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A top investor in Glosslab says he is no longer associated with the embattled nail salon even as it continues to shutter stores across the Big Apple, The Post has learned.

The New York-based company which is imploding following a bout of wild overexpansion backed by celebrity investors including Olivia Culpo, ex-Tinder CEO Sean Rad and The Chainsmokers is now operating just two salons in Manhattan, down from six earlier this month, according to its website.

One crucial investor who was burned is Joshua Coba, co-founder of European Wax Center a nearly $1 billion publicly held company with 1,000 locations. Coba secured the franchise rights for Glosslab in south Florida where there are five salons.

Coba who was supposed to oversee the companys franchise development nationwide, according to press releases also lent the company $5 million, but Glosslab has recently defaulted on the loan, sources told The Post.

Im no longer associated with them as a franchisee or in any respect, Coba told The Post. I own and operate the Florida locations and the Closter, NJ store.

Coba added that he plans to hold onto those businesses, but he also said he doesnt have a specific plan at this time regarding [his investment]. I dont have much to say at this time. Im still working through that.

Glosslab did not respond for comment about Coba.

Cobas Glosslab salon in Closter, NJ is actively hiring, according to posts on Indeed.com.

In Manhattan, two locations in the trendy Flatiron and Tribeca neighborhoods remain open. Thats down from a half dozen salons earlier this month, including locations at 860 Seventh Ave. and at 1206 Third Ave.

The company allegedly stiffed its landlords at a number of locations, as The Post previously reported.

Chief Executive Rachel Glass, a former hedge fund executive who founded the membership-based chain in 2018, told The Post last month the company is currently moving to a franchise model and working with landlords to that effect. 

One of the companys challenges, say multiple former employees, was hiring experienced and licensed nail technicians as it scrambled to staff the rapidly expanding chain. Some customers posted negative reviews on social media, complaining about botched manicures.  

When I was hired they never asked to see my license, said Katherine Tenesaca, who worked as a nail technician at Glosslabs Seventh Avenue salon until April 11 and said she has a license.

I never saw anyones license hung up on the walls where it should be. And our manager did ask us after the New York Post article whether we have our license. But were never asked to show an actual photo. They took our word for it.

Employing unlicensed nail techs can lead to the New York’s Department of State, which regulates the industry, “to issue a $500 per violation and/or suspend/revoke the license,” according to the regulation. “The penalties may vary,” a spokeswoman for the agency told The Post.

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The Post has a pending public record request regarding potential fines assessed against Glosslab.

The company vigorously denied allegations that it hired unlicensed nail technicians.

“All Glosslab nail technicians, including Katherine Tenesaca, were asked for their licenses and these were kept at the locations, Katherine Snyder told The Post.

The company “has never failed an inspection or had to pay a fine by the state of New York for doing otherwise.”

The company vigorously denied allegations that it hired unlicensed nail technicians.

Another Glosslab spokesperson, Stu Loeser, told The Post that state inspectors visited all six New York locations on March 29, “at which time they checked that all technicians on premises have licenses on display in the locations.

The fact that Glosslab locations have never been shut down for unlicensed technicians or any other regulatory reason proves that at this unannounced visit and all previous State Board visits all technicians were licensed. These facts about State oversight and visits alone disprove the former nail techs allegation, Loeser said.

Recently, some Glosslab members who pay $140 per month for unlimited manicures and pedicures said they have showed up to appointments at salons that closed suddenly or described their difficulty canceling their accounts.

I have been trying to cancel mine for over two weeks and they are ignoring my emails, calls, and Instagram DMs, Emma, a customer for the past 18 months, told The Post. I was charged $141.08 on April 15 despite emailing to cancel my subscription on April 2.”

During the preceding weeks and months, signs of trouble had been multiplying, according to Tenesaca.

We stopped getting supplies like gloves and files, she said. I had to buy my own gloves one time and eventually there were no more masks and the towel laundry service stopped recently. 

The college student, who worked part-time at the Glosslab on Seventh Avenue for the past year, said she and her colleagues received an email after 9 p.m. on April 11 telling them not to come to work the next day.

Weve made the extremely difficult decision to close select locations in our NY market, according to the email obtained by The Post. As a result, we will be parting ways with the GLOSSLAB employees of these locations. We are so grateful for all of your contributions to GLOSSLAB, and we would love to be a resource and a reference to you for future employment opportunities. 

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Farage has ‘grabbed the mic’ to dominate media agenda, says Harman

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Farage has 'grabbed the mic' to dominate media agenda, says Harman

Nigel Farage has successfully exploited the Commons recess to “grab the mic” and “dominate” the agenda, Harriet Harman has said.

Speaking on Sky News’ Electoral Dysfunction podcast, the Labour peer said that the Reform UK leader has been able to “get his voice heard” while government was not in “full swing”.

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Mr Farage used a speech this week to set himself, rather than Kemi Badenoch’s Tories, up as the main opposition to Sir Keir Starmer at the next election.

The prime minister responded on Thursday with a speech attacking the Clacton MP.

Baroness Harman said: “It’s slightly different between opposition and government because in government, the ministers have to be there the whole time.

“They’ve got to be putting legislation through and they kind of hold the mic.

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“They can dominate the news media with the announcements they’re making and with the bills they’re introducing, and it’s quite hard for the opposition to get a hearing whilst the government is in full swing.

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‘Big cuts’ to fund other Reform UK policies

“What we used to do when we were in opposition before 1997 is that as soon as there was a bank holiday and the House was not sitting, as soon as the half-term or the summer recess, we would be on an absolute war footing and dominate the airwaves because that was our opportunity.

“And I think that’s a bit of what Farage has done this week,” Harman added.

“Basically, Farage can dominate the media agenda.”

She went on: “He’s kind of stepped forward, and he’s using this moment of the House not sitting in order to actually get his voice heard.

“It’s sensible for the opposition to take the opportunity of when the House is not sitting to kind of grab the mic and that is what Nigel Farage has done.”

But Baroness Harman said it “doesn’t seem to be what Kemi Badenoch’s doing”.

She explained that the embattled leader “doesn’t seem to be grabbing the mic like Nigel Farage has” during recess, and added that “there’s greater opportunity for the opposition”.

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UK to build weapons factories and buy thousands of missiles in £6bn push to rearm

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UK to build weapons factories and buy thousands of missiles in £1.5bn push to rearm

The UK will buy up to 7,000 long-range missiles, rockets and drones and build at least six weapons factories in a £6bn push to rearm at a time of growing threats.

The plan, announced by the government over the weekend, will form part of Sir Keir Starmer’s long-awaited Strategic Defence Review, which will be published on Monday.

However, it lacks key details, including when the first arms plant will be built, when the first missile will be made, or even what kind of missiles, drones and rockets will be purchased.

The government is yet to appoint a new senior leader to take on the job of “national armaments director”, who will oversee the whole effort.

Andy Start, the incumbent head of Defence Equipment and Support – the branch of defence charged with buying kit – is still doing the beefed-up role of national armaments director as a sluggish process to recruit someone externally rumbles on.

Keir Starmer and  Volodymyr Zelenskyy speak to the press as they attend a presentation of Ukrainian military drones.
Pic: Reuters
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Sir Keir Starmer and Volodymyr Zelenskyy at a presentation of Ukrainian military drones. Pic: Reuters

Revealing some of its content ahead of time, the Ministry of Defence said the defence review will recommend an “always on” production capacity for munitions, drawing on lessons learned from Ukraine, which has demonstrated the vital importance of large production lines.

It will also call for an increase in stockpiles of munitions – something that is vitally needed for the army, Royal Navy and Royal Air Force to be able to keep fighting beyond a few days.

Some £1.5bn will be invested in the new factories, the government said. It said this additional funding will lift total expenditure on munitions to £6bn this parliament.

Sky News will launch a new podcast series on 10 June based around a wargame that simulates an attack by Russia against the UK to test Britain’s defences

“The hard-fought lessons from [Vladimir] Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine show a military is only as strong as the industry that stands behind them,” John Healey, the defence secretary, said in a statement released on Saturday night.

“We are strengthening the UK’s industrial base to better deter our adversaries and make the UK secure at home and strong abroad.”

Army Commandos load a 105MM Howitzer in Norway.
Pic: Ministry of Defence Crown Copyright/PA
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Army Commandos load a 105mm Howitzer in Norway. Pic: Ministry of Defence/PA

The UK used to have a far more resilient defence industry during the Cold War, with the capacity to manufacture missiles and other weapons and ammunition at speed and at scale.

However, much of that depth, which costs money to sustain, was lost following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, when successive governments switched funding priorities away from defence and into areas such as health, welfare and economic growth.

Even after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 and a huge increase in demand from Kyiv for munitions from its allies, production lines at UK factories were slow to expand.

A reaper drone in the Middle East as part of Operation Shader. Pic: Ministry of Defence
Image:
A reaper drone in the Middle East. Pic: Ministry of Defence

Sky News visited a plant run by the defence company Thales in Belfast last year that makes N-LAW anti-tank missiles used in Ukraine. Its staff at the time only worked weekday shifts between 7am and 4pm.

Under this new initiative, the government said the UK will build at least six new “munitions and energetics” factories.

Energetic materials include explosives, propellants and pyrotechnics, which are required in the manufacturing of weapons.

There were no details, however, on whether these will be national factories or built in partnership with defence companies, or a timeline for this to happen.

There was also no information on where they would be located or what kind of weapons they would make.

King Charles  visiting HMS Prince of Wales as the Royal Navy finalises preparations for a major global deployment to the Indo-Pacific this spring.
Pic: PO Phot Rory Arnold/Ministry of Defence/PA
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King Charles visits HMS Prince of Wales. Pic: PO Phot Rory Arnold/Ministry of Defence/PA

In addition, it was announced that the UK will buy “up to 7,000 UK-built long-range weapons for the UK Armed Forces”, though again without specifying what.

It is understood these weapons will include a mix of missiles, rockets and drones.

Sources within the defence industry criticised the lack of detail, which is so often the case with announcements by the Ministry of Defence.

The sources said small and medium-sized companies in particular are struggling to survive as they await clarity from the Ministry of Defence over a range of different contracts.

One source described a sense of “paralysis”.

The prime minister launched the defence review last July, almost a year ago. But there had been a sense of drift within the Ministry of Defence beforehand, in the run-up to last year’s general election.

The source said: “While the government’s intentions are laudable, the lack of detail in this announcement is indicative of how we treat defence in this country.

“Headline figures, unmatched by clear intent and delivery timelines which ultimately leave industry no closer to knowing what, or when, the MOD want their bombs and bullets.

“After nearly 18 months of decision and spending paralysis, what we need now is a clear demand signal from the Ministry of Defence that allows industry to start scaling production, not grand gestures with nothing to back it up.”

As well as rearming the nation, the government said the investment in new factories and weapons would create around 1,800 jobs across the UK.

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Prison officers should be armed with lethal weapons to crack down on Islamist terrorists, Tories say

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Prison officers should be armed with lethal weapons to crack down on Islamist terrorists, Tories say

Prison officers should be armed with lethal weapons to crack down on Islamist terrorists in jail, the shadow justice secretary has said.

Highly trained teams should also be equipped with tasers, stun grenades and baton rounds to tackle dangerous criminals in high-security jails, Robert Jenrick said.

The plan is taken from a series of recommendations by counter-extremism expert and former prison governor Ian Acheson.

It comes after a prison officer at high-security prison Long Lartin in Worcestershire was stabbed on Friday morning with a weapon Sky News understands was brought in from outside the prison.

It also follows several attacks on prison officers in jails.

In April this year, the Manchester Arena bomb plotter, Hashem Abedi, allegedly assaulted prison staff by throwing hot oil on them and then launching a stabbing attack, injuring three officers.

At Belmarsh prison, Southport killer Axel Rudakubana has been accused of throwing boiling water over an officer through the hatch in his cell door earlier this month.

A prison wall. Pic: PA
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File pic: PA

Mr Jenrick said: “Islamist gangs and violent prisoners in our jails are out of control.

It’s a national security emergency, but the government is dithering. If they don’t act soon, there is a very real risk that a prison officer is kidnapped or murdered in the line of duty, or that a terrorist attack is directed from inside prison.”

He said he commissioned Mr Acheson to conduct a rapid review into measures the government could adopt.

The measures include removing all radical Islamist imams working in prisons, immediately rolling out high-collar stab vests to frontline officers, and mandating the quarterly release of data on religious conversions in prison and faith-based incidents.

It also recommended legislating to overturn the De Silva ruling to strip back judicial interference in operational decisions by governors to isolate extremists.

Mr Jenrick added: “We have to stop pussy-footing around Islamist extremists and violent offenders in jails.

“That means arming specialist prison officer teams with tasers and stun grenades, as well as giving them access to lethal weapons in exceptional circumstances.

“If prison governors can’t easily keep terrorist influencers and radicalising inmates apart from the mainstream prisoners they target, then we don’t control our prisons – they do. We must take back control and restore order by giving officers the powers and protection they need.”

Mr Acheson said: “Too often what goes wrong behind the walls of our high security jails passes unnoticed, as does the bravery of the men and women in uniform who deal every day with terrorists and other highly dangerous offenders.

“Robert Jenrick is right – the threat to officer safety is now intolerable and must be met decisively by the government.

“The balance inside too many of our prisons has shifted away from control by the state to mere containment and the price is soaring levels of staff assaults and wrecked rehabilitation. Broken officers can’t help fix broken people – or protect the public from violent extremism.”

A Ministry of Justice source said: “The government considers the introduction of lethal weapons into prisons would put prison officers at greater risk.”

They added: “The last government added just 500 cells to our prison estate, and left our jails in total crisis. In 14 years, they closed 1,600 cells in the high-security estate, staff assaults soared, and experienced officers left in droves. Now the arsonists are pretending to be firefighters.

“This government is cleaning up the mess the last government left behind. We are building new prisons, with 2,400 new cells opened since we took office. And we take a zero-tolerance approach to violence and extremism inside.”

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