Hate Crime Charge Considered Against White Supremacist Who Ran Over Black Teen

Authorities in Oregon are probing whether the death of an African-American teen at the hands of an alleged white supremacist is a hate crime.

“That’s currently the subject of the ongoing active investigation,” Multnomah County Deputy District Attorney Don Rees told The Huffington Post on Friday.

Russell Courtier, a 38-year-old ex-con with a lengthy rap sheet, and his girlfriend, 35-year-old Colleen Hunt, have been charged with murder in an August hit-and-run that caused the death of 19-year-old Larnell Malik Bruce Jr.

Rees said Courtier has ties to the white supremacist group European Kindred, which the Southern Poverty Law Center described in 2010 as “one of the most feared white supremacist gangs in the Pacific Northwest.”

According to the probable cause affidavit obtained by HuffPost, Bruce was charging his cellphone at a 7-Eleven in Gresham on Aug. 10. Just before midnight, Courtier and Hunt pulled into the store’s parking lot in a red Jeep Wrangler, with Courtier behind the wheel.

Moments after the couple’s arrival, Courtier and Bruce got into a verbal dispute. The reason for the dispute is not yet known, but police have said the two men had no known connection. The dispute quickly led to an all-out brawl, with Courtier slamming the teen’s head into the storefront window, cracking a pane of glass.

“Get him, baby,” Hunt urged her boyfriend during the fight, according to witnesses cited in the affidavit. “Get him, baby!”

Bruce, police said, turned the tables when he produced a machete and forced Courtier to retreat to his vehicle, at which time, according to the affidavit, a witness heard Hunt tell Courtier to “run Mr. Bruce over.”

What happened next was partially captured by video surveillance cameras.

The footage, police said, shows Bruce walking away from the 7-Eleven as Courtier exits the parking lot and speeds toward the teen in his Jeep.

“The video surveillance showed Mr. Bruce take evasive maneuvers on foot in an attempt to escape Mr. Courtier’s Jeep,” the affidavit states. “The video surveillance then shows the red Jeep quickly turn around and accelerate towards Mr. Bruce.”

Bruce, police said, ran into oncoming traffic in an attempt to flee from Courtier. Moments later, he and the Jeep were out of the camera’s view.

When police responded to a 911 call placed by an employee of the 7-Eleven, they found a gravely injured Bruce lying on the ground not far from the convenience store. Blood was streaming out of the teen’s nose and ears. Officers later learned he suffered a traumatic brain injury when he was struck by the Jeep.

Courtier and Hunt, who were taken into custody shortly after the incident, voluntarily spoke with investigators, police said.

According to the affidavit, Courtier admitted getting into an altercation with Bruce.

“Mr. Courtier said he was angry the male produced a knife and thought about driving away from the scene, however [he] made a conscious decision to drive his vehicle towards and chase the black male,” the document states. “Mr. Courtier said he chased the black male across oncoming lanes of traffic and then intentionally struck him with the front of his vehicle.”

Hunt allegedly told police a similar story and said she saw Bruce roll across the hood of the vehicle and fall to the ground.

The pair were initially charged with attempted murder and assault. However, when Bruce succumbed to his injuries a few days later, the couple was indicted for murder.

The teen’s father, Larnell Bruce Sr., did not respond to a request for comment from HuffPost. In an interview with KATU News, he said he believes in an eye for an eye.

“I believe what he [did] was horrific,” Bruce Sr. said of Courtier. “My faith says that the Lord will forgive him. I don’t have to forgive him until the Lord’s taken him. So I don’t have to forgive him until he’s dead. That’s what I want to see ― him dead.”

In an interview with KPTV News, friends and family described Bruce as a kind young man who was caught up in addiction and life on the streets.

“He’s a good kid,” family friend Vanessa Galindo told KPTV. “He had a hard life.”

According to The Portland Mercury, Courtier spent a significant portion of his adult life behind bars, with multiple arrests for violent crimes. He was reportedly on parole at the time of the August incident for attacking a woman with a knife.

Prison records obtained by the Mercury show Courtier racked up nearly 40 prison violations between 2001 and 2013. The violations reportedly consisted of assaults, his alleged association with European Kindred members, and allegedly throwing a piece of paper smeared with feces at a guard.

Little is known about Hunt. Public records indicate she grew up in Anaheim, California. It remains unclear when she arrived in Oregon.

“Growing up with Colleen, she was very hard and mean and everyone was afraid of her,” said a former classmate of Hunt’s who attended Canyon High School with her. The classmate, who asked not to be identified for fear of retaliation, said Hunt was “scary and got in a ton of fights.”

“During high school I remember she disappeared, and I haven’t seen her since.”

Courtier and Hunt, who are being held without bond, have both entered not guilty pleas in the case. They are expected to appear in court again on Oct. 3.

Rees said hate crime-related charges will be filed against Courtier if enough evidence can be found to prove the connection in court “beyond a reasonable doubt.” However, in Oregon there are minimal consequences associated with that charge.

“In terms of a sentence, the murder charge is really the big bang,” Rees said. “In Oregon we have mandatory sentencing in place, so if convicted of murder the defendant must receive ― it’s non-discretionary with the court ― a life sentence. Having said that, the [hate crime] angle is under investigation, but I don’t want people to have the illusion this person is getting away with anything at this point.”

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Sarah Michelle Gellar And Freddie Prinze Jr. Are Still Madly In Love

Be still, our teenage hearts! Sarah Michelle Gellar and Freddie Prinze Jr. just celebrated their 14th wedding anniversary, and they’re still as in love as ever.

Happy anniversary @realfreddieprinze You stole my heart, so I got my revenge and took your last name!!

A photo posted by Sarah Michelle (@sarahmgellar) on Sep 1, 2016 at 3:25am PDT

On Thursday, the “Cruel Intentions” actress posted a throwback pic on Instagram to mark the relationship milestone, writing, “Happy anniversary! You stole my heart, so I got my revenge and took your last name!”

Shhhh…..don’t tell the #kids. We snuck out for a #datenight after they were #adultsonly @realfreddieprinze

A photo posted by Sarah Michelle (@sarahmgellar) on Apr 30, 2016 at 9:30am PDT

The couple first met on the set of the 1997 movie “I Know What You Did Last Summer,” but didn’t begin dating until three years later. Turns out, their first date happened by accident. 

“We had made plans for dinner with a mutual friend and the person canceled,” Gellar told People after the couple’s 2002 wedding in Mexico. “We decided to have dinner anyway and never looked back.”

Now the pair are parents to two kids: a son Rocky and a daughter Charlotte. 

One more day to me #bae first #cookbook goes on sale. I am so proud!! #backtothekitchen (it’s a family affair)

A photo posted by Sarah Michelle (@sarahmgellar) on Jun 6, 2016 at 7:03am PDT

#prinze family roll #airportstyle

A photo posted by Sarah Michelle (@sarahmgellar) on Jun 17, 2016 at 9:39pm PDT

During an AOL Build panel in June, Prinze said starting as friends laid a solid foundation for the couple’s romantic relationship. 

“She knew the kind of guy I was, I knew the kind of girl she was, and the trust part didn’t have to be earned because it already was,” he said.

And that no matter how effortless their marriage might appear, keeping the spark alive does take work. 

“We were fortunate enough to be at the right times in our lives where we both wanted something serious and it worked,” Prinze said. “So we’re lucky, but we also work very hard at it. It’s not just dumb luck, it’s work.”

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Know How Larry The Cable Guy May Affect The Election? Take The Fark Weird News Quiz

Larry the Cable Guy did something this week that may have a bearing on the presidential election.

If you know what that is, take the Fark Weird News Quiz.

 

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

This Program Is Changing the Syrian Narrative One Classroom at a Time

One year ago, the world mourned the death of Alan Kurdi. He was a Syrian toddler who drowned on his way to a better life, and his image stuck with all of us, humanizing the tragic toll of a war that keeps being forgotten. Weeks ago, another Syrian boy, Omran Daqneesh, made headlines around the world. His stunned and bloodied face as he sat in the back of an ambulance was another reminder of the horror, another wake-up call to finally do something about the situation in Syria. The two boys have become symbols of what seems like a never-ending nightmare. They shocked the international community to the core and made many, for at least a short while, say enough is enough.

But with Syria in its sixth year of civil war, the rhetoric surrounding the conflict is worse than ever. When refugee numbers hit 4 million in July of 2015, it became the biggest humanitarian crisis of our time. Then, when the world witnessed recent terror attacks like those in France and Belgium, the events sparked some politicians to link refugees with terrorism. Despite evidence to the contrary, this rhetoric still exists today by some of the leading politicians in the United States, including in the Republican presidential nominee’s call to ban all Muslims from entering America.

When I, Oula, first came to America from Syria, I started organizing protests at the White House in solidarity with my people to raise awareness and to get the media to cover the subject from the people’s perspective. Very few Syrians did that at that time.

As a political asylee who was forced to leave my hometown of Damascus in 2005 due to direct death threats from President Bashar al-Assad to my parents on an account of their human rights activism, I know how the Syrian regime manipulates media in its favor. That’s why it’s crucial to fight the false accusations and the negativity spreading all over the news about Syrians, whether they are about the peaceful protesters in 2011 whom the regime called “terrorists” since the very beginning, or about the millions of Syrian refugees today who are also being accused of terrorism by many sides, not only by the Assad regime, but also by some American public figures and politicians such as Donald Trump.

syria children

This hostile and derogatory dialogue around Syrian refugees in the United States that dominates discussions of the Syrian population needs to change. And one of the best places to start is in the classroom with programs like I Am Syria.

Realizing the need to counter discriminatory statements and false accusations targeting refugees fleeing their war-torn countries, grassroots movements such as I Am Syria have made it their mission to educate students on the Syrian conflict through recent news, articles with leaders in the Syrian movements and lesson plans geared towards the youth.The campaign, which creates an online curriculum for teachers to provide some context of these issues such as the so-called Islamic State and the refugee crisis has been designed to teach the facts, and acknowledge the suffering of the innocent rather than the fear of extremism. The goal is to give students a platform to act on, rather than just observe the conflict that is occurring. Lessons are designed to get students excited to generate change and open up the floor for conversations and positive solutions to combat the negative news about refugees presented in the media. And the images of Alan and Omran, while devastating, seem to increase student empathy for the cause.

From our experience, when students see Syrian children in that situation, their stories and suffering drive them to do something to help, raise awareness and also educate people around them about the issue.

What makes teaching the Syria conflict even more pivotal is how protests in Syria began. The catalyst for the Syrian uprising was a group of 9 to 12 year old boys writing graffiti on their school walls: “The government must go!” These efforts were followed by other students placing their green hands on the walls of their community. The underlying lesson for students is that no matter how small their voice might seem at a young age, it can lead to a global change.

When students see Syrian children in that situation, their stories and suffering drive them to do something to help.

“Learning about current world issues is essential, as it allows students to see and discuss how countries work together to address human rights violations and war,” Thea MacFawn, a teacher from Latham, N.Y. using the curriculum, said. “Teaching about current world issues also provides students the space to articulate their ideas about how to address these conflicts while considering current U.S. foreign policy.”

In our experience, the sad truth is that many students do not know much outside of what they see in the news about the Syrian conflict.

When asked why learning about the Syrian conflict in the classroom is important, James Hoen, a now college freshman, said, “The younger generations live their lives with little concern for others and the troubles they face. They don’t realize that they are blessed with what they have compared to what the Syrians have. One of the ways to get them to appreciate what they have is to teach them about the conflict through school.”

Fellow student Antonio Pecoraro, a college freshman at the time, had a similar sentiment after learning about Syria: “Learning about the hardships the Syrian people have to endure allows students to envision a world that stretches beyond their community, and allows them to become proper and cultured individuals.”

syria children

An injured Syrian child receives treatment at a makeshift hospital following a reported airstike on a rebel-held town east of the capital Damascus, on August 23, 2016. (And Doumany/Getty Images)

Syria is in the heart of the Middle East, the center of a troubled region, and every power whether it’s regional or international has an interest in Syria’s story today. Unlike Vegas, what happens in Syria never stays in Syria, and there are many reasons behind that.

Frustrated protesters cried for the international community’s help, especially America’s help, but no one answered. The world witnessed the bloody crackdown on civilians for years, and the use of chemical weapons by the regime, but turned a blind eye.

Every group is fighting for its own agendas at the expense of the Syrian people who called for freedom and dignity. The dreadful proxy war has muted the voices of the Syrian people and made them hopeless and powerless.

But it doesn’t have to be that way. Voices don’t have to be muted and stories don’t have to go untold.

We are all Alan Kurdi. We are all Omran Daqneesh. We are all Syrian.

Since the creation of the lesson plans, I Am Syria gets hundreds of hits and downloads a month during each school year. Educators around the world have extended the material further and hold events to raise money and awareness for the people of Syria.

Moved by the stories and the struggle of Syrian refugees, Nicole Nederlk’s elementary school students in Charlotte raised more than $500 this spring that they donated to the Convoy of Hope to aid refugees in the Middle East and Europe.

This young North Carolina classroom is not alone. Just this past March, a San Bernardino, Calif. classroom of 4th and 5th graders were inspired to do something after listening to the I Am Syria lesson plans. Selling bracelets to cover shipping costs and asking for shoe donations, they were able to send gently used shoes to a Syrian refugee camp in Jordan.

The work of teaching students compassion and kindness towards Syrian refugees is not a mission only for the United States in the eyes of the I Am Syria staff. They work to reach classrooms internationally as well.

syria children

Children play along a street in rebel-held neighborhood of Aleppo, Syria September 1, 2016. (Reuters/Abdalrhman Ismail)

Karin Etman of the 4T1 Montessori Lyceum School in Amsterdam told us after utilizing the I Am Syria materials, “Together with our pupils we started to join forces and contribute in as many ways as possible to support Syrian people. With compassion, with thoughts, and with our voices, there is always hope.”

Not only does I Am Syria help to educate young students, the material was also designed for refugee students. Jordan Hattar, the co-founder and director of Help4Refugees has worked extensively with Syrian refugees and their children inside the Zaatari Refugee camp in Jordan, teaching English. He explains, “I Am Syria has made learning about the Syrian conflict and assisting Syrian refugees more accessible to those who want to help. Firsthand, I have seen I Am Syria connect those who want to help, with those who need help.”

New York student Calvin Gath was among the first students to get involved with the I Am Syria organization and be taught the educational material in 2012, just one year into the conflict. Calvin describes his thoughts when first learning the material:

“A few years ago, I remember thinking that Syria was just the next in line for their Arab spring revolution, but I didn’t know about the mass atrocities against the Syrian people until I learned from I Am Syria.”

‘It’s easy to get sucked into your immediate surroundings and ignore atrocities as they happen elsewhere in the world.’

For Calvin, the political climate around Syria and Syrian refugees is shocking. “The refugee crisis is such a critical debate in American politics right now,” he added. “And for people to hold opinions on the decisions regarding the lives of millions of people, without understanding the grave circumstances under which those people live, is unfortunate.”

Calvin is dedicated to spreading awareness. He told us he has relayed the importance the campaign on Facebook and to his local congressional representatives.

“It’s easy to get sucked into your immediate surroundings and ignore atrocities as they happen elsewhere in the world, but after I Am Syria I feel obligated to help others when I can, even if it’s something small,” he said.

As the global citizens we are today, our world is connected. Tyranny, war, human rights violations and injustice not only affect one person, they affect all of us. When one nation suffers, we all suffer, and during these critical times, standing together is not only a moral obligation, but it is how we defend our freedom, the right for all mankind. We are all Alan Kurdi. We are all Omran Daqneesh. We are all Syrian.

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New Gene Wilder Portrait Proves He Really Is The 'Candy Man'

Gene Wilder has been the subject of many tributes since his death on Sunday, but the tastiest has to be the portrait done by Jason Mecier.

The San Francisco-based artist recently did a portrait of Wilder as Willy Wonka completely out of candy, including jelly beans, Tic-Tacs, Red Hots and gumballs.

Sorry, no everlasting gobstoppers.

Mecier actually did the portrait weeks before Wilder’s death, only to have it get new attention in the last week, according to the A.V. Club.

“My Willy Wonka candy portrait lives on,” Mecier wrote on Instagram.

A photo of the portrait is going viral, but the real thing is on display at Giddy Candy, a candy store in San Francisco.

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Here's How You Can Exchange Your Samsung Galaxy Note 7

After 35 reports of the Samsung Galaxy Note 7 overheating and exploding, Samsung recalled
the device early Friday morning. Now, Samsung has announced an exchange program for the device, effective immediately. Tim Baxter, the president of Samsung Electronics America, is actively encouraging customers to trade-in their Note 7s, calling the company’s recall “proactive.”

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Google officially ends its Project Ara modular phone initiative

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Alcatel POP 4 tablets debut alongside XL phone at IFA

Joining its wearables and VR gear come some mobile devices from Alcatel, a trio of POP 4 slates including a 6-inch “phablet” smartphone and two tablets with 7-inch and 10-inch displays. The 10-inch model is the most notable of the bunch, coming with a Qualcomm Snapdragon 430 rather than the MediaTek offerings found in the two smaller models. All three … Continue reading

Ubergizmo’s Best of IFA 2016

messe-berlin-best-of-ifaAfter two very intense “Press Days”, all the major products at the IFA trade show in Berlin/Germany have been announced, looked at and covered. The best technology companies in the world took their best shot at demonstrating the value of their new products, and many are impressive, but we think that there are ten that are above all others, the Best of IFA 2016, Here they are, in no particular order:

Samsung Gear S3

Undeniably a head-turner, the new Samsung Gear S3 is a beautifully designed watch with a large 16M color display. It uses premium materials and manufacturing processes but is nonetheless “military tough” with an IP68 rating and extreme cold/heat resistance. It comes it two variants: Gear S3 Classic and Gear S3 Frontier.

samsung_gear_s3_19

The Frontier version has slightly more expensive features and supports LTE. Both run on the Tizen OS and are designed to complement Samsung’s Galaxy 7 Series (S7/S7 Edge/Note 7) and support Samsung Pay MST which is compatible with 90% of credit card point of sales. Read our Gear S3 hands-on review.

Asus ZenWatch 3

Asus-zenwatch-3-leather-01The ASUS Zenwatch 3 is an Android Wear watch which features an updated design from last year’s ZenWatch. This new version looks classier and uses 316L Stainless steel which is highly resistant to corrosion and often used to build medical devices. It is also often used to build jewelry and watches. It has a 1.39” display (287 PPI) and has an IP67 rating, which makes it dust and water-tight. As part of the new design, the ZenWatch 3 has received two extra buttons that should reduce the number of touch-screen interaction. It’s also convenient when using thin gloves. Here’s what we said about the ZenWatch 3 this week.

Moto Z Play

moto-z-play-hands-on_16The Moto Z Play is Motorola’s aggressive entry in the $400 smartphone market. Positioned to please an increasingly savvy public, the Moto Z Play bring a great battery capacity (and therefore battery life) value to the table. It also has a nice-looking glass and metal design, a Super AMOLED 1080p display and a well-designed camera module. But is the built-in camera isn’t enough, it’s possible to plug a Hasselblad MotoMods camera module. Yes, the Moto Z has a built-in extension mechanism in the back, and many modules are available. Here’s more information on the Moto Play Z.

Fitbit Charge 2

Fitbit-charge-2-04The most popular wearable tech vendor (IDC data) is back with an updated fitness device: the Fitbit Charge 2. It provides a continuous heart rate monitoring that has a vastly superior sampling than other non-continuous sensors. Think of it as if Fitbit Surge and a Fitbit Charge HR had an electronics child. The OLED display is now 4X larger, but the battery life remains in the 5-days range. Ubergizmo co-founder Eliane Fiolet took it for a workout prior to IFA and can confirm the 5-day battery life. The Fitbit Charge 2 impresses with the accuracy of its heart rate monitoring and has a new Cardio Fitness Level algorithm that can coach you with many aspects of your workouts. Read our hands-on review of the Fitbit Charge 2.

Garmin Action Cam

Garmin-Virb-Ultra-30-01The Garmin Action Cam is a small, tough and smart Action Cam. It has voice control that let you turn the Camera On and OFF without having to deal with the awful user interfaces action cams normally seem to strive for. That’s particularly true if you are wearing gloves or have dirty hands, like any good adventurers might. On a technical level, it competes with the GoPro Hero 5: 4K/30FPS video recording, LCD display, GPS, Image Stabilization… More info on the Garmin Action Cam.

Lenovo Yoga Book

lenovo-yoga-book--05The tablet market never saw this coming: Lenovo has released a folding tablet that can be ordered with Android or Windows 10. It looks like a mini laptop and is set to dramatically increase the Android tablet productivity experience, or lighten the Windows 10 experience – depending on your OS of choice. Additionally, the keyboard is also a powerful (and large!) Wacom digitizer on which you can take notes with either an electronic pen tip or a ball pen tip. Yes, you can write on regular paper on top of the digitizer, and it will record everything. You no longer have to choose between the “paper feel” and having instant electronic archives of your writing. This is possibly the most innovative device of IFA 2016, and certainly the most innovative tablet of 2016. Read our complete hands-on review of the Yoga Book.

Garmin Fenix Chronos

Garmin-Fenix-Chronos-17Right before the start of IFA, Garmin dropped the Fenix smartwatch into the light, and it was a trending topic for a couple of days. Finally, we had an opportunity to get our hands on it. The Fenix is built as a “luxury” watch and does look like a nice, expensive watch at first glance. Of course, it’s packed with tech: GPS, Altimeter, Thermometer, Pedometer are all there to track your activity or help you predict short-term weather conditions (Barometer). Our favorite version is the Titanium one, which sells for $1500. Hands-on and video of the Garmin Fenix Chronos.

HP Pavilion Wave

HP-Pavilion-Wave_monitorDesktop PCs are usually boring, and when they’re not, they are big and not something you want to show unless you’re a bit nerdy. HP changes this by introducing the HP Pavilion Wave, a desktop PC that clearly doesn’t look like one. Built in partnership with Bang & Olufsen (B&O), the Pavilion Wave is a great-looking desktop PC with a built-in speaker (with B&O, what else?). The result is a powerful computer built with real desktop parts (faster) that will perform, and look superb. Because it’s on your desktop, connectors are easy to access, and the built-in speaker saves additional space because you don’t need the ones with hanging wires. More details about the HP Wave computer.

Parrot Disco FPV Drone

Ubergizmo co-founder Eliane Fiolet during flight tests. Photosby Brian Craig

Ubergizmo co-founder Eliane Fiolet during media flight tests. Photos by Brian Craig

Drone are incredibly fun, and of all companies, Parrot knows better because it was the one that started the consumer drone revolution. Parrot CEO Henri Sedoux presented the Parrot Disco right before the start of IFA, and we had an opportunity to fly it for ourselves. The Parrot Disco drone is wing-based, a design choice that has many advantages over the usual helicopter approach. First, the flight time is vastly improved to 45mn (many drones can only fly 15-25mn). Secondly, the top speed of 50 mph is impressive. That’s even truer when you pilot the drone with the Parrot Cockpitglasses (VR Headset) via the Parrot Skycontroller. Read about our piloting experience with the Parrot Disco drone. [Photo credit: Brian Craig]

Qualcomm Snapdragon VR820

Qualcomm-Snapdragon-VR820-01Qualcomm steps into the future of VR by building this development platform for future virtual reality (VR) devices based on mobile hardware. Powered by the Snapdragon 820 SoC, which is arguably the most powerful mobile VR chip today, the Snapdragon VR820 embeds four cameras (2 for eye-tracking), four microphones, a hiDPI display and the equivalent hardware of a high-end mobile. It is a monolithic VR headset which includes all the computing and sensing required for a totally free, untethered, VR experience. Here’s our take (+video) on the Snapdragon VR820 reference design.

Withings Steel HR Watch

Withings-activite-steel-hr-13Withings (owned by Nokia) launched a new watch with continuous heart-rate monitoring – which means “even when you sleep.” It presents the data on the watch face which is designed to look like a classic French watch with a rather minimalist and classy design. The high point of this watch is its battery life of ~25 days before it goes to “power savings” mode. If you care about health tracking but are notoriously bad to charge your watch – this may be a great option. Hands-on photos and demo of the Withings Steel HR watch.

Ubergizmo’s Best of IFA 2016 , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

This is how much an exploit merchant charges to break encryption

NSO Group, the exploit seller recently linked to a potential activist hack, charges just $650,000 to hack a group of 10 iPhones or Android devices, along with a $500,000 setup fee, the New York Times reports. For that cash outlay you’ll get complete…