John Cena admits he acquired right into a fist struggle at his brother’s marriage ceremony

“So I found out that it was a mistake when my brother Dan and I got into a fistfight in the middle of the dance floor and ended the wedding,” John recalled, which led to Jimmy’s startled laugh.

The guest then explained why, despite this interruption in the festivities, his family members were not particularly concerned. “You could tell immediately who were guests and who belonged to the Cena family,” he joked. “Because the guests said, ‘What are you going to do to stop it?’ and the Cena family say, ‘No, no, let them find out. Let them do it.’ “

Check out the hilarious and terrifying story in the video above and wonder why everyone can’t just do the “Chicken Dance”.

(E !, NBC and Universal Pictures are all part of the NBCUniversal family.)

Paralympic Video games might permit for a extra inclusive restoration from the pandemic

The Tokyo Paralympics this summer offer companies an opportunity to attract a severely underrepresented segment of the workforce and support the global coronavirus recovery, experts said.

The decades of games, which showcase the athletic talents of leading disabled athletes, have helped break taboos around often “shunned or excluded” members of society, Mike Peters, CEO of the International Paralympic Committee, told CNBC.

This, in turn, has helped spark important conversations about how businesses and society at large can better understand and involve the 1.3 billion people around the world with a lived experience of disability.

“Aside from the fact that this is an incredible moment for athletes, it is a great moment for all athletes – Paralympic athletes or Olympic athletes – to question the perception of inclusivity,” said Caroline Casey, a disability activist and Founder of The Valuable 500 on CNBC’s “Capital Connection” on Wednesday.

Why in the world would a company in its right mind put 15-20% of the world’s population behind, which equates to $ 13 trillion in purchasing power.

Caroline Casey

Founder, The Valuable 500

That became particularly important after the coronavirus pandemic, which exposed the “gross injustice and injustice” of people with disabilities, said Casey, whose organization supports CEOs in initiating and implementing commitments to diversity and inclusion.

However, the crisis has also revealed a “ray of hope”, she said, noting that many of the barriers that previously prevented employers from accepting workers with disabilities have now been broken.

Athletes position themselves on the start line during a para-athletics test event for the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games in Tokyo, Japan, on Aug.

Bloomberg | Getty Images

“We have seen that the business system can flexibly adapt and change – while it was not said before – to accommodate people with disabilities who work remotely or from home, or in the different ways we’ve seen so easy to adjust last 15 months, “said Casey.” That’s very important.

This opens up a great opportunity to involve not only workers but also consumers with disabilities, she said. In fact, after the London 2012 Paralympics, employment of workers with disabilities increased, she said.

“As we need to recover from this pandemic, why in the world would a sane company leave 15 to 20% of the world’s population worth 15 to 20%, which is $ 13 trillion in purchasing power,” she said.

The comments come as the delayed Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics continue to be ravaged by the pandemic and challenges, and sparking criticism from Japanese citizens and international observers.

However, Peters said that the organizing committee’s actions, along with the Japanese government and the Tokyo metropolitan government, have made the Games “one of the safest places in the world”.

Disclosure: CNBC parent NBCUniversal owns NBC Sports and NBC Olympics. NBC Olympics owns the U.S. broadcast rights to all Summer and Winter Games through 2032.

Joe Biden has named Cindy McCain as UN Ambassador

Joe Biden and John McCain were known to be good friends. Despite their political differences, the two men worked together in the US Senate for two decades.

The friendship between the two men led McCain’s widow Cindy to support Biden in his race against Donald Trump that fall. And it was pretty important confirmation. In 2020, Biden became only the second Democrat to bear the state of Arizona since 1952.

McCain paid a political price for supporting a Democrat. The Arizona GOP decided to censure her in January along with Governor Doug Ducey and former Republican Senator Jeff Flake.

But now McCain is going to get something of a reward from Biden. On Wednesday, Biden nominated her as ambassador for the United Nations Food Agency.

McCain responded to the announcement by saying, “I am honored to have been selected by President Biden as Ambassador to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Agencies. The communities this group serves need our support and focus, and I look forward to meeting the challenges this role brings. I am particularly grateful to the McCain Institute, its board of directors, the institute’s team, and our partners at Arizona State University for their support and preparation for this position. “

Todd Neikirk is a New Jersey-based policy and technology writer. His work has been featured on psfk.com, foxsports.com and hillreporter.com. He enjoys sports, politics, comics, and spends time with his family on the waterfront.

Physician scarcity contributed to Japan’s gradual vaccine rollout: Professor

A shortage of doctors and nurses in Japan’s aging population contributed to the country’s sluggish Covid vaccine rollout, says Keio University professor Sayuri Shirai.

As of June 21, only 18.3% of Japan’s population has received at least one Covid vaccine dose, according to Our World in Data. In comparison, more than 50% of people in the U.S. have received one dose of the vaccine while that figure is even higher in the U.K. at 63.6%.

“In an aging society it’s very difficult to find doctors and nurses. And local government, they don’t have enough people to administer [the vaccines]. So that delayed this vaccination,” Shirai told CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia” on Wednesday.

Countries with aging populations and declining birth rates also risk a critical shortage of workers in the future. A United Nations report from 2019 showed Japan had the world’s highest old-age dependency ratio, with the figure expecting to rise even further by 2050.

Even before the coronavirus pandemic, a 2017 World Health Organization report noted Japan was facing a “critical shortage of doctors.” It also noted that, despite efforts to boost the workforce in this sector, “the declining birth rate in particular is expected to impact on the future population of health care professionals.”

A nurse (R) checks a computer with hospital director Dr. Yutaka Kobayashi, in the coronavirus ward at Sakura General Hospital on Feb.10, 2021 in Oguchi, Japan.

Carl Court | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Japan’s race to vaccinate its population ahead of the Olympics faced another hurdle. An article published in medical journal The Lancet earlier this month noted the country only allows nurses and medical doctors to vaccinate citizens and listed this as one of the reasons behind the sluggish rollout.

Still, that situation may be improving. Local media report the Japanese government will relax medical rules to allow more workers to administer Covid vaccinations. Meanwhile, Bloomberg reported Wednesday that Japan has crossed 1 million doses of Covid vaccinations given on a single day.

“The vaccine rollout finally started to accelerate from mid-May,” Naohiko Baba, chief Japan economist at Goldman Sachs, told CNBC on Wednesday. “We now expect half of the population will be vaccinated by end of summer.”

Baba said that development was “good news” for the Tokyo Olympics, which is set to begin in about a month despite public fears over its potential to become a super-spreader event. A recent poll by local news agency Kyodo News showed about 86% of people in Japan are “concerned about a rebound” in Covid cases if the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics are held this summer.

As of Thursday, the Japanese prefecture of Okinawa was still under a state of emergency while multiple areas including Tokyo were under “priority preventative measures,” according to information from the country’s Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare. Japan has recorded more than 789,000 Covid infections and at least 14,506 deaths, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

Disclosure: CNBC parent NBCUniversal owns NBC Sports and NBC Olympics. NBC Olympics is the U.S. broadcast rights holder to all Summer and Winter Games through 2032.

Covid is deadlier this yr than all of 2020. Why do Individuals suppose it is over?

Fans in the audience react as The Foo Fighters reopen Madison Square Garden on June 20, 2021 in New York City.

Kevin Mazur | Getty Images

As the U.S. pushes ahead with its reopening, easing mask mandates and lifting public health restrictions, much of the rest of the world is seeing an alarming surge in the number of Covid-19 infections and deaths.

The stark contrast underscores how unevenly the coronavirus pandemic has spread, now hitting low-income nations harder as they struggle with access to vaccines, the rapid spread of new variants and heavily burdened health-care systems.

It also shows why, even with nations such as the U.S., China and the U.K. recording relatively low Covid-19 infections and fatalities thanks to a mass vaccination drive, the global health crisis is still far from over.

To be sure, more people have died from Covid-19 this year than in all of 2020, according to data compiled by the World Health Organization. The official global death toll stood at 1,813,188 at the end of 2020. More than 2 million people have died as a result of Covid so far this year.

U.S. Covid-19 cases have fallen far below the winter peak in recent weeks, with new diagnoses now down at a seven-day average of around 11,310 a day, compared to more than 250,000 at the start of the year. Fewer reported infections have coincided with fewer hospitalizations and deaths.

It has paved the way for most states to pursue plans to go back to business as usual, with California and New York both lifting most of their public health restrictions in recent days.

In doing so, California Gov. Gavin Newsom said the state was “turning the page on this pandemic,” while New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said: “We’re no longer just surviving — we’re thriving.”

Fans erupt after Phoenix Suns forward Mikal Bridges (25) hit a three-pointer over LA Clippers guard Reggie Jackson (1) late in Game one of the NBA Western Conference Finals at Phoenix Suns Arena.

Robert Gauthier | Los Angeles Times | Getty Images

Mississippi and Texas both lifted all Covid restrictions in March with Texas Gov. Greg Abbott in May adding the additional threat of fines for cities and local officials that were still imposing mask mandates.

Across the U.S., amusement parks, sports stadiums and bars are reopening and at full capacity since the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention eased its mask guidance in May. The nation’s leading health agency said it was safe for fully vaccinated people to ditch their masks whether they were outside or indoors.

‘Two-track pandemic’

The latest Axios-Ipsos Coronavirus Index found that the country’s fears of Covid-19 continued to recede as people increasingly got out of their homes. In the week through to June 8, roughly two-thirds of Americans saw family and friends and 61% went out to eat.

Both of those figures were up from late May and were said to represent “the greatest level of out of home activity since the start of the pandemic.” The Axios-Ipsos poll was conducted from June 4 to June 7 and was based on a nationally representative probability sample of 1,027 adults.

A return to a sense of normalcy in the U.S. has been boosted by the country’s relatively high vaccination rates. More than 177 million doses have been administered in the U.S., giving 53% of the population at least one dose, according to U.S. data. By contrast, some of the world’s poorest countries are yet to register a single dose.

Speaking on Tuesday during a news conference on the pandemic, White House health advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci said the highly transmissible delta variant was the “greatest threat” to the nation’s attempt to eliminate Covid-19.

Delta, first identified in India, now makes up about 20% of all new cases in the United States, up from 10% about two weeks ago, Fauci said. He has previously warned the country must avoid falling into the trap of believing the coronavirus crisis was over and no longer needed to be addressed.

In the global scramble for Covid-19 vaccines, high-income countries, predictably, have sought to secure stocks for their own populations first. It has created a situation in which millions of people have received doses in countries such as the U.S., the U.K. and China, largely thanks to the domestic development of vaccines and by striking advance purchase agreements with manufacturers.

By comparison, parts of Africa, Asia and the Pacific Islands have recorded low vaccination rates to date. Less wealthy countries are relying on Covax, the WHO’s vaccine-sharing initiative. Vaccine diplomacy has also played a significant part in the race to secure supplies, although health experts have raised questions about the effectiveness of China-made vaccines.

Ireland’s Health Minister Stephen Donnelly seemed to get to the crux of why high-income countries are pursuing a me-first approach to vaccines when speaking to the country’s Newstalk radio station earlier this year.

The idea that countries would be willing to give vaccines to other countries before they vaccinate their own population “obviously doesn’t hold up,” Donnelly said. Referring specifically to the U.K., he added: “They’re not doing it. We wouldn’t do it.”

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director General of the World Health Organization (WHO) speaks after Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases during the 148th session of the Executive Board on the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Geneva, Switzerland, January 21, 2021.

Christopher Black | WHO | via Reuters

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has described the persistent global inequity as “vaccine apartheid” and a “catastrophic moral failure” that has resulted in a “two-track pandemic.”

The WHO has warned Covid-19 is spreading faster than the global distribution of vaccines. It has said the world’s shared goal must be to vaccinate at least 70% of the global population by the time the G-7 meets again in Germany next year. Tedros has said it will require 11 billion vaccine doses to achieve this target.

G-7 leaders on June 11 promised to secure 1 billion more vaccine doses over the next 12 months either directly or via Covax.

“This is a big help, but we need more, and we need them faster. More than 10,000 people are dying every day,” Tedros said at a press briefing on June 14.

“These communities need vaccines, and they need them now, not next year,” he added.

Vaccine access

Health experts have cautioned that billions of people worldwide may not have access to vaccines this year, a prospect that raises the risk of further mutations of the virus emerging — possibly undermining the effectiveness of existing vaccines — and prolonging the pandemic.

“The very unequal access to vaccines between rich and poor countries is probably the most stark example of how global inequalities are manifesting themselves during the Covid-19 pandemic,” Dr. Michael Baker, an epidemiologist at the University of Otago in Wellington, New Zealand told CNBC.

Many groups have been pushing for the waiving of certain intellectual property rights on Covid-19 vaccines and treatments, including the WHO, health experts, former world leaders and international medical charities.

President Joe Biden’s administration has thrown its weight behind the calls, but a small number of governments — including the U.K., EU and Brazil, among others — have stonewalled a landmark proposal submitted at the World Trade Organization.

An official in personal protective equipment (PPE) manages the crowd as people queue to receive China’s Sinopharm Covid-19 coronavirus vaccine in Phnom Penh on May 31, 2021, as part of the government’s campaign to halt the rising number of cases of the virus.

TANG CHHIN SOTHY | AFP | Getty Images

The WHO’s latest figures show that while the number of new cases worldwide has declined for eight consecutive weeks, this trend masks a worrying increase in cases and deaths in many countries.

“The rate of decline in most regions has slowed and every region has countries that are seeing a rapid increase in cases and deaths. In Africa, the number of cases and deaths increased by almost 40% in the past week, and in some countries, the number of deaths tripled or quadrupled,” Tedros said at a briefing on Monday.

A study in The Lancet medical journal, published on May 22, found that Africa has the highest global mortality rate among critically ill Covid-19 patients, despite recording fewer cases than most other regions.

“While a handful of countries have high vaccination rates and are now seeing lower numbers of hospitalisations and deaths, other countries in Africa, the Americas and Asia are now facing steep epidemics. These cases and deaths are largely avoidable,” Tedros said.

Delta variant warning

Health experts are concerned about the spread of the highly transmissible delta variant. The Covid variant first identified in India is thought to be on track to become the dominant strain of the disease worldwide.

Former FDA commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb told CNBC on Thursday that the spread of the delta variant in the U.S. was “highly concerning,” noting its prevalence in the country is currently doubling every 10 to 14 days.

“It will become the dominant strain in the United States. Now, the question is: Is it going to be 90% of 10,000 infections a day or 90% of 100,000 infections a day?” Gottlieb said.

“I think as far as the summer is concerned, we are unlikely to see a big resurgence of infections even with this new variant but this is a significant risk for the fall,” Gottlieb said.

Keri Hilson sparked on-line debate by saying she “hopes my soulmate is a black man”

Keri Hilson

As a roommate, Keri Hilson often uses social media to share her opinions and preferences on a range of topics – and her latest posts on her stance on her soulmate keep everyone talking. While talking about relationships, Keri asked Hilson if she was wrong in hoping God would send her soulmate that he was a black man.

On her Twitter account, Keri Hilson posted the following tweets about who she would like to be in a relationship with:

“I want who God wants for me, but am I wrong in hoping my soulmate is a black man? He doesn’t even have to be American, I dated 3 non-American black men. But I want to love a black guy. Or a man of color …

And if he’s neither, then he would need to have a deep understanding and genuine support for my pro-blackness. Does anyone feel me? “

As with most things on social media with celebrities, it wasn’t long before Keri was a top trending topic based on their opinion. While there were some who disagreed with her and said that she should be open to love from anyone, regardless of race, there were more who understood where she was from and gave her tons of virtual love and support offered.

If you kept up, you will remember that Keri Hilson was very open about her hope of one day being married and having kids, but she doesn’t want to settle for just anyone.

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Asia could possibly be the primary and final of the Covid pandemic, says a journey service supplier

A health worker prepares a vial containing a Chinese Sinovac vaccine for Covid-19 coronavirus disease at a movie theater that was converted into a vaccination center in suburban Taguig City, Manila on June 14, 2021.

Ted Aljibe | AFP | Getty Images

SINGAPORE – Asia was the first epicenter of the Covid-19 outbreak and could be the last region to emerge from the pandemic – especially in terms of travel, according to the Asia-Pacific president of a travel services company.

“Unfortunately, Asia was the first … in the pandemic and we predict it will likely be the last out of the pandemic based on vaccination rates,” said Todd Handcock of the Collinson Group, which offers a range of travel-related services including insurance and the operation of airport lounges.

According to Our World in Data, only 22.26% of people in Asia have received at least one dose of the Covid-19 vaccine. This compares to 53.03% in the US and 63.56% in the UK

The distribution of vaccines around the world is very unfair … and Asia suffers, especially Southeast Asia.

Alicia Garcia-Herrero

Chief Economist for Asia Pacific, Natixis

Handcock told CNBC’s Street Signs Asia on Wednesday that more people are returning to the US, UK and Europe.

“We have actually seen good domestic travel in markets like China, the United States and Russia in the past few months,” he said.

“But from an international perspective, we are starting to see vaccination rates increasing in these markets – the UK is one of the leaders in the world right now – we are seeing travel certainly increasing,” he added.

Slow vaccination campaigns

Beyond that, however, Garcia-Herrero pointed out that there is a “huge” discomfort about vaccines in Asia that “we somehow don’t find in Europe or in other parts of the world – or at least not to the same extent. “

Some parts of Asia, including Taiwan and Vietnam, have been largely successful in containing the virus, but have seen a resurgence since then.

A Natixis report released in May said that “more effective containment has resulted in less urgency” for vaccines in Asia. Apart from the skepticism about the newly developed vaccines, it says in the report.

Carrot or whip approach?

Some Asian countries have introduced incentives to encourage more vaccination, similar to the lotteries and freebies offered in the US

Hong Kong has a raffle for residents who get vaccinated. The main prize? A new one bedroom apartment valued at approximately Hong Kong $ 10,800,000 ($ 1.39 million).

India’s largest passenger airline IndiGo gives discounts to customers who have received at least one dose of a vaccine. You can get a 10% discount off the base fare when you book a flight, according to a company press release.

Meanwhile, in the Philippines, President Rodrigo Duterte has threatened prison terms.

“You choose vaccine or I’ll have you locked up,” Duterte said on Monday, according to Reuters. This comment came after reports of low participation in vaccination centers in the capital, Manila.

The president’s statement contradicts instructions from his health officials who say the vaccine is voluntary, Reuters reported.

– CNBC’s Christina Farr, Hannah Miao and Yen Nee Lee contributed to this report.

Jamie Spears acknowledges Britney’s “struggling” in keeping with her testimony

Jamie Spears understands that his daughter is “suffering,” as his lawyer read in court on Wednesday June 23rd.

Britney Spears testified during the public hearing that her conservatory was “abusive” and said she wanted it to end.

“This generation was not harmed for doing wrong things, but my precious body that worked for my father for the past 13 years tried to be so good and pretty, so good,” she told the judge, pro NBC news. “I was told that the state of California allowed my ignorant father to take his own daughter – who only matters to me when I work with him – they sat back and allowed him to do that to me? I’ve worked for way too much control. “

According to her explosive testimony, Jamie’s attorney read a statement on his behalf at the hearing. It said: “Mr. Spears is sorry to see his daughter suffer so and in so much pain.

A few months ago, Jamie’s lawyer Vivian ThoreenHe spoke to Good Morning America about how he “saved” the Grammy winner.

“I understand that every story needs a bad guy, but people got it so wrong here,” the lawyer said on TV in February. “This is a story about an extremely loving, devoted, and loyal father who saved his daughter from a life threatening situation. The people harmed her and exploited her. Jamie saved Britney’s life. “

SBA to course of most assist functions for shuttered venues by early July

The Anthem music venue in Washington, D.C. pleading with the Small Business Administration to release aid for shuttered independent venues.

CNBC

The Small Business Administration plans to process most of the aid applications from its Shutter Venue Operators Grant (SVOG) program by early July, Sen. Bill Hagerty, R-Tenn., said Wednesday.

More than 14,000 small businesses across the country who have applied for the grants, according to the SBA.

“I was encouraged to hear during a constructive discussion today with Administrator [Isabel] Guzman that SVOG has her full attention, the team implementing the program has been revamped, the agency will work with applicants that simply had technical mistakes, and that SBA will aim to process most applications by early July,” Hagerty in a news release.

“The actions and commitments I heard from the Administrator today will hopefully provide struggling venues in Tennessee with more certainty about the funds needed to save their operations,” Hagerty added.

The SBA did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment on how soon the applications will be processed.

The SBA’s $16 billion fund was created to help sustain the industry until in-person entertainment can resume. Music clubs, theaters, promoters and others can access grants of as much as $10 million based on their gross revenue from 2019. The program was included in the second Covid relief package that was signed into law in December.

The program’s application portal was snarled by technical glitches. It was launched on April 8 for a few hours before closing without any applications due to the issues. It reopened weeks later after an uproar over the delay, and businesses rushed to resubmit their applications in hopes of getting a much-needed grant.

Thousands of businesses are still waiting on their applications. As of midday Monday, the SBA reported 1,445 grants had been awarded for a total of $833.4 million. The agency said in its weekly report that 7,118 applications remain in the submitted phase and 5,853 are in review. The combined requests represent $11.6 billion in grants. 

One of those businesses that waited a long time for its application to be processed was the North Park Theatre in Buffalo, New York.

The venue — a local landmark — was waiting on a grant worth more than $200,000 when CNBC’s reporting on the SVOG program was published earlier this week. The theater got notice on Tuesday that its application was approved.

“This is the kind of place you want to see a movie — you’re going to forget about the outside world and escape for a few hours,” said Ray Barker, the theater’s program director. He has been with North Park since the 1990s, when he started as a concession worker.

John McAfee died of obvious suicide underneath an extradition warrant in a Spanish jail

Eccentric antivirus software company founder John McAfee was found dead of a suspected suicide in his prison cell in Barcelona, ​​Spain on Wednesday shortly after the country’s national court approved his extradition to the United States to face criminal charges To face tax evasion, his lawyers said.

Spanish newspaper El Mundo first reported that the Catalan Justice Ministry said McAfee, 75, died within hours of the extradition ruling. Barcelona is in the Spanish region of Catalonia.

The McAfee attorney in Spain told Reuters that the founder of McAfee Associates appeared to have hanged himself.

El Mundo reported, citing the Catalan Ministry of Justice, that the prison’s medics tried to resuscitate him. McAfee was being held in Brian’s 2 prison in Catalonia.

“Our legal team in Spain has confirmed that John was found dead in his prison cell,” said Nishay Sanan, McAfee’s Chicago attorney. “I am sad to hear of what has happened and my prayers are to his wife Janice.”

“John was and will always be remembered as a fighter,” said Sanan. “He tried to love this country, but the US government made his existence impossible. They tried to wipe him out, but they failed.”

McAfee had the right to appeal his extradition, which ultimately required final approval from the Spanish cabinet.

But he couldn’t stand staying locked up any longer, said Javier Villalba, his lawyer in Spain.

“This is the result of a cruel system that had no reason to keep this man in prison for so long,” Villalba told Reuters.

McAfee’s death in custody commemorates Jeffrey Epstein, the accused child sex trafficker and multimillionaire who died of a suicide by hanging in a federal prison in Manhattan in August 2019.

McAfee’s own father, described as an alcoholic abusive, allegedly shot himself when McAfee was 15 years old.

John McAfee, Co-Founder of McAfee Crypto Team and CEO of Luxcore and Founder of McAfee Antivirus, speaks at the Malta Blockchain Summit in St. Julian’s, Malta on November 1, 2018.

Darrin Zammit Lupi | Reuters

McAfee was arrested last October at Barcelona International Airport on tax evasion charges pending in federal court in Tennessee with a maximum sentence of 30 years in prison.

He had since been incarcerated in Spain and tried to avoid extradition by claiming political persecution in the United States for criticizing the IRS.

On October 15, after his arrest, McAfee tweeted, “I’m happy in here. I have friends. The food is good. Everything is good.”

“You know it’s not my fault if I hang myself, a la Epstein,” he tweeted.

According to the tax evasion charge, McAfee generated millions in revenue from promoting cryptocurrencies, advising, speaking, and selling the rights to his life story for a documentary.

“From 2014 to 2018, McAfee allegedly did not file any tax returns, despite having received significant income from these sources,” the US Justice Department said in October.

McAfee, along with another man, Jimmy Watson, was also indicted in Manhattan federal court in March for an alleged “pump-and-dump” program that bought large amounts of cheap cryptocurrency and then online with “false and misleading tweets” were advertised. to increase their market prices.

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“The members of the McAfee team have collectively made more than $ 2 million in illicit profits from their altcoin scalping activities,” the Justice Department said in March.

Last week, McAfee tweeted about his criminal cases, writing, “The US believes I was hiding crypto. I wish I had, but it has been dissolved through the many hands of Team McAfee (your conviction is not required) and my remaining assets are all “confiscated.”

“My friends disappeared for fear of associations. I have nothing. Nevertheless, I have no regrets,” wrote McAfee in the tweet pinned to the top of his Twitter feed.

The Securities and Exchange Commission charged McAfee last October in a civil lawsuit of generating more than $ 23 million in undisclosed revenue from false and misleading cryptocurrency recommendations.

McAfee left the anti-virus software company of the same name in 1994, which he founded seven years earlier. He later sought the Libertarian Party’s presidential nomination in 2016 and again in 2020.

In 2013, he created a mundane spoof video explaining how users can uninstall the software.

In 2019, a Florida federal court sentenced McAfee to more than $ 25 million in damages for the estate of a Florida man named Gregory Faull, who was allegedly murdered in Belize in 2012 on McAfee orders.

Faull owned a beachfront property next to McAfee’s residence, two dogs of which were allegedly poisoned by Faull.

McAfee had previously fled Belize and faked a heart attack to return to the United States. He was never charged with Lazy murder.

Correction: John McAfee’s Chicago attorney is Nishay Sanan. In a previous version his name was misspelled.