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Shocking moment jewel thief tries to swallow $770,000 worth of Tiffany & Co. diamonds
Shocking moment jewel thief tries to swallow $770,000 worth of Tiffany & Co. diamonds

Daily Mail​

time9 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Shocking moment jewel thief tries to swallow $770,000 worth of Tiffany & Co. diamonds

A habitual jewel thief was caught on police body worn camera swallowing $770,000 worth of stolen Tiffany & Co. diamonds to avoid arrest. Jaythan Gilder, 32, was pulled over about 330 miles outside of Orlando, Florida, on February 26 after troopers were warned to 'be on the lookout' following a robbery at Tiffany & Co. earlier in the day. He had allegedly posed as a representative of an NBA player seeking to purchase diamonds. When he was taken to a private room, he snatched two sets of diamond earrings worth $609,500 and $160,000 and fled the store. Extraordinary body camera footage from his arrest was obtained by The Smoking Gun and captured the moment an officer noticed Gilder. The jewel thief was handcuffed and being led to the patrol car, 'was talking with a closed mouth and was moving an object around... using his tongue.' An officer quickly lunged at him while two other cops rushed to help, ordering Gilder to open his mouth and spit out the contents as they held him face down by the throat. 'You're about to get tased,' one trooper told him as he refused to comply. Moments later, a second said: 'He swallowed something.' The officers grabbed Gilder's jaw and throat, fearing he may have swallowed narcotics. He had a white substance on his lips which he later said was a cold sore cream. A search of Gilder's rented car yielded price tags and earring cards for Tiffany & Co. products, leading officers to determine he had swallowed the diamonds. Gilder was arrested and taken to hospital, where he reportedly refused an X-ray. He was scanned at jail and 'foreign objects' were detected inside his body. He reportedly asked: 'Am I going to be charged with what's in my stomach?' Upon return to hospital, Gilder reportedly 'refused to take any laxatives and claimed to be a practicing Muslim who would only eat after sundown and before sunrise due to it being the holiday of Ramadan.' This slowed recovery efforts, but after two weeks in mid-March, the Tiffany & Co. diamonds were reportedly passed naturally. Early on March 10, officers discovered two stones while tracking Gilder's excrement. But it was later determined these 'were not the earrings from Tiffany & Co.' They were of little value, but work was being done to determine where they had come from. Hours later, Gilder passed two of the diamonds allegedly stolen from Tiffany & Co., and two days later on June 12 he passed the final diamond. Back in February 2022, Gilder was arrested for stealing diamonds from a jeweler in Colorado and allegedly swallowed them when he was confronted by police According to the publication, the diamonds underwent rigorous cleaning at Tiffany's Master Jeweler and were returned to the company. It is unclear if they have since been sold. Back in February 2022, Gilder was arrested for stealing diamonds from a jeweler in Colorado and allegedly swallowed them when he was confronted by police. They were never recovered. He remains in custody facing charges of robbery and grand theft. Gilder attempted to be released from custody to attend his mother's funeral in Texas, but bail was denied.

3AW host Neil Mitchell sounds the alarm about Jim Chalmer's tax plan
3AW host Neil Mitchell sounds the alarm about Jim Chalmer's tax plan

Daily Mail​

time16 minutes ago

  • Business
  • Daily Mail​

3AW host Neil Mitchell sounds the alarm about Jim Chalmer's tax plan

Neil Mitchell has slammed Anthony Albanese 's government for having a plan to punish baby boomers as younger Australians increasingly decide elections. The 73-year-old 3AW host, from the boomer generation, suggested Treasurer Jim Chalmers had an agenda to tax older Australians over 60. 'Boomers beware. Jim Chalmers is taking about "intergenerational justice" in tax,' he said. 'That means a tax on boomers, who actually did a bit to build this country.' Chalmers used his National Press Club address this week to suggested Labor would use its landslide re-election to help younger Australians, with a hint about new taxes being considered to pay for this new relief. Millennials and Generation Z voters - born after 1981 - outnumbered boomers at the last election for the first time ever. 'The decisions we make in the 2020s will determine the sort of living standards and intergenerational justice that we have in the decades to come,' Chalmers said. 'I think there is a broad recognition of that.' Labor was re-elected last month with a plan to slash student debt by 20 per cent, saving the average graduate $5,520 at a cost to taxpayers of $16billion. It also offered tax cuts for low-income workers earning $18,200 to $45,000, with students, apprentices and part-time workers more likely to be young. This relief is set to cost the Budget $17.1billion over four years. That means Labor would either have to cut spending or increase taxes to fund relief that overwhelmingly favours the young, with Treasury only forecasting Budget deficits in coming years as gross government debt soars above $1trillion. That could see Labor review generous tax concessions on things like family trusts that can avoid paying tax on income generated from within the trust. Former Labor leader Bill Shorten lost the 2019 election proposing a new 30 per cent tax on family trusts as funds were distributed to beneficiaries. While that policy was scrapped, the government's upcoming productivity roundtable in August is expected to explore a range of new revenue-raising options, with Chalmers hinting at tax changes. 'The easiest thing in the world is for people to come to us and say we want you to dramatically cut the taxes in our part of the economy and spend dramatically more on our industry, without recognising that there are necessary trade‑offs associated with that,' Chalmers said. Treasurer Jim Chalmers used his National Press Club address this week to suggested Labor would use its landslide re-election to help younger Australians, with a hint about new taxes to pay for new relief The government is still proceeding with plans to impose a new 15 per cent tax on unrealised gains on superannuation balances above $3million, in a bid to raise $2.3billion a year in revenue. In Opposition, Albanese vowed to leave untouched franking tax credits for company shareholders and negative gearing tax breaks for investor landlords, even though house prices have surged at a faster pace since the pandemic. Labor also has no plans to introduce a capital gains tax on the family home. These existing arrangements favour boomers who were able to buy a house to live in cheaply after the capital gains tax debuted in 1985. Chalmers this week downplayed a point about government payments making up 27 per cent of the economy - the highest level since 1986 outside of the pandemic. 'It's not the highest spending since the 80s. I know that you mean absent Covid, but I think it's unusual that we absent Covid,' he said. 'Quite frequently I'll hear we've got the weakest growth in 40 years, or we've got the highest spending. That's not true.' Boomers still have political power with both Albanese and Opposition Leader Sussan Ley hailing from that generation, covering those born from 1946 to 1964. Chalmers belongs to Generation X, spanning 1965 to 1980, along with every state premier. Only the Northern Territory has a Millennial leader.

Katy Perry told music star she was 'GLAD' they left American Idol... amid fears for Orlando Bloom relationship
Katy Perry told music star she was 'GLAD' they left American Idol... amid fears for Orlando Bloom relationship

Daily Mail​

time16 minutes ago

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Katy Perry told music star she was 'GLAD' they left American Idol... amid fears for Orlando Bloom relationship

Katy Perry 's tenure on American Idol was under the spotlight after a former contestant–turned–music superstar opened up about their interactions. According to the rising star, Katy told them she was 'glad' that they left the long-running music competition series when they ran into each other years later. Katy, 40, first joined the series as a celebrity judge for season 16 in 2018, and stepped down six years later in 2024 after season 22. It was in early 2021 that her path crossed with the future singing sensation when they competed in season 21. During an appearance Wednesday on Scott Mills' BBC Radio 2's Breakfast Show, the Grammy Award nominee Benson Boone opened up about catching up with Katy years after he decided to leave American Idol. He admitted to bumping into the singer — who has been beset by rumors that her relationship with fiancé Orlando Bloom is in trouble — a 'couple months ago' and learned that she seemed to be happy that he had quite the show. According to the rising star, Katy, 40, told them she was 'glad' that they left the long-running music competition series when they ran into each other years later; seen in 2023 in LA Boone was asked if he thought Katy believes that she had 'discovered' him on American Idol. During his stint on the series, she said on camera that he had what it took to win the competition, adding that viewers were 'gonna swoon for Benson Boone.' 'Do you want to know the actual truth?' Benson replied. 'I actually think she is really glad that I left the show.' After the two had a chance to catch up a recent awards ceremony, the TikTok sensation came away thinking that Katy was 'really happy' for him. However, he also thought she was 'really worried' for his future. 'I think she understands that when you're starting to go through all of this, like, there's just a lot of hate coming your way, a lot of people that want things from you, so she was more just checking in on me,' he explained. Though Katy was widely mocked for her recent Blue Origin space flight, Benson declared that she 'actually really is a lovely person.' 'She told me, she was like, "Leaving that show was, like, the best thing you ever did." I think she just understands, like, I didn't even know if I wanted to do music at that time.' Despite his misgivings as American Idol was poised to make him a star, Boone later found his way back to music on his own terms. He had already established himself as a popular TikTok performer and singer before auditioning for the series, but the baby-faced performer — who didn't yet have his instantly recognizable mustache — blew away Katy and fellow judges Lionel Richie and Luke Bryan at his audition, where he also showed that he could play passable piano. After Benson admitted that he wasn't a singer growing up, Lionel declared him a 'natural talent,' and Luke urged him to 'have fun' with his voice now that he had discovered it. Katy dramatically added, 'I'm gonna tell you something that you may not believe, but if you believe it it might happen. I see American Idol, and I see you, and I see you winning American Idol... if you want to.' An awe-struck Benson said that was the 'biggest compliment' he had ever received. He was invited to continue on to Hollywood Week, a round of multiple performances that helps weed out the large group of singers who had survived the initial auditions. But shortly after he was selected as part of the final 24 contestants, Benson opted to end his run on American Idol, which led the series to not broadcast his Hollywood Week performances. But Benson wasn't done with the music industry, and months later Imagine Dragons frontman Dan Reynolds signed him to his label Night Street Records via a deal with Warner Records. His first single, Ghost Town, just barely scraped the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart with a peak at number 100, but the song had longevity after gaining exposure on TikTok, and it later was certified Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). His 2022 single, In The Stars, did even better. It only topped out at 82 on the Hot 100, but it went on to be certified 2x Platinum. Benson's career seemed to floundering after multiple singles in 2022 and 2023 that failed to chart, but he came roaring back last year with his biggest success to date, the single Beautiful Things. The song was buoyed by its omnipresent status on TikTok and Instagram, and it reached number two on the Hot 100 and was certified 5x Platinum. Since then, he has had multiple top 40 hits, including last year's Slow It Down and this year's songs Sorry I'm Here For Someone Else and Mystical Magical. Benson looked back on his auspicious first encountering with Katy just as she has been inundated with fan fears for the state of her relationship with her fiancé Orlando Bloom. Yesterday, the 48-year-old Lord Of The Rings star was reported by TMZ to be attending Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez's wedding in Italy without Katy by his side. But the absence turned out to be because Katy had a prior commitment, as she is touring in Australia at the moment. Katy's widely mocked space flight, the critical revulsion her album 143 earned and the poor reviews her ongoing tour have received have all reportedly added to the strain in her relationship with Orlando; seen with Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez in 2023 in Dubrovnik, Croatia Still, the couple have been apart for much of the past month, raising concerns of a potential split. A source previously told People magazine that 'They're pretty much done,' while an insider alleged to Page Six that 'It's over' and the two are 'just waiting until the tour is done before they split.' A friend of the couple exclusively told that the couple are 'are on the rocks' this week. Perry and Bloom first met in January 2016. They had a brief breakup in 2017, but later reconciled by March 2018. The pair got engaged on Valentine's Day in 2019 and welcomed their daughter, Daisy, in August 2020. Bloom also has a 13-year-old son named Flynn with his ex-wife, Miranda Kerr, 42. Katy's widely mocked space flight, the critical revulsion her album 143 earned and the poor reviews her ongoing tour have received have all reportedly added to the strain in her relationship with Orlando.

BREAKING NEWS NBA Finals set for Game 7 as Indiana Pacers blow Oklahoma City Thunder away to level the series
BREAKING NEWS NBA Finals set for Game 7 as Indiana Pacers blow Oklahoma City Thunder away to level the series

Daily Mail​

time16 minutes ago

  • Sport
  • Daily Mail​

BREAKING NEWS NBA Finals set for Game 7 as Indiana Pacers blow Oklahoma City Thunder away to level the series

The NBA Finals will have a nerve-shredding conclusion on Sunday after the Indiana Pacers dominated the Oklahoma City Thunder on Thursday night to level the series at 3-3. Despite their star man Tyrese Haliburton nursing an injury, the Pacers blew their opponents away with an emphatic 108-91 victory on their home court. It means the thrilling series will now be decided on Sunday night when the action moves back to Oklahoma for a decisive Game 7. More to follow.

Matildas star drives support network for retired athletes following tragic death of AFL stars Adam and Troy Selwood
Matildas star drives support network for retired athletes following tragic death of AFL stars Adam and Troy Selwood

Daily Mail​

time28 minutes ago

  • Sport
  • Daily Mail​

Matildas star drives support network for retired athletes following tragic death of AFL stars Adam and Troy Selwood

A former Matildas star is leading a push for better support for retired athletes after the tragic deaths of Adam and Troy Selwood. AFL fans were left reeling earlier this year following the deaths of the twin brothers. Troy Selwood died by suicide in early February. His twin brother Adam, a premiership player for the West Coast Eagles, died just three months later. The news stunned the sporting community and placed fresh focus on the mental and emotional challenges elite athletes often face once their careers end. Now, Matildas legend Elise Kellond-Knight has stepped forward to help lead the response. The retired midfielder, who represented Australia across 17 years and two Olympic Games, is backing a new initiative by the Australian Institute of Sport (AIS) to support athletes adjusting to life after elite competition. The program, called the Retired Athlete Peer Support Network, offers a safe space for former athletes to connect, reflect, and rebuild. 'It's heartbreaking,' Kellond-Knight said in an interview with Wide World of Sports. 'It's something you just don't fathom is possible, and you would hope that they had every possible piece of support around them before what eventuated.' The network aims to give retired athletes an opportunity to share experiences with others who understand the emotional toll of stepping away from sport. Whether it's been a year or a decade since they last competed, the program encourages connection and conversation, something Kellond-Knight believes is sorely needed. 'It shows you how hard it is for athletes to adjust to a new way of life,' she said. 'To basically give up one of their nearest, dearest things to them. It does show you the struggles that we all go through.' The program was developed following consultation with psychologists, coaches, and athletes, and was strongly pushed by the AIS athlete advisory committee - a group that includes both current and retired stars such as Olympic champion Nina Kennedy, surfing icon Sally Fitzgibbons, and Paralympic legend Kurt Fearnley. The committee raised concerns with AIS leaders that retirement support was lacking, particularly for athletes grappling with identity loss and disconnection. 'One of the big things every retired athlete I've ever spoken to has referred to is change of identity,' AIS executive general manager of performance Matti Clements said. 'Some will call it a loss of identity, others will say they're stepping into a new phase, but for many, it's, 'I don't know who I am anymore.' Kellond-Knight, who retired in October last year, admitted that while her identity as an athlete remained strong, the shift in routine and physical activity was difficult to manage. 'I've still got this really healthy relationship with Elise the footballer,' she said. 'I still play in the Victorian Premier League, I'm deputy chair of Professional Footballers Australia, and I commentate on matches. So the identity part isn't hard.' For confidential 24-hour support in Australia, call Lifeline on 13 11 14 Lifeline Crisis Text Service : 0477 13 11 14 Beyond Blue : 1300 224 636

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