36.1 C
Bangkok
Sunday, June 21, 2026
Home Blog Page 2812

Judge Refuses to Throw Out Sexual-Assault Case Against Cosby

Actor and comedian Bill Cosby arrives for a court appearance Wednesday, Feb. 3, 2016, in Norristown, Pa. Photo: Ed Hille / The Philadelphia Inquirer / AP

NORRISTOWN, Pa — A judge refused to throw out the sexual-assault case against Bill Cosby on Wednesday, sweeping aside a former district attorney's claim that he granted the comedian immunity from prosecution a decade ago.

A judge refused to throw out the sexual-assault case against Bill Cosby on Wednesday, sweeping aside a former district attorney's claim that he granted the comedian immunity from prosecution a decade ago.

Common Pleas Judge Steven O'Neill issued the ruling after a hard-fought two-day hearing, saying witness credibility was a factor. He did not elaborate.

In another setback for the defense, the judge also denied a request to disqualify newly elected District Attorney Kevin Steele from the case. Cosby's lawyers had accused Steele of making a "political football" out ofCosby during the campaign.

Cosby, 78, was arrested in December and charged with drugging and violating former Temple University athletic department employee Andrea Constand at his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004. The TV star could get up to 10 years in prison if convicted.

Cosby held his head in his hands after the ruling, then left the courtroom, using a cane to descend the ornate marble staircase. He waved and smiled at supporters but had no comment. His lawyers put their arms on him to comfort him.

The next step is a preliminary hearing March 8 to determine whether prosecutors have enough evidence to put him on trial.

The charges represented an about-face by the district attorney's office.

In 2005, then-District Attorney Bruce Castor decided the case was too flawed to prosecute. But Castor's successors reopened the investigation last year after Cosby's lurid, decade-old testimony from Constand's civil suit was unsealed at the request of The Associated Press and after dozens of other women came forward with similar accusations that destroyed Cosby's nice-guy image as America's Dad.

Cosby's lawyers tried to get the case thrown out with help from Castor, who testified at this week's hearing that he intended to forever close the door on prosecuting the comedian. He said he considered his decision binding on his successors.

Similarly, Cosby's lawyers said they never would have let the TV star testify in the civil case if they didn't believe criminal charges were off the table.

"In this case, the prosecution should be stopped in its tracks," Cosby lawyer Chris Tayback argued. "Really what we're talking about here is honoring a commitment."

Steele challenged Castor's credibility and questioned whether the former DA ever made such an agreement, since it was never put in writing on a legal document and the Cosby attorney with whom Castor dealt is now dead. Steele argued that in any case, Castor had no legal authority to make such a deal.

"A secret agreement that allows a wealthy defendant to buy his way out of a criminal case isn't right," Steele told the judge.

At one point late in the afternoon, the judge signaled which way he intended to rule.

"There's no other witness to the promise," O'Neill said. "The rabbit is in the hat and you want me at this point to assume, 'Hey, the promise was made, judge. Accept that.'"

On the stand, Castor defended his decision not to bring charges, citing among other things Constand's yearlong delay in going to police, her continued contact with Cosby, and suggestions that she and her mother might have tried to extort the comic.

The former DA said he made the no-prosecution commitment in hopes of prodding Cosby to testify in Constand's lawsuit without invoking his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. In the end, Cosby testified, denying he assaulted Constand but admitting among other things that he obtained quaaludes to give to women he wanted to seduce. Constand eventually settled for an undisclosed amount.

While more than 50 women have accused Cosby of drugging and sexually assaulting them since the 1960s, the statute of limitations for prosecuting the comic has run out in nearly every instance. This is the only case in which he has been charged.

As the case goes forward, Cosby's lawyers are expected to fight mightily to keep the deposition from being introduced at trial.

Castor tried to make a comeback as DA last fall but lost to Steele in a hotly contested race, during which Steele ran ads criticizing Castor for not prosecuting Cosby when he had the chance. The tension between the two men was on display Wednesday when Steele accused Castor and the Cosby camp of engaging in "revisionist history."

Most of the back-and-forth in court hinged on the wording and interpretation of a 2005 press release in which Castor announced he would not prosecute Cosby. Castor found himself sparring with prosecutors over many seemingly inconsistent statements he made over the years on whether Cosby could still be charged.

The judge said he struggled to find similar cases where a suspect who was never charged received a promise that he would never be prosecuted. Normally, immunity is granted after a suspect is charged because he or she can provide testimony or information to prosecutors.

Story: Maryclaire Dale and Michael R. Sisak / Associated Press

 

To reach us about this article or another matter, please contact us by e-mail at: [email protected].

Follow Khaosod English on Facebook and Twitter for news, politics and more from Thailand.

Follow @KhaosodEnglish

\

Advertisement

Brewing Discontent: Frothy Passions Erupt When Thai Craft Beer Goes Big

Photo: Quinn Dombrowski / Flickr

BANGKOK — Crack open a bottle of Chiang Mai Weizen from Thailand’s first legal craft brewery, Chiang Mai Beer, and out pours a light straw color, almost golden or banana yellow. There’s a slight haze, typical of the weizen, or wheat style.

However, its recent debut started a firestorm on social media, with this particular beer becoming the focal point for a controversy that’s been brewing ever since the race to produce a large-scale, Thai-made craft beer began about two years ago.

In December, Chiang Mai Beer won that race, becoming Thailand’s first domestic craft brewery to distribute on a large scale. It got around the illegality of home brewing by sending it to be bottled in Laos and shipped back to Thailand to be taxed as “foreign-made beer.”

Despite this feat, critics were quick to slam it as awful and blame the move to large-scale production.

“The weizen has no mark of weizen at all,” proclaimed Yaksa Brewery. “The beer was too light. There was not a single trace of wheat. Every smell was overwhelmed by the rotten and damp smell. I tried to continue drinking it to really know it, but I had to give up. The beer was clearly infected.”

Artid Sivahansaphan, who runs a popular beer fanpage called it flat, weightless and hardly worth the bottle’s 180 baht price.

“When the brewery was still underground, they used to produce beer in a keg, and I have tasted it,” Artid wrote. “It was pretty good, unlike these two beer lines, that are not up to standards.”

Reached by telephone, he blamed the alleged low quality on the brewer’s lack of expertise in brewing large quantities of beer, which is vastly different from small-scale, underground craft beer.

But the beer has not gotten a bad rap from everyone. Q, the founder of popular beer blog Beercyclopedia said it’s true to style, or as Q put it, “good for a wheat beer.”

I’d agree with that. Chiang Mai Beer comes across to an experienced palate as a sincere effort to brew a wheat (weizen) beer.

The first sip was pleasantly surprising, at least because it wasn’t completely god-awful like the online banter led me to believe.

It tasted like standard homebrew; a taste familiar from sampling many Thai-made craft brews during the past few years. Flat and slightly metallic – but drinkable, with a minor funk (not the good kind).

 

Trouble and Toil

For its part, Ohm at Chiang Mai Beer says they’ve heard the feedback and brought in professional consultants and are conducting lab tests to improve upon their debut batch.

The negative reviews however kept stacking up in what could be seen as a backlash fed by the growing pains of an infant industry moving from passionate hobby to commercial opportunity.

Avi Yashaya, half of the duo of Let The Boy Die put it succinctly:

“I think this situation goes to show what the importance of ‘craft’ is about, keeping quality and experimentation ahead of scale and ambition.”

Despite the Macbeth-hits-brewtopia drama of ambition oustripping wisdom, Yashaya still sees it as part of the process leading to a better future for Thai craft beer, however.

“I'm thankful he's pushing Thai craft to a potentially bigger audience while doing it with total legitimacy,” he said.

Legitimacy is an important commodity here. Just like in hip-hop, experimental music or Khaosan Road-bought academic degrees, it separates the “crafted” from the “manufactured.”

Chiang Mai Beer is conceived in Thailand with some locally sourced ingredients (this weizen’s wheat grows in Chiang Mai’s Fang district), brewed in Laos and then “imported” back into Thailand.

And for now it’s the only viable solution for a real Thai craft beer sold legally in the kingdom.

Chiang Mai Beer may not be the one to put Thailand on the map for beer nerds, but remember this is a country that has purposely stymied the efforts of brewers to create beer worthy of competing.

And producing great beer takes time. The question posed by netizens has been whether getting beer out quickly is worth releasing a product that doesn’t taste right.

“There’s certainly something off about the beer, I think there might be a problem in the brewing production process,” said Wasawat “Taey” Chaowanachinda, founder Alpha Team Brewing.

The flat and funky taste of the Weizen, he added, could come from any number things.

“I can’t say for sure that it’s the brewer, the bar owner or any one specific element.” he said, adding that brewing beer is a complicated process where everything must be tightly controlled, and one small mistake can lead to a funky brew.

Taey believes something could have happened during at any step: “Carbonation process, brewing process, stocking process…it’s hard to say."

Additional reporting Teeranai Charuvastra

Advertisement

Gong Xi Fa Cute: Chinese New Year Pom Delights World (Video)

Monday marks the beginning of Chinese New Year, and to mark the Year of the Monkey, here’s a Pomeranian performing a traditional lion dance.

How’s that for some not-negative news?

Since the video was posted Monday it has racked up just shy of 4 million views.

All we know of the 2-year-old Pom is that his name is Optimus and his human companion is Natthakrita Brompoonya. Get more Optimus on his Facebook fanpage.

Advertisement

Vendors Shut Down Police Counterfeit Crackdown

Angry vendors went on a rampage Wednesday when officers arrived to seize counterfeit products being sold in Sa Kaeo province near the border with Cambodia.

SA KAEO — Police are licking their wounds after an enraged mob of vendors chased them away when they tried to seize fake goods at a market near the Cambodian border.

Twelve officers were injured Wednesday when police and French Embassy observers went to the Rong Kluea market at Aranyaprathet in Sa Kaeo province to seize items such as fake perfume that violate intellectual property law, according to the Department of Special Investigation.

A DSI statement said about 400 Cambodian laborers surrounded the officers, pelted them with rocks and bottles and pushed over a police pickup truck. It said the police were withdrawn to ease tensions.

Video: MegaScorpion98 / You Tube

 

Advertisement

Zika Virus Forces Tata Motors to Change Car's Name

Tata Motors Chairman Cyrus Mistry, left, and Tim Leverton, head of Tata Engineering and Research and Development, pose for photographers during the unveiling of Zica at a press preview of Auto Expo in Greater Noida, near New Delhi, India, Wednesday, Feb. 3, 2016. Photo: Manish Swarup / AP

NEW DELHI — The Zika virus has hit India's Tata Motors, which has decided to rebrand a new hatchback vehicle that it was planning to call Zica.

The car was shown for the first time on Wednesday at the Auto Expo 2016 on New Delhi's outskirts.

Tata Motors said in a statement Tuesday that the car would carry the Zica nameplate during the exhibition, but a new name will be announced in a few weeks. Zica is an abbreviation of "Zippy Car."

The company said it decided to rebrand the car to empathize with the hardships caused by the outbreak of the Zika virus in many countries.

The World Health Organization has declared the Zika virus a global emergency because of its explosive spread across the Americas.

The Tata Group is one of India's largest conglomerates with business from Tetley tea to Tata Motors, owner of the Jaguar-Land Rover brand.

Story: Associated Press

 

Advertisement

Chinese Journalist Emerges After Disappearing in Thailand

In this photo taken on Nov. 20, 2015, Chinese journalist Li Xin talks to an AP reporter over Skype, at the Associated Press office in New Delhi, India. Photo: Saurabh Das / AP

BEIJING ― The wife of a Chinese journalist who disappeared from Thailand while seeking asylum said she's spoken to her husband and that he says he voluntarily returned to China for investigation, but that she believes he was forced to come back.

He Fangmei says she was able to speak with her journalist husband Li Xin on Wednesday when she was called into a police station to receive the call.

For Fangmei this was the first time to speak to her husband, Li Xin, since around 7:40 a.m., Jan. 11, when he was riding a train from Bangkok to Nong Khai.

Li's return to China would be the latest example of Beijing's reach beyond the mainland's borders for people wanted by authorities.

Li fled China in October and told the AP in an interview from India that he left because he had been forced to become an informant and wanted to avoid that work. He later sought shelter in Thailand before disappearing Jan. 11.

Story: Associated Press

Related stories: 

Chinese Journalist Who Defected is Missing From Thailand

 

Advertisement

Govt Orders Social Media PR Campaign to Counter ‘Negative News’

Junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha speaks to reporters Tuesday at Government House in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — In a bid to counter “negative news and misinformation” on social media, the military government today announced it will take a more aggressive role in directly countering such information online.

The latest effort by the junta to improve its image online comes as a second attempt at winning support from for easier censorship from foreign service providers seems to be bearing little fruit.


Thailand Asks Google to Bend Censorship Rules


According to Matichon Online, the head of the Prime Minister’s Office said all agencies have been asked to step up their public relations efforts in order to “create a positive image for their respective agencies and Thailand.” 

“[They must] compile and improve their public relations work and develop data systems on websites, such as Facebook,” Panadda Diskul said in the report. “For the sake of public relations that are modern and based on accuracy.” 

Panadda said that officials responsible for the PR drive must also monitor news and other issues on a daily basis in order to combat any negative news in a timely manner.

“When there is negative news or misinformation, they must immediately tackle the problem with integrated measures, and they must not allow the news to spread and cause damage,” Panadda said. 

Panadda’s announcement came after a renewed effort by the ruling junta to win cooperation from foreign-owned companies such as Google and Facebook in expediting censorship of comments deemed to violate Thai law, especially those that criticize the military government and the Royal Family. 


Social Media Surveillance System Planned


Much as was the case in May 2014, when Maj. Gen. Pisit Paoin was dispatched to the regional headquarters of Google, Facebook and Line; the junta appears to have received little cooperation thus far. Thai social media remains a vibrant forum for discussion on taboo topics, largely untouched by the junta’s ongoing crackdown on free expression since it came to power in the May 2014 coup. 

The Japanese company which makes Line, one of the most-used chat applications in the kingdom, has been quoted in recent media reports saying it would consider any request from Thai authorities but insisted it would prioritize its users’ privacy.

Last month Google told a junta-appointed censorship committee it would not waive its requirement that they obtain a court order to remove content, according to leaked minutes of the meeting.

Despite the apparent unwillingness of global internet companies to enable further censorship, a number of citizens have been prosecuted for their online activities. On Thursday, a former district councilman in Bangkok was arrested after he allegedly shared a video mocking junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha to his friends and relatives on Line.

 

Related stories:

Computer Crime Act Has Issues, Google Tells Censorship Committee

Govt Asks Facebook and YouTube to Help End Royal Defamation

Media Reform Committee Weighs Article 44 for Crackdown on Online Media

No Shock, Awe from 'Cyber War' as ‘National' Gateway Moves Forward

Govt 'Gateway’ Denials Contradict Cabinet Resolutions

 

 

Teeranai Charuvastra can be reached at [email protected] and @Teeranai_C.

 

\

Advertisement

Speedboat Propeller Severs Tourist’s Leg

An injured man is helped out of the water Wednesday morning off Koh Phi Phi Lee in Krabi province.

KRABI — A speed boat seriously injured two Russian tourists as they were snorkeling near Maya Bay on Koh Phi Phi Lee this morning.

The leg of one man, identified as a 30-year-old Russian national, was severed by the propeller of the boat, which was traveling from Nopparat Thara Beach to Maya Bay when it hit the two men.

The second man, 48, also received a serious injury to his leg, police Lt. Col. Jetsada Chanpum said.

Both men were given first aid and sent to a hospital for treatment.

Boat operator Adisorn Denmamood, 27, told police he was carrying about 30 passengers in the twin-engine Sunsan 2 when he struck the two men.

Adisorn will be charged with recklessness, Jetsada said.

It’s high season for tourism, which means the Phi Phi islands are seeing some of their busiest traffic of the year.

On Friday, five Chinese tourists were injured when two speedboats collided near Koh Phi Phi Lee.

Related stories

5 Chinese Tourists Injured in Speedboat Collision

 

 

Chayanit Itthipongmaetee can be reached at [email protected] and @chayaniti92.

Follow Khaosod English on Facebook and Twitter for news, politics and more from Thailand. To reach Khaosod English about this article or another matter, please contact us by e-mail at [email protected].

 

Follow @KhaosodEnglish

\

Advertisement

Man Found Dead in Khlong Lat Phrao

Waste collector Phlun Juithongkam, at right, on Khlong Lat Phrao where he found a body Wednesday morning.

BANGKOK — When Phlun Juithongkam, 44, rode out in a boat to go scavenging in Khlong Lat Phrao this morning, he saw something he didn’t expect: a man’s face in the water.

He phoned in the dead body to Wang Thonglang district police, who arrived to inspect the scene and ultimately identify the body as Phongphan Triamornlert, 55, who lived near the Pracha Uthit community along the canal.

“We suspect that he drowned, as no wounds were found on his body,” said Police Lt. Phisanu Thatsanayan.

Police said neighbors suspected the man was very drunk and fell into the water, as he was known for his drinking habit.

Police said they only found 60 baht, his ID card and a mobile phone. His body was transferred to Police General Hospital for further examination.

 

Advertisement

Foreign Affairs Says Cartoonist ‘Stephff’ Failed to Follow Regs

A Stephff political cartoon posted onlineDec. 27, 2015. Image: Stephane Peray / Facebook

BANGKOK — A longtime political cartoonist known as “Stephff” did not have his visa extended in Thailand because he failed to follow regulations, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said.

News that Stephane "Stephff" Peray, a cartoonist for several media agencies including The Nation, was denied a renewal of his press visa and work permit prompted speculation the military government was punishing Peray for his scathing cartoons, but a spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said it was a bureaucratic call.

According to spokesman Sek Wannamethee, the cartoonist cited his workplace as The Kuwait Times and submitted only work samples from foreign media agencies in his application, whereas the ministry’s regulations require they include samples from domestic news agencies.


Longtime Political Cartoonist ‘Stephff’ Loses Work Permit & Visa


“He only submitted a letter of certification from the Kuwait Times, without any work that was published in Thailand,” Sek said Tuesday evening.

However it’s not clear how foreign journalists would be expected to supply work from domestic media. According to instructions available in English on the Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ website, foreign journalists wishing to work in Thailand need only supply three pieces of work from the past year.

For his part, Peray has since said he was contacted by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and asked to submit a letter of support from The Nation instead of relying on his longstanding affiliation with The Kuwait Times, an employment status he’s cited for more than a decade.

"So apparently it's not politically motivated – just [a] new regulation from the Foreign Ministry to make life harder on freelance journalists," Peray wrote.

The spokesman’s statement did not explain what was different from previous years when Peray’s status was renewed.

Sek said the ministry recommended Immigration Police grant Peray a three-month extension to his visa.

Peray, a French national, has been drawing cartoons that mock political figures across the political spectrum for years in Thailand. His work is regularly published by The Nation, though the newspapers’ editor, Jintana Panyaarvudh, pointed out that Peray only works in a freelance capacity. The paper published a cartoon of his in its Wednesday edition.

\

A Stephff cartoon published on the Feb 3. edition of The Nation

Peray first broke the news on social media Tuesday that he was unable to extend his visa and work permit. 

“I'll be honest here, it's not proven my work permit refusal is politically motivated – but I can question the timing of this after 16 years,” Peray tweeted.

After the news spread, many commented to say Peray was another victim of the increasingly tough censorship measures imposed on the media by the military government since it came to power in the May 2014 coup. 

Foreign Correspondent's Club of Thailand president Jonathan Head said Tuesday that five foreign journalists have been denied legal working status and press credentials since the coup. 

Peray also wrote that the call from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs came after Head, a longtime BBC correspondent, contacted the ministry on his behalf.

 

 

Teeranai Charuvastra can be reached at [email protected] and @Teeranai_C.

 

\

Advertisement

Hot News

LATEST NEWS

Bangkok
broken clouds
36.1 ° C
36.6 °
35.5 °
57 %
3kmh
65 %
Sun
35 °
Mon
37 °
Tue
37 °
Wed
37 °
Thu
37 °