

Posted: at 6:07 am

EU: Bocquet on realignment mechanisms in fishing waters

An Irish-registered vessel was spotted fishing between the six- and 12-mile mile limit at Rockall, according to the Scottish White Fish Producers' Association (SWFPA). While the UK claims the uninhabitable islet is part of its exclusive economic zone (EEZ), the Irish disagree.

Mike Park, chief executive of the SWFPA, said the action over the weekend constitutes a breach of international fishing regulations.

He claimed the presence of the Irish boat in the zone amounted to IUU (illegal, unregulated and unreported) fishing.

He stressed that Rockall is not included in the areas which foreign skippers are allowed to fish in under the post-Brexit arangement with the EU.

Mr Park told the Fishing Daily: "We are aware that there are Southern Irish vessels operating within the 12-mile limit at Rockall.

"Clearly this is in breach of the law as well, and they are basically conducting IUU operations in terms of fishing.

With the Brexit negotiations, there were certain areas where the EU vessels were allowed to fish between the six-and 12-mile limit, but Rockall is not one of them.

He said the fishing industry in Scotland does not want to see EU fishermen being fined for breaching law.

He said they should simply respect post-Brexit fishing rules and avoid breaching any parts of the UK-EU deal.

He added: "We dont want to see fishermen falling foul of the law. We dont want them being arrested and we dont want them being fined.

"We just want them to apply the law as it stands.

Mr Park's warning came after a group of Scottish fishing chiefs accused Danish fishermen of ignoring conservation rules and fishing illegally off the Shetland Islands.

It is alleged that up to Danish multi-rig trawlers are using quad-rigs which are banned by the Scottish Government in the Fladen prawn grounds near the isles.

FOR THE LATEST BREXIT NEWS, PLEASE SEE BELOW:

5.20am update: 'Complicated' Brexit passport rules for Europe travel - 'for goodness sake'

Simon Calder the travel expert appeared on ITV's This Morning today to give a grave warning about travel to Europe and passports after Brexit.

Travel after Brexit is about to get much more complicated once European holidays are back on the cards for Britains.This summer Europe is expected to open up for UK holidaymakers once more.

Simon Calder warned all those planning to travel to check their passports and, most importantly, when those passports expired.

Speaking to presenters Eamonn Holmes and Ruth Langsford, Simon said: "Since Brexit, since the transition period ended, it gets a lot more complicated going into Europe.

"The Government has an online passport checker system so if you are thinking of going abroad then for goodness sake don't fall at the first hurdle and find that you haven't got your passports in order."

4.21am update:UK orders EU to 'stop bickering' - end vaccine row NOW

EU leaders need to stop "bickering" with drug making companies, in particular Anglo-Swedish firm AstraZeneca, over coronavirus jab supply according to the UK's vaccination guru.

The claim was made by Kate Bingham who headed the highly successful UK Vaccine Taskforce tasked with obtaining jabs for Britain.

The EU is demanding AstraZeneca increase vaccine supply to the bloc whilst some leaders, such as Frances Emmanuel Macron, have raised false doubts about its effectiveness.

Speaking to the Financial Times Ms Bingham said: The bickering just layers uncertainty in peoples minds, so it needs to stop.

3.48am update: Scottish fishermen raise alarm about EU vessels 'violating rules'

Scottish fishermen have attacked the EU after European fleets have violated conservation rules in UK waters.

A row has broken out between the UK and EU after Danish boats have been accused of ignoring environmental rules to plunder waters.

According to Scottish fishers in the Fladen prawn grounds around the Shetland Islands, Danish trawlers have been found to be plundering the waters despite being banned since 2007. Local fishermen have said the EU fleets have used multi-rig trawlers.

2.05am update:British expat with home in Spain feels 'screwed over' as retirement dreams dashed

A British expat with a home in Spain has said he and his partner have had their retirement dreams shattered and feel they have been "screwed over".

One of the conditions of the new terms for British citizens living in Spain is that to gain residency each individual must have an income of 21,000 a year, or have proof of work.This risks impacting thousands of UK pensioners living inSpain.

British expats living in Spain, who did not secure residency, were deemed illegal immigrants at the end of March 2021.

1.55am update:'On right side of history!' Brexit support leaps as 'disastrous' EU shows 'true colours'

Support for Brexit has increased amid the EU's shameful vaccine rollout, a new poll has shown, as a Leaver warned the bloc has put the "European project before the lives of citizens".

As Brussels continues to come under fire from voters and European leaders over the debacle, a new YouGov survey has shown a jump in hindsight for backing Brexit.

The UK's exit from the club of nations has been credited for its roaring success on the vaccine front.

12.11am update: Spain erupts at EU for punishing UK as lorry drivers suffer -'We're hostages'

Spanish lorry drivers are now suffering more under EU bureaucratic controls than their British counterparts, a haulier organisation has claimed.

The Valencian Federation of Road Haulers has hit out at the EU's rigorous controls, especially those imposed in France.

The federation said: "France wants to make emphasis on the fact that the UK has left the EU, and therefore things cannot continue the same."

The organisation stated that after three months of Brexit, lorry drivers from Spain are suffering more with European controls than British controls.

Melanie Kaidan takes over live reporting fromLaura O'Callaghan.

10.22pm update:UK stepped in and secretly shipped 700,000 AstraZeneca jabs to Australia after EU block

More than 7,000 Oxford-AstraZeneca Covid vaccines were secretly flown from Britain to Australia, according to reports, while not a single jab was exported Down Under from the EU.

The huge batches of the shots were despatched after the EU imposed new limits on exports of Covid vaccines produced on the continent.

The bloc continues to grapple with a chronic shortage of vaccines and blighted by slow inoculation programmes.

According to the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, 717,000 AstraZeneca jabs arrived in Australia after the operation was conducted under the radar.

9.02pm update:Brexit border chaos: Northern Ireland riots erupt as angry youths hurl petrol bomb into bus

Shocking footage shows a Northern Ireland bus engulfed in flames as youths were seen throwing petrol bombs into the vehicle in broad daylight.

Footage uploaded on social media showed a gang of hooded youths surrounding a bus as one of the protesters throws a petrol bomb through the window.

Police sirens are heard in the background as rioters continue to wreak havoc in Northern Ireland over unresolved border issues from Brexit and a lack of arrests at a large Republican funeral.

The bus was later seen on drone footage as completely engulfed in flames as emergency services cleared the streets.

8.28pm update:EU solidarity crumbles: Bavaria sidelines Merkel and Brussels to sign Russian vaccine deal

Angela Merkel's authority has been pushed aside by the leader of Bavaria who skirted around the German leader and the EU to sign a contract with the Russians for Covid vaccines.

Markus Sder, the state's minister-president, took decisive action as criticism of Brussels' handling of the vaccine rollout continues.

On Wednesday he signed a preliminary contract for the delivery of Sputnik V jabs, which will kick in once the Russian-made shot is approved by the European drug regulator.

The European Medicines Agency (EMA) is in the process of examining the application for approval of the Sputnik jab.

7.05pm update: Poll shows rise in suport for Brexit

Support for Brexit has risen amid the EU's vaccine crisis, new research has shown.

In a YouGov poll, 46 percent said Britain was right to leave the bloc, a rise of two points compared to a similar survey conducted recently.

The research was carried out from March 31 to April 1 and compared to data collected from March 25-26.

A total of 1,736 British adults took part.

6.36pm update:Angela Merkel crisis: 60,000 sign petition against Chancellor's 'paid politics' culture

More than 60,000 people have signed a petition calling for an end to "paid politics" in Germany, which campaigners say flourished during Angela Merkel's 16 years in office.

As the Chancellor prepares to pass the baton on later this year, her final months look to be some of her most challenging yet amid growing discontent among Germans.

The Youth Council of the Generations Foundation has hit out at Mrs Merkel for allowing a system of political lobbying completely lacking in transparency to fester.

5.43pm update: NI Protocol blasted as 'totally disproportionate'

Northern Ireland's First Minister has called for the current post-Brexit trading arrangements to be replaced with something "realistic and sustainable".

Arlene Foster said the Northern Ireland Protocol has led to a "completely disproportionate situation" where trade between Great Britain and Northern Ireland has been "severely disrupted".

EU rules are applied at the region's ports as part of the deal which was negotiated to avoid a hard border on the island of Ireland as the Republic remains within the bloc.

A number of legal challenges are being launched against the protocol.

Speaking at an In Conversation online event with Institute of Economic Affairs director general Mark Littlewood on Wednesday, Mrs Foster said the DUP warned about the impact of the protocol "right from its inception".

4.55pm update:'Change to 180!' British expat slams Spain as he demands change to post-Brexit stay rules

A British expat has slammed Spain's failure to extend residency to residents now faced with having to return to the UK amid a post-Brexit shake-up for visa requirements.

Changes tovisa rules inSpainafterBrexitmean thousands of British homeowners now face 90-day limit on their residency status.

Expats living unregistered in Spain may now have to return to the UK or risk falling foul of the new measures.

British pensioners have begun voicing their opposition to the 90-day maximum stay requirements which the Spanish Government has vowed to enforce.

One British national toldCGTN Europe: "Fifty percent where I live are having to stay for 30-days and then have to go home.

"Half of them ain't got nowhere to go, they have sold the house, they don't even have family back home to stay with.

"You know this 90-day thing is just crimping everybody, instead of making it 180 and 90 which is what everybody would agree with and think it would be brilliant to do."

3.35pm update:'Frexit fast!' EU blasted as French standard of living plummets from 5th to 26th in world

Frexit campaigner Florian Philippot shamed Brussels' devastating impact on France's rate for standard of living, as he called for the country to leave the bloc as soon as possible.

In a savage attack on the European Union project, the leader of Les Patriotes blamed Brussels forFrance's catastrophic decline for standard of living.

Mr Philippot argued it was because of France's membership to the bloc that the country has fallen from 5th place to 26th in just 46 years.

He blasted: "In 1975, France: 5th in the world for the standard of living per capita.Today: 26th row.

"But there are still ideologues to tell us that the EU and the euro are extraordinary successes!

"Frexit, independence, freedom, power, fast!"

2:30pm update:Von der Leyen to confront Charles Michel after bizarre chair snub at awkward Turkey summit

Ursula von der Leyen will seek to reaffirm her status as the EU's joint top official after she was left without a chair during a meeting in Turkey.

The European Commission President was left standing during a meeting between her Council counterpart Charles Michel and Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

The EUs executive will now open their talks with the blocs other top eurocrat to ensure she never falls victim to grandstanding again.

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Scottish fishing chief warns Ireland as boat found fishing 'illegally' in UK - Daily Express

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Closed Doors: Lack of transparency and the push to overfish in Ireland’s fishing sector – TheJournal.ie

Posted: at 6:07 am

IN OUR IMMEDIATE family, theres no fishermen coming up. And that would have been from a long line of fishermen. Its sad when you think of it.

Jerry Early, a part-time fisherman on Arranmore, is hoping to make fishing more attractive for the next generation by finding ways that small-scale island boats can prosper.

A lost generation of fishers was created on the Donegal island, according to Early. This happened when a perfect storm was created 15 years ago due to a ban of driftnetting for salmon in 2006 combined with the economic boom which attracted islanders to higher wages in Dublin, he explained.

That lag, of the generations not following through with fishing, has put all the islands at a disadvantage.

Its very important for the future of islands and coastal areas, to make it more attractive to get back into fishing, said Early. In order to do this, a group on the island are hoping to promote heritage fishing, where traditional methods are used.

This includes hand-hauling of nets and line-catching of fish. They are in the process of developing an app that will market their produce directly to the consumer.

Back in the day, when it was [all] rowboats or sailboats, fish were plentiful. We were fishing different species at different times which allowed for sustainability. Progress can be a dangerous thing, added Early, who said it has had a detrimental effect on island fishing.

Big was supposed to be better, but this has proven not to be the case in fishing, said Early. One boat can catch enough fish in one trip that can keep all the islands of Ireland going for a year.

The fisherman said that more emphasis needs to be put on small-scale and traditional methods, with poor policy making it really hard to be a fisherman on the island.

Arranmore fisherman and publican, Jerry Early, wants low impact fishing to receive more support. Source: Antti Viitala

Over the past number of months, Noteworthy has investigated the transparency in the management of Irish fishing. We delve into:

The rest of our series is out now. In part one, we revealed the impact that fishing is having on wildlife and yesterday, in part two, we explored the myriad of issues relating to the enforcement of fishery policy in Ireland.

***

Bigger is not always better

On Arranmore, the quota system is one of Earlys targets in his fight to restore their fisheries. He is chair of the recently recognised Irish Islands Marine Resource Organisation (IIMRO) Irelands newest fish producer organisation.

This will give the islands a seat at the table where quotas are discussed at a national level. One difficulty that smaller-scale fishers encounter with the current system is that those who catch more fish are given more quota, he explained.

There is a small quota for line-caught pollack and mackerel. Early said that it would be a step in the right direction if more quota was made allowable for those who want to practice heritage, inshore and traditional fishing.

At the other end of the country, Kerry native Alex Crowley is a full-time inshore fisherman who fishes mainly for shellfish close to his base at Cahersiveen.

Ten years ago would have been a different story, he explained. We used to have a much more diverse fishery with quota species such as whitefish (cod, whiting) and pelagic fish (herring, mackerel) but now the focus is on shellfish (lobster, crab and shrimp).

Crowley said the reason for this move away from quota species is that there isnt enough fish in inshore waters to be viable anymore. Split crews and non-stop intensive fishing at an industrial scale have become the norm in some of the larger fisheries, he added.

If you went back 20 years ago, if there was a spell of bad weather, the stocks got a break, but they dont get that break anymore.

Crowley, who is also the secretary general of the National Inshore Fishermens Association (NIFA) suggested that supporting smaller boats would lead to more employment and sustainable fisheries.

By allocating quota to the types of fishing that have less of an environmental impact and to vessels that dont have the physical capacity to overfish, Crowley felt this would go a long way in preventing future overfishing and sustaining coastal communities.

Environmental groups are also increasingly pushing for policy-makers to pay more attention to small, rather than industrial, fisheries.

Pdraic Fogarty of the Irish Wildlife Trust is in favour of giving more quota to fishers who use vessels and fishing methods that have a low impact on the ecosystem. He added that industrial fishing is not just damaging to the environment, but its a jobs killer.

Nets laid out for repair in Killybegs harbour. Source: Maria Delaney via Noteworthy

Our public resource

Quotas are the first thing that almost everyone with a connection to fishing talks about whenever fishing is discussed. They are the share of certain stocks of commercial fish that are allowed to be caught and were one of the points of contention of Brexit, with Ireland losing a large share of its valuable mackerel quota.

In the EU, each countrys quota is based on its historic track record. Once the country quota is allocated, Member States have a lot of freedom in how they are distributed.

In Ireland, quotas are a public resource owned by the State and are made available to fishing vessels based on a lottery for some quotas and on vessel size or other details for others. To calculate which boats and companies are allocated the Irish quota by the Government is extremely complex as the information is not publicly available.

A 2019 European Commission report compiled a database of the entire EU fleet register and found that most Irish vessels are owned by individual Irish fishers, with only about 3.5% of the fleet registered to a foreign owner or foreign registered company.

They also found that larger Irish companies are increasingly common as, due to the Irish first to catch the fish, gets the quota system, only those who can modernise are able to compete. This means smaller, less efficient vessel owners are left behind.

The study authors suggested that there is a need for greater transparency in Ireland about the ultimate beneficiaries of initial allocations of quotas.

So, who gets the largest share? The report authors calculated that the top eight quota owners share 28% of the quota between them, with the Atlantic Dawn Company topping the table, at over 7% of the entire national quota:

To view an interactive version of this graph, click here.

Industry dominance

Green Party MEP, Grace OSullivan, who is on the European Parliaments Committee on Fisheries (PECH), said there is a perception going back through the decades that the larger scale fishers have always got the lions share in Ireland.

She uses Dunmore East in Waterford as an example of a once vibrant fishing community which has lost ground because of a lack of investment. This is partly because there arent more diverse producer organisations in the country representing the small and large scale.

If everyones at the table at least you can argue for resources and try, at least, to aim for a fair distribution. In Ireland, theres a feeling that that hasnt been the case.

We have to recognise that there are inequalities in the system, they have been widening and we need to change this dynamic.

There were four producer organisations (POs) up until last February when the new island PO joined their ranks, bringing that number to five.

A report Who gets to Fish by British think-tank, the New Economics Foundation, stated that the original four POs had a combined membership of around 10% of Irish vessels but 71% of capacity. This is because their members constitute some of the highest capacity vessels, according to the report.

The vast majority of Irelands fleet consists of small vessels but the larger vessels catch most of the fish around our coasts. Figures from the Irish Fleet Register from last month show that almost 75% of the fleet are less than 10 metres in length and just over 10% are greater than 15 metres.

To view an interactive version of this graph, click here.

One advantage of being a member of a producer organisation is that a representative sits on the Quota Management Advisory Committee (QMAC) which meets on a monthly basis. Consultation with industry in respect of the management of Irelands fishing quotas is carried out via this committee that is according to the Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine, Charlie McConalogue in January.

The Committee has seven external representatives one from each of the POs as well as one from the Irish Fish Processors and Exporters Association, the National Inshore Fisheries Forum and the Co-Operative group.

POs are heavily over-represented in the QMAC, according to the New Economics Foundation report. It stated that the scale of fishing activities shouldnt determine the level of representation in decisions about access to a public resource. It also noted that scientific advisors and other stakeholders are not represented.

When asked if the Minister was open to allowing representatives of environmental NGOs to attend these meetings, a spokesperson said that issues relating to policy are not dealt with by the QMAC and, thus, it is not a forum for eNGOs to attend.

The New Economics Foundations report also suggested that the Committees advice and decision-making should be more transparent, with publication of minutes and the final advice for the Minister.

A spokesperson for the Department told Noteworthy that the Minister recently decided that the publishing of the minutes of the QMAC meetings will assist with transparency for stakeholders.

This is not a finding unique to Ireland. One of the key policy messages of the United Nations in relation to sustainable small-scale fisheries is that large industrial fleets dominate fisheries management efforts and political interest. It recommends that policies refocus to address the needs and challenges of small-scale fisheries.

Room for better balance

The Minister addressed the fact that many smaller vessels were not represented by existing producer organisations in response to aparliamentary question in January. He said that the National Inshore Fisheries Forum was established to provide a platform for engagement with those primarily involved in the inshore fisheries sector.

Alex Crowley said there needs to be room for everybody in the fishing sector. Source: Roland OShea

However, Crowley from the National Inshore Fishermens Association, who is also a past-chair of the Fisheries Forum, said that the Forum does its best to represent the small-scale operators but the people working in it do so voluntarily with no CEOs or paid professionals.

He added that a number of members of the Processors and Exporters Association, as well as directors that are part of the Co-Operative group, also either own or operate large boats.

In terms of who the Minister consults with and lobbying power, its very much leaning towards larger vessels.

Though he is not anti-big boats and said they are needed to fish species such as blue whiting and horse mackerel, Crowley felt theres room for a bit better balance, using the quota allocation as mackerel as an example.

Almost 90% of Irelands most valuable quota worth over 65 million for the peak mackerel season this year is allocated to 22 large refrigerated seawater vessels (RSW), with under 1% set aside for line-caught mackerel in a fishery of around 1,500 boats.

This policy represents a balance between all interests in the mackerel fishery and I have no plan at this time to review it, Minister McConalogue stated last November.

Patrick Murphy, chief executive of the Irish South and West Fish Producers Organisation (IS&WFPO) one of the original four POs, claimed toNoteworthythat he has done more for the inshore in his area than any man alive and will continue to fight for them, regardless of the position he is in.

There is nothing stopping a small boat joining a PO, he said. Every person who joins the PO has an equal right, no matter if you are a super trawler or a punt, you have the same voice as everybody else.

They bend over backwards to bring small boats into the POs, Murphy said, by charging them less than larger vessels. Small boats could take over the POs if they came in in large numbers, he added.

Sean ODonoghue, chief executive of the Killybegs Fishermens Organisation, one of Irelands most active POs when it comes to registering its lobbying efforts, said that it has small-scale fishers as part of the organisation and theyre quite entitled to join. He added that the idea that the POs are wielding power couldnt be further from the truth.

***

Arguing against advised limits

In addition to being consulted on the management of Irelands fishing quotas as part of their Committee work, most POs make a submission to the Government every year on fishing opportunities for the following year.

These opportunities equate to total allowable catches (TACs) for certain fish stocks the amount of a particular species in an area that EU fishers are allowed to catch. These are the basis of fishing quotas and are decided in a number of internal EU and third-party negotiations each year.

Each December, the EU Fisheries Council of Ministers meet behind closed doors to discuss EU stock allocations for the North East Atlantic. Historically, this was the most important negotiation for Ireland, but Brexit has complicated this as the UK are now a third-party. Now, most fish stocks of interest to Ireland are negotiated at consultations between the EU, Norway and the UK.

These negotiations are of high interest to environmental groups, and five of these also made submissions to the Government this year, which alongside the Killybegs Fishermens Organisation submission were published online.

In addition, Patrick Murphy emailed DAFM a statement entitled IS&WFPO Submission, pre-December Council, which Noteworthy obtained through FOI. This was sent a week after the closing date for submissions and was not included in the official documents online. However, the email was forwarded by a DAFM official to Cecil Beamish, the Assistant Secretary General for the Marine as well as others in the Department.

One of the main points that environmental groups made in their submissions to the Government is that the total allowable catch (TAC) for each stock should be set at a level recommended by scientists, in line with the 2020 legal deadline to end overfishing that the EU gave itself as part of the Common Fisheries Policy a target which has not yet been met.

Each year, the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES) advises the European Commission on the maximum amount of fish that should be caught. This is called the maximum sustainable yield (MSY) and stocks fished above this level are classed as overfished which could result in their decline.

For eight (over 61%) of these stocks, bottom trawling was the most common fishing method used by Irish vessels. ICES recommended that no fish be caught for six of these stocks but an Irish quota of over 2,700 tonnes was assigned, worth over 4.8m.

The New Economics Foundation analysed overfishing in the Northeast Atlantic in 2020 and found Ireland exceeded scientific advice by 7,300 tonnes, 4% of our total quota. This placed us fourth on the overfishing league table behind Sweden, Denmark and France, according to the report. This was an improvement from the previous year when Ireland was third, with an excess quota of 22%.

That does not take into account, however, any potential unreported overfishing, such as that recently found by the European Commission. Following an audit and formal administrative inquiry it was revealed that Ireland overfished a combination of mackerel, horse mackerel (scad) and blue whiting by over 42,000 tonnes between 2012 and 2016. Read more about issues with enforcement of Irish fisheries in part two of this investigation.

To view an interactive version of this graph, click here.

In both the official submission on 2021 fishing opportunities by the Killybegs Fishermens Organisation (KFO) as well as the email to the Department from the Irish South and West Fish Producers Organisation (IS&WFPO), arguments are put forward against the scientific advice on total allowable catch.

KFO argued against proposed reductions due to inconsistent evidence for mackerel and stated the reductions were unwarranted in Rockall haddock, unjustified in monkfish, did not make sense in hake and impossible to reconcile in plaice due to the parameters on which the advice was based.

The submission stated that KFO continues to witness a lack of consistency in the advice in relation to these stocks and said there was a critical need for quality assurance across all assessments.

The POs chief executive ODonoghue told Noteworthy that it is absolutely critical that we have an independent body such as ICES giving advice, but added that he expects that advice to be quality controlled. He said that ICES didnt have a fit for purpose quality assurance system and though it isnt fully there, it has made huge strides over the past two years.

Sort of scientific based

A pushback against ICES advice by POs is inevitable as they are representing people who have an economic interest in fisheries, according to Dominic Rihan, Director of Economic and Strategic Services at seafood development agency, BIM.

However, he added that the way the Common Fisheries Policy has been developed, the ability for Member States and industries to influence the fishing opportunity discussions are much less. Rihan is involved in these discussions with the Irish Government and is also vice-chair of the Scientific, Technical and Economic Committee for Fisheries (STECF) which reports on the progress of the CFP to the European Commission.

He felt where stocks have maximum sustainable yield (MSY) advice, there isnt a lot of wriggle room and people maybe begrudgingly have accepted that. Conflict happens when there isnt a full stock assessment so ICES issues precautionary advice which has led to blanket cuts of minus 20% and is something that the industry finds very hard to accept.

Zero total allowable catch advice also creates a huge amount of frustration because setting a zero TAC means no fishing which has an impact on other stocks in mixed fisheries.

Rihan explained that the Commission has taken a bycatch quota approach which is sort of scientific based, but also a bit of put your finger in the air and [get] whatever number you think. That is where tensions and suspicions arise from both industry and NGOs because it is very subjective.

Both producer organisations were concerned about cod which had a zero catch advice for this year because of the impact this would have on other fisheries such as haddock which lives alongside cod. The IS&WFPO wrote this would be prohibitive and Killybegs Fishermens Organisation called for the continuation of bycatch TACs.

Cod and herring in the Celtic Sea are in a very bad state at the moment, according to Dr Ciaran Kelly, Director of Fisheries Ecosystems Advisory Services at the Marine Institute.

This is primarily because of sustained periods of poor recruitment, meaning a low amount of young fish are coming into the population. There is very little that scientists can do, other than giving a zero catch advice.

You cant put fish back into the sea. So you simply have to stop catching fish at a certain point and wait for the productivity of the fish stock to come back.

According to the latest 2020 Stock Book from the Marine Institute, there has been a downward trend in biomass indicators for Celtic Sea Cod since 2012, in spite of a year-on-year reduction in catches.

On top of the pressure that fishing puts on these stocks, scientists are discovering that other factors are at play. Kelly explained, as an example, that the wrong environmental cues can lead to fish not spawning at the right time, leading to fewer offspring. When poor productivity, poor survival and individuals being taken through fishing are combined, this can lead to the decline of a stock.

Jenni Grossmann, science and policy advisor at UK-based ClientEarth, said that fishing is one of the many pressures that impacts stocks and ecosystems, alongside climate change and other issues. However, she cited a2019 intergovernmental global assessment of biodiversitywhich found that in marine ecosystems, direct exploitation of organisms (mainly fishing) has had the largest relative impact on nature.

Grossmann said that NGOs dont want fishers to be tied up in ports and they recognise that setting the catch advice at zero would cause issues for fishers in the short-term.

However, she added that by continuing to ignore that advice it is perpetuating the issue and its not going to get better. This will also limit the ability of these fisheries to improve as the stocks are being kept down, she added. The NGO approach is to let these stocks recover and then they wont be limiting the other stocks.

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Closed Doors: Lack of transparency and the push to overfish in Ireland's fishing sector - TheJournal.ie

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What Yoko Ono really thought about John Lennon leaving The Beatles for Plastic Ono Band – The Independent

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O

n 13September 1969, John Lennon the Beatle most quickly heading for the exit door played the Toronto Rock and Roll Revival festival under the name Plastic Ono Band. For the first time he appeared on stage with his wife of six months, Yoko Ono. She and Lennonhad been together since 1967, but within and without the Beatles industrial-cultural complex the Japanese artist remained, as dutifully inscribed rock lore has it, a divisive figure.

Yet performing that night in Canada, as she took her place alongside her husband,Ono was united as an artist with perhaps the greatest songwriter in the world.Was there, finally, a feeling of acceptance from Lennons fans?

I dont know about that. I still dont feel that Johns fans are accepting me, Ono, who is now 88, replied when I asked her that question 11 years ago. I dont know whos really Johns fans, and whos really John and Yoko fans. The Beatles fans, some of them really denounced John ina way. So I dont know whos who. So whenever I create something make an album or something I never think about whos gonna listen to it. Its a waste of time. You would never know.

Ono and I were talking in Reykjavik on 9October 2009, on what would have been her late husbands 69thbirthday, and which was also the 34thbirthday of their son Sean. We were in Iceland because, in her role as the keeper of Lennons flame, she was also the keeper of his light. Ono was unveiling the Imagine Peace Tower, a column of light shooting into the sky that shed first conceptualised as an artwork in 1967. It would stay lit for two months, until 8 December, the anniversary of the day on which Lennon was murdered in New York in 1980.

That autumn, Ono had also just released a new album, Between My Head and the Sky, produced by Sean and credited to Plastic Ono Band. The name had lain dormant since she and Lennon used it for 1975sShaved Fishcompilation. She explained to me how the Plastic Ono Band concept predated her meeting her future husband. Invited to perform a concert of some sort in Berlin, theavant gardeartist decided she would simulate the popular band thing well have four plastic artwork stands, and each stand would have a tape recorder inside. And that was my band.

John was very happy with Yoko'

(David Nutter)

Then when we got together I said: Oh John, I had this invitation to Berlin, she continued, recalling how she told the Beatle that her satirical take on a fab four-piece would also be holding plastic toothbrush-holders and plastic pillboxes. And he said: You should call it Plastic Ono Band. Just like that! He is so quick! marvelled Ono, still referring in the present tense, as she often did, to a man then dead for 29 years.

This month, Plastic Ono Band lives once again, in a blockbuster release of the 1970 John Lennon/Plastic Ono Bandalbum.The Ultimate Collection is a 50thanniversary super deluxe box set that promisesthe ultimatedeep listening experience of Lennons first solo album after the end of The Beatles in April that year.

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Over 11 hours and eight exhaustive discs (comprising demos, raw studio mixes, out-takes and so on), here is the primal howl of album opener Mother, sounding more traumatised still,and nevermore starkly than on the vocals-only Elements mix, which foregrounds the anguish of a child abandoned by both parents: Mother, you had me but I never had you Father, you left me but I never left you. Here, too, are the original 51 breath-stealing seconds of the climactic My Mummys Dead stretched to 75 seconds: a nursery-rhyme lament in which raw loss echoes, and echoes, down the decades as does Lennons strength in weakness.

If you think about it, how many other alpha-male rocknrollers would write a song called My Mummys Dead? wonders Richard DiLello, The Beatles press assistant at their company Apple Corps who, during that pivotal year of 1970, photographed Lennon and Ono on several occasions. And the choice of words is interesting. Its not the formal mother. Its mummy, the most intimate term you can use you with your mother.

This, though, was where Lennons head was at in the months following the end of The Beatles: searingly honest, self-lacerating, self-fulfilling.

On the one hand, says DiLello author ofthebrilliant Apple insiders account The Longest Cocktail Party(1972) and now, aged 75, living in Ohio John was in a very good place.

He was very happy with Yoko, and prior to this they were working non-stop on their peace campaign, starting with the Amsterdam bed-in in 1969, then getting married and going on their honeymoon. He was very productive; he never stopped doing stuff. I mean, all of the Beatles had enormous reserves of energy.

John Lennon and his wife of a week, Yoko Ono, in their bed in the Hilton Hotel, Amsterdam, in 1969

(Getty)

For Lennon, that found form in three solo singles, Give PeaceaChance, Cold Turkey and Instant Karma!, none of which would appear on Plastic Ono Band. DiLello recalls accompanying Lennon and Ono toTop of the Pops, where they recorded a performance of Instant Karma! on 11February 1970.

It was a powerful statement like youd expect from John Lennon. And it was so different coming after Give PeaceaChance, [this was] a hard-hitting statement, and the sonic landscape of that song was very different. It was very hard-edged. There was a buzzsaw, punk sound almost to it.

On the other hand, Lennon wanted toboldly explore new places. That almost-punk sound, notes the American, was emblematic of Lennons desire to plant a flag in a fresh musical direction, especially in the wake of their sessions with Arthur Janov and primal scream therapy. That opened up the door for a completely different period in his life, letting out all the demons.

The Californian psychotherapist treated Lennon and Yoko in London that spring, and then, over four months, in Bel Air in Los Angeles. Lennon was curious about a treatment where, as he put it, patients get to do this thing and then they scream and feel better OK, its something other than taking a tab of acid and feeling better. So I thought, lets try it In the therapy you really feel every painful moment of your life. Its excruciating. You are forced to realise that your pain, the kind that makes you wake up afraid with your heart pounding, is really yours and not the result of somebody up in the sky. Its the result of your parents and your environment.

That therapy gave John permission to talk about things that were important to him that he never was able to put into songs before, says DiLello, that didnt fit into the format of the band. This was all very personal stuff. He had a lot of demons that he had to address from this whole period of his life when hed been abandoned as a kid by his mother and father. Then he went from being a kid to being the most famous guy in the world. He had a lot to deal with in a very short period of time.

Musician and illustrator Klaus Voormann, a member of The Beatles inner-circle who performed in Toronto and played bass on Plastic Ono Band, had by then known Lennon for the best part of a decade, since the bands Hamburg days. He was aware from early on in their friendship how troubled Lennon was by first the absence, and then the death, when he was 17, of his mother Julia.

Klaus Voormann, a member of The Beatles inner-circle, pictured in 1965

(Getty)

In the very beginning he wasnt really talking much about it, he says, then he started talking about it. But I tell you this, its really true: until Yoko came on the picture, he was an unhappy person. Even having so much money and success, John was not happy.

The German remembers how, after the sessions with Janov, John and Yoko were both like little kids they were crying, then they were laughing, very open. They were like an open wound, he tells me over the phone from Bavaria. And John wanted to get rid of this feeling by writing those songs. Thats why, to me, this is such a strong record apart from the fact that Im playing on it! the 82-year-old laughs.

For Ono, this was part of a creative process that began as soon as she and Lennon met. Lennon recognised that a fellow artist, albeitonefromawildly differenttraditionanddiscipline, would revive and increase his musical potency.

Something was kicking in, Ono told me in December 2009. Two months after meeting in Iceland, we were in Tokyo for the annual Dream Power charity concert she hosted at the 12,000-capacity Budokan arena, location of The Beatles summer 1966 shows in the Japanese capital. But I didnt know anything about that really. It just felt that he was Well, you can say that I thought that he was curious about me. Lennondidnt need her to liberate himself, Ono insists; he was capable of that on his own. Its just that he needed somebody to lean on.

I asked how she responded to Lennons announcement to Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr on 20 September 1969, one week after the Plastic Ono Band Toronto show, that he was leaving The Beatles.

I said, OhJesus.Because I wanted some space for my own work.

So she didnt want him to end The Beatles?

No! What is he thinking? But he was kind of like threatening me: Now its you and me, OK? I think he sussed that maybe I might leave or something But I think he felt that what I was doing was more exciting. Only because they were doing it for how many years together.

When I suggested to her that, after The Beatles broke up, she might have thought, Great, a whole new adventure for John and me asartists,she shook her head and said firmly: No, I didnt.

It was very difficult for me because and I said this to John and he was very upset I was always a lone wolf. I did my things by myself. I had assistants, like my [former] husband [Tony Cox, whom she married in 1962 and divorced in 1969], she said with a smile. But I never had a situation where I had to do things with another person. And John was so used to it. John had a partnership with three people, and especially with Paul. So I was feeling not particularly excited about that. I felt like my power was halved.

And Lennon felt his power was doubled?

Yeah, yeah, yeah. Exactly! Ono beamed. Isnt that amazing?

I felt like my power was halved Yoko Ono with John Lennon in 1971

(Getty)

Free of The Beatles, Lennon leaned on his new wife intensely and protected her. In the summer of 1970 she suffered a second miscarriage, having already endured one in November 1968.

That was a big deal, says DiLello. They wanted to start a family and everything was working againstthem. They were still recovering from the police hounding them and busting them previously [on drugs charges in October 1968]. And also, Yoko was under this great blanket, this great blizzard of racism from the tabloid press. There was this free-floating feeling that she was an undesirable, and the public didnt approve of Yoko.

That fed into the albums secondsong, HoldOn, a mantra of encouragement and reassurance to Lennons partner and their partnership.

They had to be strong as a couple, says DiLello, they couldnt get derailed by all this negativity, which was coming at them left, right and centre.

Or, as Lennon put it, describing the songs message: Its now, this moment. Thats all right, this moment, and hold on, now. We might have a cup of tea or we might get a moments happiness any minute now. So thats what its all about, just moment by moment. Thats how were living cherishing each day and dreading it, too. It might be your last day you might get run over by a car, he added, a pointed reference to the manner of his mothers death.

Equally, this new freedom found form in the couples political activities, from the bed-ins to their support for the Black Power movement. In 1970 DiLello also photographed the couple alongside activist Michael X at a fundraising event in London at which they auctioned off their newly shorn hair and a pair of Muhammad Alis boxing shorts, covered in blood. Thats a perfect media event, the meeting of these two disparate worlds, bohemian artists and a very aggressive political figure in London at the time who was eventually hanged in Trinidadfor being involved in a murder [as part of] internecine warfare in the Black Power movement.

John Lennon and Yoko Ono with Black Power leader Michael X at his house in Holloway

(Getty)

On Plastic Ono Band, that personal-is-political bite manifested in Working Class Hero, although in a manner more nuanced, Lennon griped, than audiences often realised.

I was thinking about all the pain and torture that you go through on stage to get love from the audience who really despise you... in a subtle way. They demand something from you The thing about the song that nobody ever got right was that it was supposed to be sardonic. It had nothing to do with socialism, it had to do with: if you want to go through that trip, youll get up to where I am, and this is what youll be some guy whining on a record, alright?

Still, Voormann rememberswellhow fired up his friend was by the sociopolitical struggles that characterised the end of the Sixties, figuratively and literally.

To me it was surprising that he was getting so much into this. I witnessed calls when we were in the studio doing the ImagineLP [in 1971] and suddenly in the middle of a take, more or less, Yoko comes in: I just talked to Michael X, you have to call him back! That was a little disturbing, and was not really helpful for the session. And did not help us at all!

Theres another bold lyrical statement in God, the last full song before the short coda of My Mummys Dead. To a roll-call of deities, figureheads and concepts in which he has no faith, Lennon adds: I dont believe in Beatles. What do the men who were there around the recording of the album between late September and late October 1970 make of that totemic line?

Again, thats confessional, replies Richard DiLello. Hes saying: even though this was the most important part of my life at one time, it no longer is but you cant walk away from a legacy just like that. [He knows] thats with you forever. Maybe he didnt want it to be, but that was a fact of life.

He meant [he didnt believe in] everything, not just Beatles, offers Voormann. He just wanted to make sure everyone understood that: All I believe in is myself, andYoko. Just those two. It was incredible. Its a good statement. He didnt want to believe in Jesus or nothing like that. He just wanted to believe in himself. And that made him strong.

Released on 11December 1970, Plastic Ono Bandwas a hit, but a modest one compared to the Beatles albums, and even compared to George Harrisons solo debut, the triple-albumAll Things Must Pass, released the previous month. No matter: now its regarded as one of rocks all-time great albums. And, of paramount importance to John Lennon at the time, he had made the album he wanted needed to make. As best he could, the musician had taken a wrecking ball to the edifice of Beatlemania, to reveal the man, the orphaned boy, behind.

It was necessary for him to say: OK, this is the way it was in the past, and Im tired of being angry, thinks DeLillo. It was cathartic for him. None of us want to carry around a ball and chain from womb to tomb. He wanted to have a mentally healthier life, which he did achieve once he got to New York.

But before he and Yoko Ono could begin that life in New York, they had another trip to undertake. In Tokyo in January 1971, John Lennon met his new in-laws for the first time. When Ono and I were there 11 years ago, I asked whether he had made an effort for afternoon tea with her well-to-do family.

No, he didnt in the beginning. He just went to my parents place unshaven, and wearing an army surplus coat. Just the most hip outfit, very rocknroll! I mean, rocknroll can be a performance in a theatre, a beautiful, gorgeous thing. But he was just looking like a bum. This kind of here I am attitude.

Ono, though, wasnt embarrassed or disappointed. I thought it was a riot, she said with a smile.

John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band The Ultimate Collectionis released on Capitol/UMC on 16 April

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The Real Reason Keri Hilson Is Putting Her Music Career On Hold – Exclusive – Nicki Swift

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"I'm not in that space right now," Keri Hilson told Nicki Swiftregarding the status of new music."I've got multiple pieces of work. And I don't know, maybe when I die, I'll just leave it in my will for people to release it and people get it."

While Hilson had completed much of what was to become her third albumL.I.A.R. (an acronym for "Love Is A Religion"), two things happened which shelved the project: her acting work became more of a priority and her father died. "I must put my entire being into what I'm doing. And the time I felt like I was ready to do that with music, my father passed, and I kind of got knocked off of that idea," Hilson told us.

As it turned out, acting in films like 2021'sDon't Waste Your Pretty and the Lifetime Original MovieLust: A Seven Deadly Sins Story became a kind of therapy for Hilson. "When you're filming, you're in an alternate universe. You're in your own bubble, you're in your own world. Time stops for a moment. And your family, you have a new family, you have a new partner, you have a new way of thinking, you're completely there."

She continued, "It was welcoming for me while I was grieving ... and still grieving. So I think, when I feel that, I'll be able and capable and just naturally willing to give the 500% to music again. Because I know what that takes out of me."

Lust: A Seven Deadly Sins Story premieres April 10, 2021, at 8pm ET/PT on Lifetime.

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The Real Reason Keri Hilson Is Putting Her Music Career On Hold - Exclusive - Nicki Swift

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The INXS Pub Tour That ‘Burst Its Own Bubble’ – Ultimate Classic Rock

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INXS keyboardist and main composer Andrew Farriss recalled how the band burst its own bubble in the 90s by deciding to stop doing what the music industry expected of them.

In an upcoming episode of SiriusXMs Humans of Music program, he recalled how they felt trapped by the expectation of supporting other peoples incomes and discussed his creative partnership with latesinger Michael Hutchence.

INXS actually burst its own bubble because we got to that stadium level, as a band, around the world, he said. One of the more scary elements of that lifestyle is that you have this gravy train of people who all depend on you to keep doing it. If you dont keep doing it, then they dont have their jobs their own thing suddenly gets put in jeopardy. So, youre suddenly thinking, Why am I doing this exactly? Whos this for?

He said the band members hadstarted to talk about it quietly before they decided to "lets just play places we really like to play. If its festival, great. If its a stadium, fantastic. If its a pub, great so long as we like the venue.

The upshot was a tour of English pubs around 1993, even after wed just played stadiums.... Promoters couldnt understand it- they were like, What are you doing? Were doing what we want to do not what were supposed to do.... Everyones making money when youre doing more and more and more but are you any happier?

Farriss described Hutchence as a bohemian, social creature and recalled their unusual collaborative style, which often involved giving the singer a musical idea then waiting for him to visit late at night with melody and lyric ideas that would often give the keyboardist goose bumps.

We werent competitive, we had diametrically opposed skillsets," he noted. "He would talk in terms of, That should be a bit heavier, That needs to be a bit bluer. Id go, Okay and try to think of something. Lyrically, Id throw an idea in occasionally. He was very sure that he always wanted to lyrically say something. He was passionate about that, and I respected that.

Looking back on Hutchences suicide in 1997, Farriss said: One of the saddest things that comes along with a quick loss is that you dont get time to say goodbye to them.... I just miss the happy side of that guy and the talented side of that man. He had a cheeky side to him, too. It was funny, off camera, off mic its those sort of memories I hold in my mind, rather than going down the rabbit hole of tragedy.

The full interview airs on SiriusXM's Humans of Music on April 26 at 1PM ET andwill be repeated at various times throughout the week.

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The INXS Pub Tour That 'Burst Its Own Bubble' - Ultimate Classic Rock

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Keith, Brantley, Locklear win 30th Mopars at the Rock – NHRA.com

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At Rockingham Dragways 30th annual Moparsat The Rock event, presented by Griffin Motors, Joshua Jones, of Kannapolis, N.C., repeated in the Charger Shootout, Clifton Keith, of Ruby, S.C., was the winner in the companion Challenger Shootout, James Brantley Jr., of Richburg, S.C., prevailed in the Top E.T./Footbrake bracket, and Sanford, N.C.'s Kevin Locklear won the Trophy class.

Jason Sisk, of Culpepper, Va., drove his '68 Hemi-Barracuda to an eighth-mile best of 5.292 seconds at 132.88 mphto emerge as the unofficial winner of the Super Stock Hemi Exhibition, and Rockinghams Turbine Terry Rosberg used a starting line advantage to get the best of Dawn Perdue and Wicked Sinsations in the winner-take-all jet car exhibition.

Although Perdue had the quickest quarter-mile time of the event at 5.347 seconds, Rosberg won the feature while pushing his American Thunder entry to top speed of the meet at 290.82 mph. Defending champion Barry Nall, of Eagle Springs, N.C.,was ousted in the third round of the Combo bracket event in which Top E.T. and Footbrake cars ran separately until only eight drivers remained in competition.

Brantley ultimately hoisted the winners check due in no small part to his starting line expertise. His reaction times in the final five rounds were .036, .015, .016, .013. and .015, although he got a free ride in the final round when Kerry Booth, of Creedmoor, N.C.,was guilty of a .005 of a second foul start. Driving the same '19 Charger in which he won a year ago, Jones this time prevailed in a double-breakout final with Charlottes Greg Donaldson, who squandered a sizeable starting line advantage when he went under his target number by .058 ofa second.

Jones also was under his target, but by only .011. Keith drove his '18 Challenger past the '19 Hellcat of Mike Brice,of MountHolly, N.C.,in the other Shootout finale after Brice had taken out defending champ Joshua Gibson, of McColl, S.C., in the previous round.

Here are the results from the 30th annual Mopars at The Rock all-Dodge/Chrysler/Plymouth/Ram/Jeep car show and drag race at Rockingham Dragway presented by Griffin Motors:

SUPER STOCK HEMI EXHIBITION Round 1 Jason Sisk, Culpepper, Va., 1968 Plymouth Barracuda, .154, 5.292, 132.88 mph, def. David Crosswhite, Meadowview, Va,, 1968 Dodge Dart, . 040, 5.499, 122.92 mph; Terry Earwood, Deland, Fla., 1968 Plymouth Barracuda, .372, 6.052, 109.56 mph, def. Mike Nelson, Fayetteville, foul. Round 2 Crosswhite, .024, 5.481, 127.32 mph, def. Nelson, foul; Sisk, .146, 5.654, 109.17 mph, def. Earwood, foul. JET

DRAGSTER EXHIBITION Round 1 (single runs) Turbine Terry Rosberg, American Thunder jet, 5.444 seconds, 290.57 mph; Dawn Perdue, Wicked Sinsations jet, 5.347, 287.90 mph. FINAL Terry Rosberg, Rockingham, .119, 5.442, 290.82 mph, def. Dawn Perdue, Oxford, Pa., .284, 5.421, 269.51 mph.

MOPAR BRACKET CHAMPIONSHIP Round 3 (Top ET) Mark Dudley, Winston-Salem, 1970 Dodge Dart, .010, 6.322 on a 6.270, 105.53 mph, def. Zach Pennington, Lexington, S.C., 1970 Dodge Dart Swinger, .046, 6.278 on a 6.250, 104.63 mph; Kerry Booth, Creedmoor, 1983 Dodge Charger, .031, 5.766 on a 5.500, 100.10 mph, def. Barry Nall, Eagle Springs, 1968 Plymouth Barracuda, .013, 8.364 on a 5.790, 54.18 mph; James Brantley Jr., Richburg, S.C., 1973 Plymouth Duster, .036, 6.597 on a 6.550, 102.36 mph, def. Joe Hartsell, Stanfield, 1973 Plymouth Duster, .063, 5.523 on a 5.480, 123.19 mph; Charles Davis, Fayetteville, 1970 Plymouth Barracuda, .023, 7.431 on a 7.410, 90.22 mph, def. Kevin Locklear, Sanford, 1971 Plymouth Duster, .223, 6.416 breakout on a 6.470, 102.77 mph; Vick Helms, Catawba, S.C., 1972 Plymouth Duster, bye. Round 4 Booth, .016, 5.540 on a 5.520, 122.85 mph, def. Davis, .030, 7.462 on a 7.410, 89.17 mph; Brantley, .015, 6.589 on a 6.550, 102.14 mph, def. Helms, .080, 6.586 on a 6.540, 102.05 mph; Dudley, bye. Round 5 (Top ET plus Footbrake qualifiers) Booth, .003, 5.512 on a 5.520, 128.31 mph, def. Art Laselle, Fayetteville, 1979 Plymouth, foul; Brantley, .016, 6.571 on a 6.580, 99.87 mph, def. George Page, Stanfield, 1972 Plymouth Duster, .040, 6.740 breakout on a 6.750, 100.79 mph; Dudley, .012, 6.286 on a 6.280, 108.57 mph, def. Tommy Dix, .152, 5.957 breakout on a 6.100, 112.25 mph; Laura Glasscock, Keysville, Va., 1971 Dodge Challenger, .037, 6.327 on a 6.320, 107.33 mph, def. Pope Sellers, Byron, Ga., 1964 Dodge Dart, .067, 6.921 on a 6.910, 97.47 mph. Semifinals Brantley, .013, 6.570 on a 6.560, 101.83 mph, def. Dudley, .008, no time; Booth, .075, 5.520 on a 5.510, 128.36 mph, def. Glasscock, .007, 6.318 breakout on a 6.320, 108.37 mph. FINAL James Brantley Jr., Richburg, S.C., 1973 Plymouth Duster, .015, 6.663 on a 6.560, 102.23 mph, def. Kerry Booth, Creedmoor,1983 Dodge Charger, foul (-.005), 5.516 on a 5.510, 128.42 mph.

CHALLENGER SHOOTOUT Round 2 Joshua Gibson, McColl, S.C., 2016 Challenger, .058, 12.132 on a 12.030, 112.21 mph, def. Unknown #499, .199, 11.665 breakout on an 11.720, 115.63 mph; Philip Scott Kimrey, Indian Trail, 2020 Challenger, .354, 11.573 on a 10.900, 126.54 mph, def. Misty Kimrey, Indian Trail, 2017 Hellcat, .402, 12.609 breakout on a 12.800, 118.37 mph; Julian Heitz, Lincolnton, 2019 Challenger, .107, 11.460 on an 11.430, 112.57 mph, def. Alfonzo Watkins, Southern Pines, 2019 Challenger, .163, 13.327 on a 13.300, 102.68 mph; Brian Corsonaro, Seagrove, 2019 Challenger, .121, 12.186 on a 12.100, 114.17 mph, def. Turk Bates, 2018 Demon, .351, 10.694 breakout on a 10.800, 133.99 mph; Clifton Keith, Ruby, S.C., 2018 Challenger, .088, 9.906 on a 9.900, 133.74 mph, def. Howard Stewart, Godwin, .186, 12.986 on a 12.700, 97.81 mph; Jerry Mason, Florence, S.C., 2009 Challenger, .085, 11.220 on a 10.310, 126.35 mph, def. Jordon Taylor, Oxford, 2020 Challenger, .729, 12.163 breakout on a 12.300, 112.48 mph; Mike Brice, Mt. Holly, 2019 Hellcat, .068, 9.713 on a 9.750, 135.40 mph, def. Dan Leonard, Waxshaw, 2019 Challenger, foul. Round 3 Keith, .063, 10.601 on a 9.890, 101.68 mph, def. Corsonaro, .678, 12.485 on an 11.900, 112.75 mph; Heitz, .184, 11.427 on an 11.380, 118.89 mph, def. Mason, .166, 10.331 breakout on a 10.350, 127.59 mph; Brice, .308, 10.050 on a 9.650, 140.94 mph, def. Leonard, foul; Gibson, bye. Semifinals Brice, .142, 9.918 on a 9.650, 140.66 mph, def. Gibson, .085, 12.002 breakout on a 12.020, 113.52 mph; Keith, .194, 9.919 on a 9.890, 133.24 mph, def. Heitz, .350, 11.454 on an 11.380, 118.72 mph. FINAL Clifton Keith, Ruby, S.C., 2018 Challenger, .116, 10.054 on a 9.890, 133.59 mph, def. Mike Brice, Mt. Holly, 2019 Hellcat, .325, 9.914 on a 9.850, 139.03 mph.

CHARGER SHOOTOUT Round 2 Jose Rinck, Lincolnton, 2019 Charger, .307, 11.015 on a 10.900, 123.77 mph, def. Unknown #00, .209, 12.037 breakout on a 12.420, 111.56 mph; Joshua Jones, Kannapolis, 2019 Charger, .124, 11.853 on an 11.780, 109.69 mph, def. Unknown #766, .080, 10.108 on a 9.890, 140.12 mph; Greg Donaldson, Charlotte, 2016 Charger, bye. Semifinals Donaldson, .067, 11.719 on an 11.600, 108.19 mph, def. Rinck, .429, 11.016 on a 10.990, 123.28 mph; Jones, bye. FINAL Joshua Jones, Kannapolis, 2019 Charger, .217, 11.829 on an 11.840, 115.65 mph, def. Greg Donaldson, Charlotte, 2016 Charger, .103, 11.742 breakout on an 11.800, 101.04 mph.

TROPHY Round 4 Thurman Warren, Dunn, RAM truck, .112, 14.252 on a 14.200, 89.19 mph, def. Unknown #510, .127, 13.001 on a 12.700, 103.21 mph; Unknown #69B, .084, 15.474 on a 15.430, 83.00 mph, def. Daniel Furr, Salisbury, 1969 Dodge Coronet, .119, 14.485 on a 14.450, 92.80 mph; Holly Smith, Rocky Mount, Dodge Ram truck, .113, 17.168 on a 17.130, 74.69 mph def. Jose Rinck, Lincolnton, 2019 Dodge Charger, .342, 11.040 on a 10.990, 123.80 mph; Kevin Locklear, Sanford, 1971 Plymouth Duster, .003, 12.486 on a 12.800, 107.21 mph, def. Jeff Minnick, Delta, foul. Semifinals Thurman Warren, Dunn, RAM truck, .092, 14.335 on a 14.200, 95.40 mph, def. Unknown #69B, .042, 15.403 breakout on a 15.430, 84.16 mph; Locklear, .058, 12.728 on a 12.750, 89.45 mph, def. Smith, .116, 17.068 breakout on a 17.100, 80.69 mph. FINAL Kevin Locklear, Sanford, 1971 Plymouth Duster, .034, 12.775 on a 12.750, 93.41 mph, def. Thurman Warren, Dunn, RAM truck #52, .052, 14.267 on a 14.250, 91.41 mph.

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How to Amend the Constitution | Can the Second Amendment Be Changed – Reader’s Digest

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Its not easy to change the Constitutionand thats exactly what the Framers intended.

As we know all too well, mass shootings are shockingly common in the United States, and after each, we see a few recurring themes. One of the most prominent is that any tragedy involving firearms triggers a reflexive call to repeal the Second Amendment, with people asking, Why dont we just get rid of it? In theory, we know exactly how to amend the Constitutionafter all, the instructions are right there in Article V. But practically speaking, its very hard to do.

The Framers wanted the people to have the right to change the Constitution, but they didnt want it to be too easy, says Adam Winkler, professor of law at UCLA. The Framers understood that this was the fundamental charter of our nation, and if its too easy to change, it becomes just an ordinary legal document.

While arguments certainly get heated in regard to Second Amendment rights, especially since theres disagreement over exactly what they mean, the same principle applies to First Amendment rights and all others outlined by this founding document. Heres exactly what it would take to change the Constitution.

RELATED: Constitution Facts Many Americans Get Wrong

The Founding Fathers intended for the Constitution to evolve, adapt to new circumstances, and reflect societys progress, Winkler says. Many Framers believed it was within the peoples power to change it if they sought to secure new rights or the old rules became outdated or onerous.

I am not an advocate for frequent changes in laws and Constitutions. But laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the progress of the human mind, wrote Thomas Jefferson, one of the prominent Founding Fathers who didnt sign the Constitution. We might as well require a man to wear still the coat which fitted him when a boy as civilized society to remain ever under the regimen of their barbarous ancestors.

Jeffersons opinion is just one of the competing views of the nature of the Constitution. The Living Constitution theory says its meaning, if not its text, must change to meet the needs of society, while Originalists argue that it should be interpreted in light of what it meant when it was drafted. Those battling viewpoints are often expressed in oral arguments before the Supreme Court.

Article V of the Constitution lays out the ways it can be amended. There are two paths: one through Congress, and one through the states. In Congress, two-thirds of the Senate and two-thirds of the House of Representatives must vote to propose an amendment. Or, two-thirds of the states can petition the Congress to open a convention for proposing amendments. Any proposed amendment that comes out of it must then be approved by three-fourths of the states within a reasonable time. What makes for a reasonable time is not defined, but Congress has attached time limits, controversially, to some amendment proposals.

How hard is it to do all of that and actually amend the Constitution? Well, since the Bill of Rights was ratified in 1791, its only been accomplished 17 times.

RELATED: The Difference Between the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution

Many amendments reflect the nations deeply held principles, like the 22nd, limiting the presidency to two terms in office and curtailing entrenched power and political dynasties. Others show the results of long, hard-fought struggles for equality. The Reconstruction-era 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments sought to remove the stain of slavery from laws and policies after the Civil War, while the 19th Amendment extended voting rights to women in 1920. Still, others seem to show temporary interestslike the 18th Amendment, banning alcohol and launching the Prohibition era in 1920, and the 21st Amendment, repealing it 12 years later.

But the amendment process is meant to discourage flavor-of-the-month lawmaking. Though thousands of amendments to the Constitution have been proposed in Congress, most never got past the first set of hurdles, according to U.S. Senate records.

The fastest Amendment to become law was the 26th, which lowered the voting age to 18 years old. Though it was initially discussed in the 1940s when World War II helped spur the slogan Old enough to fight, old enough to vote, it was never formally proposed, and it languished until the turmoil of the Vietnam War era revived it. In 1970, Congress passed a law to make 18 the national voting age, but the Supreme Court ruled in December of that year that it could apply only to federal elections and that states could determine the appropriate age for state elections.

In response, House and Senate committees recommended the 26th Amendment on March 2, 1971. A unanimous 940 vote in the Senate approved it eight days later, and the House voted 40119 in favor on March 23. Five states ratified it that very day, followed in short order by 33 more, leading to certification by the General Services Administration on July 1, 1971.

The 27th amendment took the longest. Its the one that says Congress cant vote to give itself a pay raise unless a new Congress is seated before the raise goes into effect. Proposed by the very first Congress in 1789, it wasnt ratified until 1992. It was dragged over the finish line largely by Gregory Watson, a University of Texas undergraduate who wrote a paper on the neglected amendment in 1982, arguing it could still become law. He then made it his personal cause when his professor gave him a C. After 202 years, seven months, and 10 days, the amendment was ratified, and the university retroactively gave Watson an A.

Other amendments have had time limits attached to their ratification, like the Equal Rights Amendment, or ERA, which would forbid discrimination against women on the basis of sex. It passed Congress in March 1972 with a seven-year deadline, and within a year, it was ratified by 30 states. After a three-year extension, it stalled, and by 1982, it was considered dead. But over the course of nearly 40 years, state legislatures began to take it up again. On January 15, 2020, Virginia became the 38th state to ratify the ERA, pushing it over the three-fourths hurdle.

But the ERA is not yet the law of the land. Legal battles are being fought over whether states can rescind their ratifications of an amendment, as many did after the ERAs first wave of support waned, and whether Congress has the authority to make and remove time limits on amendments. The Constitution provides no easy answers to those questions.

The lack of specific instructions is a key characteristic of the Constitution. For every argument for a specific interpretation, theres another one (or more) for a different interpretation. Thats why the Supreme Court hears more than 100 cases every year. This may seem like a flaw, but its what the Founders intended. The more specific we are with our rights, the less useful they are, Winkler says. Vague, general terms are easier to adapt to unforeseen dangers and threats.

Winkler adds that an itemized list of specific rights might be convenient, but it would be limiting, too easily used to exclude rights that society might decide it needsrights the Founders couldnt have predicted. Consider this: Would you have a right to privacy for things you keep stored on your cell phone if the Fourth Amendment, written 18 decades before the first cell phone made its first call, listed specific places and things meant to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures? Or, would you have the right to carry a semi-automatic rifle with a high-capacity magazine if the Second Amendment listed which arms you have the right to bear? At the time, the only firearms the Founders knew of fired one shot at a time and took nearly half a minute for the average person to reload, and, of course, gun violence statistics were nonexistent.

That question lies at the heart of the modern debate over gun rights and speaks directly to the difficulty in amending the Constitution. Could we get a majority of Americans to agree that some regulations had to be made to adapt the Second Amendment to modern weaponry? If so, what would the contours of those regulations look like? Could a super-majority of Congress agree to define those contours? And could a super-majority of states approve the changes in a reasonable time? If anyone is optimistic about all of that, theyre not saying so very loudly.

But while gun rights and gun control advocates square off over the Second Amendment, and legal scholars, Living Constitutionalists, and Originalists debate whether the Constitution should be changed to address realities our 18th-century leaders couldnt have imagined, the people can rest assured that the Constitution can be changed, if it must.

RELATED: Why I No Longer Think Guns Are a God-Given Right

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Theresa Bentaas trial for Baby Andrew postponed for 3rd time – Argus Leader

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Theresa Rose Bentaas walks to court Monday, March 11, at the Minnehaha Courthouse in Sioux Falls. Bentaas is charged with first-degree murder, second-degree murder and first-degree manslaughter after police say she left her newborn baby outside to die in 1981. Bentaas was arrested after DNA testing proved she was the infants mother.(Photo: Briana Sanchez / Argus Leader)

The trial for a South Dakota woman charged with the murder of her newborn 40years ago has been postponed again, according to the Minnehaha County clerk of courts.

Theresa Bentaas was scheduled for trial Mondayin Minnehaha County court in Sioux Falls.Randy Sample with the Minnehaha County States Attorney's officesaid that both sides were in agreement for a reset and that a new date has not yet been scheduled.

Bentaas, 59, is charged with first-and second-degree murder and first-degree manslaughter in connection to the former cold case of Baby "Andrew" John Doe.

This is the thirddelay in the trial since she was formally charged in March 2019. Bentaas' attorneys also filed a motion to delay the trial in November,citing the continuous rise is COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations.

The firstdelay was in September2019,when parties said they were having trouble finding times when all the witnesses were available.

Heres what we know about the incident, investigation and arrest:

On Feb. 28, 1981, a newborn baby was found in a ditch,wrapped in a blanket alongside what is now Sycamore Avenue near 26th Street. The bundle was spotted by a driver who called to report it.

More: 'I consider him my long lost son:' Man who found Baby Andrew speaks out after arrest

By the time officers responded,it was too late and the baby was no longer alive.

An autopsy was conducted a few days later and the cause of death was determined to likely be exposure and failure to assist the baby in maintaining an airway, according to court documents.

After a few leads and attempts to contact the parents of the baby, the case went coldshortly after that.

The grave of Baby Andrew John Doe, an infant who was found dead in a ditch in 1981, is shown. Police arrested Theresa Rose Bentaas decades later on Friday, March 8, 2019 after determining through DNA that she was the mother.(Photo: Loren Townsley / Argus Leader)

In 2009, a detective with the Sioux Falls Police Department, Mike Webb, reopened the case of Baby Andrew John Doe in hopes of obtaining any DNA evidence for testing. Webb shortly discovered all testable evidence had been destroyed in 1995, the court documents noted.

Webb learned of a process where DNA could be extracted from the bones and tissues of the body. After doing some research, he found the North Texas University Science Center conducted those lab tests.

More: Cold case: Police hope DNA leads to parents of abandoned baby

Baby Andrew's body was exhumed in September2009 and sent down to Texas in hopes of finding any DNA matches that would help locate the parents. No matches were found, according to the court affidavit.

With no matches the case hit a stalemate again. But per policy, the DNAsamples were to be tested every year and weretested in Feb. 2018 and again no matches were found, documents said.

With the technology increase, police submitted the DNA to a Virginia-based company, Parabon NanoLabs, Inc. in 2019,that was able to find two possible genetic matches.

Using those genetic links, police were able to use a family tree that led to Theresa Rose (Josten) Bentaas and Dirk Bentaas in Sioux Falls.

After conducting a "trash pull" at Bentaas'home, Sioux Falls police found a cigarette butt,beer and water containers that were seized as evidence. FemaleDNA wasfound on the evidence that "could not be excluded as being from the biological mother of Baby Doe," according to a court affidavit.

More: Timeline: How police spent 38 years trying to solve Baby Andrew's murder

Detectives interviewed both Dirk and Theresa Bentaas and took buccal swabs from both.

In the interview, Bentaas said she was "young and stupid" and admitted to being pregnant in 1980-81,having the child alone in her apartment and driving the baby to the place he was later discovered.

Court documents said she saw the baby was discovered on the news and stated that "she was in denial that she was the one responsible for that." And she thinks about it when she drives by the area now.

On March 4, 2019, lab results from swabs came back and showed a strong evidence to support the relationship between both Theresa and Dirk Bentaas and Baby Andrew.

Theresa Rose Bentaas, 57, was arrested Friday morning after police determined through DNA that she was the mother of Baby Andrew. Sioux Falls Argus Leader

Theresa Bentaas was arrested and charged in the death of Baby Andrew on March 8, 2019.

In a press conference the day she was arrested,Sioux Falls Police Chief Matt Burns acknowledged the dedication of theinvestigators in thepursuit of justice.

"I couldn't be more pleased with the results today and the arrest and the closure that we find, as well as the hard work and dedication for the pursuit of justice for Andrew," Burns said.

In Feb. 2020, Bentaas' lawyers filed a motion to suppress the DNA evidence that police obtained from the trash pull at her residence that led to her arrest, stating that it violated her rights.

More: Bentaas case: Judge says DNA evidence from trash pull can be used in murder trial

"As a free member of the general public, law enforcement's extraction of Bentaas' DNA from the items pulled from the trash and the subsequent creation of her DNA profile for the testing of Baby Doe case constitutes an unreasonable search under the Fourth Amendment," Bentaas' attorneys wrote in the brief.

The judge in the case later ruled the DNA evidence could be used in the murder trial and did not violate her Fourth Amendment rights.

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Theresa Bentaas trial for Baby Andrew postponed for 3rd time - Argus Leader

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