All posts tagged: Cries

Moment predator who exposed himself to women on the Tube cries after being snared by police

Moment predator who exposed himself to women on the Tube cries after being snared by police

Video footage has captured the moment a predator who terrorised women on a London train tells police “I’m regretting my actions”, as he is arrested. Ayman Yanoussi, 21, of Newham, exposed himself to several women on a station platform and on a District line train on the morning of December 28 last year. He was jailed at Inner London Crown Court on Thursday, April 16, for 14 months after previously pleading guilty to two counts of exposure, breaching a SHPO, and possessing cannabis. Footage published by British Transport Police of his arrest shows Yanoussi crying in the back of a police van, with his hands cuffed, as he reflects on his actions, telling officers: “I’m just thinking about what I’ve done”. Two weeks before the incident, Yanoussi was handed a Sexual Harm Prevention order (SHPO) for other sexual offences he had committed. In the video, Yanoussi can be heard telling police: “I’m regretting it”. Ayman Yanoussi, 21, was sentenced at Inner London Crown Court to 14 months’ imprisonment (BTP) A court previously heard how Yanoussi …

‘Cries of delight’ as Sumatran orangutan filmed using canopy bridge to cross road for first time | Endangered species

‘Cries of delight’ as Sumatran orangutan filmed using canopy bridge to cross road for first time | Endangered species

The critically endangered Sumatran orangutan has been filmed for the first time using a canopy bridge to cross a road. In 2024, conservationists in the Pakpak Bharat district of North Sumatra in Indonesia built the bridge high over the Lagan-Pagindar road, which provides an essential route for local people but which became a barrier for animals. Natural crossing was “impossible for wildlife”, said Erwin Alamsyah Siregar, director of Tangguh Hutan Khatulistiwa (TaHuKah), the environmental organisation that helped install the bridge. For two years, the Sumatran Orangutan Society (SOS) and TaHuKah, its local partner, had been watching camera-trap footage of the bridge, waiting for the day that an orangutan would finally cross. Sumatran orangutan filmed using a canopy bridge to cross a public road in North Sumatra “You should have heard the cries of delight from the team,” said Helen Buckland, chief executive of SOS. “After two long years, it’s finally happened.” This is the first time the species has been caught on camera crossing a wildlife bridge, offering a glimmer of hope to conservationists worried …

Mum cries ‘this is our home’ after council demands £180k extension be torn down

Mum cries ‘this is our home’ after council demands £180k extension be torn down

A mum-of-four is worried she will become homeless after her local council demanded she tear down her £180,000 extension. Suzie Cavadino, originally from Bootle before moving into her home on Sunnyside in Aughton about 20 years ago, replaced her conservatory with an extension to her home. The extension was completed in December 2022 and holds the house’s boiler, kitchen and a bedroom, which has been split in two for two of Suzie’s children. However, West Lancashire Council has ordered the extension be taken down by the end of next month, according to Liverpool Echo. Suzie claims officers from the local authority told her it is “out of keeping with the character of the surrounding area”. Living with her four children aged between 12 and 19, she told the ECHO how the builder she employed to knock down the then-conservatory and replace it with the two-storey extension, stated she wouldn’t need planning approval for the construction work. Following the completion of the work, Suzie said the council informed her she in fact needed consent for the …

Primary Losers: Crockett Cries ‘Disenfranchisement’, Crenshaw Crushed

Primary Losers: Crockett Cries ‘Disenfranchisement’, Crenshaw Crushed

Rep. Jasmine Crockett has just lost her Democratic Senate primary in Texas to Democratic state lawmaker James Talarico, who will now try to become the first Democrat in nearly 40 years to win a Senate election in Texas. He will face the Republican winner between longtime incumbent Sen. John Cornyn and Texas AG Ken Paxton.  Crockett, a racist, who says that entering the USA illegally is ‘not a crime’ and is under FEC investigation for suspicious ActBlue donations, says she’s going to file a lawsuit challenging the results due to alleged confusion among some voters in Dallas County over where they were supposed to vote.  Speaking with supporters Tuesday night, she says that because of the confusion, “people have been disenfranchised,” and that the outcome of the race wouldn’t be known until Dallas County’s votes are counted.  As noted above, Cornyn and Paxton will advance to a runoff in the Texas Republican primary race, after neither candidate manged to receive 50% of the vote.  Crenshaw Loses Rep. Dan Crenshaw, R-Texas, was unseated in Tuesday’s primary. Tom Williams / CQ-Roll …

Vintage Nerds, Abercrombie Has Finally Heard Our Cries

Vintage Nerds, Abercrombie Has Finally Heard Our Cries

The mall-brand renaissance has admittedly cooled off over the last six months, but it’s still one of the most reliable ways to pop into a store and cop solid basics for the low. One label that continues to serve up some of the best cropped hoodies and one of the most affordable yet genuinely stylish topcoats is Abercrombie & Fitch. While those pieces are seemingly printing money for the masses, it’s the brand’s discreet sprinkling of vintage-inspired drops under the A&F Archive moniker that’ll pull in the more discerning guy. Now, I’ll admit, A&F and “archive” don’t exactly roll off the tongue when you think back to the early aughts. You might start picture dimly lit storefronts, bare-chested greeters braving Midwestern winters, pungent cologne pumping through the vents, and those racy Bruce Weber–shot quarterly catalogs. Don’t worry—no one’s asking for that cinematic universe to return. This revival is about bringing back the heavy hitters, not the haze. With Y2K and ’90s nostalgia still leading the charge, plus a growing cohort of stylist-obsessed A&F collectors, now …

“I hate how it ended”: Allen cries following Bills’ overtime loss

“I hate how it ended”: Allen cries following Bills’ overtime loss

Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen was overcome with emotion while speaking to reporters after a heartbreaking loss to the Denver Broncos on Saturday. Allen has been a perennial MVP candidate throughout his career, but he’s never made it to the Super Bowl. He has the most playoff starts in without a trip to the championship game (15) of any quarterback in NFL history. Following an off season for the typically dominant Kansas City Chiefs, Allen’s path to the big game looked clearer than ever. Allen threw three touchdowns against the Broncos, but couldn’t hold on to the ball. Two costly fumbles and two interceptions led to a nail-biter of a playoff game. Allen’s final interception, in overtime, led to the Bronco’s game-winning field goal. At the podium after the game, a visibly shaken Allen cried while answering questions. “It’s been a long season, I hate how it ended. And it’s going stick with me for a long time,” he said. #Bills QB Josh Allen shows up to his postgame press conference with tears in his …

The President Who Cries Emergency

The President Who Cries Emergency

This is an edition of The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here. Today, Donald Trump announced that he is considering using the Insurrection Act to send the U.S. military to Minneapolis if state officials do not quell anti-ICE protests there. Deploying federal troops on American soil against the objections of state and local officials is an extreme measure––and seems likelier to inflame than to extinguish unrest there, given that needlessly provocative actions by ICE officers helped create conditions on the ground. Yet the president seems eager to suppress the actions of people he calls “professional agitators and insurrectionists.” For months, members of his administration have laid the rhetorical groundwork for a martial crackdown. Insurrections are rare in U.S. history, but according to White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, we’ve had lots of them just since 2024. In his telling, the perpetrators of recent insurrections against the United States include …