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  • Phil Collins, 74, reveals sad health update after retiring: I’ve…

    Phil Collins, 74, reveals sad health update after retiring: I’ve…

    Phil Collins gave a sad update on his health condition.

    The Genesis rocker, 74, opened up about his health woes that forced him into retirement in a new interview with MOJO magazine.

    “I keep thinking I should go downstairs to the studio and see what happens. But I’m not hungry for it anymore,” Collins shared. “The thing is, I’ve been sick. I mean very sick.”

    In the 2024 documentary, “Phil Collins: Drummer First,” the musician addressed his health battle, which left him unable to play the drums.

    “It’s still kind of sinking in a bit,” the Grammy winner admitted. “I’ve spent all my life playing drums. To suddenly not be able to do that is a shock.”

    Collins started playing the drums at age 5, sharing that the movement has “taken its toll on my hands, legs.”

    “If I can’t do what I did as well as I did it, I’d rather relax and not do anything,” the star added.

    “If I wake up one day and I can hold a pair of drumsticks, then I’ll have a crack at it. But I just feel like I’ve used up my air miles.”

    He played his final show in March 2022 alongside his Genesis bandmates Mike Rutherford and Tony Banks at London’s 02 Arena.

    The “Against All Odds (Take a Look at Me Now)” singer performed while sitting down and joked he’d have to find a real job amid his ongoing health battle. During the show, his son, Nic, played the drums.

    While he didn’t give any further details on his condition, Collins has suffered several issues over the years.

    In 2017, Collins was diagnosed with drop-foot, a condition that left him without sensation in one of his feet.

    At the time, he said the condition was a “result of a back operation which makes it difficult to walk.”

    In the documentary, Nic shared that his father had major surgery on his neck in 2015. Collins has used a cane to walk since then.

    “Musicians, people in bands in general had this thought that they were invincible,” Nic elaborated.

    “I think that’s really what it is with my dad is just this kind of sense of you’re a drummer, you’re invincible, you do what you do. But you don’t know it’s gonna take a toll in the long run.”

    “I’d love to [play] but… there are certain physical things that get in the way,” the English rockstar told BBC Breakfast in 2021.

    Collins has been suffering health issues since 2007 when he dislocated a vertebrae in his neck, leaving him with severe nerve damage to his hands.

    Collins is an eight-time Grammy winner, who’s hits include “In the Air Tonight,” “Sussudio,” “Against All Odds (Take a Look at Me Now),” and “You’ll Be in My Heart.”

  • Their mosque burned down in LA-area wildfire. They’re still determined to gather for Ramadan

    Their mosque burned down in LA-area wildfire. They’re still determined to gather for Ramadan

    The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.

    All that remains of Masjid Al-Taqwa is a sign that bears its name.

    The mosque in Altadena, which served a tight-knit Muslim community for 42 years, burned to the ground in one of the Los Angeles area’s deadliest fires in January — leaving the congregation heartbroken and without a place to pray and break their upcoming Ramadan fast together.

    With that weighing on their minds, about 20 mosque members and a few connected families met on a recent Saturday at a local Islamic school to pray and share a meal, their first together since the fire. Many who came are living in motels or with family after losing their homes in the Eaton fire, which killed 17 people and scorched thousands of homes and over 14,000 acres across Los Angeles County.

    With Ramadan just days a way, their volunteer imam, Junaid Aasi, had good news to share. Clad in a white robe, black jacket and prayer cap, he walked onto the plush blue prayer rugs and placed a small karaoke machine in the middle of the multipurpose room at New Horizon Islamic School.

    Aasi announced the school was offering this space for four nights each week during Ramadan. There were gasps of relief, and utterances of “Alhamdulillah,” an Arabic phrase that means “praise be to God.”

    Aasi said many in the community have been anxious about Ramadan and having this room, even if only for some days each week, is a blessing.

    “Ramadan is not only a time when we pray and eat together, but we also help and support each other and others in the community,” he said. “This year, with so many who have lost so much, it’s going to be more important than ever.”

    The imam, with a secular job as an IT professional, has volunteered at the mosque for the past 25 years. He has been revisited the property since the fire. Sometimes, he says, he can still see everything the way it was when he closes his eyes.

    The place where people would perform wudu — the ritual washing of hands, feet and face before coming in to pray. The thick carpets where they prayed. Copies of the holy Quran. A fig tree outside.

    “I still can’t believe it’s all gone,” Aasi said.

    He said many members are still displaced and hurting emotionally.

    “One member just texted me that they were on their way here but stopped to check out their (burned) home,” Aasi said. They were so overwhelmed, he added, that they couldn’t bring themselves to the gathering.

    Aaron Abdus-Shakoor, one of the mosque’s founders and current board president, lost his home, the building that housed his real estate business and several investment properties around Altadena. He said the mosque, which began in the 1970s as a meeting place for Nation of Islam members, evolved into a mainstream, multicultural Muslim community. It was called the Pasadena-Altadena Daawa Center until members in 1997 renamed it Masjid Al-Taqwa, which means “pious and god-conscious.”

    “All these years, we’ve been good citizens,” Abdus-Shakoor said. “We’ve always kept our doors open and have tried to be a positive influence in the community.”

    In the early days, the communal Ramadan celebration only happened on Eid al-Fitr, which marks the end of the holy month, he said. But for many years now, members have hosted a daily community iftar, the evening meal during Ramadan, which breaks the day-long fast.

    For many, the mosque has been a second home.

    Salah Eddine Benatia, an Algerian immigrant, has only been in the country three months. He discovered Al-Taqwa online and had been riding the bus from Pasadena for prayers.

    “I felt so warmly welcomed by this community,” he said. “I miss home a lot especially around Ramadan. I was so sad when I heard the mosque burned down. Being here gives me a sense of being with family.”

    Farzana Asaduzzaman, who has lived in the neighborhood since 2016, said Ramadan at the mosque has always been “a family affair.”

    “Everyone brings food, we fast, we break our fast together,” she said. “The kids would play Uno, make arts and crafts, and assemble Eid gift bags. We would put up heaters in the outside area, sit down, sip hot chai and talk for hours.”

    Asaduzzaman, her husband and their three children, ages 14, 10 and 3, lost their home in the fire as well. They spent two and a half years renovating the property before it burned down.

    “Our masjid may be gone and our neighborhood may be gone, but our community is strong,” she said. “This is our support system. We’ll be together for Ramadan, no matter where it is. We’ll find a place where we can see our kids run around and where we can gather and be together again.”

    For Mohammed AlDajani, a second-year medical student, the mosque was a five-minute walk from his condo, which was also lost in the fire. For AlDajani, who had no relatives or friends nearby, the mosque fulfilled the need for social and spiritual nourishment.

    “The masjid was actually a nice incentive for me to move here,” he said. “It’s a place that has helped ground me in this community.”

    AlDajani said, unlike many mosques he has attended, Masjid Al-Taqwa’s members represent many nationalities and ethnicities — Arab, African American, Afghan, Indian, Bangladeshi, Turkish and North African among them.

    “I found that very unique,” he said.

    Last year was his first Ramadan in Southern California. The mosque’s youth painted a mural of the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem, a disputed holy site that has become a flashpoint in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. As a Palestinian American, AlDajani said the community project touched him profoundly at a time when his heart was broken by the suffering of those in Gaza.

    He said he learned about the Altadena mosque’s destruction even before he found out his home was gone.

    “It’s just like my chest sank when I saw the images,” AlDajani said. “It was difficult because I was there for morning and night prayers every day. It was my little haven. It doesn’t feel right, having that empty space there.”

    As he tries to find a place to rent, AlDajani says the mosque community has been “keeping him afloat.”

    “Our prayer group still meets on the weekends,” he said. “I was anxious about Ramadan. It’s nice to know we’ll still be able to gather and pray, and this haven will still exist.”

    Sakeenah Ali’s children, who attended Elliott Magnet Middle School across the street from the mosque, lost their school in the fire.

    “They would hear the afternoon call to prayer from their school, which was very special,” she said, adding that she went out and saw the mosque burn and the parking lot covered in ash.

    “Cars were on fire, trees were smoldering,” Ali recalled. “You could hear explosions everywhere – boom, boom.”

    But she believes that her community is resilient.

    “The key is to keep showing up,” Ali said. “Make sure we have our prayer time, stay connected and be consistent. We are going to rebuild.”

    ___

    Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

  • Peter Jason, the voice of Fallout 2’s famous drill sergeant and Dizzy in the Gear of War games, has died

    Peter Jason, the voice of Fallout 2’s famous drill sergeant and Dizzy in the Gear of War games, has died

    Jason had a long career as a character actor in film and television and frequently collaborated with John Carpenter, but to us he’ll always be Sergeant Dornan.

    A Variety report says character actor Peter Jason, known to gamers as the gruff, put-upon Drill Sergeant Dornan in Fallout 2 and Dizzy in the Gears of War series, has died.

    Jason was a well-known “that guy” in films and television, with more than 260 credits going back to the 1960s, according to IMDB. He had memorable roles in 48 Hrs, Prince of Darkness, and a long run as Con Stapleton in HBO’s Deadwood series, but he appeared in pretty much everything: Other credits include Heartbreak Ridge, The Karate Kid, The Golden Girls, Knots Landing, Marked for Death, Castle, The New Woody Woodpecker Show, Mortal Kombat (the good one), Mommy Dearest, Starsky and Hutch, and dozens of others. The guy got around.

    Elias Toufexis, an actor well-known for his own work in games and television, called Jason “the consummate character actor” in a message posted to X.

    He was also a frequent collaborator with famed horror director John Carpenter, appearing in films including They Live, Prince of Darkness, In the Mouth of Madness, Village of the Damned, and Escape from LA.

    “Peter Jason, one of the great character actors in cinema, has died,” Carpenter wrote in a farewell message. “His first movie was Howard Hawks’ Rio Lobo. He was a dear friend and I’ll miss him terribly.”

    Aside from being a prolific character actor, Jason also contributed to a handful of videogames. He served up a memorable turn as Dizzy Wallin in Gears of War 2 and 3 — the official Gears account described Jason as “a legend” in its own tribute to the actor.

    For me, though, his best work in games came in the role of Arch Dornan, the Enclave drill sergeant who got very tired of your nonsense in Fallout 2. It wasn’t a huge role, but it was memorable enough that Obsidian name-checked him 12 years later in Fallout: New Vegas.

    The Variety report says the cause of death was cancer. Peter Jason was 80 years old.

  • Amazon’s James Bond deal could mean a new future for 007

    Amazon’s James Bond deal could mean a new future for 007

    (Image credit: Tristan Fewings / Getty Images for EON Productions, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios, and Universal Pictures)

    This is one transaction that is shaken, not stirred. It was announced on Feb. 20 that a deal had been reached to give control of the “James Bond” film series to Amazon-MGM, likely opening the doors to a whole new future for Hollywood’s most legendary spy. The agreement relinquishes control of the Bond IP from the longtime stewards of the franchise.

    With the most recent Bond actor, Daniel Craig, being killed off in 2021’s “No Time to Die,” the search has been on for a new actor to take up the role of 007. But giving control of Bond to one of the biggest companies in the world could have ripple effects throughout the film industry.

    The deal was made between Amazon MGM and the Broccoli family, whose patriarch Albert Broccoli started the Bond film franchise 60 years ago. The two parties “formed a new joint venture to house the James Bond intellectual property rights,” under which “Amazon MGM Studios will gain creative control of the James Bond franchise,” Amazon MGM said in a press release.

    This marks the end of a longstanding wrestling match between the parties. Bond was originally owned by MGM, which “was acquired by Amazon in 2022,” said NPR. At that time, Albert Broccoli’s daughter Barbara Broccoli and her stepson Michael Wilson “said they would retain creative control of the films through their own production company, Eon.” But with this deal, they are “stepping down from their creative roles and allowing the new home of the Bond franchise to take the lead.”

    This marks the biggest change in the history of the Bond franchise. Broccoli and her stepson “had extraordinary control over the Bond franchise, personally steering the films” in certain directions, said IndieWire. More than anything, they “were the arbiters of ‘what is a James Bond film,’ navigating Bond’s post-Cold War reinvention with Pierce Brosnan in the ’90s and selecting Daniel Craig as his replacement in 2005.”

    But now Amazon and its owner, Jeff Bezos, are at the helm, and “fan reaction — including this one — is mixed,” said IndieWire. There is the “possibility of more Bond projects than ever. But at what cost?” It is “hard not to think that Bond has sold out,” given that for the Broccolis, each “Bond film was a bespoke product of a family business.” Of course, this may have also “limited the potential for new takes on Bond,” the outlet added.

    Such limits on Bond may no longer exist; the deal is part of the “transition from movies to content, from curated popcorn to popcorn sold by the yard,” said Variety. The “seismic nature of the ‘Bond’ news today marks that transition as a cultural done deal.” There is now potential, too, for the franchise to be spun off into a larger saga — with films that are released much more often.

    Amazon and Bezos apparently wanted the “Bond” IP so badly that they paid a lofty sum; Amazon purchased MGM for $8.5 billion in 2022, but it “took another $1 billion to ensure that they could fully steer and exploit” the Bond franchise, said Deadline. Amazon probably has a “desire to expand the James Bond franchise into its own universe akin to Marvel or Star Wars,” creating a new era of spy films.

  • Salman Rushdie Attacker Found Guilty for Brutal 2022 Assault That Left Novelist Blinded

    Salman Rushdie Attacker Found Guilty for Brutal 2022 Assault That Left Novelist Blinded

    Hadi Matar is facing up to 30 years in jail after a jury in New York found him guilty Friday

    Hadi Matar, the New Jersey man who attacked Salman Rushdie in 2022, seriously wounding him and leaving him blind in one eye, was found guilty on Friday of attempted murder and assault.

    The eight-day trial was held in Chautauqua County Court, where the jury deliberated for two hours before rendering their verdict. Matar is facing up to 30 years in prison, according to NBC News.

    The attack occurred on Aug. 12, 2022, at the Chautauqua Institution in the western New York town of Chautauqua, where Rushdie was slated to speak at a literary festival.

    Rushdie testified on Feb. 11 that he noticed Matar before he rushed onstage with a knife. “I was aware of this person rushing at me from my right hand side,” he said. “I was struck by his eyes which seemed dark and ferocious to me.”

    The novelist recalled lying in “a lake of blood” and holding up his hand in self-defense, which was also stabbed. “It occurred to me that I was dying,” Rushdie said, according to the Associated Press. “That was my predominant thought.”

    Rushdie was hospitalized for 17 days after the attack and still does not have the use of his right hand.

    The author had been receiving death threats since the 1989 publication of his novel “The Satanic Verses,” which led Iranian leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini to issue a call for Muslims around the world to kill him.

    The Booker Prize winner went into hiding until 1998, when the Iranian government called off the fatwa. He has lived in New York City since 2000. The Indian-British writer was knighted in 2007 by Queen Elizabeth II.

    Last year, Rushdie published a memoir of the near-fatal assault in a book titled “Knife: Meditations After an Attempted Murder.”

  • Phil Collins, 74, Offers Heartbreaking Health Update

    Phil Collins, 74, Offers Heartbreaking Health Update

    Phil Collins has offered a heartbreaking update on his health.

    “The thing is, I’ve been sick. I mean very sick,” Collins, 74, told MOJO magazine in an interview published on Tuesday, February 18.

    The legendary singer-songwriter, whose daughter is Emily in Paris star Lily Collins, has largely retreated from the public eye following the completion of his band Genesis’s The Last Domino? Tour in March 2022. A myriad of health problems meant Phil sat in a chair during those shows, while his son, Nic Collins, replaced him on drums.

    In this new interview, Phil admitted that his health setbacks have dampened his interest in writing and recording new music.

    “I keep thinking I should go downstairs to the studio and see what happens. But I’m not hungry for it anymore,” he conceded.

    Collins is a type 2 diabetic and also suffered nerve damage from a spinal injury in 2007. He was unable to play drums at all for a period of time, before undergoing surgery in 2015. Following this procedure, Collins triumphantly announced in October 2015 that he was “no longer retired.”

    The rocker reunited with Genesis bandmates Mike Rutherford and Tony Banks for their second and final reunion tour in 2020, but several Last Domino? concerts faced postponements in 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Peter Gabriel, who fronted Genesis between 1967 and 1975, chose not to join his bandmates on stage but attended their final show at London’s O2 Arena to support Collins.

    “Phil wasn’t in as great a shape as he used to be, but they did a great job,” Gabriel told MOJO. “Me going was a rite of passage, really. I’d been part of the creation of Genesis, so I wanted to be there at the end.”

    During an appearance on BBC News in 2023, Rutherford revealed that Collins was “much more immobile” due to his health problems.

    “He’s fine now at home, he’s enjoying life,” Rutherford said. “He’s worked so hard over the years. I think he’s enjoying his time at home.”

    A more recent update came from the 2024 documentary Phil Collins: Drummer First, in which he spoke candidly about how his health problems have impacted his lifelong passion for drumming.

    “If I can’t do what I did as well as I did it, I’d rather relax and not do anything,” he insisted. “If I wake up one day and I can hold a pair of drumsticks, then I’ll have a crack of it. But I just feel like I’ve used up my air miles. It’s still kind of sinking in a bit … I’ve spent all my life playing drums. To be suddenly not be able to do that is a shock.”

    Collins got his first plastic drum at age 3. As a professional, he sold a staggering 33.5 million solo albums in the U.S. throughout his career, on top of the more than 100 million he sold with Genesis worldwide. Initially hired as the group’s drummer, Collins took over as lead singer as well following Gabriel’s departure in 1975.

    He left Genesis in 1996 to focus strictly on his solo work, but the brand briefly carried on with Ray Wilson as new frontman until 2000. The 1980s lineup of Genesis reunited for the Turn It On Again Tour in 2007 and contributed to the BBC documentary Genesis: Together and Apart in 2014.

    Collins has received numerous industry awards as well, including a Best Original Song Oscar for “You’ll Be in My Heart” from Disney’s Tarzan soundtrack. He has won eight Grammy Awards and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame with Genesis in 2010.

  • LA County district attorney opposes a new trial for Menendez brothers

    LA County district attorney opposes a new trial for Menendez brothers

    LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan Hochman announced Friday that he’s opposing a petition made last year by attorneys for Erik and Lyle Menendez asking the court to take another look at their case amid new sexual assault allegations they say corroborate a history of abuse.

    But Hochman stopped short of shutting down the possibility of resentencing the brothers, who are serving life terms for killing their parents, saying he’ll revisit the issue in “the coming weeks.”

    The 1989 killing inside the family’s Beverly Hills home, and the highly publicized trials that followed, sparked documentaries, films and a recent television series that have renewed public interest in the Menendez case decades later. Revelations made in the last year have also prompted new consideration of their crimes and pleas for the brothers to be freed.

    During a Friday news conference, Hochman said there are no grounds for a habeas petition. He argued that the evidence presented by the defense in their petition to the court was not new or credible.

    “The court should deny the current habeas petition by the Menendez brothers,” Hochman said.

    The district attorney said his team has reviewed more 50,000 pages of trial transcripts and spoken to defense attorneys, law enforcement and prosecutors, along with every family member who wanted to discuss the case. He said he plans to give a response to a resentencing request in the coming weeks.

    The brothers’ life sentences seemed to be on the way to be reconsidered last year, after then-District Attorney George Gascón said he supported granting them clemency. Gascón asked a judge to rescind the brothers’ prior life sentences without the possibility of parole and instead sentence them to 50 years to life. The move could make them eligible for parole as youthful offenders because they were younger than 26 when they killed their parents.

    Gascón said at the time that he believed the brothers had “paid their debt to society.” But after defeating Gascón in the November election, Hochman has said he intends to review that decision.

    A hearing to determine if the brothers should be resentenced is scheduled for March 20.

    Hochman’s update on the case comes a day after Erik and Lyle Menendez spoke to TMZ about their time in prison, which they said included attacks and bullying during their early days behind bars.

    During the “2 Angry Men” podcast with Harvey Levin and Mark Geragos, the younger of the Menendez brothers, Erik, discussed the “bullying and trauma” he’s endured over the years.

    “Prison was hard for me,” he said. “I faced a lot of bullying and trauma — it was a dangerous environment.”

    Sources told The Times that Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office communicated with the brothers’ legal representation after they described their experiences behind bars.

    Their three decades imprisoned could come under scrutiny as part of their appeal for freedom. Hochman has said previously that, before making a decision, he needs to review not just the criminal case, but also the Menendez brothers’ prison files and their time behind bars. Hochman must also question whether the brothers have been rehabilitated.

    Fellow inmates, attorneys and rehabilitation workers have told The Times that the two have become deeply involved in rehabilitation programs, including launching their own projects to promote rehabilitation of inmates in California prisons.

    They are starkly different portraits of the brothers compared with how they were portrayed during their trials.

    In 1989, Erik and Lyle Menendez bought a pair of shotguns with cash, walked into their Beverly Hills home and shot their parents while they watched a movie in the family living room. Prosecutors said Jose Menendez was struck five times, including in the back of the head, and Kitty Menendez crawled on the floor wounded before the brothers reloaded and fired a final, fatal blast.

    Police initially speculated that the killings were a mafia hit based on the gruesome scene. But the brothers were eventually charged with murder after Erik, who was then 18 years old, confessed the killings to his therapist in March 1990.

    During the trial, prosecutors argued the brothers’ motive for killing their parents was rooted in greed — centered on access to their parents’ multimillion-dollar estate. The brothers’ defense attorneys countered that years of violent sexual abuse by their father preceded the shootings, justifying the killings as a form of self-defense.

    The first trial ended with hung juries for each brother. In the second, allegations of abuse and supporting testimonies were restricted, and Lyle and Erik Menendez were convicted of first-degree murder in March 1996.

    Since then, the two have pursued appeals for years without success, but last year appeared to reach a turning point. Attorneys and advocates in May called for the court to take another look at the case amid new sexual assault allegations they say corroborate a history of abuse against the brothers.

    A recently discovered letter that attorneys say was written by Erik Menendez suggests sexual abuse by his father continued into his late teenage years. And new allegations made by a former member of the Puerto Rican boy band Menudo suggest Lyle and Erik Menendez were not the only victims.

    Roy Rosselló, who raised the allegations in the Peacock docuseries “Menendez + Menudo: Boys Betrayed,” said he was raped in the 1980s by Jose Menendez when he was a teen.

    A petition filed on behalf of the brothers in Los Angeles County Superior Court last year argued that the new evidence directly challenged the argument prosecutors made during trial, paving the way for their case to be reconsidered.

    Earlier this month, two Los Angeles County prosecutors who recommended the brothers be freed from prison — Brock Lunsford, who oversaw the district attorney’s resentencing unit, and Nancy Theberge — alleged they were punished by Hochman and defamed online by one of his political allies.

    The brothers’ relatives who have supported the brothers’ release expressed concern this month that Hochman might be injecting politics into the case, as evidenced by the removal of Lunsford and Theberge. Nearly two dozen family members have met with Hochman to offer their support for Erik and Lyle.

    “Their commitment to the facts and the law was a source of hope for us, reaffirming our belief in the justice system’s ability to evolve,” the family said of the prosecutors. “The decision to remove these dedicated prosecutors from the case, however, underscored exactly what we feared, that political influences might overshadow justice.”

    _____

    (Los Angeles Times staff writer James Queally contributed to this report.)

  • Lawyer for Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs quits ahead of sex trafficking trial

    Lawyer for Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs quits ahead of sex trafficking trial

    NEW YORK — An attorney representing Sean “Diddy” Combs in his high-profile federal sex trafficking case has announced that he’s stepping down as counsel, just over two months before trial is set to begin.

    In a motion filed in New York Federal Court on Friday, Anthony Ricco notified the judge of his intent to withdraw, citing “sufficient reasons,” the specifics of which are protected under attorney/client privilege.

    “Although I have provided Sean Combs with the high level of legal representation expected by the court, under no circumstances can I continue to effectively serve as counsel for Sean Combs,” he continued. “It is respectfully but regrettably requested that the court grant the relief requested.”

    Ricco noted that there will be no “lapse in representation” as the rapper is still being represented by “five other attorneys on record.” He added that his decision followed discussions with Combs’ lead counsel Marc Agnifilo.

    “This motion for withdrawal of counsel, if granted,” he continued, “will not result in a delay of the present schedule for the commencement of jury selection and trial, or the present schedules for briefings of pre-trial legal issues.”

    Combs has been behind bars at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn since his arrest on Sept. 16. He was taken into custody at the Park Hyatt Hotel in Midtown following a months-long federal investigation, which saw agents raid his homes in Miami and Los Angeles.

    At the center of the federal case is Combs’ infamous “freak off” sex parties, which allegedly involved degrading and physically abusive acts that were often recorded without consent.

    According to a federal indictment in the case, the rapper “abused, threatened and coerced women and others around him” into participating in the illicit parties.

    Diddy has pleaded not guilty to charges of sex trafficking, racketeering and transportation to engage in prostitution. He has repeatedly been denied bail.

    Still, he has continued to maintain his innocence in the months since, even as more alleged victims have come forward. He’s currently facing more than 30 civil lawsuits, most of them detailing allegations of drug use, rape, sexual assault and physical abuse.

    Back in June, the music mogul did admit to assaulting his ex-girlfriend R&B singer Cassie Ventura after violent video footage leaked of a 2016 incident in a hotel hallway. She filed suit against Diddy in November 2023, but settled the following day.

  • Voletta Wallace, mother of rapper Notorious B.I.G. and steward of his legacy, dies at 78

    Voletta Wallace, mother of rapper Notorious B.I.G. and steward of his legacy, dies at 78

    Voletta Wallace, the mother of the late rapper Notorious B.I.G. who worked to elevate his short-lived but influential career to hip-hop greatness, has died. She was 78.

    “We suffered a tremendous loss today. Our mother, our matriarch, the woman who dedicated herself to uplifting her son, Christopher Wallace, and preserving his legacy has passed,” Wallace’s family said Friday on her Facebook page. “It is with immense sadness that we share this news with you, and ask that you give our family the space and time needed to grieve this monumental loss. Thank you for your continued outpouring of love, prayers and condolences in this difficult time.”

    Wallace died Friday morning in Stroudsburg, Penn., the Monroe County coroner, Thomas Yanac, confirmed to the Associated Press. She died of natural causes in hospice care at home, he said. Yanac did not immediately respond to The Times’ requests for comment.

    Wallace’s son, who was also known as Biggie, was gunned down in 1997 following a music industry party in the Mid-Wilshire district, just two weeks before his seminal album “Life After Death” was released. His mother worked to safeguard the “Hypnotize” rapper’s legacy and pass on his wealth to her grandchildren, “Notorious” star Christopher Jordan “C.J.” Wallace and daughter T’yanna Dream Wallace. The family also filed a number of lawsuits alleging wrongful death and conspiracy.

    She and her family also sued the city of Los Angeles, alleging that officials covered up police involvement in the rapper’s slaying. A federal judge dismissed that lawsuit in 2010 after lawyers on both sides said they had reached an agreement allowing for the lawsuit to be filed at a later date. The family brought several other lawsuits stemming from the killing, which remains unsolved.

    Wallace, a Jamaican immigrant, worked as a preschool teacher and was a single mother. Her son, who was 24 when he died, was killed just six months after rival rapper Tupac Shakur was gunned down in Las Vegas. The Brooklyn emcee and “Big Poppa” rapper, born Christopher Wallace, was among the most successful acts launched by embattled music mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs. Six months after his death, his mother took the stage at the MTV Video Music Awards to accept the prize for rap video (“Hypnotize”) on his behalf.

    “I know if my son was here tonight, the first thing he would have done is say, ‘Big up to Brooklyn,’” she said.

    Two years later, she and Shakur’s mother, Afeni Shakur, put on a united front at the 1999 MTV Video Music Awards to “stand united as mothers preserving their [sons’] legacies.

    “The fact that we are even standing here shows what the power of faith, friends, family, loved ones and fans can do to bring us all closer,” Wallace said.

    The matriarch also worked with the mothers of other late young musicians — Aaliyah, TLC’s Lisa “Left Eye” Lopes and Jam Master Jay, among them — through the Christopher Wallace Memorial Foundation and its B.I.G. (“Books Instead of Guns”) Night Out.

    “It is our way of saying, ‘Keep your head up,”‘ Wallace told the Associated Press in 2003. “It’s the foundation’s way just to let these parents know that we love them.”

    When Combs fell from grace last year, Wallace was among those who spoke out against the music producer after a video of him attacking his ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura surfaced and made her “sick to [her] stomach.”

    “I don’t want to believe the things that I’ve heard, but I’ve seen [the video],” Wallace told Rolling Stone last May. “I pray that he apologizes to her. I hope that I see Sean one day and the only thing I want to do is slap the daylights out of him. And you can quote me on that. Because I liked him. I didn’t want to believe all the awful things, but I’m so ashamed and embarrassed.”

    Biggie, who released his debut album “Ready to Die” with Bad Boy Records in 1994, was posthumously inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2020, one of his many achievements that his mother highlighted on her social media accounts that she largely dedicated to him. Last year, she marked “Hypnotize” reaching 1 billion streams on Spotify after its 1997 release.

    In an early 1997 profile in The Times, Biggie, describing his own reformation, said: “What I’m doing now is right. I’m taking care of my mother, my kids and my peers. It’s legal, and I’m just using a talent that I have to express myself and get paid, so it’s only right that I follow that righteous road.”

    In 2005, Wallace published a memoir, “Biggie: Voletta Wallace Remembers Her Son, Christopher Wallace, aka Notorious B.I.G.,” to pay tribute to Biggie, describing losing him so young as feeling like “a 100-pound lead weighing down in my chest.” The Atria-published book included never-before-published photographs and a foreword from Biggie’s widow, singer Faith Evans. The book charted her son’s climb to stardom and how Wallace worked to keep “her bright, precocious son on the straight and narrow.” In it, she also condemned Biggie’s friends whom she claimed treated her with little respect after he died, as well as her ongoing quest to identify her son’s killers.

    In 2021, she worked as an executive producer on the Netflix documentary “Biggie: I Got a Story to Tell.” Prior to that, she served as a producer on the 2009 biopic “Notorious,” in which Angela Bassett played her, and Biggie’s son C.J. played a younger version of him. Jamal Woolard starred as the elder version of the rapper. She visited the set nearly every day, and although she loved the final film, she said, it also made her angry and sad.

    “I learned a lot … about my son — a lot that I never knew. But I still love him because he was from [my heart] and the love is still here,” she told CinemaBlend in 2009. “You can’t change love.”

    To mark Biggie’s 50th birthday, she and the rapper’s children, along with collaborators Lil’ Kim and Lil’ Cease, got together at the Empire State Building when it changed its colors to red and white in his honor. New York also commemorated the rapper with a special edition MetroCard and an orchestral tribute to his music at Lincoln Center, Variety reported.

  • Peter Jason, “Karate Kid” and “Deadwood” Actor, Dies at 80

    Peter Jason, “Karate Kid” and “Deadwood” Actor, Dies at 80

    Peter Jason, “Karate Kid” and “Deadwood” Actor, Dies at 80

    Tommy McArdle

    February 21, 2025 at 6:15 PM

    Peter Jason, a beloved character actor who acted in film and television for over 50 years, has died. He was 80.

    Multiple outlets reported news of Jason’s death on Friday, Feb. 21. The actor’s death was first announced by a number of his colleagues and collaborators on Thursday, Feb. 20; a cause of death was not immediately available.

    “Peter Jason, one of the great character actors in cinema, has died,” horror filmmaker John Carpenter, who cast Jason in a number of his movies, wrote on X on Feb. 20. “His first movie was Howard Hawks’ RIO LOBO. He was a dear friend and I’ll miss him terribly.”

    Billy Zane similarly took to Instagram to mourn Jason’s death late on Feb. 20. He shared a number of photos of Jason, including one of the actor posing on a golf course.

    “If there are no words then there certainly is no music.. My dear, dear friend, the brightest light, most generous soul and gregarious of men, the supremely talented and kind Peter Jason has left the set,” Zane, 58, wrote in a caption. “Survived by his lovely wife Eileen and his children, the vacuum felt by his passing gut punched me as I saw it coming. It had me spending the last two hours deciding between pieces of music to underscore this tribute that would either confuse, tickle or bore 1/2 of the viewers.”

    Related: Paying Tribute to the Celebrities Who Have Died in 2025

    “They ranged from Spike Jones to Morricone. I couldn’t pick one so I chose none. All I know is his wake will be widely attended by and teeter somewhere between a Friar’s Roast to a burial at sea befitting an admiral,” Zane added in the caption. “See you on the back 9 my friend! RIP PJ 🙏🏼”

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    Jason amassed 267 acting credits on IMDb over the course of his career, which began with 1967’s A Bell for Adano. He appeared in seven different movies made by director Carpenter over the years, including 1987’s Prince of Darkness, 1988’s They Live, 1993’s Body Bags, 1994’s In the Mouth of Madness, 1995’s Village of the Damned, 1996’s Escape from L.A. and 2001’s Ghost of Mars.

    Other notable films Jason appeared in included 1984’s original Karate Kid, 1990’s The Hunt for Red October, 1995’s Mortal Kombat and 2002’s Adaptation, among others. He held a supporting role in HBO’s mid-200s Western series Deadwood as Con Stapleton, which he reprised in 2019’s Deadwood: The Movie. Video game fans will also recognize Jason as a voice actor in the Gears of War series.

    Jason is survived by his wife Eileen and daughter Robin Goldwasser.

    Read the original article on People