Economic jitters and soaring gold prices create a frenzy for US jewelry merchantsNew Foto - Economic jitters and soaring gold prices create a frenzy for US jewelry merchants

LOS ANGELES (AP) — At the biggest jewelry center in the United States, Alberto Hernandez fired up his machine on a recent day and waited until it glowed bright orange inside before shoveling in an assortment of rings, earrings and necklaces weighing about as much as a bar of soap: just under 100 grams, or 3.2 troy ounces. Minutes later, the bubbling liquid metal was cooling in a rectangular cast the size of a woman's shoe. An X-ray machine determined it was 56.5% gold, making it worth $177,000 based on the price of gold that day. As gold pricessoar to record highsduring global economic jitters, hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of gold are circulating through the doors of St. Vincent Jewelry Center in downtown Los Angeles on any given day. Many of the center's 500 independent tenants, which include jewelers, gold refiners and assayers, say they have never seen such a surge in customers. "Right now, we're seeing a lot of rappers and stuff melting their big pieces," said Alberto's nephew, Sabashden Hernandez, who works at A&M Precious Metals. "We're getting a lot of new customers who are just getting all of their grandfather's stuff, melting it down pretty much." Gold'scurrent rallycomes as PresidentDonald Trumpissues ever-changingannouncements on tariffs, roiling financial markets and threatening toreignite inflation. In response, people across the country are flocking to sell or melt down their old jewelry for quick cash, including middlemen like pawn shop owners. Others, thinking their money might be safer in gold than in the volatile stock market, are snapping it up just as fast. Los Angeles jeweler Olivia Kazanjian said people are even bringing in family heirlooms. "They're melting things with their family's wedding dates and things from the 1800s," Kazanjian said. She recently paid a client for a 14-karat gold woven bracelet with intricate blue enamel work that could be turned into a brooch. The customer walked away with $3,200 for the amount of gold contained in the piece measured in troy ounces, the standard for precious metals equivalent to 31 grams. But Kazanjian doesn't plan to melt the piece. The real artistic and historical value was a lot more, she said. "It's just stunning … and you won't see that kind of craftsmanship again," Kazanjian said, adding she has persuaded some customers to change their minds about melting items. "It's a piece of history, and if you're lucky enough to inherit it, it's a piece of your family." Businesses on the sales side of the action, offering gold bars and other material, also are working hard to keep up with the frenzy. "Stuff comes in and it goes right out," said Edwin Feijoo, who owns Stefko Cash for Gold in Pennsylvania and receives shipments from customers across the U.S. looking to sell their gold. "Everybody's busy right now." Business hasn't been good for everyone, though. For some jewelers who source their products from places abroad like Italy, Turkey and China, the combination of high gold prices and added tariffs have cut into profit margins and hurt demand. "Our profit margins are so razor thin here," said Puzant Berberian, whose family founded V&P Jewelry inside St. Vincent in 1983. Berberian said he recently paid an extra $16,000 on a package from overseas. Customers also are feeling "sticker shock" when they can't afford the things they used to. A chunky, 14-karat gold bracelet weighing about 10 grams (0.32 troy ounces) might have sold for around $600 last year, but now it's closer to $900, Berberian said. Some believe those trends could continue, both for consumers and businesses. Customers hoping to buy bullion "think gold will go up" even more, according to Sam Nguyen, whose business, Newport Gold Post Inc., has bought and sold gold and other precious metals at St. Vincent for five years. While gold has cooled from its record high of $3,500 per troy ounce, Nguyen thinks it could reach $4,000 to $5,000 by year's end. Jeff Clark agrees. The founder of The Gold Advisor, which provides investment advice, said he wouldn't be surprised if gold prices continue rising since the metal is considered a haven for people to park their money when there isanxiety about a possible recession. "History shows it has gone much higher in the past," Clark said, referring to a frenzy in the 1970s when the average price of gold increased 17-fold amid double-digit inflation rates. "If the fear and uncertainty continues in the general populace, the prices are going to keep going up."

Economic jitters and soaring gold prices create a frenzy for US jewelry merchants

Economic jitters and soaring gold prices create a frenzy for US jewelry merchants LOS ANGELES (AP) — At the biggest jewelry center in the Un...
Iran, US to resume nuclear talks amid clashing red linesNew Foto - Iran, US to resume nuclear talks amid clashing red lines

By Parisa Hafezi DUBAI (Reuters) - Top Iranian and U.S. negotiators will resume talks on Sunday to address disputes over Tehran's nuclear programme, in a push for progress as Washington hardens its stance ahead of U.S. President Donald Trump's Middle East visit. Though Tehran and Washington both have said they prefer diplomacy to resolve the decades-long dispute, they remain deeply divided on several red lines that negotiators will have to circumvent to reach a new nuclear deal and avert future military action. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi and Trump's Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff will hold the fourth round of talks in Muscat through Omani mediators, despite Washington taking a tough stance in public that Iranian officials said would not help the negotiations. Witkoff told Breitbart News on Thursday that Washington's red line is: "No enrichment. That means dismantlement, no weaponization," requiring the complete dismantling of Iran's nuclear facilities in Natanz, Fordow, and Isfahan. "If they are not productive on Sunday, then they won't continue and we'll have to take a different route," Witkoff said in the interview. Trump, who has threatened military action against Iran if diplomacy fails, will travel to Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates on May 13-16. Reacting to Witkoff's comments, Araqchi said on Saturday that Iran would not compromise on its nuclear rights. "Iran continues negotiations in good faith ... if the aim of these talks is to limit Iran's nuclear rights, I state clearly that Iran will not back down from any of its rights," Araqchi said. Tehran is willing to negotiate some curbs on its nuclear work in return for the lifting of sanctions, according to Iranian officials, but ending its enrichment programme or surrendering its enriched uranium stockpile are among "Iran's red lines that could not be compromised" in the talks. A senior Iranian official close to the negotiating team said that U.S. demands for "zero enrichment and dismantling Iran's nuclear sites would not help in progressing the negotiations". "What the U.S. says publicly differs from what is said in negotiations," the official said on condition of anonymity. He said matters would become clearer when talks take place on Sunday, which was initially planned for May 3 in Rome but were postponed due to what Oman described as "logistical reasons". Moreover, Iran has flatly ruled out negotiating its ballistic missile programme and the clerical establishment demands watertight guarantees Trump would not again ditch a nuclear pact. Trump, who has restored a "maximum pressure" campaign on Tehran since February, exited Tehran's 2015 nuclear pact with six world powers in 2018 during his first term and reimposed crippling sanctions on Iran. Iran, which has long said its nuclear programme is peaceful, has breached the 2015 pact's nuclear curbs since 2019 including "dramatically" accelerating its enrichment of uranium to up to 60% purity, close to the roughly 90% level that is weapons-grade, according to the U.N. nuclear watchdog. (Writing by Parisa Hafezi, Editing by Louise Heavens)

Iran, US to resume nuclear talks amid clashing red lines

Iran, US to resume nuclear talks amid clashing red lines By Parisa Hafezi DUBAI (Reuters) - Top Iranian and U.S. negotiators will resume tal...
A split jury and a lie sent him to prison. Now he's working to change Louisiana's lawNew Foto - A split jury and a lie sent him to prison. Now he's working to change Louisiana's law

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — As 18-year-old Bobby Gumpright rode his bike home from his bartending job in New Orleans in 1999, he began to concoct a story about why he didn't have any money. In the throes of addiction and not wanting to admit he had spent his paycheck on drugs, Gumpright lied to his father and said a Black man had robbed him at gunpoint. The fabrication spun out of control when a detective, armed with photos of potential suspects, asked Gumpright to point to the culprit. Across town, Jermaine Hudson, a 20-year-old Black man, was pulled over for a traffic stop and taken into custody. He figured he would soon be released to go home to his pregnant wife and 10-month-old daughter. Instead, he was charged with a crime he didn't commit. Even though two jurors didn't believe Gumpright's story, Hudson was found guilty by a split jury, a practice that 20 years later would bedeemed unconstitutionalby the U.S. Supreme Court, which acknowledged its origins from racist Jim Crow laws. Nearly 1,000 people convicted by split juries remain inprison in Louisiana. Now, 25 years after Gumpright's lies sent Hudson to prison, the two unlikely friends are sharing their story in a push for legislation to give some of those people a chance to have their cases retired. A split decision As Hudson sat in the courtroom in 2001, he grappled with a reality that he didn't create. "Never in my wildest dreams would I have thought my life would have been at a standstill ... missing out on my kids' life, on my life," Hudson told The Associated Press last month. Two witnesses testified: the officer who responded to the 911 call and Gumpright. As Gumpright took the stand, Hudson prayed the stranger would acknowledge the wrongful allegation and his nightmare would end. A prosecutor asked Gumpright, who is white, if he was sure it was Hudson who robbed him. He responded, "110%." In a 10-2 vote, the jury convicted Hudson of armed robbery. The judge sentenced him to 99 years in prison. A practice rooted in racism At the time of Hudson's trial, only Louisiana and Oregon allowed convictions if one or two jurors disagreed. Louisiana adopted the practice in 1898, fueled by efforts to maintain white supremacy after the Civil War. Diluting the voice of Black jurors allowed the often-white majority to determine the outcome. In 2018, Louisiana voters did away with the use of nonunanimous jury convictions, two years before the Supreme Court ruling. Of the 1,500 people in Louisiana prisons from split jury convictions at that time, about 80% were Black and most were serving life sentences, according to a Project of Justice Initiative analysis. Following the high court decision, Oregon's Supreme Courtgranted new trialsto hundreds of people. But Louisiana's Supreme Courtrejected argumentsto apply the ruling retroactively, leaving people like Hudson locked up with scarce legal options or waiting on a miracle. Waiting 22 years for freedom Years of Hudson's life dwindled away as he missed the birth of his second daughter, graduations and other milestones. He prayed Gumpright would "come forward with the truth." "This can't be my final destination. This can't be the end of my life," Hudson often thought. Gumpright tried to numb his guilt with drugs and alcohol, but it never went away. "I was either gonna kill myself or I was gonna come forward," he told the AP. In 2021, Hudson was preparing to take a new deal: plead guilty to armed robbery in exchange for a sentence of time served. Just days before the bargain was finalized, Hudson received news he long waited for. Gumpright, who had entered a drug treatment facility, had come clean about his lies. After spending 22 years behind bars, Hudson was released. A few months later, Gumpright answered a phone call from a blocked number. "I bet you never thought you'd hear from me," Hudson said. Fixing an injustice A packed committee room at the state Capitol fell silent last month as a man wearing a suit and tie took to the microphone. "My name is Bobby Gumpright," he said, his hand trembling. "I come before you as a citizen of Louisiana. ... I'm also a man who lives each day with the consequences of a terrible sin." Gumpright told lawmakers his story, the true one. Sitting behind him was Hudson. The pair first met in New Orleans, six months after Hudson's release. They have spent the past two years advocating for a bill that would give inmates convicted by split juries the opportunity to ask for a retrial. The measure does not automatically grant a retrial. The duo say their story is an example of how an innocent man can be imprisoned for decades under an unconstitutional practice and that it's never too late to right a wrong. "I couldn't change the past, but I could refuse to live the lie any longer while injustice continued," Gumpright told lawmakers. "Louisiana can't change the past. But Louisiana can refuse to let its injustice live on." The measure failed last year, but a legislative committee backed a similar bill in April. It still needs approval from the governor, House and Senate, which could debate it this week People cheered as the bill cleared its first hurdle. Gumpright and Hudson hugged, holding each other up, as they cried tears of joy. An unlikely bond Both men said they needed one another to heal. Hudson wanted to know why Gumpright lied. Gumpright sought forgiveness. "I'm not the type of man to hold grudges or to hate anyone," Hudson said. "I have a forgiving heart. And in order for me to really move on I forgave him, because I understood what he was going through." Sober for four years, Gumpright, 44, is now an addiction counselor. Hudson, 47, moved to Texas, got married, bought a house, is starting a business and spends time with his two grandsons. Gumpright attended Hudson's housewarming and met his family. They text each other words of encouragement every day and keep photos of each other close by. "My friend? That's an understatement," Hudson said about his relationship with Gumpright. "He's my brother."

A split jury and a lie sent him to prison. Now he’s working to change Louisiana’s law

A split jury and a lie sent him to prison. Now he's working to change Louisiana's law BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — As 18-year-old Bobby G...
Celtics trounce Knicks, cut series deficit to 2-1New Foto - Celtics trounce Knicks, cut series deficit to 2-1

Jayson Tatum finished with 22 points, nine rebounds and seven assists and the Boston Celtics pulled away for a 115-93 win over the host New York Knicks on Saturday afternoon in Game 3 of their Eastern Conference semifinals series. Payton Pritchard scored a team-high 23 points off the bench for Boston, which cut the Knicks' lead to 2-1 in the best-of-seven series. Jaylen Brown added 19 points and Derrick White had 17. Jalen Brunson scored 27 points on 9-for-21 shooting to lead the Knicks. Karl-Anthony Towns finished with 21 points and 15 rebounds. After struggling to score in the first two games of the series, the Celtics found their rhythm on offense. Boston shot 48.2 percent (40 of 83) overall and 50 percent (20 of 40) from 3-point range, and New York shot 40 percent (32 of 80) from the field and 20 percent (5 of 25) from beyond the arc. "They got some clean looks early, and they see it go in, that gives them confidence. Then it's hard to shut them off," said Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau. "We have to have greater awareness. We can't allow missed shots to take away from (our) defensive tenacity. We've got to bounce back." Tatum made a basket to put Boston on top 112-89 with 2:40 remaining. He assisted on a 3-pointer by Al Horford on the next possession, and Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla rested his starters for the remainder of the game with the score out of reach. "This is the fun part. You don't get into the journey for it to be easy," said Mazzulla. "It's been dark, but in a good way. You've just got to tap into your darkness, and that's it." The Celtics led 96-70 at the end of the third quarter. Boston led by as many as 31 points after Pritchard made a basket with 1:42 to go in the quarter, and the Knicks trimmed slightly into the deficit by scoring the final five points of the quarter on an alley-oop dunk by Mitchell Robinson, a floating jump shot by Brunson and a free throw by Robinson. "I don't think we came with the mindset of being satisfied, but I think it was just subconsciously satisfied being up 2-0," said Brunson. "Just not the way we need to approach the game." Boston sprinted to a 36-20 lead at the end of the first quarter. Pritchard drove the ball across half court and hit a baseline jumper as time expired to put the Celtics on top by 16. By halftime, the Celtics increased their lead to 71-46. Brown buried a 3-pointer to put Boston at the 70-point mark with 30.5 seconds left in the half, and he made one of two free throws in the closing seconds to give the Celtics a 25-point advantage. --Field Level Media

Celtics trounce Knicks, cut series deficit to 2-1

Celtics trounce Knicks, cut series deficit to 2-1 Jayson Tatum finished with 22 points, nine rebounds and seven assists and the Boston Celti...
Cade Horton wins his MLB debut as the Cubs hold off the Mets 6-5New Foto - Cade Horton wins his MLB debut as the Cubs hold off the Mets 6-5

NEW YORK (AP) — Cade Horton earned the win with four solid innings of relief in his major league debut, and the Chicago Cubs held off the New York Mets 6-5 on Saturday night. Cubs opener Brad Keller worked a perfect first inning before giving way to Horton, who was recalled from Triple-A Iowa earlier in the day. The team's top pitching prospect gave up three hits — including Brett Baty's three-run homer in the fourth — and struck out five. The 22-year-old Horton (1-0), a first-round draft pick in 2022 who was 2-1 with a 1.24 ERA in six starts at Iowa this season, walked none and threw 49 of his 77 pitches for strikes in his first professional relief appearance. Seiya Suzuki and Dansby Swanson hit RBI singles off Tylor Megill (3-3) in the first, and Michael Busch had a run-scoring single in the third before Swanson led off the fourth with a homer to left field. Miguel Amaya added pivotal insurance with a two-run single in the eighth before Baty hit his third homer in two games, a two-run shot to left in the bottom half. Porter Hodge, the Cubs' sixth pitcher, earned his second save with a hitless ninth. After a leadoff walk, he got Francisco Lindor to ground into a 1-6-3 double play. Megill allowed four runs and seven hits over 4 2/3 innings. Key moment With the Cubs ahead 4-3, right-hander Daniel Palencia struck out Juan Soto and retired Pete Alonso on a grounder to wriggle out of two-on jam in the seventh. Key stat Megill has given up eight runs over 9 2/3 innings in two starts this month after compiling a 1.74 ERA in six April starts. In his five-year career, Megill is 10-4 with a 2.45 ERA in April and 14-20 with a 4.99 ERA thereafter. Up next Cubs LHP Matthew Boyd (3-2, 2.75 ERA) opposes Mets RHP Griffin Canning (5-1, 2.50) in Sunday's series finale. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Cade Horton wins his MLB debut as the Cubs hold off the Mets 6-5

Cade Horton wins his MLB debut as the Cubs hold off the Mets 6-5 NEW YORK (AP) — Cade Horton earned the win with four solid innings of relie...

 

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