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            <title><![CDATA[Family of Hae Min Lee to appeal Baltimore judge’s decision that freed Adnan Syed]]></title>
            <link>https://paragraph.com/@rgerh/family-of-hae-min-lee-to-appeal-baltimore-judge-s-decision-that-freed-adnan-syed</link>
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            <pubDate>Thu, 29 Sep 2022 07:31:24 GMT</pubDate>
            <description><![CDATA[BALTIMORE — The family of Hae Min Lee will appeal a Baltimore judge’s decision to overturn Adnan Syed’s 22-year-old murder conviction in Lee’s death, according to court papers filed Wednesday. Attorney Steve Kelley, who represents the Lee family, told The Baltimore Sun he filed the notice to appeal earlier Wednesday. Syed’s case became a matter of international intrigue following the 2014 release of the “Serial” podcast, which reexamined his legal saga. Baltimore Circuit Judge Melissa Phinn l...]]></description>
            <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BALTIMORE — The family of Hae Min Lee will appeal a Baltimore judge’s decision to overturn Adnan Syed’s 22-year-old murder conviction in Lee’s death, according to court papers filed Wednesday.</p><p>Attorney Steve Kelley, who represents the Lee family, told The Baltimore Sun he filed the notice to appeal earlier Wednesday. Syed’s case became a matter of international intrigue following the 2014 release of the “Serial” podcast, which reexamined his legal saga.</p><p>Baltimore Circuit Judge Melissa Phinn last week overturned Syed’s conviction after prosecutors swore in an affidavit they found evidence suggesting Syed’s innocence that had not previously been disclosed to defense attorneys in the case. Officially, Phinn ordered a new trial in the matter, but under Maryland law prosecutors have 30 days to either dismiss the charges or to continue with a new trial.</p><p>Baltimore State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby said last week on multiple occasions that she planned to dismiss the charges against Syed and formally declare his innocence if pending DNA tests in his case came back either inconclusive or suggested another suspect.</p><p>———</p>]]></content:encoded>
            <author>rgerh@newsletter.paragraph.com (rgerh)</author>
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            <title><![CDATA[Old Lyme officer under fire amid racism allegations agrees to retire]]></title>
            <link>https://paragraph.com/@rgerh/old-lyme-officer-under-fire-amid-racism-allegations-agrees-to-retire</link>
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            <pubDate>Thu, 29 Sep 2022 07:07:22 GMT</pubDate>
            <description><![CDATA[Sep. 29—OLD LYME — Police officer Jay Rankin agreed to retire almost a year after he was placed on paid leave and later arrested for an alleged altercation involving his use of a racist slur in Old Saybrook. A settlement agreement signed Sept. 16 gave Rankin more than $20,000 and two-and-a-half years of insurance benefits in exchange for retiring and never working for the town again. First Selectman Tim Griswold put Rankin, 60, on leave on Sept. 22 of last year. He cited multiple ongoing inve...]]></description>
            <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Sep. 29—OLD LYME — Police officer Jay Rankin agreed to retire almost a year after he was placed on paid leave and later arrested for an alleged altercation involving his use of a racist slur in Old Saybrook.</p><p>A settlement agreement signed Sept. 16 gave Rankin more than $20,000 and two-and-a-half years of insurance benefits in exchange for retiring and never working for the town again.</p><p>First Selectman Tim Griswold put Rankin, 60, on leave on Sept. 22 of last year. He cited multiple ongoing investigations.</p><p>Rankin was paid in full during his absence, receiving a salary of $79,456 initially. He got a contractually-obligated pay increase in July that brought him to $81,432.</p><p>He did not return a call for comment Wednesday.</p><p>Rankin became an officer in Old Lyme after he retired as a master sergeant from the Old Saybrook Police Department in 2017.</p><p>In March, he was arrested by the same department where he had worked for 29 years. The case stemmed from a complaint that Rankin used the n-word during an argument in front of the Old Saybrook Fire Department, where he served as a volunteer firefighter.</p><p>The arrest warrant affidavit said Paul Levels, a man identified as homeless, was pushing his shopping cart in front of the fire station when Rankin pulled up in his car. Levels told police Rankin called him the n-word while yelling at him for being in the way.</p><p>According to the affidavit, Rankin told two fellow firefighters at the scene and police during an interview that he called Levels a freeloader, not the n-word.</p><p>The affidavit identified Rankin as a white man with no past criminal history.</p><p>A police report about the firehouse incident, obtained through a Freedom of Information request, included a statement by an Old Saybrook firefighter who witnessed the argument between Levels and Rankin but did not hear the alleged slur. That same firefighter said he&apos;d also seen Rankin yelling at a Black truck driver in the Walmart parking lot earlier that year. The firefighter said he apologized to the truck driver for Rankin&apos;s behavior, which he described as totally unacceptable and a complete embarrassment to the Old Saybrook Fire Department.</p><p>Old Saybrook Fire Department Chief Joe Johnson said Wednesday he did not know if Rankin was still a member of the department. But he specified no action had been taken against the volunteer.</p><p>Rankin&apos;s criminal attorney, former Chief State&apos;s Attorney Christopher Morano, said Rankin&apos;s resignation is separate from the court case but reiterated his client&apos;s many years of service in public safety.</p><p>Morano declined to go into specifics about the court case.</p><p>&quot;We&apos;ll save those comments for the more appropriate place, which would be in the courtroom,&quot; the attorney said.</p><p>Rankin was scheduled to appear in Middlesex Superior Court Thursday. He pleaded not guilty to the misdemeanor second-degree breach of peace charge back in March.</p><p>&apos;Off duty conduct&apos;</p><p>Rankin&apos;s settlement agreement with the town comes with a $20,000 lump sum payment, $1,957 for a quarter of his accrued sick time, and 30 months of health insurance coverage for his family of three.</p><p>The agreement described the deal as the final resolution of the town&apos;s investigation into &quot;alleged off duty conduct.&quot;</p><p>A letter of reprimand referenced in the agreement was not available by press time. Neither were any documents pertaining to the town&apos;s internal investigation, which the town said was completed Sept. 14.</p><p>Rankin was the subject of three other internal affairs investigations initiated in October 2021 by Connecticut State Police, who oversee the small Old Lyme police force through a resident state trooper.</p><p>The incidents occurred or were reported within a one-month period starting in late August of 2021, according to state police internal affairs reports. They were all deemed unsubstantiated. One involved a bar incident in Old Saybrook that left the complainant, a Black man, feeling verbally assaulted. Another involved Rankin&apos;s alleged failure to respond in a timely manner to a medical call. The other was spurred by a complaint from Griswold to Old Saybrook police about the alleged theft of an alternator from an Old Lyme police cruiser.</p><p>The Office of the State&apos;s Attorney in Middletown declined prosecution in the alternator case based on insufficient evidence, according to police reports.</p><p>Griswold, the first selectman, told The Day that the town chose to work toward a settlement agreement rather than go through the lengthy disciplinary and grievance process that would have resulted by placing Rankin on unpaid leave.</p><p>&quot;That timing, we did not need that,&quot; he said. &quot;It was negotiated to go straight to the agreement.&quot;</p><p>Griswold said it would probably be best for him not to comment on the allegations or why it took so long for the situation to be resolved.</p><p>&quot;But I guess I&apos;m just pleased that the matter&apos;s come to a conclusion and we can move on,&quot; he said.</p><p><a target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow ugc" class="dont-break-out" href="mailto:e.regan@theday.com">e.regan@theday.com</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
            <author>rgerh@newsletter.paragraph.com (rgerh)</author>
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            <title><![CDATA[Squid Game’ actor O Yeong-su goes viral for busting moves at Emmys afterparty]]></title>
            <link>https://paragraph.com/@rgerh/squid-game-actor-o-yeong-su-goes-viral-for-busting-moves-at-emmys-afterparty</link>
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            <pubDate>Thu, 15 Sep 2022 06:15:53 GMT</pubDate>
            <description><![CDATA[The Netflix series has a lot of reasons to celebrate after taking home six out of the 14 Emmy awards it was nominated for, including best actor for Lee Jung-jae, who became the first Asian to win in the category. He also became the first actor from a non-English-language series to nab an Emmy award. But it was actor O Yeong-su, who played Oh Il-nam (Player 001) on the show, who took the spotlight during the festivities hosted by Netflix following the awards ceremony. In a video recorded durin...]]></description>
            <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Netflix series has a lot of reasons to celebrate after taking home <a target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow ugc" class="dont-break-out" href="https://nextshark.com/squid-game-lee-jung-jae-emmy-best-actor/">six out of the 14 Emmy awards</a> it was nominated for, including best actor for Lee Jung-jae, who became the first Asian to win in the category. He also became the first actor from a non-English-language series to nab an Emmy award.</p><p>But it was actor O Yeong-su, who played Oh Il-nam (Player 001) on the show, who took the spotlight during the festivities hosted by Netflix following the awards ceremony.</p><p>In a video recorded during the party, the 77-year-old actor can be seen boogying in the middle of the dance floor as everyone cheers him on.</p><p><strong>More from NextShark: </strong><a target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow ugc" class="dont-break-out" href="https://nextshark.com/enhypen-first-pitch-dodger-stadium-korean-heritage-night/"><strong>ENHYPEN to throw first pitch at LA&apos;s Dodger Stadium to celebrate Korean Heritage Night</strong></a></p><p>Netflix retweeted a video of O Yeong-su’s dance moves, which was first shared by New York Times bestselling author Meena Harris.</p>]]></content:encoded>
            <author>rgerh@newsletter.paragraph.com (rgerh)</author>
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