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First shipment of latest round of security aid arrives in Kyiv

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The first shipment of a $200 million U.S. security assistance package aimed at boosting Ukrainian defense forces arrived in Kyiv, the U.S. Embassy announced Saturday.

The delivery touched down at Kyiv’s Boryspil International Airport amid heightened tensions stemming from Russia’s troop buildup along its border with Ukraine.

“The donation, which includes close to 200,000 pounds of lethal security assistance, including ammunition for the front line defenders of Ukraine, demonstrates the United States’ strong commitment to Ukraine’s sovereign right to self-defense,” the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv said in a statement.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited Kyiv earlier this week.

The U.S. has committed more than $650 million in security assistance to Kyiv over the past year. The latest aid package to Ukraine was approved in December.

“The United States will continue to provide such assistance to support the Armed Forces of Ukraine, supporting them in relentlessly protecting Ukraine‘s sovereignty and territorial integrity from Russian aggression.,” the embassy said.

Ian Alexander Jr., only child of Regina King, dies at age 26

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NEW YORK — Ian Alexander Jr., the only child of award-winning actor and director Regina King, has died. He turned 26 on Wednesday.

“Our family is devastated at the deepest level by the loss of Ian,” a family statement shared Saturday by a King spokesman said. “He is such a bright light who cared so deeply about the happiness of others. Our family asks for respectful consideration during this private time.”

The spokesman confirmed the death was suicide. No further details were released.

The “One Night in Miami” director shared Alexander with her former husband, record producer Ian Alexander Sr. The two divorced in 2007 after 10 years of marriage. The younger Alexander was a musician and DJ who often accompanied King to red carpet events.

He told E! News at the 2019 Golden Globes: “She’s just a super mom. She doesn’t really let bad work days or anything come back and ruin the time that we have. It’s really awesome to have a mother who I can enjoy spending time with.”

The pair had matching tattoos reading “unconditional love” in Aramaic.

“We were taking Kabbalah classes,” King said on The View in 2017. “He said, let’s choose three designs each and not tell each other which ones they are and whichever one is matching, that’s the one we’re going to get tattooed – and we both chose unconditional love.”

For his mother’s 50th birthday last year, Alexander posted a tribute on Instagram that read in part: “To be able to watch you take this lifetime by its neck and make it yours is something i (sic) will forever be grateful for. But to have you as my mother is the greatest gift I could ask for.”

On Instagram a week ago, King shared a clip of her son’s latest track, “Green Eyes,” urging her followers to check it out. In an interview with People, she once called her son “an amazing young man” and spoke of the love between mother and child.

“You don’t know what unconditional love is. You may say you do, but if you don’t have a child, you don’t know what that is,” said the Oscar, Golden Globe and four-time Emmy winner. “When you experience it, it’s the most fulfilling (thing) ever.”

Word of Alexander’s death spread quickly on social media.

“Deepest condolences and prayers for strength to @ReginaKing. Sending back to her all the warmth and light and support she has extended to me and to so many others,” Sherrilyn Ifill, president and director-counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, posted on Twitter.

King, a star in “If Beale Street Could Talk,” “The Harder They Fall” and numerous other films, is the recipient of two NAACP Image Awards.

Bernice King, the CEO of the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Change and daughter of the civil rights icon, posted on Twitter: “Praying for Regina King. She needs all the grace and light that can flow her way right now.”

Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC.

VanVleet rescues Raptors late in 109-105 win over Wizards

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WASHINGTON — Fred VanVleet hit a tiebreaking 3-pointer with 59 seconds to play, and the Toronto Raptors hung on after blowing an 18-point fourth-quarter lead to beat the Washington Wizards 109-105 on Friday night.

Rookie Scottie Barnes scored a career-high 27 points, VanVleet scored 21 and had 12 assists, Pascal Siakam also scored 21 points for Toronto, which went 2-3 on a five-game trip.

Bradley Beal led Washington with 25 points. He also had eight assists, but committed nine turnovers, equaling his career high. The Wizards, who began the season 10-3, are 13-20 since.

Beal scored 13 points in the fourth quarter, and the Wizards tied the game at 102 on five straight points from Montrezl Harrell, who converted a three-point play and then dunked.

OG Anunoby scored on a layup and Siakam hit two free throws to seal the game.

Toronto took control with a 22-6 run that gave it a 91-77 lead after three quarters. Barnes, the fourth overall pick in the draft, scored 10 points in the third. The Raptors were up 95-77 early in the fourth quarter.

Toronto’s Yuta Watanabe, who didn’t play in the last two games, returned and matched up with Washington’s Rui Hachimura, the second time in NBA history two Japanese players faced each other.

Hachimura had 11 points, and Watanabe didn’t score in six minutes.

TIP-INS

Raptors: G Gary Trent Jr. returned after missing six games with a left ankle injury. He scored 13 points. … G Dalano Banton was sent to Toronto’s G League affiliate.

Wizards: F Kyle Kuzma was out with neck spasms. … “This has been a week of curveballs,” acting coach Joseph Blair said. “We’ve constantly wondered how we’re going to deal with our depth, and this is a good opportunity to utilize it.”

UP NEXT

Raptors: Host Portland on Sunday.

Wizards: Host Boston on Sunday.

Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC.

Weber Grills apologizes for ill-timed meat loaf recipe email

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NEW YORK — Weber picked the wrong day to suggest grilling meat loaf.

The outdoor grill maker apologized on Friday for sending a recipe-of-the-week email earlier that day featuring instructions on how to prepare “BBQ Meat Loaf.”

The email coincided with news of the death of Marvin Lee Aday, best known as rock superstar Meat Loaf.

Not long after sending out its recipe, Weber Grills followed up, offering its “sincerest apologies” to recipients.

“At the time we shared this recipe with you, we were not aware of the unfortunate passing of American singer and actor Mr. Marvin Lee Aday, also known as Meat Loaf,” Weber said. “We want to express our deepest apologies for this oversight and for any offense this email may have caused.”

The company based in Palatine, Illinois, offered its condolences to Aday’s family and fans, signing off as “The Weber Family.”

Meat Loaf, who shot to fame on the back of anthems such as “Paradise By the Dashboard Light” and “Two Out of Three Ain’t Bad,” died Thursday, according to a family statement provided by his longtime agent Michael Greene. He was 74.

Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC.

Google Asks Court to Dismiss Texas Antitrust Case

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Google asked a federal court on Friday to dismiss an antitrust lawsuit led by the State of Texas, the first time it has sought to have one of the government competition cases against it thrown out in the United States.

In a filing, Google said the state had failed to show that it engaged in anticompetitive behavior and hadn’t proved that an agreement between Facebook and Google, a core part of the case, violated the law.

“We’re confident that this case is wrong on the facts and the law, and should be dismissed,” said Adam Cohen, the company’s director of economic policy.

The Texas lawsuit argues that Google has obtained and abused a monopoly over the labyrinthine set of systems that allow publishers to auction off ad space to marketers. The states argue that Google misled publishers and advertisers about the nature of the ad auctions, allowing it to pocket more of the money flowing through its ad systems. And they say the company used a deal with Facebook to maintain its dominance when the publishers tried to develop an alternative system.

“Despite amassing a lengthy collection of grievances, each one comes down to a plea for Google to share its data or to design its products in ways that would help its rivals,” Google said in its filing.

Texas’ attorney general, Ken Paxton, said in a statement: “Google’s motion attributes their monopoly status to pure success on the merits. The company whose motto was once ‘Don’t Be Evil’ now asks the world to examine their egregious monopoly abuses and see no evil, hear no evil, and speak no evil.”

Google faces pressure from governments around the world. In addition to the lawsuit from Texas and more than a dozen other states, the federal government and a different group of states have sued the company, arguing it has abused a monopoly over online search. On Thursday, a Senate committee endorsed an antitrust law meant to crack down on some of its practices — along with Amazon’s and Apple’s — and European lawmakers in Brussels are considering their own new digital antitrust rules.

Google is also not the first tech giant to try to get a recent government antitrust case dismissed. Last year, Facebook asked a federal court to throw out lawsuits filed against it by the Federal Trade Commission and a collection of states. The judge in the case initially agreed. But the F.T.C. refiled its lawsuit, and the judge said this month that it could move forward. The states have appealed.

The Metro Films is Set to Produce G.R. Jerry’s Tom and Lovey Series

The team, led by producers MJ Wolfe and Mark Alvarez are working with a Page Turner Press and Media published book for their next big film. Packed with brutality, enthralling action and adventure, Tom and Lovey is pegged as the next major horror hit in Hollywood. 

The author, G.R. Jerry was born and educated in north shore suburban Ohio. He began to nurture his lifetime interest in the macabre at an early age. After completing a military obligation, exploring the U.S. while expanding his mind during his time spent as a working weekend hippie, and an insurance career that ended in Chicago, he turned to putting dreams to words, the mystical, magical, fantastical images of the mind and the horror of it all. He now resides with his wife, Patricia, corralled in a small village of central New Mexico, surrounded by stories and stars of the dark heavens.

About the book:

On a ten year mission to avenge the brutal sacrifice of her man by Stargut, the local sheriff, himself on a mission to create the perfect man-beast, Lovey, abandoned by her spellbound friend Patty, is joined by a stranger. Tom is a preacher of sorts, who has followed the scent of evil for a hundred years. He mysteriously appears in the Village of Wrong, the rural Midwestern town and its mutant inhabitants, mere creations of the devil lawman. Together the three converge under the moon into the wood down by the river at the doorsteps of hell.

Grab your copy at pageturner.us or Amazon.com

Stock Markets Off to Worst Start Since 2016 as Fed Fights Inflation

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After falling for a fourth day in a row on Friday, the stock market suffered its worst week in nearly two years, and so far in January the S&P 500 is off to its worst start since 2016. Technology stocks have been hit especially hard, with the Nasdaq Composite Index dropping more than 10 percent from its most recent high, which qualifies as a correction in Wall Street talk.

That’s not all. The bond market is also in disarray, with rates rising sharply and bond prices, which move in the opposite direction, falling. Inflation is red hot, and supply chain disruptions continue.

Until now, the markets looked past such issues during the pandemic, which brought big increases in the value of all kinds of assets.

Yet a crucial factor has changed, which gives some market watchers reason to worry that the recent decline may be consequential. That element is the Federal Reserve.

As the worst economic ravages of the pandemic appear to be waning, at least for now, the Fed is ushering in a return to higher interest rates. It is also beginning to withdraw some of the other forms of support that have kept stocks flying since it intervened to save desperately wounded financial markets back in early 2020.

This could be a good thing if it beats back inflation without derailing the economic recovery. But removing this support also inevitably cools the markets as investors move money around, searching for assets that perform better when interest rates are high.

“The Fed’s policies basically got the current bull market started,” said Edward Yardeni, an independent Wall Street economist. “I don’t think they are going to end it all now, but the environment is changing and the Fed is responsible for a lot of this.”

The central bank is tightening monetary policy partly because it has worked. It helped stimulate economic growth by holding short-term interest rates near zero and pumping trillions of dollars into the economy.

This flood of easy money also contributed to the rapid rise in prices of commodities, like food and energy, and financial assets, like stocks, bonds, homes and even cryptocurrency.

What happens next comes from an established playbook. As William McChesney Martin, a former Fed chairman, said in 1955, the central bank finds itself acting as the adult in the room, “who has ordered the punch bowl removed just when the party was really warming up.”

The mood of the markets shifted on Jan. 5, Mr. Yardeni said, when Fed officials released the minutes of their December policymaking meeting, revealing that they were on the verge of embracing a much tighter monetary policy. A week later, new data showed inflation climbing to its highest level in 40 years.

Putting the two together, it seemed, the Fed would have no choice but to react to curb rapidly rising prices. Stocks began a disorderly decline.

Financial markets now expect the Fed to raise its key interest rate at least three times this year and to start to shrink its balance sheet as soon as this spring. It has reduced the level of its bond buying already. Fed policymakers will meet next week to decide on their next steps, and market strategists will be watching.

Low interest rates made certain sectors especially appealing, foremost among them tech stocks. The S&P 500 information technology sector, which includes Apple and Microsoft, has risen 54 percent on an annualized basis since the market’s pandemic-induced trough in March 2020. One reason for this is that low interest rates amplify the value of the expected future returns of growth-oriented companies like these. If rates rise, this calculus can change abruptly.

The very prospect of higher interest rates has made technology the worst-performing sector in the S&P 500 this year. Since its peak in late December, it has fallen more than 11 percent.

The S&P’s three best-performing sectors in the early days of 2022, on the other hand, are energy, financial services and consumer staples.

The energy index is dominated by fossil fuel companies, like Exxon Mobil and Halliburton, whose fortunes have risen along with oil and gas prices. Financial companies can charge more for loans when interest rates are high. Big banks like Wells Fargo have reported bumper earnings over the past week. Consumer companies like Kraft Heinz and Campbell Soup lagged the explosive share price growth of tech stocks earlier in the pandemic, but they have been gaining ground in this new environment.

The stock market, overall, has also lost some of its buoyancy for reasons other than monetary policy. “Stay at home” stocks that flourished during pandemic restrictions, like Netflix and Peloton, have begun to flag as people venture out more.

Some astute market analysts foresee bigger problems. Jeremy Grantham, one of the founders of GMO, an asset manager, predicts a catastrophic end to what he calls a “superbubble.”

But the current losses could be beneficial if they let a little air out of a potential bubble, without bursting investor portfolios. This year’s declines erase only a small share of the market’s gains in recent years: The S&P 500 rose nearly 27 percent last year, more than 16 percent in 2020 and nearly 29 percent in 2019.

And the prospects for corporate earnings remain good. Once the Fed starts to act, and the effects are better understood, the stock market party could continue — at a less giddy pace.

Mandate or no mandate: Businesses take divergent paths after Court nixes Biden’s vaccine rule

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The Supreme Court’s decision to strike down President Biden’s vaccine mandate for the private sector is forcing big companies to take divergent paths with some requiring shots anyway and others deciding it is not worth the bother.

In doing so, executives are dealing with a patchwork of local rules and double-edged pushback from employees who support or oppose mandates.

Starbucks said it would no longer take steps to ensure workers are vaccinated or face weekly testing after the justices issued a stay against the Biden rule from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, which would have imposed the same vaccinate-or-test rule on all companies with 100 or more workers as of Feb. 9.

Carhartt, an apparel company, went in the opposite direction. It reminded employees they were subject to an in-house vaccine mandate regardless of the justices’ ruling.

“We put workplace safety at the very top of our priority list, and the Supreme Court’s recent ruling doesn’t impact that core value,” Carhartt CEO Mark Valade wrote to workers. “An unvaccinated workforce is both a people and business risk that our company is unwilling to take.”

Others companies are on the fence. 

Macy’s department stores began to request the vaccination status of its employees this month but told publications it was “evaluating this late-breaking development” from the court.

A survey by Willis Towers Watson in November found that a third of companies would only forge ahead with mandates if the OSHA rule took effect.

Now that the justices have blocked it, companies are forced to navigate the landscape without a roadmap from Washington.

“In the absence of that, the CEOs are going to proceed on their own and see what their competitors are doing, what works in their workplace,” said Dan Meyer, managing partner of the Tully Rinckey law firm’s Washington office. “We are in a balkanized decision-making arena right now.”

Carhartt’s memo doubling down on the mandate prompted an outcry and calls for a boycott from those who oppose vaccine mandates, even as the union Starbucks Workers United slammed the coffee chain for failing to discuss the issue or negotiate with unionized partners at two locations in the Buffalo, New York, area.

“This comes after partners at [one location] raised COVID safety concerns that the company rebuffed. Once again, this shows why Starbucks partners need a union to have a voice in these critical matters,” the union said in a statement to The Washington Times.

Starbucks’ corporate office simply made preparations to comply with the OSHA regulation in January and then complied with the ruling, which suspended the vaccinate-or-test regimen. It said the vast majority of company employees are fully vaccinated and it strongly encourages workers to get the shots.

“Given the court’s ruling, we expect more jurisdictions may move quickly to pass local mandates. Starbucks will continue to follow all laws, mandates and public health regulations,” wrote John Culver, the group president for North America and chief operating officer at Starbucks.

Indeed, local regulations and private employers’ decisions are dictating the way forward now, as Mr. Biden struggles to preserve his federal mandate.

A federal judge issued an order Friday halting Mr. Biden’s order that all federal employees get the coronavirus vaccine or risk losing their jobs, saying the president overstepped his powers.

Judge Jeffrey Vincent Brown, a Trump appointee to the bench in Texas, issued a nationwide injunction, meaning that of the four major vaccine mandates the Biden administration has promulgated, three are now blocked.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said it would be up to the Justice Department to decide the next steps but suggested the idea of the mandate has already worked.

“First, let me update you that 98% of federal workers are vaccinated. That is a remarkable number,” she said.

Private companies who believe in strong mandates are driving ahead regardless of the high-profile rulings.

“Biden’s failure to get OSHA mandates did not hugely overturn existing mandates in companies and health care institutions. Some big industries that were waiting did not proceed but many — I don’t know percentage — did not drop their existing requirements,” said Art Caplan, director of the division of medical ethics at the New York University Grossman School of Medicine.

Citigroup, a major bank, reported last week that 99% of its employees complied with its vaccine mandate before a Jan. 14 deadline.

Also, JP Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon recently told CNBC the bank will take a hard line at its New York City headquarters.

“To go to the office you have to be vaxxed and if you aren’t going to get vaxxed you won’t be able to work in that office,” he said last week. “And we’re not going to pay you not to work in the office.”

United Airlines, which loudly and proudly imposed mandate months ago, says its rules are preventing severe disease and death.

Even though 3,000 United Airlines workers were infected with the virus amid the omicron wave this month, “zero of our vaccinated employees are currently hospitalized,” CEO Scott Kirby said in a Jan. 11 letter to employees. “Prior to our vaccine requirement, tragically, more than one United employee on average per week was dying from COVID.”

Mr. Meyer said companies with a vaccine mandate will tend to have a more stable workforce but industries that suffer from high turnover rates might avoid mandates so they don’t lose workers who object to new rules.

“Companies are going to do what’s prudent for the company’s business line,” he said. “The more we have to go through this, the more companies will get used to it.”

Stephen Dinan contributed to this report.

For more information, visit The Washington Times COVID-19 resource page.

Mark McMorris in search of one more win: Olympic snowboard gold

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ASPEN, Colo.— Mark McMorris points to the top of his leg. “I have a femur rod here,” he says.

Then, to the top of his arm. “A big plate in my humerus.”

And at his face. “Plates put into my jaw but I had one of them removed.”

McMorris has endured quite a pounding over more than a decade of hard riding for Canada’s most-decorated snowboarder. At 28 and heading into his third Olympics, he is missing one thing from an already awe-inspiring career.

Of the 25 medals he has won over the past 10 years at major events, not one is an Olympic gold.

McMorris will be on the mountain Saturday for the slopestyle and big air contests, where he’ll be going for his 10th and 11th gold medals at the Winter X Games. Next month, he’ll get two more chances to win his first Olympic title in those same events at the Beijing Games.

“Of course it’s something that I really want to get, and it’s something I know I can get,” McMorris says. “But it’s not going to make or break me.”

Given what he‘s been through, it’s laughable to think a medal would make or break him. Among McMorris‘ most ill-timed injuries came at the Winter X Games in 2014 when he broke ribs during his final slopestyle run at the X Games. He recovered to win a bronze medal less than a month later in Sochi.

In 2016, he shattered his femur after catching a toe edge on the landing at a big air contest.

He was able to recover from that in time to start the 2016-17 season and earn his spot on the highly competitive Canadian team for the 2018 Olympics.

But there is more to snowboarding than contests, and one reason McMorris has gained such a devoted following over the years is that he loves taking to the backcountry, as well.

It was there in March 2017, with the fog rolling in, that McMorris, on an outing with his brother Craig and a group of friends, slammed into a tree and had to be helicoptered to the ICU. Footage from the bloody, gruesome accident is included in the gut-wrenching documentary “Unbroken,” which goes through McMorris‘ accident and recovery.

He broke his jaw, his arm and also suffered a collapsed lung and ruptured spleen. He was placed into an induced coma, and when he came out of it, he was certain his career as a high-level snowboarder was over.

“The call came from Craig and when he said, ‘You have to come, it’s serious,’ then panic set in,” McMorris‘ mother, Cindy, said in the documentary.

After the tubes and needles started coming out, doctors told McMorris there was a chance that he could get back to where he was again. The idea he would pass on that chance never occurred to him.

“I don’t know what else I would do if I had just called it quits at 23,” McMorris said. “And I’m happy with my choice to keep pushing. I think it’s a feel-good story for anyone. If an athlete gets hurt, and gets a chance to get close to 100 percent again and do what you love, then why wouldn’t you try?”

Less than 12 months later, McMorris was in the starting gate. He won another bronze medal in Pyeongchang – nothing less than amazing given both the physical and mental obstacles he had to overcome.

“The trauma is going be around for my whole life,” McMorris said in the documentary. “It was a snowboard accident and I snowboard every day. How are you really supposed to forget about it?”

Since then, he has gotten better and stronger, but just as he was rebounding, he suffered another blow – this one to his heart: His close friend, Jake Burton Carpenter, died after a relapse with testicular cancer. Burton Carpenter is the inventor of the modern-day snowboard, and the man who has supported so many riders on their journeys.

McMorris was one of his closest friends, and as the 2019-20 season wound down, he conceded that Burton’s death impacted his performance.

“It’s not like I’m thinking about him while I’m snowboarding down in my contest run, but it’s just, like, everything else,” McMorris said in March 2020. “It’s everyone coming up to you, saying ’Hey, sorry.’ It’s just nonstop. And everything reminds you of the guy.”

Nearly two years later, some of those wounds have healed, and McMorris‘ riding has grown stronger.

“I’m at peace with it but I miss … him,” McMorris said in his recent AP interview. “But it’s a little bit easier to shred and think of him and like, know he‘s there.”

As is the case on the halfpipe, the stakes and difficulty are ever-increasing on the slopestyle and big air courses. An 1800 – a jump with five full rotations – could be what’s needed to win a title in either event, and there are about a half-dozen riders who can do it.

As he has shown time and again, McMorris feels the risk is worth it.

“Winning the Olympics can really help set you up for life,” McMorris said. “Yes, it’s just one side of snowboarding, and it’s one event that comes around once every four years, but it holds a lot of weight.”

Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC.

Parag Agrawal Shakes Up Twitter’s Security Team

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SAN FRANCISCO — Twitter shook up the top ranks of its security team this week with the termination of the head of security and the exit of the chief information security officer, the company told employees on Wednesday, as its new chief executive reorganizes the social media service.

Peiter Zatko, the head of security, who is better known within the security community as Mudge, is no longer at the company, Twitter confirmed. Rinki Sethi, the chief information security officer, will depart in the coming weeks.

The changes followed “an assessment of how the organization was being led and the impact on top priority work,” according to a memo from Parag Agrawal, Twitter’s chief executive, that was sent to employees on Wednesday and obtained by The New York Times. Mr. Agrawal said the “nature of this situation” limited what he was allowed to share with employees.

Ms. Sethi and Mr. Zatko did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Credit…U.S. Federal Government, via Reuters

Mr. Agrawal, who was appointed Twitter’s chief executive in November, has shuffled the company’s executives since taking over from Jack Dorsey, a founder. In December, Mr. Agrawal reorganized the leadership team and dismissed Dantley Davis, the chief design officer, and Michael Montano, the head of engineering.

Mr. Zatko joined Twitter in late 2020. He is a well-known hacker and has had a long career in government and private industry. Before taking on his role at Twitter, he held roles at DARPA, Google and Stripe. He began his cybersecurity career in the 1990s, when he was a member of the hacking group Cult of the Dead Cow. Twitter recruited him after teenagers compromised the company’s systems in July 2020 and took over the accounts of prominent users.

Ms. Sethi also joined Twitter after the hack and, alongside Mr. Zatko, was charged with improving the company’s security and protecting its user data. She was previously a vice president of information security at IBM and had worked in security at Intuit and Walmart.

Lea Kissner, Twitter’s head of privacy engineering, will become the company’s interim chief information security officer, according to current and former employees. They previously held security and privacy leadership roles at Google and Apple.