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WATCH: Young Communist Left Humilated During Debate on Capitalism After Conservative Businessman Issues a Proposition to Call Her Bluff | The Gateway Pundit

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Credit: Jubilee Media YouTube screenshot

One of America’s most prominent conservative businessmen effectively put an ignorant communist in her place by calling her bluff with a simple offer during a recent debate.

During the debate,  hosted by Jubilee Media, which was released on Monday, businessman and podcast host Patrick Bet-David faced off against 20 brainwashed communists who believe this economic system is fundamentally immoral. Bet-David, an Iranian immigrant who made millions as a self-made businessman in America, effectively put each of these kids in their place during the hour-plus faceoff.

The most telling moment came when one young woman named Allannah started ranting nonsensically about why she hates capitalism.

Bet-David then put forth a case study comparing communist North Korea with its capitalist neighbor, South Korea. Last year, North Korea’s GDP was $23 billion while South Korea’s was $1.7 trillion.

Allannah responded ridiculously, claiming that South Korea was owned “by, like, five companies,” and saying she would not be free in a country like that.

She next claimed that capitalism removes one’s ability to be free when the opposite is true, even after Bet-David pointed out that in North Korea, the debate they were having would not be permitted.

At that moment, Bet-David decided to issue a proposition. He offered Allannah $2,350 to renounce her citizenship and move to the communist country of her choice. He said he would even pay for her ticket.

A clueless Allannah had no effective comeback and could only claim the countries Bet-David mentioned (Cuba, Venezuela, and North Korea) were NOT communist countries. Of course, these nations are the quintessential definition of Marxism.

She then shook Bet-David’s hand and conceded defeat.

WATCH:

Transcript:

ALLANNAH: I like to be free, that’s why I’m anti-capitalist. Capitalism removes that choice.

There is no incentive to capitalism because the incentive is survival.

BET-DAVID: If I were to give you your $2,350, which is the cost to renunciate your citizenship, and I paid your first class flight to whatever communist country, and $20,000 of spending money. Would you give up your citizenship to go to that country?

ALLANNAH: Name me a communist country.

BET-DAVID: Cuba. We can give you Venezuela. We give you North Korea. Any one of those you want to go to.”

ALLANNAH: Those aren’t communist countries. Those aren’t communist countries.

You can watch the full episode below:




This story originally appeared on TheGateWayPundit

Government to change how flu patients are treated ahead of winter

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Flu patients could receive treatment all year round as the government vows to cut red tape that has been preventing doctors and pharmacists from providing certain medications outside of peak flu season. This move will alter prescribing regulations alongside the NHS’s enhanced flu vaccine programme.

Currently, doctors and pharmacists are prohibited from prescribing certain flu medications outside of flu season, a period defined by an annual letter of confirmation from the Chief Medical Officer. Outside of this time, GPs had to be commissioned via a patient-specific direction to prescribe certain medicines. They could still prescribe other medications, but items like seltamivir (Tamiflu®) and zanamivir (Relenza®) were restricted outside of the flu season.

These antivirals are recommended for specific settings like care homes and for those at highest risk of severe disease outside of the normal flu season. It requires a confirmatory test showing they do have the flu first.

This can lead to delays in treatment while also adding some layers of bureaucracy to the health service. Flu season is usually allocated as between October and March with very few cases being reported outside of these months.

The government has pledged to remove these rules so that doctors and pharmacists are able to actively treat flu cases year round. It’s hoped that treating cases earlier will also ease the strain on the NHS in the winter season during peak flu outbreaks.

Health Minister Stephen Kinnock declared: “Flu can strike all year round, so it doesn’t make sense to restrict doctors and pharmacists from taking action to protect the most vulnerable in their communities. That’s why, as well as starting the flu vaccination programme today, we are also removing the need for clinicians to have to ask for permission to prescribe what their patients need.

“It is exactly the type of change we wanted to see when we launched the red tape challenge to bulldoze bureaucracy and prioritise patients over paperwork.”

Dr Jamie Lopez Bernal, consultant epidemiologist for immunisation at the UK Health Security Agency, explained: “While the majority of influenza cases and outbreaks occur during the flu season, we do continue to see outbreaks outside the peak period.

“These changes will allow primary care providers and health protection teams to respond more rapidly with effective treatment to reduce the risk of severe disease and the spread of infection at any time of year.”

The latest development follows the launch of the revamped and enhanced vaccine programme this month.

The initiative aims to simplify access to free jabs for eligible individuals, with certain school providers now delivering vaccines in nursery environments for two to three year olds.



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk

Starbucks Pumpkin Spice Latte, Fall Menu, Drive Record Sales

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It’s pumpkin spice season, and Starbucks is raking in the profits. The coffee giant launched its fall seasonal offerings last week, including the famous Pumpkin Spice Latte (PSL), and the company has already seen an increase in sales, according to Starbucks CEO Brian Niccol.

In an internal memo on Monday seen by Bloomberg, Niccol said that the fall products, including pumpkin-flavored offerings like the latte, pumpkin cream cold brew, and iced pumpkin cream chai, helped Starbucks “deliver a record-breaking sales week” at its U.S. company-operated stores last week.

Related: Starbucks Is Hiring In-Store Human Workers After Replacing People With Machines — and Finding It Didn’t Work

Starbucks first introduced the PSL in 2003, marking over two decades of the popular drink. There have been hundreds of millions of units of the beverage sold since launch.

Starbucks had 41,097 stores as of July, with 53% operated by the company and 47% licensed.

The news of rising sales arrives as Starbucks is in the midst of a turnaround, working to reverse consecutive quarters of declining sales. Niccol is in charge of the effort; under his leadership, Starbucks has adopted a “Back to Starbucks” plan designed to bring customers back to stores.

Changes under the plan include cutting 30% of the Starbucks menu, making coffee more quickly, and personalizing customers’ orders by writing names down in Sharpie on their cups.

Starbucks is also adding new offerings, like protein cold foam with 15 grams of protein and no added sugar, in the coming year. It is additionally reducing sugar in drinks by adding coconut water-based drinks, like coconut-water matcha and cold brew.

Related: ‘We’re Not Effective’: Starbucks CEO Tells Corporate Employees to ‘Own Whether or Not This Place Grows’

In July, Starbucks reported its sixth consecutive quarter of declining store sales. According to the coffee chain’s earnings report for the quarter ending June 29, store sales dropped by 2% worldwide and in North America. However, net revenue rose 4% to $9.5 billion in the quarter, a 3% jump.

In the earnings report, Niccol stated that the company is “ahead of schedule” to “unleash a wave of innovation” next year.

Niccol also announced a mandate in July that corporate employees come back to the office four days a week, up from three, starting at the beginning of the company’s fiscal quarter in October.

It’s pumpkin spice season, and Starbucks is raking in the profits. The coffee giant launched its fall seasonal offerings last week, including the famous Pumpkin Spice Latte (PSL), and the company has already seen an increase in sales, according to Starbucks CEO Brian Niccol.

In an internal memo on Monday seen by Bloomberg, Niccol said that the fall products, including pumpkin-flavored offerings like the latte, pumpkin cream cold brew, and iced pumpkin cream chai, helped Starbucks “deliver a record-breaking sales week” at its U.S. company-operated stores last week.

Related: Starbucks Is Hiring In-Store Human Workers After Replacing People With Machines — and Finding It Didn’t Work

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This story originally appeared on Entrepreneur

Charles Blow ‘struggled to justify’ working at NY Times

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Charles Blow says editors at The New York Times drained the life out of his writing, leaving his once-fiery columns a “zombie thing” with only “a dwindling trace of my breath in it.”

In the debut of his Substack newsletter, Blow the Stack, the longtime columnist torched his final years at the Gray Lady as “no longer fully my voice” and admitted he went from loving the job to “struggling to justify doing it for pay.”

Blow’s indictment of the Times’ editing process echoes that of Nobel Prize–winning economist Paul Krugman, who also quit the opinion pages and shifted to Substack.

Charles Blow says his final years writing for the New York Times left him struggling to justify the work “even for pay.” Getty Images for ESSENCE

Krugman said a deteriorating relationship with management — including the discontinuation of his newsletter and what he called growing editorial constraints — made conditions “intolerable” for his style of policy analysis.

Both high-profile defections underscore how even marquee names at The Times have bolted for Substack, where they can write freely and publish more frequently without interference.

Blow, 55, spent 17 years hammering out columns after joining the paper as an intern three decades ago. But he said the grind wore him down and sapped his confidence.

“The reader can sense hesitation, unease and lack of conviction just as they can recognize the muscularity of thought and the sure-footedness of a well-crafted phrase,” he wrote.

He signed off from the op-ed page in February.

Blow said he still respects the Times, even as he admitted the grind of churning out columns wore him down. Blow the Stack/@charlesmblow

Months later, however, he was lured back by a senior editor at the Times Book Review, who tapped him to critique “Baldwin: A Love Story,” the first major James Baldwin biography in three decades. Blow said the editing on that piece was “restorative.”

“The editor was strong and sure, but also delicate, careful to preserve the voice and craft in the writing,” he recalled. “He was respectful. I had forgotten what that felt like.”

Blow’s exit from the Times op-ed echoed that of Paul Krugman. REUTERS
The Times published Blow’s farewell column in February. Christopher Sadowski

While he conceded his years at the Times were “weighted towards the good” and insisted he held no animus toward the paper, Blow made clear his time on the opinion desk ended in disillusionment.

“When I parted ways with The Times, it was without sorrow,” he said.

Blow is now promising readers a more “unfiltered and emancipated” voice on Substack, pledging to be “a fierce voice in terrifying times.”

The Post has sought comment from The Times.



This story originally appeared on NYPost

With Zohran Mamdani the mayoral front-runner, Alvin Bragg’s Manhattan DA race is an existential crisis for the city

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The New York City Campaign Finance Board just announced the general-election debates: Mayoral candidates will slug it out Oct. 16 and 22, comptroller candidates Oct. 14 and 23 and public advocate candidates Oct. 21.

Yet there’s radio silence on a debate for the Manhattan district attorney race.

Why the cowardice, Alvin?

Back in 2021, incumbent Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg duked it out with other “Defund the Police” radicals in Democratic primary debates hosted by heavyweights like New York Law School and Citizens Union.

But he chickened out of a direct face-off with GOP candidate Tom Kenniff, only agreeing to a pathetic 30-minute Zoom call where they never shared the screen while speaking. Talk about gutless! 

The contest matters more this year with Democratic socialist and wannabe police defunder Zohran Mamdani leading the mayor’s race.

Bragg is ducking a debate against opponent Maron. Steven Hirsch

Why should Bragg serve four more years when subway murders skyrocketed from zero in 2017 to 11 in 2024 during his term, when his refusal to prosecute fare evasion is bleeding the Metropolitan Transportation Authority dry to the tune of $700 million a year and when he dismisses 14% of all arrests and downgrades a whopping 60% of all felonies?   

I call on Bragg to agree to a public debate and defend his disastrous record.

As a battle-tested public defender with over 20 years in the trenches, an education advocate fighting for fairness and justice in our city and a mom of four kids who take the subway to public school, I am not afraid to defend my record of fighting for our city or my vision for a safer New York.

Why is Alvin Bragg ducking a debate?

Maybe Bragg does not want to answer questions about whether or not he agrees with his party’s mayoral nominee, frontrunner Mamdani, about not prosecuting misdemeanors, legalizing prostitution, sending social workers to respond to domestic-violence calls and decommissioning the NYPD Strategic Response Group.

Mamdani and Bragg are both supporters of extremist policies like “de-carceration” — a real mouthful just to say “Keep as many people out of jail as possible.”

Mamdani’s frontrunner status makes the Manhattan DA race more momentous this year. LP Media

For a lifelong Democrat like me, someone who switched parties to hold on to my progressive values, not to reject them, I don’t recognize this brand of so-called liberalism because it puts people who cannot afford private security — like Mamdani and Bragg use — at risk. 

As a public defender at the Legal Aid Society I represented many mentally ill people who were literally dying in the streets before they got arrested.

Sometimes I was able to get my clients into treatment programs as part of a plea bargain. Arresting the drug-addicted, mentally ill street homeless who commit crimes to get them the help they desperately need is not a perfect system, but it offers some of the most hard-to-treat individuals a true chance at recovery.

Unlike Mamdani and Bragg, I never looked at a man lying in his own filth on a park bench with a needle sticking out of his arm and thought, “Good thing no one has the authority or responsibility to help this man.”

A heroin user shoots up in The Bronx’s St. Mary’s Park amid needles and the toothpaste he stole from CVS to feed his habit. Richard Harbus for New York Post

The blinkered policies and radical ideologies that Mamdani and Bragg promote and impose on all of us tie the hands of the police to make arrests and block one of the only real paths to helping desperate people who cannot help themselves. 

They also make our streets, parks and subways unusable, unsafe and unclean.

It’s a lose-lose to pretend the police and the criminal-justice system are always the bad guys, but that is what Mamdani and Bragg believe, and that is what they want to impose on all of us.

They call it harm reduction, but it is really harm amplification.

The wretched souls who are dying in the streets and those of us who have to navigate around their psychoses as we walk our children to school or try to get home from work all suffer.

A lifelong liberal like me believes we have an obligation to help those that are suffering the dual affliction of mental illness and drug addiction while also acknowledging that everyday New Yorkers who pay taxes, go to work and walk our streets deserve better than the Mamdani-Bragg dystopia their DSA crime agenda creates.

Author and Manhattan DA candidate Maud Maron has on-the-ground work experience at the Legal Aid Society. Stephen Yang

Sixty-seven percent of Manhattan voters believe that the city is headed in the wrong direction.

And if Gotham elects Mamdani — a frighteningly real possibility — getting rid of Bragg in Manhattan is even more important. 

A Bragg-Mamdani Big Apple will increase the chaos on our streets, close down more businesses, keep the toothpaste locked up and the criminals free, while driving New York state’s record-breaking outward migration — decimating our tax base and communities. 

Mamdani and Bragg want us to pay for the goods that others steal, and they want us to pay the costs of their failed ideas, but that cost is too high.

It robs us of true safety, usable public transportation, clean parks and streets and the city we know and love.

Alvin Bragg has had four years to do the job of Manhattan’s top prosecutor.

He should defend his record, in public, by agreeing to a debate.  

Maud Maron is a former Legal Aid lawyer and the GOP candidate for Manhattan district attorney.



This story originally appeared on NYPost

Andrew Firestone Net Worth 2025: How Much Money Does He Make?

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Andrew Firestone is a notable television star and entrepreneur. Over the years, he has appeared in several popular television shows and made numerous guest appearances. Naturally, fans are eager to know what his net worth is in 2025.

So, here’s everything we know about Andrew Firestone’s earnings.

What is Andrew Firestone’s net worth in 2025?

Andrew Firestone has an estimated net worth of $52 million in 2025.

Andrew Firestone’s net worth in 2025 consists of earnings from his career as a businessman and television personality.

Firestone is most famous for being The Bachelor on the third season of the popular reality series. He is also noted for being the great-grandson of Harvey S. Firestone, the founder of the Firestone Tire and Rubber Company.

What does Andrew Firestone do for a living?

Andrew Firestone is a businessman and television personality.  

Most recently, Firestone announced his split from his wife, Ivana Firestone. The couple had been married for over 17 years, after tying the knot on July 5, 2008. They have three children, sons Adam and Shane, and daughter Anja.

Andrew Firestone’s earnings explained — how do they make money?

Andrew Firestone earns money from his business ventures and career in television.  

Firestone oversees several businesses. As per his official LinkedIn profile, he is the principal and founder of StonePark Capital. It is a hospitality firm established to “focus on the acquisition and development of hospitality investment opportunities.” Additionally, he co-runs the Firestone Walker Brewing Company with his brother-in-law, David Walker.

In addition to business, Firestone has made several notable television appearances. He was the third Bachelor in the popular ABC reality series, where he selected Jen Schefft as his partner. Although the couple went their separate ways after a few months, they have remained good friends. Firestone has also appeared on Celebrity Poker Showdown, Celebrity Paranormal Project, Billionaires Car Club, and more.



This story originally appeared on Realitytea

White House Plans ‘Big Announcement’ To Show Trump’s Not Dead Yet

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PoliticusUSA is straightforward news. No BS, no nonsense, just the news. Please support us by becoming a subscriber.

The White House has been hyping a major “exciting announcement” from Trump related to national defense. Speculation centered on the war in Ukraine, or even Gaza, but it is none of those things.

Instead, the AP reported that Trump will be announcing:

President Donald Trump’s administration will announce on Tuesday that U.S. Space Command will be located in Alabama, reversing a Biden-era decision to keep it at its temporary headquarters in Colorado, according to a person familiar with the announcement.

Trump is expected to speak Tuesday afternoon, and he will give the new location, according to the person, who spoke on condition of anonymity to confirm the plans ahead of the official announcement. A Pentagon website set up to livestream the remarks described the event as a “U.S. Space Command HQ Announcement.”

The White House is making this announcement because people on the left spent the weekend entertaining themselves by speculating about Trump’s health. Of course, Trump did nothing to ease the speculation by being pretty much invisible for nearly a week.

Lately, when Trump does show up in public, he has been mostly seated. The days of the nearly 80-year-old president having the stamina to do rallies appear to be long gone. In fact, the mainstream media was praising Trump for sitting in a televised cabinet meeting for 3 hours last Tuesday, as the bar for a functioning president continues to be lowered for Trump.

The announcement today will give Trump a platform to rant about Joe Biden, but that might not be a good idea. The public already believes that Trump is too old to be in the White House, so allowing him to ramble about Joe Biden is only going to reinforce the comparisons between the two men.

Sending Trump out to make a reality TV-style announcement about the location of Space Command won’t make people forget that Trump is old and the White House might be hiding some details about his health.

What do you think about the “big announcement” from the White House? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

Leave a comment



This story originally appeared on Politicususa

AirPods live translation may not arrive for the iOS 26 launch

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Live Translation through AirPods was rumored to be included in iOS 26 at some point, but it doesn’t look like it will arrive with the release of the new operating system.

AirPods will gain new features in iOS 26

Apple has been rumored to introduce a live translation feature for AirPods for quite some time, allowing users to hear a conversation held in another language via the personal audio accessories. However, while it’s been rumored that the feature would arrive in iOS 26, that may not be the case.

According to an anonymous source of 9to5Mac on Monday, the live translation won’t make it for the iOS 26 release. Instead, it is probably going to arrive in a later software update.

Rumor Score: 🤯 Likely

Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums


This story originally appeared on Appleinsider

Funding cuts force nonprofits into influencer territory on YouTube, podcasts

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Cindy Eggleton has always believed in the power of a story.

But the CEO and co-founder of Brilliant Cities, a Detroit-based early childhood development nonprofit that supports learning in underserved communities, never expected someone to tell hers. And definitely not in a sleek documentary with a slick soundtrack and plenty of images of other Detroit institutions, such as General Motors, Diana Ross, and the historic Fox Theatre.

“It’s never been about me,” said Eggleton, adding that participating in the “Nevertheless: The Women Changing the World” documentary series on YouTube was her way of honoring her late mother, Geraldine, who inspired her to speak out and help others in their community.

However, as they face an increasingly uncertain funding landscape, nonprofits are focusing more on storytelling in outreach to donors – both big and small – and raising production values for videos and podcasts.

“Storytelling is how we’re able to draw people in and get them to connect to a deeper truth about themselves or about the world or a problem that needs to be solved,” said Elevate Prize Foundation CEO Carolina Jayaram Garcia. “It’s connecting those issues back to you as a human and not saying, ‘Well, that’s their problem. That’s all the way over there.’ The story allows it to be human.”

Elevate Prize Foundation launches its own documentary studio

The foundation launched the production house Elevate Studios earlier this year to tell more of those stories, Jayaram Garcia said. “Nevertheless: The Women Changing the World,” Elevate Studios’ first series, has already generated more than 3 million views on YouTube and will debut its second season in the summer of 2026.

“It’s been incredible to see the growth we’ve had on YouTube and how it’s resonated so quickly with so many people,” Jayaram Garcia said. “We know we’re on to something here.”

Philanthropic support of storytelling has been ongoing for decades, mostly through donors funding documentary projects. Open Society Foundations created the Soros Documentary Fund in 1996 before the Sundance Institute took it over in 2002, with the George Soros-backed nonprofit’s continued monetary support. The Ford Foundation formalized its funding plans in 2011, creating its JustFilms program that still supports 25-30 documentary films annually. Earlier this month, Firelight Media, a New York-based nonprofit supporting documentary filmmakers of color, launched the Firelight Fund, which will offer directors $50,000 grants for their projects.

But Lance Gould, founder and CEO of media strategy firm Brooklyn Story Lab, says what Elevate Prize Foundation and others are doing is different. He says it reflects both technological improvements that have lowered the cost of documentary storytelling and the rise of social media, which allows nonprofits to interact with donors directly.

“Being able to tell your story well is paramount,” said Gould, whose firm works with nonprofits to help them produce their own story-driven content. “But storytelling is not only about reaching viewers, it’s also about having the right message for the right viewers.”

He suggests that nonprofits connect their work to larger initiatives like the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals — an ambitious list of 17 efforts from eliminating extreme poverty and hunger to guaranteeing every child a quality secondary education by 2030 — to attract more attention and support.

How storytelling can strengthen connection

Gould, who was previously executive editor of The Huffington Post and editor in chief of The Boston Phoenix, said “everyone can be their own media company at this point.”

That’s a point Nicole Bronzan, vice president of communications and content for the Council on Foundations, hopes is not lost in the push for more storytelling.

“We don’t want people to feel that they have to make big technological investments in order to tell better stories,” Bronzan said. “We wouldn’t want anyone to feel like they have to have a big fancy studio, but certainly the news that folks are investing in storytelling is great for us and for the whole sector.”

In a Council on Foundations report released last year, “ A New Voice for Philanthropy: How Deeper Stories and Clearer Language Can Build Trust,” researchers, including Bronzan, reported that people had positive attitudes toward foundations, but most didn’t really understand how foundations worked. Bronzan said stories that provide more transparency about how donations are used and how those decisions are made help connect people to a nonprofit and its work.

“If you’re telling those stories,” she said, “I can only imagine that people will be more inclined to open up their pocketbooks and say, ‘Oh, OK, these are causes that need my support.’”

Documentary sparks donations

So far, that has been the case for Brilliant Cities, which saw an increase in donations after Eggleton’s episode debuted on YouTube.

“We have a funder who wants to increase his gift from $7,000 to $100,000,” said Eggleton, whose nonprofit turns a neighborhood’s vacant homes into community centers with family services ranging from tutoring to mental health support groups. She said new donors have also reached out. “It’s kind of incredible.”

Though Brilliant Cities doesn’t rely on federal funding for its services, Eggleton said government aid cuts have made a tough funding environment even tougher because the competition for non-governmental donations becomes even tougher.

“Everybody’s being told what’s being taken away,” she said. “People are pulling at grant officers and individuals with stock market gains. I think it’s more than the funding, though. I think it’s about really recognizing how the world already feels so disconnected and now feels even more so.”

Storytelling, Eggleton said, helps reduce that. By focusing on female changemakers, Elevate Studios makes an even stronger point, she said, adding she’s been quoting Spanish poet Antonio Machado — “There is no path/We make the path by walking” — as she explains the power of the series.

“This is the time that we really do need to figure out how we build empathy through stories and not necessarily saying, ‘You’re wrong or you’re right,” she said. “You just show the world what can be and what should be.”

_____

Associated Press coverage of philanthropy and nonprofits 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. For all of AP’s philanthropy coverage, visit https://apnews.com/hub/philanthropy.



This story originally appeared on Fortune

Police search area in case of boy ‘presumed dead’ in Donabate, County Dublin | World News

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Police in Dublin are preparing to search an area of open ground as they investigate the disappearance of a seven-year-old boy not seen in three years – and who was never reported missing.

The Gardai, the Irish police service, say that the missing child is “presumed dead”.

The boy, who officers have not named, was last known to have resided at The Gallery Apartments in Donabate, County Dublin.

It is believed there has been no confirmed sighting of the child since he was three or four years old.

The Irish child and family agency Tusla raised concerns and alerted the police last Friday.

Image:
Forensic teams are starting a search in Donabate for the boy, who is ‘presumed dead’

The police say, despite their enquiries, they have been unable to locate the boy or find any evidence that he is still alive.

It’s understood that they have spoken to members of the boy’s family who are abroad.

A search was carried out at the apartment complex over the weekend, and forensic teams are now starting a search of an area of open ground elsewhere in Donabate.

Tusla said that “we continue to work closely with the Garda and, in line with normal practice, all relevant information relating to this family has been shared”.

The agency raised the alarm a year to the day since it reported the case of missing schoolboy Kryan Durnin to police.

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Kyran, from County Louth, was six years old when he was last seen in 2022, and officers believe he may have died up to three years ago.

Police say they have carried out 570 separate investigative actions in relation to Kyran’s disappearance and suspected murder, and have scoured 29,500 hours of CCTV footage.

Two people have been arrested as part of the investigation, but no charges have yet been filed.

Although there is no suggestion that the two cases are connected, the apparent similarities in circumstances, with delays in reporting children as missing, have shocked many in Ireland.

Ireland’s Minister for Children, Norma Foley, said that she is “deeply concerned” about the latest incident.



This story originally appeared on Skynews