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Justice Department charges ex-government contractor with leaking to Washington Post reporter

Kraig Pakulski 0 30 Article rating: No rating
Pictured is the Washington Post building in downtown Washington

By Devan Cole, Katelyn Polantz, Clay Voytek, CNN

(CNN) — Federal prosecutors on Thursday charged a government contractor with unlawfully sharing classified information with a Washington Post reporter, expanding the criminal case brought against him earlier this month for allegedly mishandling the information.

The case has become a flashpoint for press freedom advocates over the Trump administration’s approach to the First Amendment and lingering questions over how it approached the seizure of the reporter’s computers and phone days after Perez-Lugones was arrested.

Washington Post reporter Hannah Natanson’s devices were seized in a pre-dawn FBI raid on January 14 pursuant to a warrant related to the investigation into Perez-Lugones. Government seizures of reporter records are exceedingly rare in the US, and The Post and press freedom advocates immediately decried the action.

The new charges represent the first time the Justice Department in Aurelio Perez-Lugones’ case has publicly formally tied his conduct to Natanson’s reporting. The previous court allegations against him only accused him of illegally copying and taking home classified information.

The Post and Natanson have not been charged with any crime. CNN has reached out to the Post for comment.

The charges approved Thursday by a federal grand jury in Maryland against Perez-Lugones include five counts of unlawfully transmitting the information to the reporter through an encrypted messaging application beginning in late October 2025 and continuing through early January. The grand jury also approved a single count of unlawful retention of classified information, a charge he had previously faced through a criminal complaint, which did not require sign-off by a federal grand jury.

The 11-page indictment against Perez-Lugones, a former member of the US Navy, refers to Natanson as “Reporter 1,” and references five articles she co-authored or contributed to that allegedly contained the classified information he allegedly provided to her.

The indictment includes redacted images of communications between Perez-Lugones and Natanson, including one in which he told her he was “going quiet for a bit” after he allegedly sent her photographs of classified documents.

“I’m going quiet for a bit … just to see if anyone starts asking questions,” he wrote, according to the indictment.

Perez-Lugones previously acknowledged he mishandled classified information, prosecutors said, according to a court hearing transcript obtained by CNN. Perez-Lugones told federal investigators he was angry about “recent government activity,” Assistant US Attorney Patricia McLane said during a detention hearing earlier this month.

If convicted, Perez-Lugones, 61, faces a maximum sentence of 10 years in federal prison for each of the six counts.

He’s currently behind bars and has not yet been formally presented with the charges previously brought against him, or the new ones and therefore hasn’t entered a plea to any of them.

Attorneys for Perez-Lugones didn’t respond to a request for comment.

A judge had signed off on the Justice Department’s warrant request for the reporter, allowing for the surprise search last week, but underlying court

Everyone’s trying to feel good about wearing fur

Kraig Pakulski 0 24 Article rating: No rating

By Rachel Tashjian, CNN

(CNN) — Only a few years ago, seeing scores of women strolling around New York City in real animal fur coats would have seemed unimaginable.

Fur has been out of fashion for so long that it’s been decades since Vogue’s Anna Wintour was regularly seen wearing it. (In one of the last instances, in 2005, she was pelted with a tofu pie by anti-fur protestors outside a Paris fashion show.)

But walk around Manhattan – or most cities with a wintry chill – and you may wonder whether you’ve fallen through some kind of sartorial portal to the 1950s, when lush, bracelet-sleeve furs were a symbol of old-world glamour and post-war wealth, or the 1980s, when an ankle-length mink was de rigueur for the peacocking matriarchs of new and old money alike.

Furs have come roaring back, despite continued industry prohibitions like bans at brands like Gucci, Prada and Chanel, and restrictions around the depiction of new animal fur in magazines owned by major publishers like Condé Nast, which includes Vogue and Vanity Fair. The European Commission is also expected to make a decision in March on whether to propose an EU-wide ban on fur-farming. (LVMH, which owns Dior and Louis Vuitton, remains an outlier.)

Rather than shelling out for brand-new chinchillas or classic minks, customers are gravitating towards workarounds that speak to a more considered appreciation for sustainability, and to investment shopping over quick thrills: vintage furs, scored from secondhand dealers online and off, and a new cohort of labels that make fur-like coats out of materials, like shearling, deemed to have less environmental impact.

In short, consumers are fur crazy, and are doing their best to feel warm and fuzzy about it.

“We’re seeing a massive spike,” said Kristen Naiman, chief creative officer of the resale site The Real Real. Searches for “vintage fur coat” were up a whopping 191% year-over-year in 2025, and “mink fur jacket” is up 280%, according to data shared by the platform. Meanwhile, the average selling price for fur outerwear on the site has gone up 18% year-over-year, meaning that buyers are snapping them up more quickly before they become steeply discounted, Naiman said.

Many consumers see vintage fur as a more ethical outerwear choice. “Our sense of what is sustainable, and what is responsible, is actually shifting and in certain ways, getting much more nuanced,” Naiman said. More consumers understand that faux fur is essentially plastic, and that wearing clothes for longer, and shopping secondhand, are more mindful choices. “There’s a part of me that feels that the single most sustainable thing you can do is keep things in circulation longer.”

The vintage look of the furs – maybe a shoulder pad, a dramatic length or standard wear and tear – also emphasizes that this is a used, not a new, piece, potentially easing any moral anxieties. “When a fur is old and gorgeous and lived in, you feel that, and it gives a different vibe,” Naiman said. “There’s an antidote to the hyper-consumption – all the newness, digital, all that.” TheRealReal has also seen a rise in interest in pieces that are labeled “as-is” or “fair,” inspired by the weathered handbags of icons like Jane Birkin and Mary-Kate Olsen.

Women aren’t simply looking for grandma’s castoffs, though. To cater to modern tastes, some designers have turned to shearling, which is touted as more sustainable because it is a byproduct of the meat industry that would otherwise be discarded. Shearling coats, many indistinguishable from traditional furs, have been all over runways for the past year.

This thinking has minted new fashion stars. While Nour Hammour was founded in 2013 to create the proverbial perfect leather jac

Everyone’s trying to feel good about wearing fur

Kraig Pakulski 0 31 Article rating: No rating


CNN

By Rachel Tashjian, CNN

(CNN) — Only a few years ago, seeing scores of women strolling around New York City in real animal fur coats would have seemed unimaginable.

Fur has been out of fashion for so long that it’s been decades since Vogue’s Anna Wintour was regularly seen wearing it. (In one of the last instances, in 2005, she was pelted with a tofu pie by anti-fur protestors outside a Paris fashion show.)

But walk around Manhattan – or most cities with a wintry chill – and you may wonder whether you’ve fallen through some kind of sartorial portal to the 1950s, when lush, bracelet-sleeve furs were a symbol of old-world glamour and post-war wealth, or the 1980s, when an ankle-length mink was de rigueur for the peacocking matriarchs of new and old money alike.

Furs have come roaring back, despite continued industry prohibitions like bans at brands like Gucci, Prada and Chanel, and restrictions around the depiction of new animal fur in magazines owned by major publishers like Condé Nast, which includes Vogue and Vanity Fair. The European Commission is also expected to make a decision in March on whether to propose an EU-wide ban on fur-farming. (LVMH, which owns Dior and Louis Vuitton, remains an outlier.)

Rather than shelling out for brand-new chinchillas or classic minks, customers are gravitating towards workarounds that speak to a more considered appreciation for sustainability, and to investment shopping over quick thrills: vintage furs, scored from secondhand dealers online and off, and a new cohort of labels that make fur-like coats out of materials, like shearling, deemed to have less environmental impact.

In short, consumers are fur crazy, and are doing their best to feel warm and fuzzy about it.

“We’re seeing a massive spike,” said Kristen Naiman, chief creative officer of the resale site The Real Real. Searches for “vintage fur coat” were up a whopping 191% year-over-year in 2025, and “mink fur jacket” is up 280%, according to data shared by the platform. Meanwhile, the average selling price for fur outerwear on the site has gone up 18% year-over-year, meaning that buyers are snapping them up more quickly before they become steeply discounted, Naiman said.

Many consumers see vintage fur as a more ethical outerwear choice. “Our sense of what is sustainable, and what is responsible, is actually shifting and in certain ways, getting much more nuanced,” Naiman said. More consumers understand that faux fur is essentially plastic, and that wearing clothes for longer, and shopping secondhand, are more mindful choices. “There’s a part of me that feels that the single most sustainable thing you can do is keep things in circulation longer.”

The vintage look of the furs – maybe a shoulder pad, a dramatic length or standard wear and tear – also emphasizes that this is a used, not a new, piece, potentially easing any moral anxieties. “When a fur is old and gorgeous and lived in, you feel that, and it gives a different vibe,” Naiman said. “There’s an antidote to the hyper-consumption – all the newness, digital, all that.” TheRealReal has also seen a rise in interest in pieces that are labeled “as-is” or “fair,” inspired by the weathered handbags of icons like Jane Birkin and Mary-Kate Olsen.

Women aren’t simply looking for grandma’s castoffs, though. To cater to modern tastes, some designers have turned to shearling, which is touted as more sustainable because it is a bypr

Ventura-Based Company Patagonia Files Trademark Infringement Lawsuit Against Drag Queen

Kraig Pakulski 0 23 Article rating: No rating
Patagonia, the Ventura-based outdoor apparel company, filed a trademark infringement lawsuit on January 21, 2026, against drag performer and environmental activist “Pattie Gonia” following years of prior discussions between the […]

The post Ventura-Based Company Patagonia Files Trademark Infringement Lawsuit Against Drag Queen appeared first on edhat.

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