Rabu, 26 Februari 2020

The Significance of the Latest Divorces Roiling the Royal Family - E! NEWS

Peter Phillips, Autumn Phillips

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For a family so fundamentally averse to divorce, the royals sure do a lot of divorcing.

Queen Elizabeth II could have used a PR break after an already disconcertingly eventful start to the new year. But just as the dust was seemingly starting to settle around the smoldering crater left when Prince Harry and Meghan Markleblew up their position within the royal family, there came word that another implosion was taking place nine spots down the line of succession.

Some months after privately separating, Peter Phillips, son of Princess Anne and the queen's eldest grandchild, confirmed that he and wife Autumn Phillips are getting divorced after 12 years of marriage.

"After informing HM the Queen and members of both families last year, Peter and Autumn jointly agreed to separate. They had reached the conclusion that this was the best course of action for their two children and ongoing friendship," a spokesperson for the family said earlier this month. "The decision to divorce and share custody came about after many months of discussions and although sad, is an amicable one. The couples' first priority will remain the continued well-being and upbringing of their wonderful daughters Savannah and Isla."

Both sides of the family "were naturally sad at the announcement, but fully supportive of Peter and Autumn in the joint decision to co-parent their children. Both Peter and Autumn have remained in Gloucestershire to bring up their two children where they have been settled for a number of years. Peter and Autumn have requested privacy and compassion for their children while the family continues to adapt to these changes."

Considering the "many months of discussions," the queen wasn't blindsided by this announcement, but the Phillips' statement did come shortly after The Sun ran with the news that their marriage was over—so the report seemed to hasten their public comment.

Regardless, it's a sad outcome for any family, as Peter well knows. His parents, Anne and Capt. Mark Phillips, separated in 1989 when Peter was 11 and—despite an initial declaration that they had no plans to divorce—divorced in 1992. Anne remains married to Timothy Laurence, the second husband she got a head start with while still married to the first. Mark and his second wife, Sandy Pflueger, with whom he has another daughter, Stephanie Phillips, announced their intention to divorce in 2012.

Peter and his younger sister, Zara Tindall, were not given royal titles, Princess Anne figuring the lack of monarchical baggage would allow them a more normal childhood—and adulthood, for that matter. "Her advice generally about life has been invaluable," Peter said about their mother in a 2010 BBC special celebrating Anne's 60th birthday. "Whenever we may have got slightly above our station she'd be the first one to bring us back down to earth."

He went to Gordonstoun School in Scotland—Prince Philip's now co-ed alma mater that he insisted Prince Charles attend back when it was all-boys and further from home than Charles would have liked—and had a grand time, playing rugby and serving as a head boy. He spent his gap year in Australia, then attended the University of Exeter.

Peter Phillips, Princess Anne

Chris Jackson/Getty Images

Armed with a degree in sports science, Peter went to work for Jaguar as a corporate hospitality manager, then was an account manager for Williams Grand Prix Engineering, whose Formula One team is ROKiT Williams Racing. Since 2018 he's been chairman and CEO of City Racing, which stages horse races in city centers around the globe. 

He met Autumn Kelly in 2003 at the Canadian Grand Prix, held in her native Montreal. Autumn—who has two siblings, older brother Kevin and a twin brother, Chris, and divorced parents—graduated from McGill University and was working as a management consultant when she met Mark—whom, because no royal title preceded him (and apparently he didn't put on airs), she had no idea was a member of the royal family for weeks until she glimpsed him in a TV special about Prince William, in honor of the future king's 21st birthday.

As fate would have it, Autumn—who fresh out of university had turned down a job with the Canadian Security Intelligence Service—was already planning to move to England to work for a computer firm, and once she had relocated her relationship with Peter got more serious. They eventually moved in together, splitting time between a flat in London and a cottage at Gatcombe Park, Anne's estate in Gloucester.

The couple's engagement was announced in July 2007, and Autumn started being included in more big events, such as the queen's 80th birthday celebration and the monarch and Prince Philip's 60th wedding anniversary dinner that November. Her fiancé's grandmother also invited Autumn to join her on an extensive tour of the Scottish isles, which are very near and dear to her heart.

Autumn was raised Catholic and gave it up to join the Church of England—a necessity if Peter was going to retain a place in the line of succession (he's currently 15th)—but she kept her Canadian passport (and has retained her Canadian citizenship to this day).

She and Peter married on May 17, 2008, at St. George's Chapel at Windsor Castle, the spot where Harry and Meghan would wed 10 years later. Kate Middleton's solo presence while William was attending a friend's wedding in Africa also signified that the two of them, dating off and on for several years, were truly serious (though it didn't work out for Harry and his date, Chelsy Davy).

Queen Elizabeth II, Autumn Phillips, Peter Phillips

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Welcoming Savannah in 2010 and Isla in 2012, Peter and Autumn have led a relatively private life while also being included in all the big family events and traditions, such as weddings, Christmas with the queen at Sandringham, Trooping the Color and the annual Royal Ascot. Their big eyebrow-raising moment to date occurred early on, when they sold their wedding photos to Hello! for a reported £500,000, without securing the queen's approval.

"It's not great," a senior royal source described the situation to The Telegraph at the time. But life went on. 

"They're just a family, they're happy, they have great relationships with each other—they're very close," Autumn told the CBC in 2016, adding that the queen "knows more about Canada than I ever will."

She and Peter were all smiles at Royal Ascot in June, though their last public appearance together appears to have been in September at the Braemar Gathering, a centuries-old annual event frequented by the queen, in Aberdeenshire, Scotland. 

Autumn Phillips, Peter Phillips, Royal Wedding Arrivals

REX/Shutterstock

Appearances aside, apparently their domestic bliss was unraveling behind the scenes—and they weren't the only ones.

Yet another marriage was breaking up while all eyes in Britain and beyond were on Harry and Meghan's decision to step down as full-time royals, as well as on Prince Andrew's increasingly sordid-sounding ties to late businessman Jeffrey Epstein—who the Duke of York still had a friendship with after Epstein became a convicted sex offender—and his reported reluctance to cooperate with authorities in their ongoing investigation.

A week after Peter and Autumn Phillips confirmed their separation, the queen's nephew, David Armstrong-Jones—the only son of the monarch's late sister, Princess Margaret—announced that he and his wife of more than 26 years, Serena Stanhope, were also divorcing. They have two children together, son Charles, Viscount Linley, 20, and daughter Lady Margarita, 18 (who was a bridesmaid at William and Kate's wedding when she was 8 years old).

In royal speak, David was Viscount Linley (he has been David Linley in his professional life) and became Lord Snowden, or 2nd Earl of Snowden, when his father died in 2017; his dad, photographer Antony Armstrong-Jones, became Lord Snowden when he married Margaret in 1960. They separated in 1976 and divorced in 1978. 

As a child, David—founder of a high-end furniture and design business who has gone from fifth to 21st in line to the throne over the course of his 58 years—spent a lot of time with his aunt, the queen, when his mother was busy traveling.

And though he's never been a working royal, David remains "very, very close to the Queen and Prince Charles. He goes to Sandringham at Christmas and turns up at Balmoral in the summer," a friend of his recently told the Daily Mail.

David Armstrong-Jones, Serena Armstrong-Jones, Countess of Snowdon

Richard Young/Shutterstock

He and Serena have also led their lives somewhat privately, though David's late mother—who defiantly thumbed her nose at royal propriety time and again—remains the subject of endless fascination. And the press is always perfectly happy to pounce on a scandal, such as when David and his sister, Lady Sarah Chatto, sold some of Princess Margaret's possessions, including her Politmore tiara (which she wore at her wedding when she married their father) at auction, netting roughly £10 million, reportedly to go toward paying the inheritance tax on her estate.

Coincidentally, David and Serena were described to the Daily Mail as "the Glumleys" when they were photographed not looking particularly joyful at Peter and Autumn Phillips' wedding in 2008.

"Serena is not a charity lunch girl—she's happiest doing the school run," a family friend told the paper. "But David's away so much in Russia and the States making money [with his bespoke furniture business] that she'll be making another life for herself if he's not careful." Between 2010 and 2014, the press-shy Serena owned a home goods boutique, Serena Linley Provence, in Knightsbridge.

As of 2017, at least, they were still living the high life together, vacationing at Chateau d'Autet, their country home in Provence, with Charles and Margarita.

"He is the hardest-working royal—albeit not for the royal family," David's friend told the Mail. "He is endlessly abroad through his Christie's role. He is their go-to rainmaker executive [as the auction house's honorary chairman for Europe, the Middle East, Russia and India]. But all the travel put a strain on the marriage.

"Serena spends most of her time in Gloucestershire. He lives in Kensington. It's been a slow drift apart. I think the impetus for the split is with her but she is very sad about it. It is going to be tough for David. Everyone is surprised. Even if things weren't perfect between them, they are both very family oriented. Their main focus now will be on ensuring that their two children and them remain a family unit even if they are no longer living together as a couple."

David Armstrong-Jones, Serena Armstrong-Jones, Lady Margarita, Charles Armstrong-Jones

Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images

"The Earl and Countess of Snowdon have amicably agreed that their marriage has come to an end and that they shall be divorced," read the statement from their household last week. "They ask that the press respect their privacy and that of their family."

The most infamous split in modern royal history, however, remains that of Prince Harry's parents, Prince Charles and Princess Diana, who separated in 1992 (capping off the queen's infamous "annus horribilis" featuring the end of three of her four children's marriages) and divorced in 1996, barely a year before Diana died in a car wreck.

David and Serena's wedding in October 1993 at St. Margaret's Chapel in Westminster, a far splashier affair than Princess Anne's second wedding attended by 30 people the previous December, was a welcome bright moment at the time, coming after so much turmoil.

David Armstrong-Jones, Serena Armstrong-Jones, Lady Margarita, Charles Armstrong-Jones

David M. Benett/Dave Benett/Getty Images

In addition to wanting to protect his wife and son Archie from the emotional and physical dangers of media scrutiny when it gets too close for comfort, Prince Harry is surely aware of just how many marriages in his family have ended in divorce in the past 30 years. Meghan's parents also divorced when she was a kid—and Meghan divorced her first husband in 2013.

So, with two more splits—apparently the divorce rate in the royal family since the queen got married in 1947 is now exponentially higher than the national average among all people in the U.K.—making headlines, Harry and Meghan may rest more assured than ever that they've made the right choice.

But they have also stated their intention to become financially independent and, although they've agreed to stop using the term "royal" in future business and charity endeavors once they detach fully on March 31, the reason for their celebrity is unshakable—and every attempt at personal financial gain will be met with the utmost scrutiny, even if they're going by plain ol' Harry and Meghan.

Peter Phillips, Autumn Phillips

Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images

Peter Phillips—who has never even been a working royal—and Princess Diana's niece Kitty Spencer popping up in Chinese milk ads recently proved that point.

"It just feels tacky, and it feels like a conflict of interest, and it feels very much like they are cashing in on their royal connections," Vanity Fair Royal Editor Katie Nicholl told the magazine. "Whether or not they're HRH, they're related to the queen. They are members of the royal family and they're using that for their own commercial gain."

Like Harry's cousins, Meghan has experience working in the private sector—and while one door is closing for the couple, another is opening wide for opportunities that royal watchers saw coming years ago, albeit not necessarily for Harry.

"Royals aren't marrying other royals and aren't marrying into the upper classes," royal commentator Richard Fitzwilliam told BBC News when Peter and Autumn tied the knot and subsequently sold their wedding photos. "They're marrying into the middle class and they're marrying for love. Which of course is how it should be and it has this sort of reviving effect—new ideas, new trends—and it means that royal houses won't be so alone. They won't be so fossilized."

It's just that in Harry and Meghan's case, being a little bit alone may work out better in the long run.

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2020-02-26 11:00:00Z
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Selasa, 25 Februari 2020

Harvey Weinstein hospitalized after guilty verdict - Fox News

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  1. Harvey Weinstein hospitalized after guilty verdict  Fox News
  2. Stunned Harvey Weinstein jailed after guilty verdict | WNT  ABC News
  3. The Weinstein verdict is a huge win for #MeToo – but what's next?  The Guardian
  4. The Harvey Weinstein Verdict Is a Watershed — and a Warning  The New York Times
  5. Andrew McCarthy: The Harvey Weinstein verdict -- A severe sentence likely awaits ex-movie mogul  Fox News
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2020-02-25 16:04:00Z
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Pete Davidson knew it was 'over' with Ariana Grande after Mac Miller died - CNN

In an extensive interview with Charlamagne Tha God, Davidson talked about a few of his high profile relationships including his engagement to Grande.
The "Saturday Night Live" star and pop singer went public with their romance in May 2018 which was around the same time people became aware that she and Miller had split after two years together.
By June 2018 Davidson and Grande were engaged, but that ended after Miller died in September of that year at the age of 26 from "mixed drug toxicity."
Soon after Davidson and Grande ended their engagement.
"I pretty much knew it was over after that," he said. "That was really horrible and I can't imagine what that sh*t is like."
Davidson said Grande loved Miller deeply and the comic said offered to be there for her during her grief until she didn't need him anymore.
Davidson also said he doesn't love being known more for who he dates than his actual work.
It's also made working on "SNL" a bit awkward, he said, because he's sometimes been the subject of jokes there. That made him consider his exit from the legendary show, he said.
"I really wanted last year to be my last year, but I'm still around and trying to knock it away," he said.

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2020-02-25 15:49:00Z
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Kelley Flanagan Responds to Rumors She Didn't Like Peter Weber During 'The Bachelor' - Cosmopolitan.com


    Hands up if you think Kelley Flanagan should be the next Bachelorette? She was truly the best and shadiest part of Peter Weber's entire season, and one of the reasons fans loved her so much is because she put up with approximately zero sh*t. But there's been a lot of speculation about whether or not Kelley even *liked* Peter—especially after she liked a tweet saying she "clearly hates" him, lol.

    But it looks like Kelley's putting speculation about her feelings for Peter to bed. When asked if she had "real feelings" for our dude during an Instagram Q&A, Kelley wrote "Yes I did! Peter is an amazing guy."

    image

    Instagram

    She was also asked if she had any "hate" towards Peter / any lingering questions for him, and responded "No hate at all! I think every girl on the show will always has [sic] lingering questions! I guess I'm still looking for that strong WiFi connection."

    image

    Instagram

    Welp, that settles that. As a reminder, The Bachelor Women Tell All is next week, which means all your faves are gathering in one place to spill a bunch of tea. It's going to be amazing! What a blessed day! But unfortunately Kelley isn't going to be in attendance, so good thing she's clearing up her feels on Insta, amirite?

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    2020-02-25 13:31:00Z
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    Every 'Bachelor' Contestant Should Follow Madison On Fantasy Suite Sex - The Federalist

    Every future “Bachelor” contestant should follow Madison Prewett’s lead and demand the object of their affection abstain from sex during the competition. As Madison noted on Monday’s episode, if she were to win the show, Peter would be proposing marriage after having slept with her costar(s) only six days prior. That’s a perfectly reasonable line to draw.

    Madison reluctantly told Peter he would need to fight the temptation of the Fantasy Suites if he truly wanted to “move forward” with her. “If next week you were to, like, sleep with somebody else, it would be really hard for me to really, like, move forward in this,” she said. After dates with each of the final three women—and despite professing his love for Madison—Peter admitted to having been “intimate” with another contestant on the show. “I can’t lie to you about that,” he told her.

    “I literally can’t talk to you right now,” Madison replied, getting up from the table to walk outside.

    Whether Madison left the show over Peter’s decision is still unclear. But her request was entirely fair, and highlights “The Bachelor’s” seedy structure, which encourages men and women to a) pursue marriage while b) potentially enjoying “Fantasy Suites” with each contestant shortly before proposing to one of them. That’s disgusting, and Madison was right to be uncomfortable with the setup. (It’s also worth noting she knew what she was signing up for.)

    I don’t like “The Bachelor,” but I understand why millions of people tune in every week. The whole ordeal is too performative for my liking, and the Corinnes are few and far between, mostly because the show needs to cast people plausibly suited for its likable stars. (Who thought Pete was likable, I do not know.) Still, “The Bachelor” deserves credit for casting contestants representative of the Christian community, whose struggles with the temptations of premarital sex are ignored in most of popular culture.

    Christian or not, the Fantasy Suite option is gross. Let’s assume, for the sake of argument, that Windmill Pete is genuinely in love with three different women. Sex will not clarify their feelings, it will confuse them. Aside from being a reasonable way to test Peter’s devotion, Madison’s request was in everyone’s best emotional interest.

    Producers’ unprecedented decision to have the women share a suite during the overnight date week helps prove that point. If the possibility of Pete’s intimacy with multiple women was uncomplicated and meant little, it would hardly be worth emphasizing the discomfort induced by close quarters. But we know sex is not meaningless, and we know Peter decided to be “intimate” with another contestant after Madison said it could cost him their potential future.

    I have no idea where Peter’s heart lies, and I fully understand that it must be odd to have a stable of attractive mates vie desperately for your hand. In terms of ending up together, Pilot Pete told Madison on Monday’s episode, “coming into this week, I could see that with other people, too.” It’s a strange situation, which is precisely what keeps viewers coming back for more.

    Nevertheless, every future contestant should do exactly as Madison did and ask their bachelor to abstain from intimacy in the Fantasy Suites. It will mitigate his own pain and amplify his own joy, while also instructively testing his potential spouse, and contributing to the creation of a culture that mitigates the personal pain of their viewers.

    If such a request is rooted in faith, that’s great. But religion or not, it’s just common sense. Pete may believe he loves Madison, but if he respected her, he would have been able to exercise some self-control. Hopefully she learned from his decision. Hopefully future contestants did too.

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    2020-02-25 12:08:50Z
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    Harvey Weinstein found guilty of 2 out of 5 charges in monumental trial | Nightline - ABC News

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    1. Harvey Weinstein found guilty of 2 out of 5 charges in monumental trial | Nightline  ABC News
    2. Judge Napolitano calls Weinstein verdict a 'monumental setback' for government  Fox News
    3. Stunned Harvey Weinstein jailed after guilty verdict | WNT  ABC News
    4. The Harvey Weinstein Verdict Is a Watershed — and a Warning  The New York Times
    5. The Weinstein verdict is a huge win for #MeToo – but what's next?  The Guardian
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    2020-02-25 12:00:04Z
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    Placido Domingo Abused His Power And Sexually Harassed Women, Investigation Finds - HuffPost

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — An investigation into legendary singer Placido Domingo by the U.S. union representing opera performers found more than two dozen people who said they were sexually harassed or witnessed inappropriate behavior by the superstar when he held senior management positions at Washington National Opera and Los Angeles Opera, according to people familiar with the findings.

    The investigation, conducted by lawyers hired by the American Guild of Musical Artists, concluded that the accounts from 27 people showed a clear pattern of sexual misconduct and abuse of power by Domingo spanning at least two decades, according to those who spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to disclose the findings.

    The union’s investigation was the first of two independent inquiries launched after multiple women accused Domingo of s
    The union’s investigation was the first of two independent inquiries launched after multiple women accused Domingo of sexual harassment and abusing his power.

    In response to a request for comment from the AP, Domingo issued a statement saying:

    “I have taken time over the last several months to reflect on the allegations that various colleagues of mine have made against me. I respect that these women finally felt comfortable enough to speak out, and I want them to know that I am truly sorry for the hurt that I caused them. I accept full responsibility for my actions, and I have grown from this experience.”

    The union’s investigation was the first of two independent inquiries launched after multiple women accused Domingo of sexual harassment and abusing his power in two AP stories published last year. The second inquiry, still ongoing, was launched by LA Opera, where Domingo had been general director since 2003 before resigning in October.

    According to the people familiar with the contents of the union’s investigation, lawyers from the firm Cozen O’Connor interviewed 55 people from September until late December. In addition to the 27 who said they experienced or witnessed sexually suggestive behavior on the part of Domingo in the 1990s and 2000s, 12 others said they were aware of the star’s reputation and that it was common knowledge at the two companies.

    Mirroring AP’s reporting last year, the investigation found that the allegations included unsolicited physical touching that ranged from kisses on the mouth to groping, late-night phone calls in which Domingo asked women to come to his residence, and inviting women to go out with him socially with such persistence that some felt they were being stalked.

    Two of the women told investigators that they had sexual relations with Domingo, saying they felt compelled to submit because of his position of authority and potential to damage their careers, according to the people familiar with the investigation.

    In the rest of his statement to the AP, Domingo said, “I understand now that some women may have feared expressing themselves honestly because of a concern that their careers would be adversely affected if they did so. While that was never my intention, no one should ever be made to feel that way.

    “I am committed to affecting positive change in the opera industry so that no one else has to have that same experience. It is my fervent wish that the result will be a safer place to work for all in the opera industry, and I hope that my example moving forward will encourage others to follow.”

    Union officials would not directly address the contents of the report, which has not been made public. But the union’s national executive director, Leonard Egert, issued a statement to the AP saying, “AGMA salutes the brave people across all our industries and encourages them to continue speaking out against wrongdoing. We call upon management, and pledge to work collaboratively with them, to get at the root causes that have allowed this behavior to occur, and go unaddressed, in opera, dance, and choral cultures for far too long.”

    Egert, other senior union leaders and the investigators briefed the union’s Board of Governors on the findings Monday.

    The people familiar with the investigation said Domingo, now 79, had reiterated his denials of wrongdoing to investigators and contended that he did not occupy a position of power over his colleagues and their careers. They said he told investigators he had engaged in flirtatious behavior but did not cross a line into inappropriate touching or behavior like asking colleagues to meet privately in his residence.

    They said the investigators characterized Domingo’s conduct as inappropriate workplace behavior under the norms of the 1990s or by today’s #MeToo standards.

    The investigators said that they found the witness accounts to be credible based on the number of people who came forward, the similarities of their stories, corroborations of their accounts, and the common theme that Domingo’s behavior and reputation were such widespread knowledge that women at his companies were warned to avoid being in close contact with him.

    The union announced its investigation in September, shortly after the publication of AP’s stories, saying it did not trust the industry to police itself. Most of the harassment alleged in AP’s stories occurred at LA Opera and at Washington opera, which has repeatedly declined to say if it would investigate the claims. LA Opera has not said when or if it will make its findings public.

    In the AP stories, more than 20 women accused Domingo of sexual harassment or other inappropriate behavior in encounters taking place from the late 1980s to the 2000s. Dozens more said his behavior was an open secret in the industry.

    A number of U.S. companies canceled Domingo appearances and he withdrew from others under pressure. But no European performances have been affected.

    Domingo has been one of the opera’s most beloved and successful figures, admired as an ambassador for the art form and valued for his enduring talent and ability to attract sellout crowds in an era of diminishing ticket sales.

    He also was a prolific conductor and powerful administrator, which his accusers told the AP gave him the power to make or break careers and behave with impunity. In addition to heading Los Angeles Opera, he served as general director at Washington Opera from 2003-2011.

    Most of Domingo’s accusers were young and starting their careers at the time. Several told the AP that he dangled job prospects as he tried to pressure them into sexual relationships, sometimes punishing them professionally if they rebuffed him. Soprano Angela Turner Wilson said that after weeks of pursuing her, Domingo forcefully grabbed her bare breast under her robe in a backstage room.

    The accusations in the union’s report included multiple new accusers not interviewed by the AP, according to the people familiar with its contents.

    Investigators said most of the people they interviewed requested anonymity in the final report, fearing professional retaliation or personal embarrassment, highlighting the problem the industry faces in trying to convince victims to come forward.

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    2020-02-25 07:50:00Z
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