Latest news with #Carry


Forbes
21-05-2025
- Business
- Forbes
Teach:able's Founder Bets On A New Product To Help Investors Earn More From Their Cash Stash
With many investors looking to park their cash in higher-earning accounts, Ankur Nagpal, who founded and exited Teach:able, is jumping into the fray. His fin-tech startup Carry is officially rolling out Smart Yield, an alternative to traditional high-yield savings accounts, today. It has been testing the product for a little under two weeks, he says. Carry, a New York City-based investment platform focused on helping users optimize their taxes, makes automated allocations through Smart Yield into strategic money market funds, where the mix includes many tax-free federal, state and local funds. Smart Yield is available through solo 401(k)s, traditional IRAs and brokerage accounts opened on Carry. Its daily yield scans calculate the ideal tax equivalent yield based on the user's tax situation offering 'intelligent allocations' based on their personal inputs and market yields. 'We'll look every day whenever we find a better opportunity and move them to a different product that earns a little bit more,' he says. The high-interest rate environment has encouraged many investors to flock to high-yield savings accounts and newer investment alternatives, such as real estate syndicate funds. Nagpal has targeted successful entrepreneurs and other high earners through the platform. When it comes to their cash, many are tucking it away in high-yield savings accounts paying 4-5%, he says, but for those in high-tax states, taxes can cut into the yields. According to Nagpal, Smart Yield can give them the equivalent of a taxable investment bringing a return of 5.5% or 6%. The users who can derive the most benefit, he says, are those who are holding onto a lot of cash, are in the highest federal income tax bracket, or live in areas with high city or state taxes. 'It's simple yet powerful,' he says. Nagpal founded Teach:able, a platform for independent course creators, in 2013, and scaled it to $60 million in recurring annual revenue. In a nine-figure exit in 2020, he sold it to Hotmart, a platform that allows users to market digital products around the world. He opened Carry in September 2022. In addition to retirement accounts, it offers brokerage accounts and a no-free roboadvisor. Ahmed Elsayyad, an investor on the platform, has tried Smart Yield for cash management. Previously, he says, it felt like he was playing whack-a-mole. He was using spreadsheets to compare after-tax yields on investments such as Treasuries and municipal funds, with the promise to himself he would rebalance the following week. 'Smart Yield automates the whole loop,' he says. 'The algorithm continuously arbitrages after-tax yield across T-Bills, municipal bonds, and other money market cash accounts, factoring in my Florida residency (zero state income tax) and settlement frictions.' He says the net result is 'higher yield with zero additional cognitive load.' Girish Gopalan, a tech exec and former finance professional based in San Francisco, has also tried Smart Yield. He appreciates the time saved on figuring out how to invest his cash balance. 'Smart Yield automates this, giving me peace of mind that my assets are optimally allocated to generate the best after-tax yield possible,' he said.

Yahoo
19-05-2025
- Yahoo
Problem traffic stops predated Dexter Reed killing by police
The five tactical officers for months were on the radar of the Civilian Office of Police Accountability. From mid-2023 through March 2024 — the month 26-year-old Dexter Reed was killed in a shootout during a traffic stop in the 3800 block of West Ferdinand — those five cops were named in at least four separate COPA investigations that stemmed from traffic stops initiated in the Chicago Police Department's Harrison District (11th). The fatal shooting of Reed, a former basketball player at Westinghouse College Prep high school who shot a police officer moments before he was killed, laid bare longstanding tensions between Chicago's police and the investigators who probe officers' use of deadly force. The officers involved repeatedly violated rules involving motorist traffic stops, investigators found. And, after months of public discord, the leaders of the city's police department and its oversight agency reached the same conclusion: The officers needed to be suspended. Those findings came after the stop that wound up costing Reed his life, but they highlight the problems such a pattern can create when officers put themselves in harm's way with improper stops. Chicago police still are working to prevent that kind of policework even as turmoil in the police disciplinary structure appears to be subsiding. Prior stops The 3900 block of West Van Buren has been a hotspot for drug and gang activity for years. On Friday, March 1, 2024, just after sunset, a man sat in his vehicle with his brother in the front passenger seat outside his apartment building near the end of the block. The car was stationary, but its headlights were on, according to records made public by COPA last month. Moments later, the men were boxed in by two unmarked CPD squad cars. The lead officer asked the driver for his license, but he didn't have it. He was then asked for a Firearm Owner's Identification Card and Concealed Carry License. He didn't have either and denied any weapons were in the vehicle. Both men were ordered out and patted down. The front and rear compartments of the vehicle were searched. Nothing was found. The officers told the men they were detained because the vehicle's lights were on while stationary — an unlawful interpretation of Chicago's municipal code, COPA later found. No arrests were made and the officers did not provide any sort of documentation for the traffic stop. The officers then turned off their body-worn cameras and left. 'In the absence of legal authority to detain these two members of the public, the officers' actions constitute an unlawful restraint,' COPA investigators later wrote. The man in the driver's seat alleged that the officers wouldn't provide him their names and badge numbers. Soon after the stop concluded, the man requested that a CPD sergeant come to the scene so he could file a complaint. Just minutes later, the tactical officers were about half-mile north in the 4000 block of West Wilcox, where they placed a man under arrest for allegedly possessing an illegal handgun. Cook County court records show that case is still pending. The next week, on Wednesday, March 6, the officers were involved in another traffic stop, this one in the 3800 block of West Jackson. Around 5 p.m., the team curbed the driver of a Maserati who, they said, was unbuckled, speeding and eating while driving. Another officer later told the driver he was stopped because the vehicle had tinted windows. The driver gave his license to one of the officers and was soon ordered out of his car. He initially refused, though, and requested that a sergeant come to the scene. Another of the officers threatened to arrest the man for obstruction of justice. The driver then acquiesced, and the officers searched him and the car. While standing outside the vehicle, the man requested the officers' names and badge numbers. He was again threatened with arrest, COPA records show. The search turned up nothing, and the officers disabled their body-worn cameras and left the area. A misconduct complaint was filed later that day. Friction in disciplinary structure Traveling in unmarked squad cars, often in plainclothes attire, tactical officers are frequently the first cops to respond to shootings or other high-priority calls for service. In the Harrison District — the epicenter of Chicago's narcotics trade and one of the most violent parts of the city — 'tact teams' stay busy. Civilian complaints of misconduct are common, though most are not sustained by investigators. CPD Superintendent Larry Snelling's frustration with then-COPA Chief Administrator Andrea Kersten was apparent for much of 2024. Inside COPA, friction among managers and allegations of biased investigations prompted Kersten to resign earlier this year. Despite the public tensions, CPD ultimately agreed with COPA's assessment that the tactical officers should be suspended for repeatedly violating CPD rules related to traffic stops.. CPD said those five officers should be off the street, collectively, for 109 days for their behavior during four traffic stops on the West Side that occurred in the months before the Reed shooting. One of those five quit CPD in November 2024. The officer who was shot may not be able to perform police duties in the future, a police source recently told the Tribune. CPD is now working to develop and implement a new traffic stops policy, the first draft of which was released last month. Though nothing is set in stone, the draft of the new policy would allow officers to continue using pretextual traffic stops as a means to go after guns and drugs. Meanwhile, Mayor Brandon Johnson nominated an interim leader of COPA as the Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability continues the search for Kersten's permanent replacement. The officers still with CPD are on administrative duty, according to a department spokesperson. Of CPD's 22 patrol districts, the Harrison District — roughly bounded by Roosevelt Road, Division Street and Western and Cicero avenues — usually ranks near the top in narcotics arrests and shootings. Police activity is often highest in and around the blocks closest to the Eisenhower Expressway, along Pulaski Road, as well as the intersection of Chicago and Homan avenues. 'What I've seen from police officers in my district is they use traffic stops as a way of going around some of the limitations that they're finding and trying to enforce drug laws,' Brian Ramson, one of the Harrison District Councilors, said last month. Dexter Reed Nine days before his death, Dexter Reed had court. It was a status hearing for a gun charge that came the previous July after he was arrested with a revolver near the Windy City Smokeout festival outside the United Center. Another hearing was set for the following month. Court filings show that the years leading up to Reed's death were marked by physical, emotional and financial hardship. He survived a shooting in 2021, though he spent months in the hospital recovering. 'I'm physically disabled and mentally unstable with PTSD, short-term memory loss, slurred speech, drop foot in one of my legs, blindness in one eye, shoulder/arm hard to move, weakness and/or sensitivity,' Reed wrote in a 2023 court filing. On March 21, 2024, Reed was driving in the 3800 block of West Ferdinand when his vehicle was boxed in by the team of tactical officers. Police bodycam footage shows the officers exit an unmarked police vehicle, draw their weapons and repeatedly order Reed to roll down his SUV's tinted windows. Reed initially complied and rolled down his window, but he appeared to disregard the officers' commands to roll down the window on the passenger side. Moments later, Reed shot the officer standing on the SUV's passenger side. The other four officers then opened fire, shooting dozens of rounds at Reed, who exited the vehicle before falling to the pavement. One officer fired three more shots at Reed as he was lying motionless in the street. That officer shot at least 50 times during the 41 seconds of gunfire. He was one of three officers who reloaded their weapons, according to COPA. An autopsy later found that Reed was shot 13 times. *** Just hours before the fatal gunfire erupted, a Cook County judge entered an order that would allow CPD officers accused of serious misconduct to forgo the Chicago Police Board. The board convened for its monthly meeting that evening, about 90 minutes after the Reed shooting. Both Snellling and Kersten delivered their agency's monthly report to the dozen or so regular meeting attendees. 'I want to also express condolences to members of the Chicago Police Department in light of tonight's events,' Kersten told Snelling shortly after Reed was killed and the officer was wounded. 'I think it just really crystallizes the importance of having these conversations, collaboratively and productively, about how COPA does its job, how the Chicago Police Department lives up to its policies and training, and how we move forward as a city.' It was a striking change in tone from the police board's meeting in February. It was then that Snelling chided COPA investigators for leaning on 'personal opinions and speculation.' Less than two weeks after the Reed shooting, on April 1, Kersten wrote Snelling to note that the officers involved were under investigation for their actions during another traffic stop in the Harrison District. Kersten urged that the officers be stripped of their police powers and placed on desk duty. The body-worn video footage of the Reed shooting was made public on April 9, 2024. Two days later, Kersten was a guest on ESPN personality Stephen A. Smith's YouTube show. Kersten did not discuss the facts of the shooting, but her appearance irked CPD leaders and the conservative wing of the City Council. Ald. Nick Sposato, 38th, soon filed a complaint against Kersten with the city's Office of Inspector General. Sposato accused Kersten of speaking 'in an accusatory and inappropriate prejudicial tone about facts that have yet to be investigated,' but his letter did not cite examples from her public remarks. A few weeks later, during the April 2024 police board meeting, Kersten addressed the outcry. 'Last week's release of materials and my public comments pertaining to the fatal police shooting of Dexter Reed, in which an officer was also shot and wounded, have led to sharp criticisms,' Kersten said. 'This criticism demonstrates a fundamental lack of understanding of COPA's role and process and smacks of hypocrisy.' 'This is misleading at best,' Snelling said in response. 'There is nothing wrong with transparency, transparency is of the utmost importance,' Snelling added. 'But when information is leaked prior to releasing the video, when statements are made without all of the information, an investigation has to begin. And if we're starting by putting it out in the public in a manner in which we framed it, and we expect the public to see it the way we want them to see it, it's problematic. This is why I've made no statements about this shooting.' Reed's family held a press conference the following week outside the Harrison District station to announce its federal lawsuit against the city. The initial complaint did not mention that Reed shot a police officer before he was killed. Nicole Banks, Reed's mother, told reporters that she watched the police bodycam footage of the shooting 'over and over and over.' 'They executed him,' Banks said through tears. 'He fell down and they put the handcuffs on him. That was not right. In the name of Jesus, I ask that he rest in peace.' Civil rights challenges Police shootings, justified or not, usually lead to some kind of civil litigation. Surviving family members often bring lawsuits that allege civil rights abuses, and CPD officers can ask a judge to undo discipline leveled against them. In August 2024, the Fraternal Order of Police filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of eight CPD officers recommended for discipline by COPA. The union alleged that the agency's investigators and higher-ups 'have engaged in a pattern and practice to treat Police Officers unequally and unfairly. Specifically, Defendant COPA conducts unconstitutional, biased and untimely investigations.' Among the defendants in the FOP's federal suit was Matthew Haynam, COPA's former deputy chief administrator who was fired from the agency, also in August 2024. The next month, Haynam filed a whistleblower lawsuit against COPA in Cook County, alleging that his firing was a result of him speaking out against what he called COPA's anti-police bias. Over that winter, the Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability was fielding and investigating complaints about COPA's workplace culture and accountability and the quality of its investigations under Kersten's leadership. 'If the police accountability system is or is reasonably perceived to be ineffective or unfair, it will erode public confidence in policing and police oversight,' CCPSA President Anthony Driver and Vice President Remel Terry wrote to Kersten on Jan. 28, 2025. CCPSA told Kersten a no-confidence vote was forthcoming, and she announced her resignation two weeks later amid a purge of leadership in several other city departments. It was a decision, she said, that was in the works for some time. 'What I know to be certain about this issue is that society has forced it into this binary where you're either for or against somehow, as opposed to understanding that, truly, to do this work, to do this kind of accountability reform work, it's not one or the other. It's not 'either-or.' It's not pro-police or against,' Kersten told the Tribune shortly before she left her post. That same month, attorneys for the city and the CPD reached an agreement with Reed's family to settle their federal lawsuit for $1.25 million. In early March 2025, Snelling endorsed the agency's recommendations that the officers be suspended. Haynam then voluntarily dismissed his lawsuit against COPA, court records show. Last week, however, Haynam filed a new lawsuit in federal court alleging that his firing was a violation of his First Amendment rights. In April, the City Council voted down the proposed settlement with Reed's family. The FOP's lawsuit against COPA alleging unconstitutional investigations reached its conclusion, too. On April 24, 2025, a federal judge granted the city's motion to dismiss, agreeing that the constitution 'does not protect a police officer's interest in fair and impartial employment investigations.' 'Because COPA's investigation constitutes process rather than a protected property interest, the Court dismisses Plaintiffs' due process claim premised on a property interest in a fair investigation,' wrote U.S. District Judge Jorge Alonso.


Chicago Tribune
19-05-2025
- Chicago Tribune
Problem traffic stops predated Dexter Reed killing by police
The five tactical officers for months were on the radar of the Civilian Office of Police Accountability. From mid-2023 through March 2024 — the month 26-year-old Dexter Reed was killed in a shootout during a traffic stop in the 3800 block of West Ferdinand — those five cops were named in at least four separate COPA investigations that stemmed from traffic stops initiated in the Chicago Police Department's Harrison District (11th). The fatal shooting of Reed, a former basketball player at Westinghouse College Prep high school who shot a police officer moments before he was killed, laid bare longstanding tensions between Chicago's police and the investigators who probe officers' use of deadly force. The officers involved repeatedly violated rules involving motorist traffic stops, investigators found. And, after months of public discord, the leaders of the city's police department and its oversight agency reached the same conclusion: The officers needed to be suspended. Those findings came after the stop that wound up costing Reed his life, but they highlight the problems such a pattern can create when officers put themselves in harm's way with improper stops. Chicago police still are working to prevent that kind of policework even as turmoil in the police disciplinary structure appears to be subsiding. Prior stops The 3900 block of West Van Buren has been a hotspot for drug and gang activity for years. On Friday, March 1, 2024, just after sunset, a man sat in his vehicle with his brother in the front passenger seat outside his apartment building near the end of the block. The car was stationary, but its headlights were on, according to records made public by COPA last month. Moments later, the men were boxed in by two unmarked CPD squad cars. The lead officer asked the driver for his license, but he didn't have it. He was then asked for a Firearm Owner's Identification Card and Concealed Carry License. He didn't have either and denied any weapons were in the vehicle. Both men were ordered out and patted down. The front and rear compartments of the vehicle were searched. Nothing was found. The officers told the men they were detained because the vehicle's lights were on while stationary — an unlawful interpretation of Chicago's municipal code, COPA later found. No arrests were made and the officers did not provide any sort of documentation for the traffic stop. The officers then turned off their body-worn cameras and left. 'In the absence of legal authority to detain these two members of the public, the officers' actions constitute an unlawful restraint,' COPA investigators later wrote. The man in the driver's seat alleged that the officers wouldn't provide him their names and badge numbers. Soon after the stop concluded, the man requested that a CPD sergeant come to the scene so he could file a complaint. Just minutes later, the tactical officers were about half-mile north in the 4000 block of West Wilcox, where they placed a man under arrest for allegedly possessing an illegal handgun. Cook County court records show that case is still pending. The next week, on Wednesday, March 6, the officers were involved in another traffic stop, this one in the 3800 block of West Jackson. Around 5 p.m., the team curbed the driver of a Maserati who, they said, was unbuckled, speeding and eating while driving. Another officer later told the driver he was stopped because the vehicle had tinted windows. The driver gave his license to one of the officers and was soon ordered out of his car. He initially refused, though, and requested that a sergeant come to the scene. Another of the officers threatened to arrest the man for obstruction of justice. The driver then acquiesced, and the officers searched him and the car. While standing outside the vehicle, the man requested the officers' names and badge numbers. He was again threatened with arrest, COPA records show. The search turned up nothing, and the officers disabled their body-worn cameras and left the area. A misconduct complaint was filed later that day. Friction in disciplinary structure Traveling in unmarked squad cars, often in plainclothes attire, tactical officers are frequently the first cops to respond to shootings or other high-priority calls for service. In the Harrison District — the epicenter of Chicago's narcotics trade and one of the most violent parts of the city — 'tact teams' stay busy. Civilian complaints of misconduct are common, though most are not sustained by investigators. CPD Superintendent Larry Snelling's frustration with then-COPA Chief Administrator Andrea Kersten was apparent for much of 2024. Inside COPA, friction among managers and allegations of biased investigations prompted Kersten to resign earlier this year. Despite the public tensions, CPD ultimately agreed with COPA's assessment that the tactical officers should be suspended for repeatedly violating CPD rules related to traffic stops.. CPD said those five officers should be off the street, collectively, for 109 days for their behavior during four traffic stops on the West Side that occurred in the months before the Reed shooting. One of those five quit CPD in November 2024. The officer who was shot may not be able to perform police duties in the future, a police source recently told the Tribune. CPD is now working to develop and implement a new traffic stops policy, the first draft of which was released last month. Though nothing is set in stone, the draft of the new policy would allow officers to continue using pretextual traffic stops as a means to go after guns and drugs. Meanwhile, Mayor Brandon Johnson nominated an interim leader of COPA as the Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability continues the search for Kersten's permanent replacement. The officers still with CPD are on administrative duty, according to a department spokesperson. Of CPD's 22 patrol districts, the Harrison District — roughly bounded by Roosevelt Road, Division Street and Western and Cicero avenues — usually ranks near the top in narcotics arrests and shootings. Police activity is often highest in and around the blocks closest to the Eisenhower Expressway, along Pulaski Road, as well as the intersection of Chicago and Homan avenues. 'What I've seen from police officers in my district is they use traffic stops as a way of going around some of the limitations that they're finding and trying to enforce drug laws,' Brian Ramson, one of the Harrison District Councilors, said last month. Dexter Reed Nine days before his death, Dexter Reed had court. It was a status hearing for a gun charge that came the previous July after he was arrested with a revolver near the Windy City Smokeout festival outside the United Center. Another hearing was set for the following month. Court filings show that the years leading up to Reed's death were marked by physical, emotional and financial hardship. He survived a shooting in 2021, though he spent months in the hospital recovering. 'I'm physically disabled and mentally unstable with PTSD, short-term memory loss, slurred speech, drop foot in one of my legs, blindness in one eye, shoulder/arm hard to move, weakness and/or sensitivity,' Reed wrote in a 2023 court filing. On March 21, 2024, Reed was driving in the 3800 block of West Ferdinand when his vehicle was boxed in by the team of tactical officers. Police bodycam footage shows the officers exit an unmarked police vehicle, draw their weapons and repeatedly order Reed to roll down his SUV's tinted windows. Reed initially complied and rolled down his window, but he appeared to disregard the officers' commands to roll down the window on the passenger side. Moments later, Reed shot the officer standing on the SUV's passenger side. The other four officers then opened fire, shooting dozens of rounds at Reed, who exited the vehicle before falling to the pavement. One officer fired three more shots at Reed as he was lying motionless in the street. That officer shot at least 50 times during the 41 seconds of gunfire. He was one of three officers who reloaded their weapons, according to COPA. An autopsy later found that Reed was shot 13 times. *** Just hours before the fatal gunfire erupted, a Cook County judge entered an order that would allow CPD officers accused of serious misconduct to forgo the Chicago Police Board. The board convened for its monthly meeting that evening, about 90 minutes after the Reed shooting. Both Snellling and Kersten delivered their agency's monthly report to the dozen or so regular meeting attendees. 'I want to also express condolences to members of the Chicago Police Department in light of tonight's events,' Kersten told Snelling shortly after Reed was killed and the officer was wounded. 'I think it just really crystallizes the importance of having these conversations, collaboratively and productively, about how COPA does its job, how the Chicago Police Department lives up to its policies and training, and how we move forward as a city.' It was a striking change in tone from the police board's meeting in February. It was then that Snelling chided COPA investigators for leaning on 'personal opinions and speculation.' Less than two weeks after the Reed shooting, on April 1, Kersten wrote Snelling to note that the officers involved were under investigation for their actions during another traffic stop in the Harrison District. Kersten urged that the officers be stripped of their police powers and placed on desk duty. The body-worn video footage of the Reed shooting was made public on April 9, 2024. Two days later, Kersten was a guest on ESPN personality Stephen A. Smith's YouTube show. Kersten did not discuss the facts of the shooting, but her appearance irked CPD leaders and the conservative wing of the City Council. Ald. Nick Sposato, 38th, soon filed a complaint against Kersten with the city's Office of Inspector General. Sposato accused Kersten of speaking 'in an accusatory and inappropriate prejudicial tone about facts that have yet to be investigated,' but his letter did not cite examples from her public remarks. A few weeks later, during the April 2024 police board meeting, Kersten addressed the outcry. 'Last week's release of materials and my public comments pertaining to the fatal police shooting of Dexter Reed, in which an officer was also shot and wounded, have led to sharp criticisms,' Kersten said. 'This criticism demonstrates a fundamental lack of understanding of COPA's role and process and smacks of hypocrisy.' 'This is misleading at best,' Snelling said in response. 'There is nothing wrong with transparency, transparency is of the utmost importance,' Snelling added. 'But when information is leaked prior to releasing the video, when statements are made without all of the information, an investigation has to begin. And if we're starting by putting it out in the public in a manner in which we framed it, and we expect the public to see it the way we want them to see it, it's problematic. This is why I've made no statements about this shooting.' Reed's family held a press conference the following week outside the Harrison District station to announce its federal lawsuit against the city. The initial complaint did not mention that Reed shot a police officer before he was killed. Nicole Banks, Reed's mother, told reporters that she watched the police bodycam footage of the shooting 'over and over and over.' 'They executed him,' Banks said through tears. 'He fell down and they put the handcuffs on him. That was not right. In the name of Jesus, I ask that he rest in peace.' Civil rights challenges Police shootings, justified or not, usually lead to some kind of civil litigation. Surviving family members often bring lawsuits that allege civil rights abuses, and CPD officers can ask a judge to undo discipline leveled against them. In August 2024, the Fraternal Order of Police filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of eight CPD officers recommended for discipline by COPA. The union alleged that the agency's investigators and higher-ups 'have engaged in a pattern and practice to treat Police Officers unequally and unfairly. Specifically, Defendant COPA conducts unconstitutional, biased and untimely investigations.' Among the defendants in the FOP's federal suit was Matthew Haynam, COPA's former deputy chief administrator who was fired from the agency, also in August 2024. The next month, Haynam filed a whistleblower lawsuit against COPA in Cook County, alleging that his firing was a result of him speaking out against what he called COPA's anti-police bias. Over that winter, the Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability was fielding and investigating complaints about COPA's workplace culture and accountability and the quality of its investigations under Kersten's leadership. 'If the police accountability system is or is reasonably perceived to be ineffective or unfair, it will erode public confidence in policing and police oversight,' CCPSA President Anthony Driver and Vice President Remel Terry wrote to Kersten on Jan. 28, 2025. CCPSA told Kersten a no-confidence vote was forthcoming, and she announced her resignation two weeks later amid a purge of leadership in several other city departments. It was a decision, she said, that was in the works for some time. 'What I know to be certain about this issue is that society has forced it into this binary where you're either for or against somehow, as opposed to understanding that, truly, to do this work, to do this kind of accountability reform work, it's not one or the other. It's not 'either-or.' It's not pro-police or against,' Kersten told the Tribune shortly before she left her post. That same month, attorneys for the city and the CPD reached an agreement with Reed's family to settle their federal lawsuit for $1.25 million. In early March 2025, Snelling endorsed the agency's recommendations that the officers be suspended. Haynam then voluntarily dismissed his lawsuit against COPA, court records show. Last week, however, Haynam filed a new lawsuit in federal court alleging that his firing was a violation of his First Amendment rights. In April, the City Council voted down the proposed settlement with Reed's family. The FOP's lawsuit against COPA alleging unconstitutional investigations reached its conclusion, too. On April 24, 2025, a federal judge granted the city's motion to dismiss, agreeing that the constitution 'does not protect a police officer's interest in fair and impartial employment investigations.' 'Because COPA's investigation constitutes process rather than a protected property interest, the Court dismisses Plaintiffs' due process claim premised on a property interest in a fair investigation,' wrote U.S. District Judge Jorge Alonso.


The Citizen
10-05-2025
- Automotive
- The Citizen
Suzuki Eeco ‘half-loaf' panel van gets job done at half the price
Honest little workhorse ready to swallow a whole South African pallet in the rear. The gap left by the discontinued Nissan NP200 is being absorbed by a motley crew of alternative solutions like one-tonner single cabs, converted SUVs and cargo hatchbacks. But the most interesting of the lot is undoubtedly the unique little Suzuki Eeco. The Eeco is the spiritual successor to the Japanese manufacturer's iconic Carry van. Many of them found their way to Mzansi alongside the Samurai-badged third-generation Jimny via private importers in the 1980s. Affectionately dubbed the 'half-loaf', the Carry van was a mini-minibus with a second-row bench seat and a decent amount of boot space behind it. The Suzuki Eeco is only sold as a panel van. Like its Super Carry pick-up sibling, it prides itself on offering fuel-efficient point-to-point transport of goods at a low price. ALSO READ: 'Half-loaf' returns as Suzuki prices tiny new Eeco panel van Oodles of space Don't let its size fool you, though. While its dimensions of 3 675mm in length and 1 475mm in width make it hardly bigger than Mr Bean's Mini, its cargo space is no laughing matter. The loadbed is 1 620mm long, 1 300mm wide and offers 1 070mm from the floor to the roof which is large enough to accommodate a full South African pallet. A foldable steel-grid partition separates the Suzuki Eeco's loadbed and cabin. Two sliding doors and a large rear door provide easy access to the cargo hold. Unlike standard panel vans, the glass rear window enables rear-view mirror vision behind the Eeco—a welcome feature in the absence of a rear-view camera. The cabin is a very humble affair, with highlights being standard air-conditioning and seats clad in perforated PU leather. The latter is in sharp contrast to the bare steel wheel arches and cardboard-like door inserts. Adjusting the side mirrors requires some elbow grease in the form of winding down the windows and tilting the mirrors with your hand. A full South African pallet can fit in the rear of the Suzuki Eeco. Picture: Suzuki Suzuki Eeco easy on the juice The Eeco's small and simplistic instrument cluster does not have a rev counter, but then again, neither does my Kawasaki cruiser. I've come to the realisation that my hearing can be just as effective as a needle and a gauge. A digital speedometer has a tiny LCD screen below it displaying the fuel level and the option to toggle between the odometer and two trip meters. That's it. As there was no indication of fuel consumption, we'll just have to take Suzuki's word that the Eeco only sips 5.1 litres per 100km. This will ensure a range of over 600km on its 32-litre fuel tank. Although a radio is not standard, the Suzuki Eeco is prepped for one, along with two speakers, an antenna, and a 12V socket. ALSO READ: Toyota Hilux and Suzuki Swift lead new vehicle sales in April As simple as you can get Apart from the aircon controls and steering wheel stalks, the only other buttons in the van are the hazard lights, a rear-window demister, cabin light switch, front light adjustment and electronic stability control (ESC) switch. The Suzuki Eeco is bereft of luxuries such as remote or central locking, and the driver's door, rear door and fuel flap are opening with the key. Locking the sliding doors and passenger door is a manual process through the fob on the top of the door. ESC comes standard alongside two airbags and ABS with EBD. Suzuki Eeco easy to maintain The Suzuki Eeco features a 1.2-litre four-cylinder naturally aspirated petrol engine that sends 59kW of power and 104Nm of torque to the front wheels via a five-speed automatic gearbox. Spark plugs, engine oil and filters are easily accessed underneath the driver's seat. Creature comforts are hard to come by. Picture: Suzuki Driving the Suzuki Eeco was a welcome break for The Citizen Motoring from modern-day cars, which have become smartphones on wheels. The petrol mill is perfectly capable of its intended purpose and works a charm, along with an easy clutch and old-school manual box. It reaches the national limit without too much fuss, but don't expect too much after that. The rack and pinion steering system is reminiscent of pre-power steering says, but a turning circle of only 4.5 metres makes it ridiculously easy to manoeuvre. While the 13-inch wheels might seem tiny, the Eeco does feature decent ground clearance of 160mm. 'Half-loaf' not half-baked Cost-cutting means that noise insulation inside the van is non-existent, but it should improve with more cargo in the rear to muffle sounds projected from the road surface and engine. You can poke fun at the 'half-loaf' all day long, but you can't beat its brutal honesty and unmatched capabilities. Especially at a very attractive R227 900 price tag, which will work out to less than R200k without VAT.
Yahoo
14-04-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Carry The Load Walks to Honor Fallen Service Members this Memorial May
Thousands of participants across the U.S. will raise awareness and funds at events April 28 through Memorial Day Participants at 2024 Carry The Load Event JPMorganChase employees supporting Carry The Load Dallas, April 14, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Carry The Load, a national non-profit veteran and first responder service organization, kicks off its Memorial May campaign on Monday, April 28 through Memorial Day. True to its mission of providing active ways to connect Americans to the sacrifices made by our military, veterans, first responders, and their families, thousands of individuals will walk in honor and remembrance of fallen service members at Carry The Load events throughout the month. 'Carry The Load first started out of anger and frustration for a nation that we felt had forgotten the true meaning of Memorial Day,' says Stephen Holley, co-founder, president and CEO of Carry The Load and Veteran U.S. Navy SEAL." Since then, our Memorial May campaign has helped provide healing for friends and family of the fallen and keeps their memories alive." In addition to honoring those who died in active U.S. military service, Carry The Load makes it a point to include first responders as a part of the mission. "It takes both our armed forces overseas and first responders back home to protect our families and communities," says Holley. How People Can Get Involved Find a local event at or Register a team, join an existing team, or sign up as an individual. Upon registration, start fundraising and track miles walked during Memorial May. People of all ages, family members of the fallen, service members, and civilians are all welcome. Perfect for youth groups, employee engagement, and more. If you can't make it to an event, make a tax-deductible donation at Each Memorial May, Carry The Load raises much-needed funds to assist with challenges facing service members, veterans, and their families. Peer-to-peer fundraising and donations go toward strengthening nationwide services such as counseling, adaptive training, suicide prevention, equine therapy, service dogs, job placements, transition, home improvements, education scholarships for children of the fallen, and more. This year's goal is to raise $1.5 million. Since 2011, Carry The Load has raised $46 million, with 93% of the funds raised going directly to programs. JPMorganChase is the National Presenting Sponsor of Carry The Load for the 11th consecutive year. 'Carry The Load's mission serves as a powerful reminder of the true meaning of Memorial Day, and JPMorganChase is proud to support their efforts to ensure our nation's heroes are never forgotten,' says Mark Elliott, Global Head of Military & Veterans Affairs at JPMorganChase. 'Our commitment to the military community is deeply rooted – from hiring nearly 20,000 veterans and over 3,000 military spouses since 2011, to equipping military families and veteran-owned businesses with the tools and resources they need to thrive. Honoring the sacrifice of those who gave their lives means not only remembering them – but supporting the loved ones and communities they served.' Additional corporate partners include American Airlines; Builders FirstSource; Energy Transfer; FirstNet®, Built with AT&T Fritos; Government Employees Health Association (G.E.H.A), Jersey Mike's Subs (Houston); SRS Distribution; TACenergy; and Wyndham Hotels & Resorts. The VA National Cemetery Administration is a strategic partner for the 8th consecutive year. ### ABOUT CARRY THE LOAD Carry The Load is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization founded in 2011 by veteran U.S. Navy SEALs Clint Bruce and Stephen Holley. Carry The Load's mission is to provide active ways to honor and remember our nation's heroes by connecting Americans to the sacrifices made by our military, veterans, first responders, and their families. Carry The Load has earned a 4/4 Star rating on Charity Navigator and is a designated Combined Federal Campaign charity #20469. For more, visit or Connect with us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, and YouTube. Attachments Participants at 2024 Carry The Load Event JPMorganChase employees supporting Carry The Load CONTACT: Renee Cossman Carry The Load