Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League delayed into 2024
Coming Feb. 2, 2024
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Coming Feb. 2, 2024
Class of ’09 stars Brian Tyree Henry and Kate Mara and will stream on Hulu
Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League has been delayed to 2024. In a social media post, developer Rocksteady confirmed that the action game is now slated to release on February 2, 2024.
“We have made the tough but necessary decision to take the time needed to work on getting the game to be the best quality experience for players,” Rocksteady said. “Thank you to our amazing community for the continued support, patience, and understanding. There is much more to share in the months ahead and we look forward to seeing you in Metropolis next year.”
— Suicide Squad: Kill The Justice League (@suicidesquadRS) April 13, 2023
This new delay announcement is no big surprise. After all, it was reported in March this year that the game might slip to 2024. The game was previously scheduled to release at the end of May 2023. Kill the Justice League was, at one point, set for release in 2022.
Four Democratic lawmakers have written to the Department of Justice to investigate Warner Bros. Discovery and launch an inquiry into alleged anti-competitive behavior. Democratic representatives Elizabeth Warren, Pramila Jayapal, David Cicilline and Joaquin Castro wrote that the merged company has harmed workers and reduced consumer choice. Warner Bros. Discovery was formed after WarnerMedia merged with […]
Lawmakers ask Department of Justice to investigate Warner Bros. Discovery merger by Aisha Malik originally published on TechCrunch
SHOCKING figures reveal that at least 1,000 sex offenders avoided getting a criminal record over the past two years due to apologising to their victims.
Cops handed out “community resolutions” in 1,064 such cases in 2021 and 2022, several of those involved child rape.
The use of out-of-court sanctions for sexual assault have doubled in just 12 months (stock image)[/caption]
Following the murder of Sarah Everard by Met Police officer Wayne Couzens, promises were made to take violence against women and girls seriously but the use of out-of-court sanctions for sexual assault have doubled in just 12 months.
Home Office figures show the number of times the penalty was used in all sexual offences increased by 53 per cent, the Daily Mail reports.
A community resolution, which involves an offender admitting responsibility, is meant to be used by police for low-level crimes.
This could mean an agreement to pay compensation, a rehabilitation activity or a “restorative justice” meeting involving the victim and offender for an apology.
The figures show the sanction was used to settle 643 sex crimes, which included rapes, sexual assaults, grooming and flashing offences, in the 12 months to March 2022, a rise of 53 per cent from the 421 dealt with in the year before.
The number of times it was used to resolve sexual assault cases by the police in this way has doubled from 178 in 2021 to 371 in 2022.
Lincolnshire Police handed out the penalty in four child rape cases last year, one of which involved a girl under 13.
The sanction was used after two rapes of girls under 13 by officers in Nottinghamshire.
Police in Norfolk also used it in the case of the rape of a young boy in 2020.
Some of the sexual offences could have occurred between consenting underage children where, while the incident is recorded as a crime, cops believe it would be too severe to take the teenager to court for their punishment.
The figures, though, also reveal that community resolutions are being handed out for adult offences, including sexual exploitation of a child.
Police bosses say the penalty is usually used in relation to sexual offences only if the victim consents for the crime to be handled that way.
However, the chief executive of Rape Crisis England and Wales Jayne Bulter said: “We do not believe that restorative justice or community resolutions are appropriate remedies for sex offences, or other forms of violence against women and girls.
“Justice solutions such as these minimise the severity of sexual violence and its impact on survivors and fail to acknowledge the inherent power dynamics at play in these types of crimes.”
She added: “It’s important to understand that even so-called ‘low-level’ forms of sexual violence can be extremely traumatising.
“Whilst perpetrators are being given second chances, victims and survivors are left to deal with the impacts of their experiences.”
Commander Alison Heydari of the National Police Chiefs’ Council though said community resolutions were “typically applied where schoolchildren share inappropriate images or in cases of sex between underage children”.
She added: “We have made it clear that out-of-court disposals are not to be used in serious cases.
“Officers take into consideration all circumstances of a case, with victims’ wishes at the centre of our decision-making.
“Community resolutions and other out-of-court disposals are only used in a very small number of sexual offence cases.”
The recent report into Scotland Yard which was overseen by Baroness Casey painted a disturbing picture of the force and how it deals with sexual offences.
Rape cases are being dropped because samples are kept in “over-stuffed dilapidated or broken fridges and freezers”.
One officer told the review that rape detection rates were so low “you may as well say it is legal in London”.
Couzens exposed himself to two frightened attendants at a McDonald’s drive-through in Kent, just three days before he snatched Sarah from a South London street in March 2021.
Scotland Yard were given a description of him, his car registration number and bank card details but cops failed to investigate until he was arrested for the abduction and murder of Sarah.
A woman flashed by Couzens said: “If he had been held accountable when we had reported the crime, we could have saved Sarah.”
Couzens is serving a whole life sentence for the murder of Sarah.
Sarah Everard was snatched off a London street and murdered by Wayne Couzens[/caption]
The very week Donald Trump‘s alleged involvement in a hush-money scheme was set to make him the first U.S. president to be arrested and face criminal charges, the 76-year-old managed to also make history in an unexpected way: topping a Billboard chart.
Details inside.
As we reported here, the real estate mogul/reality TV personality/politician joined forces with a group of prisoners called the J6 Prison Choir *who were incarcerated for their alleged involvement in the January 6 insurrection) on a song called ‘Justice for All.’
The track –
The post Donald Trump Makes Billboard Debut After His Single ‘Justice For All’ Was the Week’s Top-Selling Song appeared first on ..::That Grape Juice.net::.. – Thirsty?.