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Mass murderer Anders Breivik secretly trying to pocket £7million by selling the rights to turn his life into a film

July 10, 2021 by www.thesun.co.uk Leave a Comment

EVIL Anders Breivik is secretly trying to pocket £7million by selling the rights to turn his life into a film, The Sun on Sunday can reveal.

Ten years on from his chilling island massacre — which left  77 dead — the vile killer has sent 20 letters to film-makers begging them to tell his story.

A Sun on Sunday probe has found the 42-year-old Norwegian mass- murderer, who writes 50 pages a  day in his prison diary, has already penned a biography and film script and has sent out invites to be interviewed in prison.

A source said: “ Breivik ’s bid for fame, money and freedom is an insult to his victims and their families .

“So too is the prison life he lives. Breivik lives a life of Riley in prison. He’s never said sorry for his wicked crimes and he has no plans to.

“He still wants to inspire others and he still believes in a fascist revolution. His plans to make money from the murders is an utter insult to his victims and their families.”

Today we can also reveal how Breivik, jailed for 21 years, is making a new bid for parole and is convinced he will one day walk free.

And despite enjoying a cushy life inside a three-bedroom “apartment” — furnished with a study, gym and kitchen area — in Skien prison, he has submitted a  list of whingeing complaints to jail bosses.

He wants a better deep-cleaning moisturiser and says too many of his meals are cooked in microwaves.

‘He feels no shame about what he did’

He is also asking for luxury pens to write with, as the biros he has been given cause him hand cramp.

Biographer Asne Seierstad, who has written a book about Breivik, said: “He’s never shown remorse. What he wants is a stage, a place to share his thoughts and his message. And to gain more supporters.”

On his prison life, she added: “He said that in prison he has never been happier.

“I’ve got to know him a little bit and he manipulates situations a lot. He gets his way in the end.

“He talks about plastic cutlery as a torture-like existence or about cold coffee or about waiting 20 minutes before he is let out. He talks about these things like they are bad room service at a hotel.”

Breivik became one of the world’s most notorious killers on July 22, 2011, after carrying out two lone wolf attacks .

In the first, he bombed the Norwegian government quarter in Oslo. This turned out to be just a distraction as,  dressed as a policeman, he then travelled to the Norwegian Labour Party’s summer camp on nearby Utoya Island and carried out a sickening massacre.

The majority of his 77 victims were teenagers — his youngest victims were aged just 14.

Before the incidents, Breivik,  who idolised Adolf Hitler, wrote a 1,500-page manifesto under the pseudonym Andrew Berwick.

In it, he blamed feminism for the “cultural suicide of Europe”, opposed Islam and called for the mass deportation of Muslims from Europe.

He was later given the longest sentence the Norwegian courts can hand out. Recently, the courts said it could be extended if he is still considered a danger to society.

Breivik has so far posted nearly two dozen letters explaining how he wants to sell book, film and interview rights.

One of the recipients was Christoph Andersson, a specialist on right-wing extremism.

Andersson said that in his letter, Breivik had valued the material at $10million (£7million). A source added: “Breivik feels no shame about what he did. In fact, he  revels in it.”

Meanwhile, his lawyer told how Breivik is appealing his sentence.

He said the killer planned to try for parole after serving the first ten years of his term.

The lawyer said: “This is a right that all prisoners have and one that he wants to use.”

Yet  Breivik’s own father thinks he should never be freed.

Jens Breivik said: “I don’t feel like his father. How could he just stand there and kill so many innocent people and seem to think that what he did was OK? He should have taken his own life, too.”

Breivik, who has changed his name to Fjotolf Hansen, is being held in  a three-room “cell” — one for sleeping, one for studying and one for exercising.

Each area is 86ft square and he has access to a private gym, a laptop and desk. His cell comes with video games, a DVD player and outside space. He also has access to books and newspapers.

But in a 27-page letter bemoaning his prison life, he whined how he would like more butter, more comfortable handcuffs and a  better view.

He groaned about the “800” strip searches he had undergone and said he would enjoy more social interaction, claiming his treatment was “inhuman”. He also complained about not having internet access. In 2017 he said five years of prison isolation had further radicalised him.

A source said: “Breivik might be one of the world’s most notorious killers but he lives like a king.

“Guards are waiting on him hand and foot and he generally gets whatever he asks for because the prison is so fed up with how much he moans.”

In most countries, including here in the UK, criminals are forbidden from profiting from their crimes after conviction.

‘He has every chance  of selling the rights’

Yet Breivik believes Norway’s liberalism, openness and availability of information means he has every chance of selling the rights to his life story.

He was further boosted when one of the country’s most senior politicians recently said many of Breivik’s far-right views were important to listen to.

Hans Jorgen Lysglimt Johansen, leader of the Alliance Alternative Party in Norway, said: “Much of what Breivik said in his manifesto was correct.

“We have not had a proper debate about that, we have not had a proper settlement with it.”

Norwegian prison officials declined to comment.

SURVIVORS RECALL THEIR FIGHT TO LIVE

KAMZY GUNARATNAM was 23 when Breivik trawled Norway’s Utoya Island preying on her friends.

She saw Breivik shoot one of them in the head .  Kamzy, now 33,  escaped by swimming across the Tyrifjorden Lake, with bullets striking the water around her as the gunman took aim.

After the tragedy Kamzy suffered depression, but seeing a picture of Breivik one day inspired her to start a political career. She is now the deputy mayor of Oslo and has met VIPs including Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton.

In her autobiography Your Struggle Is My Struggle, Kamzy told about a tightly written  22-page letter she received from Breivik in January 2020.

In an open ­letter back to the killer, she told him: “When I read your name, I got chills down my spine. My body went into panic mode for a moment. After what you did on July 22, 2011, I struggled mentally for a long time. I slept badly, sounds sounded like shots, and I could not go into a place without looking for the emergency exits.

“Your actions have caused me lasting damage.  I spent many years putting down my ­paranoia. Your letter aroused fear again.”

Sisters Lara and Bano Rashid were ­having an enjoyable break before Breivik came to the island.  When he fired into their tent,  Lara, then 16, heard the bullets whistle through the canvas.

After the 40-minute rampage, she went to look for her 18-year-old sister and found her dead — cuddled up by a dead friend.

Lara, 26, who works at the Iraqi Embassy in Oslo, says she thinks of her sister every day. She added: “Radical Muslims are not the only terrorists. There’s also a danger from right-wing extremism.”

Adrian Pracon watched his friends get killed by Breivik, and he later lay on their ­bodies and played dead to survive.

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He thought he was safe when Breivik walked past.  But the killer came back, pointed the gun to his head and fired.

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Incredibly, he survived. Adrian now leads an annual trip back to the island,  gives speeches and has written books.

Speaking about his first visit back, he said: “I needed to cry.   It will be good  for me to do this process of trying to  proceed with my life and realise that this has ­happened.”

Filed Under: World News Crime, Exclusives, Features, The Sun Newspaper, Norway, mass murderers, mass murderers in america, mass murderers in history, mass murderers list, mass murderers in the us, mass murderers usa, anders breivik book, mass murders united states, united states mass murders, worlds mass murderers

The Best Kept Secret In The Florida Keys

March 20, 2023 by www.forbes.com Leave a Comment

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An independent luxury hotel in Islamorada is thriving despite increased pressure to sell to big brands. For others, it’s a different story.

Locals call him “the most expensive game in town.” He doesn’t actively advertise, because he doesn’t have to. Word of mouth, a string of famous swimsuit model photo shoots, and a lifetime of labor has kept his Moorings Village in Islamorada going since 1987. It has survived devastating hurricanes, financial crises and takeover bids.

But owner Hubert Baudoin is a rare breed. Born and raised in Côte d’Ivoire, you’d sooner find him windsurfing in the Bahamas or blazing trails through the desert on a motorcycle before you’d find him hunched over a balance sheet. Like his safari-chasing father before him, he is something of an extremist. One who took root in the Keys, itself a land of extremes: tranquility and raging storms, poverty and wealth, alcoholism and detox retreats.

Though he seems so laissez-faire sitting on his porch sipping a glass of iced tea, buddha bracelets hugging deeply tanned wrists — his lifestyle is anything but. If he weren’t so camera shy, you’d have heard his story by now.

“I was sailing and nearly shipwrecked. I needed help and there was a payphone on that coconut tree, which was hilarious [he gestures to a tree 20 yards away]. I went to ask the owner for help, and we talked. He had inherited this property, which was really small. A bunch of termites holding hands. He looked at me like I was a messiah who emerged from the water,” says Baudoin. The original Moorings was built in 1936 as a private estate. By the time Baudoin washed up in the 80s, it was in dire shape.

“Do you want to get involved in running a little hotel? I had never thought about it. I didn’t know where to start. But he was looking to sell. I opened a little windsurfing bed and breakfast for $60 a night. That’s how the adventure started. And then, we got very lucky because the fashion world started coming. That’s what saved us, and helped us get the land next door,” he recalls, in thick French accent. “It was going to be a 240-unit condo monstrosity. But we were able to fight against it.”

He’s been fighting against forces natural and man-made ever since. After Hurricane Irma hit in 2017, it took years to rebuild and renovate. With the help of family and friends who did everything from grab a paintbrush to send him truckloads of grass sod and palm trees, the property now looks new.

On Location

Today, the Moorings offers real luxury in a destination known for RV campsites, discount dive stores, and oily bait and tackle shops. Islamorada is a come-as-you-are town, where fish guts and blown-out flip flops are acceptable attire. Down here, distance is measured in mile markers and time is measured in tequila tots. And the die-hards can’t get enough. But Baudoin’s place is something else.

Located on an 18-acre stretch of waterfront land, the hotel has eight villas, beautifully appointed in French West Indies style, all tucked beneath a canopy over more than 800 coconut palms. It’s subtropical seclusion with toys, including a 25 meter saltwater swimming pool, fitness center, bicycles, kayaks, hammocks, and easy access to watersport excursions of every stripe. It’s so private, you feel like you own the place. And when the sun shines, it’s a mini paradise.

You can see why, in their 90s heyday, Vogue, Elle, and Sports Illustrated shot swimsuit covers here. The black and white portraits of Claudia Schiffer and Cindy Crawford still adorn the walls, signed to Hubert by photo legends like Antoine Verglas and Marco Glaviano. Campaigns for Ralph Lauren and Abercrombie & Fitch were shot here too. More recently, the popular Netflix series Bloodline used the largest cottage, a two-story home called Blue Charlotte, as the main backdrop for its family drama.

The magnifying effect of the camera lens created an air of glamor here that still very much exists today. It’s why the Moorings maintains a production studio and a professional makeup room on-site, to keep the crews coming. It’s also why the Moorings can charge rates that range from $1,680 to more than $6,000 per night.

“Hubert can charge guests as much as he wants, and his repeat business is off the charts,” said Sarah Ewald, a local realtor at Ocean Sotheby’s International Realty. “I’ve lived here my whole life, and we went from a sleepy little fishing village to a luxury second home destination. It’s astonishing what has happened here.”

The pandemic was a boon for property owners in the Keys, sparking bidding wars among hopeful buyers. Closed sales of single-family homes in the Keys nearly doubled in volume during the first half of 2021, according to Ocean Sotheby’s International Realty. Though the market has since cooled, prices remain inflated.

As an independent hotel owner, Baudoin is a dying breed. Not even he could stave off a partial sale. The Moorings used to be 18 cottages. Now it’s eight, which is too small to be classified as a resort.

The Conglomerates Are Coming

In 2020, in an overheated market, Baudoin sold almost half of his 18 acres, including the beloved Morada Bay and Pierre’s restaurant , to Northwood Hospitality, which owns the neighboring Cheeca Lodge & Spa. When I think of Cheeca Lodge, the words commercial real estate portfolio come to mind. The word luxury does not. The same can be said of the nearby Hawks Cay Resort, which was purchased by New York City-based Carey Watermark Investors in 2013 for a reported $134 million. My own family’s beloved outpost in Islamorada, the Islander Resort , was sold in 2021 to a joint venture of Philadelphia-based Lubert-Adler Real Estate Funds and Hersha Hospitality Management for a reported $73 million .

These sales reflect a larger trend that now dominates the modern hotel market: independent owners that offer authentic, personal-touch quality are shrinking while conglomerates come in to buy them out. They just don’t have the reach or resources to compete with big chains.

We’d call this the great brandification of American hotels — but sometimes it ain’t so great. Generally speaking, hospitality portfolio companies “optimize” revenue streams, which means you can expect to be upsold in every possible way. Want beach toys for your kids today? There’s a store on property. Did you use communal sunblock? Hello, resort fee.

Only about one-third of the roughly 160,000 hotels in the U.S. have remained independent, in an increasingly consolidated market. This is happening, at least partly, because independents don’t typically offer loyalty points programs, which are attracting an ever-larger customer base according to the travel companies that sell them (including Marriott, Delta, American Express, and many others).

During the pandemic, independents also had a higher closure rate than branded properties, according to STR market research. Many held out hope that a buyer would swoop in and save the day, by making them part of a luxury hotel “collection.” But losing ownership costs more than money.

Selling the Dream

It’s a Thursday morning at the Moorings. I awake realizing I’ve almost missed the sunrise. I grab a swimsuit, a cup of coffee, and bolt barefoot out of pristine white French doors to find there’s still time. Sunrise over the inky blue Atlantic has risen just for me. The swaying hammock on the pier is my front row seat.

But I’m not truly alone. An egret skulks patiently through the seaweed, scanning for shiny fish. He is patient and still. His morning meditation starts now, too. A cool breeze skims off the water, common to this time of year. To the left and right, all you can see is horizon, and a pool of golden sun reflecting on the water. Sure, paradise is ephemeral… but I can’t help but hope Hubert holds on a while longer.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Florida Keys, Islamorada, Bloodline, luxury travel, spring break, luxury hotels, hotels, marriott, best hotels in the keys, family travel, Florida..., best community to live in florida, best master planned communities in florida

Claudia Winkleman reveals secret to long-lasting marriage to ‘feminist’ Kris Thykier

March 17, 2023 by www.express.co.uk Leave a Comment

 Claudia Winkleman has shared a rare insight into marital life with her

Claudia Winkleman has shared a rare insight into marital life with “feminist” husband Kris Thykier (Image: BBC)

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Claudia Winkleman credits her husband Kris Thykier’s Danish background for his modern attitude to women’s roles in a marriage – and she says he’s never asked her what’s for dinner once. The 51-year-old Strictly Come Dancing host adds that having a feminist husband is the only reason she “survived lockdown” – and that her mother would never have allowed her to marry any other type of man.

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According to Claudia, her movie producer partner Kris “is very Danish in his ways”.

“It’s not up to me to make dinner, it’s not up to me to make lunch, and it’s not up to him to take the kids outside to play catch,” she exclaimed in a 2021 interview with the Sun .

“In 20 years of marriage he has not once asked me what’s for dinner. I married a feminist, my mum wouldn’t have let me not.”

She added mischievously that he would never ask her to mend a button, simply because he’s “better at it” than she is.

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Claudia Winkleman at a showbiz event with husband Kris Thykier (Image: GETTY)

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Claudia, who has a penchant for “annoying” habits like leaving teabags in the sink after attempting to use them as a tanning tool, also admitted that Kris is tidier than her.

For that reason, the bedtime and bathtime of their three children, Matilda, Jake and Arthur, has always been something at which he has excelled.

His responsibilities also include getting the trio to school on time and making a “magnificent chicken” when the opportunity allows.

“He has never expected me to do the house stuff and the kids’ stuff while he waltzes into the office,” she explained.

Claudia Winkleman husband Kris Thykier marriage feminist

Claudia Winkleman says her husband has never asked her what time dinner is ready (Image: GETTY)

Claudia Winkleman husband Kris Thykier marriage feminist

Claudia Winkleman and co-host Tess Daly on Strictly Come Dancing (Image: GETTY)

Claudia added that having a 50/50 marriage is “extremely helpful”.

The modern household set-up is something she’s been accustomed all of her life, as she admits her father is exactly the same at home.

However, there are limits to Kris’ patience – and one of Claudia’s bizarre beauty hacks leaves him fuming.

Talking on Radio Four’s Women’s Hour, she explained that her husband was “driven mad” by her leaving teabags in the sink after attempting to achieve her intentionally “orange” look.

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Claudia revealed to an astonished Emma Barnett that the habit originated in her university days when she had to scrimp and save and scarcely had enough money to buy fake tan in the shops.

She resorted not just to teabags but also to Bisto gravy granules – and sometimes mud.

The presenter, who is also known for her smeared eyeliner and extra-long jet black fringe, adds that even “a brown Sharpie” isn’t out of the question for her in her bid to achieve the tangerine glow of her dreams.

“Burnt orange” by choice, she elaborated during the In The Bathroom online beauty vlog: “If you use the amount of spray tan I do, you need to scour it off with a kitchen utensil.

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“If you were using a Dulux colour chart, if there was one on there that said tangerine, right at the bottom, the one where you say, ‘That’s going to be too much for our walls’, it’s not too much for me. Put it on!”

Claudia regularly invites a beautician to her house, who applies her glow inside a specially designated tanning tent – and she specifically asks for a shade that’s “orange”.

Her already long fringe has lengthened even more dramatically in recent years – and at one point in lockdown it covered her eyes completely if she didn’t pin it back – but she has revealed that the unusual style saves her needing to fork out on Botox.

She added: “You get to a point where your face is falling off and your body is made of crepe but you know what makes you happy… your husband and your friends.”

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For Gadget Geek in the Oval Office, High Tech Has Its Limits

January 25, 2016 by www.nytimes.com Leave a Comment

WASHINGTON — In this always-on, always-connected world, what good is a Fitbit with no GPS or an iPad that can’t connect to the cloud?

Hint: Ask President Obama.

Mr. Obama is the first true gadget geek to occupy the Oval Office, and yet his eagerness to take part in the personal technology revolution is hampered by the secrecy and security challenges that are daily requirements of his job.

What counts as must-have features for many people — high-definition cameras, powerful microphones, cloud-connected wireless radios and precise GPS location transmitters — are potential threats when the leader of the free world wants to carry them around.

And so using the latest devices means more than merely ordering one on Amazon for delivery to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. It means accepting the compromises imposed by White House technology experts, whose mission is to secure the president’s communications, and by the Secret Service agents who protect him.

“I am not allowed, for security reasons, to have an iPhone,” Mr. Obama conceded at a youth summit in 2013.

He has not given up, though. Mr. Obama is the first commander in chief to regularly carry a specially secured BlackBerry. He reads briefings and checks scores from ESPN on an iPad (the first of which was given to him by Steve Jobs before its public release). And recently he has been seen wearing the Fitbit Surge, a fitness band packed with all the latest technology, on his left wrist.

Mr. Obama was last seen with the fitness tracker during an appearance on Jerry Seinfeld’s web series, “Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee.” Mr. Obama’s Fitbit makes a brief but clear appearance as he steers a 1963 Corvette Stingray with his left hand.

Politics Across the United States

From the halls of government to the campaign trail, here’s a look at the political landscape in America.

  • MAGA and Martinis: A combative young Republican group in New York, firmly on the right and Trump-friendly, is wary of the official G.O.P. establishment ’s more moderate path.
  • Kamala Harris: During her first trip to Iowa as vice president, Harris portrayed Republican attempts to impose a nationwide ban on abortion as immoral and extreme. She framed the issue as part of a broader struggle for health care and privacy .
  • In Florida: A national get-out-the-vote group and the N.A.A.C.P. challenged a state law that bars the use of digital signatures on voter registration forms, bringing a federal lawsuit against the state similar to ones pending in Texas and Georgia.
  • Phil Murphy: New Jersey’s top election-enforcement official sued the state’s governor and three aides for what the official said was a bid to oust him in retaliation for comments he had made about political fund-raising rules.

That raises the question: How many of the device’s features have been purposely disabled?

Fitbit’s website, which calls the Surge model “the ultimate fitness super watch,” trumpets “GPS tracking” and “wireless syncing” as two key features — both of which could be problematic for security officials who are not keen on broadcasting the president’s location and condition at any moment. The website notes the presence of Bluetooth communications and eight sensors, including a heart-rate monitor.

White House officials repeatedly declined to comment on any of the security issues regarding the president’s personal technology. Officials at Fitbit did not respond to emails requesting information about his use of their device.

Still, from the experiences of others inside the White House, it is easy to conclude that Mr. Obama is not having a typical out-of-the-box experience with his electronic toys.

James E. Cartwright, a retired Marine general who served as the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during part of Mr. Obama’s first term, was one of the administration’s earliest tech adopters. Eager for a better way to have information at his fingertips in top-secret meetings, General Cartwright was dazzled by the possibilities when the first iPad was unveiled early in 2010.

“If nothing else, in the physical sense, not having to have large binders and four lieutenants to carry them for me,” General Cartwright said of his decision to carry his briefing documents on an iPad. “As soon as people saw it, the race was on: ‘How do I get one?’”

But it wasn’t that easy, he recalled. The general’s iPad was essentially a prototype modified at his direction by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the military’s high-tech lab that helped develop weather satellites, the Internet, GPS, and stealth technology.

The agency made physical alterations to the iPad, removing the cameras, wireless chips, location sensors and microphones. Briefing documents were loaded onto the device every morning via a secure cable. Anything General Cartwright wanted to save came off the device the same way in a process he called “store and dump.”

“What I ended up with was a pretty dumb iPad,” he said. “It wasn’t connected to anything. Anything was removed that could transmit.”

Without such alterations, the general would not have been allowed to take the iPad into the White House Situation Room or other secured rooms known as SCIFs (Sensitive Compartmented Information Facilities). Baskets sit outside such rooms so that White House staff members or other attendees can drop their iPhones before walking in.

General Cartwright declined to say if the president’s iPad had been altered, though others who are familiar with Mr. Obama’s technology said it would not be a stretch to assume that similar precautions had been taken for the commander in chief.

The president has acknowledged that his BlackBerry is enhanced with security features that ease fears of his emails being hacked or intercepted. Even so, his communications are severely limited — only a small number of designated people are even allowed to send him email.

When Mr. Obama posted his first message from the @ POTUS Twitter account in May, he borrowed an iPhone from a staff member instead of using his secure BlackBerry.

Such precautions are seen as vital in an era when cyberattacks from the nation’s adversaries are common. Chinese hackers are suspected of having breached millions of records at the Office of Personnel Management, and officials believe Russian hackers penetrated an unclassified White House email system — though apparently not Mr. Obama’s BlackBerry.

Mr. Obama is not the first person inside the White House to take precautions against high-tech dangers.

In 2007, Vice President Dick Cheney disabled the wireless abilities of his defibrillator, which had been implanted to regulate his heartbeat. His fear: that terrorists could have hacked the signal in an assassination attempt, not unlike the dramatic plot twist that killed the vice president in Showtime’s “Homeland” a few years ago.

But Mr. Obama is the first committed early adopter of personal technology to serve as president. In 2014, he told his helicopter pilot to wait while he ran back into the Oval Office. “I forgot my BlackBerry,” the president told reporters, holding the phone up. When Mr. Obama filmed a short video preview before his State of the Union address this year, his BlackBerry could be seen on the desk behind him, and his new Fitbit was clearly visible.

Those close to him say he envisions an ultra-high-tech presidential library when he leaves the White House. And in long dinners with Silicon Valley titans , he has talked extensively about ways to better use personal technology to increase voter turnout and improve civic engagement.

Mostly, though, Mr. Obama is just intent on being plugged in the way most Americans are these days. In a town hall exchange in 2011 with Jorge Ramos of Univision, Mr. Obama seemed amused that Mr. Ramos did not think he had his own computer.

“I mean, Jorge, I’m the president of the United States,” he said. “You think I’ve got to go borrow somebody’s computer?”

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Gwyneth Paltrow to testify in $300,000 civil case about her 2016 Utah ski accident

March 20, 2023 by economictimes.indiatimes.com Leave a Comment

Synopsis

At the Deer Valley Resort in 2016, Gwyneth Paltrow got into a ski accident.

Actress Gwyneth Paltrow ‘s day skiing in Park City, Utah was cut short seven years ago when she needed to take a break after colliding with a skier heading down the slope.

On February 26, 2016, she was climbing the slope when another skier crashed into her from behind. She says the man instantly apologized after she sustained minor injuries.

According to her, Terry Sanderson , 76, a retired optometrist, stated he couldn’t properly remember what had transpired after the “whole body hit”. But, the situation is crystal obvious to Ms. Paltrow.

His account of what happened is quite different. This is all we are aware of:

Four broken ribs and a “permanent traumatic brain damage” are among the injuries

According to Law & Crime, Mr. Sanderson , 76, claims that the movie star and CEO of Goop was the one who struck him with such force that he had a “permanent traumatic brain damage,” four broken ribs, agony, suffering, a diminished quality of life, mental anguish, and deformity.

The two of them are currently proceeding to trial to determine who is accountable for covering damages. The trial is set to begin on March 21.

Where To Ski In Europe After The Closure Of Various Slopes? See Best 7 Spots

  • Where To Ski In Europe After The Closure Of Various Slopes? See Best 7 Spots
  • Madonna Di Campiglio
  • San Martino Di Castrozza
  • Val Gardena
  • Racines-Giovo Racines

Where To Ski In Europe After The Closure Of Various Slopes? See Best 7 Spots

Madonna Di Campiglio

One of the most visited places in Italy during winter, it has the main point access to the Brenta Dolomites and a famous connection to the via ferrata. It has a top elevation of 1500 meters and is surrounded fully by a scenic wooded valley.

San Martino Di Castrozza

The resort located on the roof of the largest mountain area in the Dolomites is just a two-hour drive from Venice airport. It is very famous for its dramatic scenery and has a top elevation of 2,357 meters.

Val Gardena

The valley situated in the heart of the Dolomites, is perfectly fit for the beginners skiers. The views from it include a canyon with a frozen waterfall with a top elevation of 2,518 meters.

Racines-Giovo Racines

The meadow also known as Ratschings, is just over the border with Austria. It is perfect for intermediate skiers with its 28 kilometers of slopes and a top elevation of 2,100 meters.

The skiing counterpart of a hit-and-run

According to Mr. Sanderson, Ms. Paltrow effectively committed the ski counterpart of a hit-and-run. According to his 2019 lawsuit, she “got up, turned, and skied away, leaving Sanderson dazed, laying in the snow, gravely injured” following the crash.

The complaint says that a Deer Valley ski instructor who had been instructing Ms. Paltrow but had missed the collision skied over, saw Sanderson wounded, and then turned around, accusing Sanderson of being at fault.

On the other hand, Ms. Paltrow asserts that her teacher really did see the crash.

Erik Christiansen was the one who went skiing with the movie star. Initially, the petition listed both him and the Deer Valley Resort Corporation . These were eventually eliminated when the judge limited the disagreement to being between Ms. Paltrow and Mr. Sanderson and to being about the incident, with the hit-and-run issue being dropped from the controversy.

According to the decision, Ms. Paltrow is now being sued for carelessness for allegedly causing the incident, and what happened later is irrelevant to the proceedings.

A lawsuit that originally sought $3.1 million in damages has been reduced to a $300,000 claim against Gwyneth Paltrow, who is now asking for only one dollar in compensation and for her legal costs to be paid.

FAQs:

  1. How much is Goop worth?
    $250 million
  2. What is the age of Gwyneth Paltrow?
    50 years

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