Blog

  • YieldNest Launches ynRWAx Vault

    YieldNest Launches ynRWAx Vault

    YieldNest, a DeFi infrastructure provider for yield strategies, has introduced ynRWAx, a vault designed to integrate real-world credit returns into decentralized finance. The product focuses on combining tokenized assets with lending mechanisms commonly used in DeFi, including leveraged looping strategies.

    The vault targets an annual yield of about 11%, based on mortgage-backed private credit linked to residential real estate in Australia. The credit operations are managed by Kimber Capital, a licensed Australian investment firm specializing in structured lending. YieldNest delivers the on-chain architecture and integrations.

    ynRWAx is structured as a yield-bearing asset that allows users to gain exposure to off-chain credit markets within blockchain-based systems. It follows the ERC-4626 standard, which supports compatibility with lending protocols and broader DeFi applications without requiring special permissions.

    The vault currently holds more than $7.5 million in total value locked and operates across multiple networks, including Ethereum, Base, Arbitrum, and Polygon. Additional integrations include Euler and Morpho for lending, as well as Pendle and Spectra, which enable separation of fixed and variable yield components. Incentive layers are provided through Merkl and Brevis Incentra, adding extra rewards alongside the base yield.

    Image: Freepik

  • Analytics Company Predicts When Bitcoin Will Bottom Out! “We’re Very Close!”

    Analytics Company Predicts When Bitcoin Will Bottom Out! “We’re Very Close!”

    Bitcoin ($BTC) has experienced a correction of over 50% since peaking around $126,000 in October 2025.

    During the current correction, Bitcoin fell to levels around $60,000, but is now trying to hold above $70,000.

    While technically the bear market is still ongoing, investors are trying to catch the bottom for Bitcoin.

    While there are various predictions for the bottom at this point, one CryptoQuant analyst said it could take two months for $BTC to reach its bottom.

    CryptoQuant analyst Maartunn, in a statement from his X account, predicted that if Bitcoin follows its historical pattern, a potential bottom will occur in approximately two months.

    The analyst based this prediction on the historical four-year halving pattern. According to the analyst, 703 days have passed since the last Bitcoin halving.

    Historically, the market bottom typically begins to form around the 777th day after the halving, but the analyst suggested this could happen in about two months.

    According to the analyst, if the four-year pattern in Bitcoin remains intact, a definitive bottom could occur in late May 2026.

    In line with this analysis, CryptoQuant stated in its February analysis that Bitcoin had not yet fully surrendered and that on-chain indicators were still in a bearish phase. At that point, analysts drew attention to the price support levels that had been reached, pointing to $55,000 as the ultimate bottom for $BTC.

    *This is not investment advice.

  • California man wins $50,000 lottery prize during Maryland trip

    California man wins $50,000 lottery prize during Maryland trip

    Odd News // 1 month ago

    California man wins $50,000 lottery prize during Maryland trip

    Feb. 18 (UPI) — A California man took a trip to Maryland to visit his daughter’s family and ended up winning a $50,000 lottery prize during his vacation.

  • ‘For All Mankind’ Renewed for Sixth and Final Season at Apple TV

    Apple TV is looking to the heavens one last time.

    The streamer has renewed its drama series For All Mankind for a sixth and final season. The pickup comes three days before season five of the show premieres on March 27; season six will debut in 2027.

    With the renewal, For All Mankind (produced by Sony Pictures Television) will become one of the longest-running series in Apple TV’s six-plus years of offering original programming. Among shows aimed at adults, only Slow Horses — which has been renewed through a seventh season — will have gone longer.

    “Getting to explore the For All Mankind universe over six seasons has been an amazing privilege, and we’re thrilled to have the opportunity to finish the story the way we’ve always hoped,” said showrunners Matt Wolpert and Ben Nedivi, who also co-created the series with Ronald D. Moore. “We’re incredibly proud of what this series has become, and grateful to Apple TV and Sony Pictures Television for helping us see it through to its final chapter.”

    Added Apple TV head of programming Matt Cherniss, “From being one of the first Apple originals to launch on Apple TV in 2019, For All Mankind has remained an innovative, epic sci-fi series that has enthralled fans season after season. As one of Apple TV’s most enduring and celebrated series, it has delivered time and again because of the extraordinary artistry of visionary storytellers Ron, Matt, and Ben, along with our partners at Sony, and we can’t wait for people to experience how this story comes to its exhilarating conclusion when the final season debuts next year.”

    Season five of the series, set in an alternate history where the Soviet Union was the first to land people on the moon, is set in the 2010s and will delve into the friction between residents of a colonized Mars and those who remain on Earth. Joel Kinnaman, Toby Kebbell, Edi Gathegi, Cynthy Wu, Coral Peña and Wrenn Schmidt reprise their roles alongside new series regulars Mireille Enos, Costa Ronin, Sean Kaufman, Ruby Cruz and Ines Asserson.

    Wolpert and Nedivi serve as showrunners and executive produce with Moore and Maril Davis of Tall Ship Productions, Kira Snyder, David Weddle, Bradley Thompson and Seth Edelstein.

  • The Freelance Platform Fiverr Wants to Sell You AI Video

    The Freelance Platform Fiverr Wants to Sell You AI Video

    Can a gig economy stalwart crack Hollywood? Fiverr thinks it figured out the model… by going all-in on generative artificial intelligence.

    The freelance marketplace, which connects users to workers in all sorts of categories (think website development, resume guidance, etc) on Tuesday launched an “AI Video Hub,” which will offer services from a handful of established AI directors at “a fraction of the cost” of traditional production, Fiverr CMO Matti Yahav says.

    That includes Billy Bioman, the Stockholm-based director who has created AI brand videos for Google, Universal Music Group and Klarna, among others. In a marketing stunt connected to the launch, Fiverr constructed a 30-foot tall, 230-foot wide billboard of Boman’s name overlooking the 101 Freeway, meant to evoke the Hollywood sign.

    It also includes The Dor Brothers, who created Snoop Dogg’s first AI-generated music video, and other directors with experience using AI tools for commercial work.

    Indeed, commercials, especially for smaller businesses, seem to be the logical market for Fiverr’s marketplace. Big brands, after all, can pick and choose who they work with on a project by project basis, and have no problem leveraging the human creativity of big agencies (many of which are also embracing AI tools).

    And while Fiverr is framing its marketplace as a disruption of the Hollywood studio system, it seems to be more disruptive to Madison Ave, which has never quite been able to crack advertising for small and mid-size businesses, given the obvious economic constraints.

    Car companies have massive marketing budgets. Car dealers do not.

    The AI directors will create brand films, social media content and even commercials that can run on TV or streaming platforms.

    “For decades, brand video has been at the mercy of the Hollywood production playbook: big crews, big agencies, big budgets, and months of lead time,” said Yahav in a statement. “That model is breaking. The directors in this hub are producing work that stands next to anything coming out of a traditional studio, and they’re doing it faster, leaner, and for a fraction of the cost. We put a 30-foot sign on a hillside in LA because this is where the entertainment industry has always announced what comes next. This is what comes next.”

    “A year ago, I was constrained by what was technically possible. Now I’m constrained only by what I can imagine, and that changes everything about how a brand can tell its story,” added Boman. “My name on that hillside next to one of the most famous landmarks in entertainment history says something about where this industry is heading. The old gatekeepers built incredible things. But the gates are open now, and the directors walking through them don’t need a studio lot or a seven-figure budget to deliver at that level.”

  • The US should end the war asap

    United States President Donald Trump’s instincts are correct. He wants to end the current engagement as soon as possible. He is using both a carrot and a stick to achieve that result. The carrot he offers is to spare Iran’s electricity grid and energy industry from further destruction. The stick, of course, is more bombing and possibly a ground invasion.

    He should lean more in the direction of the carrot.

    Destroying Iran’s energy infrastructure would result in an environmental disaster and make it an economic basket case for years to come. It would create a legion of refugees who would eventually make their way to Europe and possibly the US.

    These refugees, unlike those who left Iran after the Iranian revolution of 1979, would not be blaming the ayatollahs for taking away their freedoms. They would hate America for what it did to them and their homeland. They would be a destabilising force on the world stage. I guarantee this would come back to bite us here in the US.

    Obviously, coming up with an immediate negotiated peace would be preferable, but even if there were no agreement, it would be good for the US to simply leave. If we called a unilateral ceasefire and simply left the region, the Iranian regime would have a vested interest in opening the Strait of Hormuz because it would help its economy. This would immediately lower oil prices globally.

    And what if the Iranians continued terrorising cargo ships as they tried to move their product? Well, that would incite an immediate reaction from our allies, trade partners and competitors. It would not simply be our problem; it would be everybody’s problem. And my assumption is that the Iranian regime would back off pretty quickly in the face of a global reaction.

    Regime change will not happen during this current campaign. Regimes do not collapse when bombs are dropping. But that does not mean that the current efforts have not been successful in weakening the governing structure.

    As the Trump administration calls a halt to its ongoing campaign, it should also work to arm insurgent groups who have the will but not the weaponry to overthrow the Islamic republic. It is too much to ask our friends inside the country to keep bringing only knives to what clearly will be a series of gunfights.

    Of course, the number one reason to end this war now is domestic politics. The American people do not want it, and they certainly do not want the higher petrol prices that have accompanied it.

    Affordability is the buzzword among all the political pundits here in the US. But I do not think it is just expensive products that make voters grumpy. It is the anxiety that suffuses during any wartime engagement.

    Voters do not know how this is all going to play out. They already have plenty of other things that are making them worried about the future. Artificial intelligence is threatening their livelihoods. Data centres are sucking up water and electricity and increasing utility prices. Political conflict has led to staffing shortages at the Transportation Security Administration, making air travel more uncertain.

    Add war to the mix, with the threat of Iranian sleeper cells, and you have an American populace on edge. None of this is conducive to winning an election.

    Republicans still have a chance to keep control of Congress – both the House and the Senate – but that requires that the Trump administration immediately change the focus from international conflict to domestic concerns. The American people care more about what is happening around their neighbourhoods and the cost of food at their dining room tables than about foreign adventures.

    I still remember well when President George H W Bush had approval ratings of 91 percent shortly after the first Iraq War. But by the time he ran for re-election, voters cared less about the impressive celebratory military parade that he hosted in Washington, DC, in June 1991 and more about their own pocketbooks.

    Bush did not have much of a vision thing, while his opponent, Bill Clinton, a draft dodger and notorious womaniser, was focused on the economic issues like a laser beam. It was the economy, stupid, he told his campaign team.

    If Trump wants Congress to stay in Republican hands, he needs to remember that it is still the economy, stupid. Ending this war sooner rather than later makes it much easier to turn the focus back on the American people, right where they want it.

    The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.

  • Jon Bernthal’s ‘Punisher’ TV Special Titled ‘One Last Kill” and Sets May Release Date, Same Day as ‘Daredevil: Born Again’ Season 2 Finale

    Jon Bernthal’s ‘Punisher’ TV Special Titled ‘One Last Kill” and Sets May Release Date, Same Day as ‘Daredevil: Born Again’ Season 2 Finale

    After returning in “Daredevil: Born Again” Season 1, Jon Bernthal is back for his Marvel Special Presentation, “Punisher: One Last Kill,” set to release May 12 — the same day as the “Daredevil: Born Again” Season 2 finale.

    Bernthal originally starred as Frank Castle in Season 2 of Netflix’s “Daredevil” series in 2016. He faced off against Charlie Cox’s blind vigilante, and later teamed up with him. Castle, a military veteran driven to vengeance after the massacre of his family, proved to be popular enough to headline his own “Punisher” spinoff show that ran for two seasons from 2017 until 2019.

    Netflix’s street level heroes, including Bernthal’s Punisher, Cox’s Daredevil and Krysten Ritter’s Jessica Jones, slowly made their way back into the MCU. After his Netflix show ended, Cox reprised his role as lawyer Matt Murdock in “Spider-Man: No Way Home,” then “She-Hulk: Attorney at Law” and “Echo.” In 2025, he starred in the revival series “Daredevil: Born Again” on Disney+, which was the first M-rated Marvel series. Bernthal also appeared on the show, reuniting with Cox and teaming up with him against corrupt New York City mayor Wilson Fisk (Vincent D’Onofrio), aka the Kingpin. After the success of “Daredevil: Born Again,” which is renewed through Season 3, it was revealed Bernthal would star in his own Punisher MCU special.

    But that’s not all for Bernthal’s character: He’ll also appear in “Spider-Man: Brand New Day” with Tom Holland. Fellow MCU characters like Mark Ruffalo’s Hulk and Michael Mando’s Scorpion from “Spider-Man: Homecoming” will also reappear in the movie.

  • Jay-Z Says Kendrick-Drake Beef Went Too Far by ‘Bringing People’s Kids In,’ Explains Why He Refused to Settle Sexual Assault Lawsuit: ‘I Would Die’

    Jay-Z Says Kendrick-Drake Beef Went Too Far by ‘Bringing People’s Kids In,’ Explains Why He Refused to Settle Sexual Assault Lawsuit: ‘I Would Die’

    The past decade has taught us to wake up to surprises, but it’s probably safe to say Jay-Z’s first interview in many years — let alone a sprawling conversation drawn from four hours of interviews — was not very high on the list of possibilities.

    In a long, long interview with GQ senior editor Frazier Tharpe tapping out at nearly 8,000 words — and in advance of his concerts at Yankee Stadium and the Roots Picnic this summer — Jay talked about a wide range of topics, from his early career to being a billionaire, being a father, being a Black businessman, the painful sexual-assault lawsuit he refused to settle last year, and much more.

    Yet the item the streets — both today’s and the ones he came up in 40 years ago — are most hungry for is probably his thoughts on the Kendrick LamarDrake beef and Lamar’s Super Bowl performance.

    That part of the conversation begins with Jay’s thoughts his Roc Nation company overseeing Super Bowl’s Halftime talent. “For a lot of years, it was only one side of music that was being represented for whatever reason,” he says, clearing noting that most of the talent before he took the helm in 2019 was white and male. “We got the opportunity to create a more balanced idea of what popular music is today. I’m not going out on a limb. These are the most famous people in the world. I didn’t pick the indie artist that I really like from Portland. [This was] the number one streamed artist in the world. ‘I got an idea, let’s let him [Bad Bunny] play.’ [Laughs.] It’s Rihanna!”

    The interviewer then suggests how much Jay must have enjoyed Lamar’s performance last year because it was a solo rap headliner.

    “Yeah, for sure,” Jay replied. “[Lamar] could have made it a little easier on himself. The artistic choice to play the new album was brave in front of that big of an audience. Because even if 10 million people know some of these songs, there’s 120 million people that’re like, ‘What is he doing?’ As an artist, to stand up there and do it and complete your vision — I had to tip my hat. I had high respect for him already, but, like, even more my respect was like: He’s really about what he says he’s about.”

    The interviewer then references Jay’s early ‘00s beef with Nas, saying, “As someone who was part of the genre’s biggest rap beef —” before Jay interjects, “Well, until now.” — the interviewer completes the thought, “As a spectator, what did you think of the 2024 back-and-forth between Kendrick and Drake?”

    Jay then takes a long route to getting to what he describes as, “an answer you’re not going to like. Well, I don’t know if you’re going to like it. That’s presumptuous. There are four pillars of hip-hop. There’s breakdancing, graffiti, there’s DJ’ing and battling. Breakdance is not at the forefront of rap anymore. It’s actually an Olympic sport. So that’s dead [laughs]. Graffiti, beautiful in certain places. It’s not part of hip-hop. The DJ was in the forefront. It was Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince. Eric B. and Rakim. You don’t even know the DJ for half of the artists anymore. And the last pillar is battling. We love the excitement and I love the sparring, but in this day and age there’s so much negative stuff that comes with it that you almost wish it didn’t happen.”

    He continues, “Now, people that like Kendrick hate Drake, no matter what he makes. It’s like an attack on his character. I don’t know if I love that. I don’t know if it’s helpful to our growth where the fallout lands, especially on social media.

    “It’s too far. It’s bringing people’s kids in it. I don’t like that. I sound like the old guy wagging his finger, but I think we can achieve the same thing, as far as sparring with music, with collaborations more so than breaking the whole thing apart. It could stand it before because there was no social media. You had the battle and it was fun and then you moved on. Right now, I don’t know if it could stand it with the technology that we have.

    He concludes, It’s like trying to tear down people’s lives. I don’t know if it’s worth it at this point. I love the idea that we got so much music in such a short period of time. Just everything around it was like, ‘Man, this is taking us a couple steps back.’ We’ve just grown so much that — I guess I’m going to say it — I don’t know if battling needs to be part of the culture anymore. We grew from breakdancing. We love graffiti. Before, the MC’s job was to bring attention to the DJ…. I want to hear what the rapper is saying.

    “Now the last pillar is battling, and these are all the things that come with it. I hate that I have this point of view on it. I do. Because I know what it sounds like. It’s just how I feel about it.”

    Jay later added to his comment, saying, “There is clearly an agenda to silence voices in our community, a heavy right wing agenda. And the culture is happily playing along in the name of this insane thirst of Stan culture to have something on the other side. We are in a strange time. I’m curious as to how this plays out!”

    The interviewer then noted that Jay’s choice of Lamar for the Super Bowl made it seem like he was choosing side.

    “I chose the guy that was having a monster year,” he replied. “I think it was the right choice. What do I care about them two guys battling? What’s that got to do with me? Have at it. They drag everybody in it, like everyone’s part of this conspiracy to undermine Drake, I guess. But, it’s like, what the fuck? I’m fucking Jay-Z! [Laughs.] All due respect to him. I’m fucking Hov. Respectfully. It doesn’t make any sense. It couldn’t be that these guys just don’t like each other. I think this has been brewing, just like me and Nas was brewing. It didn’t happen at the Summer Jam — that happened with ‘Lex with TV sets, the minimum.’ It was a whole bunch of stuff leading up to that point. I actually regret that because I really like Nas. He’s a really nice guy.

    Jay later added, “I realize it’s a bit hypocritical because of how many battles I’ve been in, and given the nature of ‘Super Ugly.’ It takes growth to arrive at this place, because I’ve done the bullshit too!”

    Yet he ends on a positive note, saying, “I’m careful because I always hear that person talking about the new culture of folks. And I always was like, “Shut the fuck up. You had your time.” So I’m really careful to let people just do their thing…  I accept it all. I trust that you guys are going to take it in a proper direction.”

    Surprisingly, the interview starts with the sexual-assault lawsuit, the gravity of which becomes apparent because it’s Jay’s answer to the interviewer’s question, “How was your 2025?”

    “It was hard,” Jay replies. “Really hard. I was heartbroken. I’m glad we got right to that so we could just get that out the way. Like I was really heartbroken by everything that occurred. We’re in a space now where it’s almost like consequence is not thought about enough. Because everything is so instant, you know what I’m saying?

    “That whole [lawsuit thing], that shit took a lot out of me,” he continues. “I was angry. I haven’t been that angry in a long time, uncontrollable anger. You don’t put that on someone — that’s a thing that you better be super sure. It used to be like that. You had to be super sure before you put those kind of things on a person. Especially a person like me. Even when we were doing the worst things, we had those kind of rules. There was a line: no women, no kids. You hear those sayings, but those are the things that I took from the street. We lived and died by that. So it’s strict for me, like it meant a lot to me.

    “I took that really hard. I knew that we were going to walk through that because, first of all, it’s not true. And the truth, at the end of the day, still reigns supreme.”

    He then explained why he chose to fight the lawsuit rather than the arguably simpler course of settling. “I can’t take a settlement — it ain’t in my DNA,” he said. “First of all, first I had to tell my wife. Let’s back up. I know the weight that this is going to bring on our family. I can’t do it. I would die.

    “If I settled — make that thing go away. And for me, it would’ve been cheaper? Yes. Cheaper, quicker, move on with your life. I knew what was coming. I wasn’t naive. I called — again, after my family — my partners. They were like, ‘What do you need to help? Don’t even worry.’ In a phone call. Not even a: ‘I got to go to the board with this.’ It was like a testament because people know me. Like: ‘I know who you are and that’s impossible. Not only are we standing by you, but what do you need?’

    Asked how he’s been recovering, he said, “I’m still dealing with that. Because that’s a horrible thing to put on someone. It was like released the night of my daughter’s [movie] premiere,” for “The Lion King.”

    He even said he briefly considered the possibility of not attending, “because this is her moment,” he said. “But our family, we are a tight unit. Blue has this jersey with ‘Jay-Z’ on the back. She put it on one day. She went to school with the “Jay” [points to his back]. I was just in the corner, like tears coming down. Seriously. To have that, it’s priceless. People can say that [they’ll always be there for you], but it’s very rare that you’re going to have to exercise it. And in the darkest moment for me, I got to see those sorts of things.”

    Read the full interview here.

  • Joey Fatone Is Producing an ID Doc Series About the Dark Side of Boy Bands

    NSYNC‘s Joey Fatone is serving as executive producer on an upcoming documentary series that will chronicle the dark side of the boy band boom of the 1990s, ID announced on Tuesday.

    Boy Band Confidential is set to premiere on April 13 and 14, and it will feature interviews from the likes of NSYNC’s Lance Bass, Backstreet Boys‘ AJ McLean,  and Boyz II Men’s Wanya Morris and Shawn Stockman, among others.

    “Being in a boy band was one of the greatest experiences of my life — but it also came with challenges we didn’t always understand at the time,” Fatone said in a statement of the upcoming series. “This project gave all of us a chance to reflect, to be honest and to share what really happened behind the spotlight.”

    In a press release, ID said the upcoming series “exposes the secret machinery of manufactured superstardom and the devastating human cost of the era’s glossy perfection.” In a statement, ID president Jason Sarlanis called Boy Band Confidential  “an honest, unfiltered look at a cultural phenomenon that shaped an entire generation.”

    “With Joey Fatone bringing together a who’s who of artists from the era’s most iconic boy bands, we’re illuminating the pressures, vulnerabilities and surprising realities of life at the height of pop stardom with a level of access rarely achieved in music documentaries,” Sarlanis said.

    Boy Band Confidential comes ahead of ID’s second season of Hollywood Demons. The series isn’t the network’s first time taking a deeper look at the exploitation and abuse stars face in Hollywood; ID had a hit in Quiet on Set back in 2024, exploring allegations of a toxic environment on classic Dan Schneider television shows.

    Watch the trailer for Boy Band Confidential below.

  • Bill Cosby found guilty of 1972 sexual assault, victim awarded nearly $60m

    Bill Cosby found guilty of 1972 sexual assault, victim awarded nearly $60m

    The actor faces allegations of sexual misconduct by at least 60 women, all of which he denies.

    A United States jury has found stand-up comedy and television superstar Bill Cosby liable for drugging and sexually assaulting a woman in 1972, awarding her $59.25m.

    After a nearly two-week trial in Santa Monica, California, jurors on Monday found the 88-year-old guilty of the sexual battery and assault of Donna Motsinger, who was a server at a restaurant in Sausalito near San Francisco at the time of the aggression.

    Recommended Stories

    list of 3 itemsend of list

    In her lawsuit, filed in 2023, Motsinger said Cosby had invited her to his stand-up comedy show at a theatre in nearby San Carlos. Both were in their 30s at the time.

    She said Cosby gave her wine and two pills that she believed were aspirin, and that she was going in and out of consciousness as two men put her in a limousine.

    “She woke up in her house with all her clothes off,” the lawsuit said. “She knew she had been drugged and raped by Bill Cosby.”

    In court filings, Cosby’s lawyers argued that the allegations rested almost entirely on speculation and assumption, saying Motsinger “freely admits that she has no idea what happened”.

    Cosby did not testify at the trial, whose witnesses included Andrea Constand, the Temple University sports administrator he was convicted of sexually assaulting in a Pennsylvania criminal court in 2018. The state’s Supreme Court threw out the verdict, and Cosby was freed from prison after serving nearly three years of a three- to 10-year sentence.

    The once beloved actor, known as “America’s Dad” for his role on the Cosby Show, was the first celebrity to be convicted after the #MeToo movement was popularised following a number of allegations against well-known individuals in October 2017.

    Motsinger’s lawsuit echoed allegations of rape, sexual assault and sexual harassment made by at least 60 women against Cosby, all of which he has denied.

    The jury awarded Motsinger $17.5m in past damages and $1.75m for future damages, including “mental suffering, loss of enjoyment of life, inconvenience, grief, anxiety, humiliation, and emotional distress”.

    Then, in a second phase of the trial on Monday afternoon, it awarded an additional $40m in punitive damages.

    Cosby has settled several similar lawsuits and has been ordered to pay in others, but Monday’s award is likely the most he has had to pay in a case.

    His lawyer, Jennifer Bonjean, said they were disappointed in the outcome and would appeal the verdict.

    Motsinger said the verdict was not about her but about holding Cosby accountable. “I have carried the weight of what happened to me for more than 50 years. It never goes away,” she said.

    “Today, a jury saw the truth and held him accountable. That means everything. I hope this gives strength to other survivors who are still waiting for their moment to be heard.”