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  • April 14, 2017 - Central Jakarta, Jakarta, Indonesia - Jakarta, Indonesia, 14 April 2017 : Illegal parking still happening at Thamrin City - Jakarta. Although there has bee serious action from Jakarta Administration but street vendors and illegal parking still operated at some part of Jakarta. Monthly the income of illegal parking can reach millions of rupiah and its hard to eradicate because lot of powerfull people involved in the business. (Credit Image: ©  via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170414_zap_h128_019.jpg
  • November 4, 2016 - Batam, Riau Island, Indonesia - Officers were evacuating victims of the sink of ship Indonesian illegal workers in Teluk Mata Ikan, Batam, Riau Islands. Ships carrying 98 Indonesian illegal worker and three crewmen during sailed from Malaysia and sank in the waters of Nongsa with 41 peoples survivors, 52 peoples died and 8 peoples are still missing. (Credit Image: © Dedy Sutisna via ZUMA Wire)
    20161104_zap_s221_004.JPG
  • November 4, 2016 - Batam, Riau Island, Indonesia - Officers were evacuating victims of the sink of ship Indonesian illegal workers in Teluk Mata Ikan, Batam, Riau Islands. Ships carrying 98 Indonesian illegal worker and three crewmen during sailed from Malaysia and sank in the waters of Nongsa with 41 peoples survivors, 52 peoples died and 8 peoples are still missing. (Credit Image: © Dedy Sutisna via ZUMA Wire)
    20161104_zap_s221_002.JPG
  • November 4, 2016 - Batam, Riau Island, Indonesia - Officers were evacuating victims of the sink of ship Indonesian illegal workers in Teluk Mata Ikan, Batam, Riau Islands. Ships carrying 98 Indonesian illegal worker and three crewmen during sailed from Malaysia and sank in the waters of Nongsa with 41 peoples survivors, 52 peoples died and 8 peoples are still missing. (Credit Image: © Dedy Sutisna via ZUMA Wire)
    20161104_zap_s221_004.JPG
  • November 4, 2016 - Batam, Riau Island, Indonesia - Officers were evacuating victims of the sink of ship Indonesian illegal workers in Teluk Mata Ikan, Batam, Riau Islands. Ships carrying 98 Indonesian illegal worker and three crewmen during sailed from Malaysia and sank in the waters of Nongsa with 41 peoples survivors, 52 peoples died and 8 peoples are still missing. (Credit Image: © Dedy Sutisna via ZUMA Wire)
    20161104_zap_s221_002.JPG
  • August 15, 2017 - Bialowieza, Poland - Members of ''Camp for forest'' organization stand near illegal logging during event near illegal logging near Bialowieza on August 15, 2017. (Credit Image: © Maciej Luczniewski/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20170815_zaa_n230_366.jpg
  • August 15, 2017 - Bialowieza, Poland - Members of ''Camp for forest'' organization stand near illegal logging during event near illegal logging near Bialowieza on August 15, 2017. (Credit Image: © Maciej Luczniewski/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20170815_zaa_n230_353.jpg
  • August 15, 2017 - Bialowieza, Poland - Members of ''Camp for forest'' organization stand near illegal logging during event near illegal logging near Bialowieza on August 15, 2017. (Credit Image: © Maciej Luczniewski/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20170815_zaa_n230_365.jpg
  • April 29, 2017 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - Policeman raids at the illegal liquor factory and destroys the raw materials used to make liquor at Ghurpur area in Allahabad. (Credit Image: © Prabhat Kumar Verma/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170429_zaa_p133_039.jpg
  • December 17, 2018 - Wroclaw, Poland - An illegal garbage dump catches fire. (Credit Image: © Krzysztof Kaniewski/ZUMA Wire)
    20181216_zap_k137_004.jpg
  • December 17, 2018 - Wroclaw, Poland - An illegal garbage dump catches fire. (Credit Image: © Krzysztof Kaniewski/ZUMA Wire)
    20181216_zap_k137_005.jpg
  • November 3, 2018 - The Hague, Netherlands - Anti-Fascist Action (AFA) organized a nationwide demonstration in the Hague under the motto: 'No one is illegal. Down with fortress Europe. Freedom of movement for all.' Hundreds of people gathered to make a loud and clear statement against Europe's migration policies and to call for freedom of movement for all. Also to express their solidarity with refugees and migrants and take a stand against racism and exclusion. (Credit Image: © Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20181103_zaa_n230_482.jpg
  • November 3, 2018 - The Hague, Netherlands - Anti-Fascist Action (AFA) organized a nationwide demonstration in the Hague under the motto: 'No one is illegal. Down with fortress Europe. Freedom of movement for all.' Hundreds of people gathered to make a loud and clear statement against Europe's migration policies and to call for freedom of movement for all. Also to express their solidarity with refugees and migrants and take a stand against racism and exclusion. (Credit Image: © Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20181103_zaa_n230_470.jpg
  • July 6, 2018 - Aceh Utara, Aceh, Indonesia - Police seen cutting down cannabis plants..National Narcotics Agency (BNN) and Indonesian Police officers destroyed cannabis plants in plantation fields of residents of Aceh Utara District, Aceh Province, Indonesia. During the operation BNN officers and the Indonesian Police succeeded in destroying 10.5 hectares of cannabis land in the settlement of Aceh Utara district, Aceh Province. Cannabis is categorized as a dangerous illegal substance in the same category as heroin and cocaine in Indonesia. (Credit Image: © Maskur Has/SOPA Images via ZUMA Wire)
    20180706_zaa_s197_001.jpg
  • July 13, 2017 - Rome, Italy, Italy - ''No one is illegal'' demonstration in Campidoglio against mayor of Rome Virginia Raggi policies to say that the problems of Rome are not migrants ,on July 13, 2017 in Rome, Italy  (Credit Image: © Andrea Ronchini/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20170713_zaa_n230_173.jpg
  • July 13, 2017 - Rome, Italy, Italy - No one is illegal, demonstration in Campidoglio against Mayor of Rome Virginia Raggi policies to say that the problems of Rome are not migrants. (Credit Image: © Andrea Ronchini/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20170713_zaa_p133_256.jpg
  • December 17, 2018 - Wroclaw, Poland - Fire at an illegal garbage dump. (Credit Image: © Krzysztof Kaniewski/ZUMA Wire)
    20181216_zap_k137_001.jpg
  • December 16, 2018 - Wroclaw, Poland - December 17 2018 Poland Fire of an illegal garbage dump in Wroclaw, Poland Credit: Krzysztof Kaniewski/ZUMA Press (Credit Image: © Krzysztof Kaniewski/ZUMA Wire)
    20181216_zap_k137_001.jpg
  • November 3, 2018 - The Hague, Netherlands - On Saturday 3rd of November, the Anti-Fascist Action (AFA) organized a nationwide demonstration in the Hague under the motto: ‘No one is illegal. Down with fortress Europe. Freedom of movement for all.’ Hundreds of people gathered to make a loud and clear statement against Europe’s migration policies and to call for freedom of movement for all. Also to express their solidarity with refugees and migrants and take a stand against racism and exclusion. (Credit Image: © Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20181103_zaa_n230_465.jpg
  • August 15, 2017 - Bialowieza, Poland - Members of 'Camp for Forest' organization stand near illegal logging during a protest event near Bialowieza. (Credit Image: © Maciej Luczniewski/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20170815_zaa_n230_353.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_015.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Peter Nygard. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Peter Nygard. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Peter Nygard. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Peter Nygard. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Peter Nygard. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Peter Nygard. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Peter Nygard. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Peter Nygard. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_025.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_018.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_021.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_022.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_020.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_019.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_023.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Peter Nygard. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Construction work and changes to fashion mogul Peter Nygard's seized multi-million dollar Caribbean estate. Last Friday, Nygard arrived at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of the estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. FILE PHOTOS. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: file photo. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284670_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Construction work and changes to fashion mogul Peter Nygard's seized multi-million dollar Caribbean estate. Last Friday, Nygard arrived at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of the estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. FILE PHOTOS. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: file photo. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284670_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Construction work and changes to fashion mogul Peter Nygard's seized multi-million dollar Caribbean estate. Last Friday, Nygard arrived at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of the estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. FILE PHOTOS. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Construction work in 2013. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284670_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Construction work and changes to fashion mogul Peter Nygard's seized multi-million dollar Caribbean estate. Last Friday, Nygard arrived at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of the estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. FILE PHOTOS. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: file photo. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284670_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Construction work and changes to fashion mogul Peter Nygard's seized multi-million dollar Caribbean estate. Last Friday, Nygard arrived at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of the estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. FILE PHOTOS. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Construction work in 2013. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284670_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_016.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Peter Nygard. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_017.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_024.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_026.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Construction work and changes to fashion mogul Peter Nygard's seized multi-million dollar Caribbean estate. Last Friday, Nygard arrived at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of the estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. FILE PHOTOS. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Construction work in 2013. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284670_002.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484802.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484819.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484795.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484791.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484782.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484785.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484777.jpg
  • Patricia Sauthoff joins day three of a blockade at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484765.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Justin Bieber appears to ignore traffic signs and makes an illegal U-Turn in his Lamborghini on Sunset Blvd. 18 Apr 2018 Pictured: Justin Bieber. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA204596_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Justin Bieber appears to ignore traffic signs and makes an illegal U-Turn in his Lamborghini on Sunset Blvd. 18 Apr 2018 Pictured: Justin Bieber. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA204596_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Justin Bieber appears to ignore traffic signs and makes an illegal U-Turn in his Lamborghini on Sunset Blvd. 18 Apr 2018 Pictured: Justin Bieber. Photo credit: Rachpoot/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA204596_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Justin Bieber appears to ignore traffic signs and makes an illegal U-Turn in his Lamborghini on Sunset Blvd. 18 Apr 2018 Pictured: Justin Bieber. Photo credit: Rachpoot/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA204596_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Justin Bieber appears to ignore traffic signs and makes an illegal U-Turn in his Lamborghini on Sunset Blvd. 18 Apr 2018 Pictured: Justin Bieber. Photo credit: Rachpoot/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA204596_005.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484828.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484826.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484830.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484801.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484803.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484820.jpg
  • A man swears at unmarked police who showed up to reportedly help employees escape as protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484818.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484809.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484812.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484815.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484805.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484800.jpg
  • Timothy Perrigoue joins day three of a blockade at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484796.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484792.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484771.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484770.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484768.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484769.jpg
  • Dog poop and smashed eggs are pictured at the entrance of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484767.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484764.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484772.jpg
  • Timothy Perrigoue joins day three of a blockade at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484763.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484774.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484773.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484775.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Justin Bieber appears to ignore traffic signs and makes an illegal U-Turn in his Lamborghini on Sunset Blvd. 18 Apr 2018 Pictured: Justin Bieber. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA204596_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Justin Bieber appears to ignore traffic signs and makes an illegal U-Turn in his Lamborghini on Sunset Blvd. 18 Apr 2018 Pictured: Justin Bieber. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA204596_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Justin Bieber appears to ignore traffic signs and makes an illegal U-Turn in his Lamborghini on Sunset Blvd. 18 Apr 2018 Pictured: Justin Bieber. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA204596_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Justin Bieber appears to ignore traffic signs and makes an illegal U-Turn in his Lamborghini on Sunset Blvd. 18 Apr 2018 Pictured: Justin Bieber. Photo credit: MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA204596_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Justin Bieber appears to ignore traffic signs and makes an illegal U-Turn in his Lamborghini on Sunset Blvd. 18 Apr 2018 Pictured: Justin Bieber. Photo credit: Rachpoot/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA204596_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Justin Bieber appears to ignore traffic signs and makes an illegal U-Turn in his Lamborghini on Sunset Blvd. 18 Apr 2018 Pictured: Justin Bieber. Photo credit: Rachpoot/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA204596_006.jpg
  • August 3, 2017 - New York City, New York, United States of America - During a public “Ivory Crush” organized by the Department of Environmental Commission (DEC), the Wildlife Conservation Society, Tiffany & Co., and environmental groups, such as 96 Elephants (the estimated number of elephants slaughtered daily), some two tons of confiscated Ivory, with a value of $8.5 million USD was crushed in NYC’s Central Park.  In 2014, New York State passed a law making the trade of Ivory items a class D felony, except in certain cases with state approval.  Despite this, New York City is the nation's largest port of entry for illegal wildlife goods, according to state officials..Investigative Lieutenant Jesse Paluch of the NYS DEC Department of Environmental Crimes Investigations adds that what was crushed today “was the culmination of three years of investigations and the execution of 12 search warrants”.  He further adds “we want to show that the ivory on the animal is priceless, but worthless in this form as a consumer good”.  Mary Dixon of WCS says “we would like to send a message to poachers and anyone involved in the illegal ivory trade that we will no longer tolerate this”.  WCS works in 60 countries worldwide and works to stop animal trafficking.  Mick Fleetwood of Fleetwood Mac was among the guests in attendance. (Credit Image: © Sachelle Babbar via ZUMA Wire)
    20170803_zbp_b160_001.jpg
  • Mary holds a sign as protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484821.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484799.jpg
  • Protesters continue to blockade the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center in Portland, Ore., on June 19, 2018. People have camped outside the facility since Sunday to demand justice as the Trump administration continues to separate children from their families in an attempt to curb illegal immigration. (Photo by Alex Milan Tracy/Sipa USA)
    sipausa_23484798.jpg
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