Fox News - Video
Fox News - Video
2026-02-19 08:02:26 (3 days ago)
Former Laci Peterson detective walks through Guthrie crime scene
Former Laci Peterson investigator Jon Buehler walked through the area outside Nancy Guthrie's home with Fox News' Griff Jenkins.
Fox News - Top Stories
Fox News - Top Stories
2026-02-19 08:00:16 (3 days ago)
Margaret Qualley opens up about growing up as Andie MacDowell's daughter in the South, sharing how her "normal" childhood shaped her acting career.
Globo News - Mundo
Globo News - Mundo
2026-02-19 08:00:14 (3 days ago)
Ex-príncipe Andrew: quem é o filho da rainha Elisabeth II acusado de ligação com caso Epstein

Caso Epstein: ex-príncipe Andrew é um dos nomes que aparecem nas investigações
O ex-príncipe Andrew, preso nesta manhã de quinta-feira (19) pela polícia do Reino Unido, tem 66 anos e é o terceiro filho da Rainha Elisabeth II, falecida em 2022.
Segundo a rede de TV britânica BBC, que deu a notícia, a prisão está ligada à investigação aberta há 10 dias pela polícia britânica para apurar alegações de que o ex-príncipe teria enviado informações confidenciais do governo a Epstein. A polícia confirmou uma prisão por "má conduta em cargo público".
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Antes de ter seu nome ligado ao caso, Andrew, informalmente conhecido como o favorito entre os quatro filhos da rainha, era reconhecido pela sua carreira militar, onde foi tenente da marinha por 22 anos, e também pelos serviços prestados à coroa.
Linha de sucessão ao trono britânico
g1, Washington Post
Perda de títulos militares
Andrew começou sua trajetória na marinha em 1979, quando ingressou no Colégio Naval Real. Foi piloto do helicóptero, participou da Guerra das Malvinas e continuou na Marinha como tenente por 22 anos, período em que acumulou diversas condecorações militares.
Em 2020, já afastado da vida pública devido ao caso Epstein, Andrew renunciou a uma promoção militar que receberia ao completar 60 anos. Dois anos depois, perdeu todos os seus títulos militares e o direito de usar o tratamento de "sua alteza".
A retirada dos títulos foi uma decisão da rainha Elisabeth II, tomada após um tribunal de Nova York seguir com o processo civil no qual Andrew é acusado de agredir sexualmente uma jovem com então 17 anos em 2001.
SAIBA MAIS
Jeffrey Epstein: quem foi, quais crimes cometeu e como o Brasil aparece no caso
Em 2025, o rei Charles III retirou o título de príncipe do irmão, que passou a ser conhecido apenas como Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.
Com essa nova destituição, Andrew perdeu o direito de morar no Royal Lodge e se mudou para uma casa de campo no complexo de Sandringham, propriedade particular do rei Charles III.
Acusações contra Andrew envolveu jovem de 17 anos
O ex-príncipe Andrew conheceu Jeffrey Epstein em 1999 por intermédio de Ghislaine Maxwell, que o apresentou como um bilionário influente de Nova York. A amizade se fortaleceu nos anos seguintes. Como enviado especial britânico para o comércio internacional à época, Andrew teria usado contatos de Epstein para negócios.
Em 2010, após Epstein ser condenado nos EUA, Andrew foi fotografado passeando com ele em Nova York, o que gerou o primeiro escândalo público.
A foto polêmica de 2001, mostrando Andrew com o braço na cintura de Virginia Giuffre, de 17 anos, e Maxwell ao fundo, veio à tona em 2011 e se tornou símbolo das acusações. Giuffre alegou ter sido traficada por Epstein para encontros sexuais com Andrew em três ocasiões — Londres, Nova York e a ilha de Epstein —Andrew sempre negou todas as acusações.
Príncipe sugere que esta foto, em que aparece com a então adolescente, foi adulterada
Virginia Giuffre/ BBC
Em 2019 Andrew negou durante entrevista à BBC, conhecer Giuffre. Pressionado, ele renunciou a funções reais públicas e cortou laços com Epstein, mas documentos judiciais liberados em 2021 reforçaram as denúncias de Giuffre, levando a um processo nos EUA. Em 2022, Andrew pagou uma indenização milionária (estimada em US$ 16 milhões) para encerrar o caso, sem admitir culpa.
Novas revelações em 2025, com e-mails de Epstein desacreditando Giuffre e fotos inéditas de Andrew em festas, reacenderam investigações policiais no Reino Unido. Acusado de vazar relatórios comerciais confidenciais para Epstein e pressionar seguranças para "desenterrar sujeira" sobre Giuffre, Andrew perdeu todos os títulos reais em outubro de 2025 por ordem do rei Charles III.
Novos arquivos de Epstein mostram ex-príncipe inglês Andrew ajoelhado ao lado de mulher
DEPARTAMENTO DE JUSTIÇA DOS EUA/AFP
Fox News - Top Stories
Fox News - Top Stories
2026-02-19 08:00:13 (3 days ago)
After Jennifer Fisher claimed a three-day gluten detox reduced her bloating and brain fog, Martha Stewart says she's considering the brief break. Experts weigh in.
The Guardian - World News
The Guardian - World News
2026-02-19 08:00:12 (3 days ago)
Byrne delivers a barnstorming performance as a shrink – counselled by an impatient Conan O’Brien – being pushed to the edge by stress of parenting
Here is a psychological horror-comedy of postnatal depression and lonely parental stress, like a flip-side to Eraserhead or Rosemary’s Baby; it’s a scary movie with a heroine shot almost solely in looming closeup – but instead of supernatural apparitions, there are simply the banal problems of childcare and no time to deal with them. It’s also a film about therapy and transference when there’s nothing left to transfer. Mary Bronstein is its writer-director, and her film-maker husband Ronald Bronstein serves as producer – as does Josh Safdie, whose influence, through movies such as Uncut Gems and Marty Supreme, can perhaps be detected in the sprint towards a nervous breakdown.
Rose Byrne delivers a barnstormer as Linda, a psychotherapist whose husband is away, leaving her to deal with a sick infant daughter whose face is not shown until the very end, indicating perhaps the way in which the little girl’s identity is simply that of a gigantically blank all-pervasive problem to be managed. The girl is intubated via a feeding machine that must be carted around with her, especially to the day-care hospital whose brusque doctor in charge (played by Mary Bronstein in cameo) supervises group therapy sessions that blandly reassure the parents present that all this is not their fault, while curtly reprimanding Linda for her failure to turn up to appointments and to discuss her daughter’s failure to gain the weight necessary for the tube to be removed.
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The Guardian - World News
The Guardian - World News
2026-02-19 08:00:12 (3 days ago)
The rise of AI is making the future of work look bleak – but it could be an opportunity
New technology has workers spooked, but experts say it’s creating an opening for a resurgence in worker power
In 2026, it’s a scary time to work for a living.
Gone are the days of quiet quitting, the Great Resignation, and the highly visible union-organizing battles that began the decade and signaled that perhaps worker power was on the rise again in the US. Instead, much of that momentum is being crowded out of our minds by anxieties: a worsening affordability crisis, geopolitical instability, and the specter of artificial intelligence looming over the workplace.
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The Guardian - World News
The Guardian - World News
2026-02-19 08:00:12 (3 days ago)
Dear Kristi Noem: you’re tracking down ICE critics? I’m one of them | Robert Reich
The homeland security department is reportedly seeking information on critical social media accounts. Look no further
The New York Times reports that the Department of Homeland Security has sent Google, Meta (owner of Facebook and Instagram) and other media corporations subpoenas for the names on accounts that criticize ICE enforcement. The department wants to identify Americans who oppose what it’s doing.
I’ll save them time.
Robert Reich, a former US secretary of labor, is a professor of public policy emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley. He is a Guardian US columnist and his newsletter is at robertreich.substack.com. His new book, Coming Up Short: A Memoir of My America, is out now
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The Guardian - World News
The Guardian - World News
2026-02-19 08:00:11 (3 days ago)
The story of Georgian wine has been 8,000 years in the making | Wine
Dubbed ‘the holiest of holies’, produce from this former Soviet republic today boasts a variety and deftness that’s sending sales surging
France, Italy and Spain purport to be the best-loved classical wine regions, but if you’re in the market for the real old-world deal, look no further than Georgia, which has more than 8,000 years of winemaking prowess. There’s something about this place on the lush intersection of the silk roads between Europe and Asia that gets under the skin. Perhaps it’s the combination of unpolished authenticity paired with profound generosity (guests are considered a gift from God and fed accordingly), all while being gently rocked in a cradle of civilisation, that make Georgian wine so beguiling. (My first visit in August 2023 – a khachapuri-fuelled reconnaissance for my book, Drinking the World: A Wine Odyssey – lingered in my mind long after my flight touched back down on British tarmac.
What I find most refreshing is that the country, and its wine, is completely itself, despite being hemmed in by empires with a proclivity for invasion (Persians, Turks, Mongols et al), as well as the decades spent under USSR rule, which between 1922 and 1991 switched the grape-growing focus to yield over quality. Today, you really feel the Georgian delight at flipping that old Soviet diktat on its head.
Victoria Brzezinski is co-author of Drinking the World: A Wine Odyssey, published by Pavilion Books/HarperCollins at £22. To order a copy for £19.80 go to guardianbookshop.com
Continue reading...CBC News - Top Stories
CBC News - Top Stories
2026-02-19 08:00:00 (3 days ago)
Northeast B.C. is ‘one big family’ supporting Tumbler Ridge, says district chair

There's been an outpouring of support across the country, but Peace River Regional District chair Brad Sperling says you can tell how close everyone is in the northeast by looking at what's being said and done locally.
Fox News - Top Stories
Fox News - Top Stories
2026-02-19 07:59:49 (3 days ago)
'Miracle on Ice' legend shares advice for Team USA women's hockey ahead of gold medal game
"Miracle on Ice" goaltender Jim Craig had words of wisdom for the U.S. women's ice hockey team ahead of their gold medal game against Canada.
Fox News - Video
Fox News - Video
2026-02-19 07:57:09 (3 days ago)
King Charles issues statement on ex-Prince Andrew's arrest
Piers Morgan weighs in after King Charles expressed support for law enforcement after the arrest of his brother, the former Prince Andrew.
Fox News - Top Stories
Fox News - Top Stories
2026-02-19 07:57:03 (3 days ago)
RNC sues to stop Democrats' Virginia redistricting push
RNC and two GOP lawmakers sue to stop Virginia Democrats' push to redraw congressional maps, claiming constitutional violations in amendment process.
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