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A transgender Michigan woman who sued her ex-boyfriend for discarding her surgically removed testicles had her case tossed out by a judge who also rejected the ex’s counterclaim for being humiliated by the case.

Brianna Kingsley, 40, last year filed a small claims petition claiming her ex, William Wojciechowski, 37, retains possession of my surgically extracted testicles, preserved in (a) Mason jar, kept in (the) fridge next to the eggs.

The Pontiac resident demanded the immediate return of her human remains specimen in her handwritten affidavit, in addition to $6,500 in damages.

“We’re talking about my nuts. … I wanted them in my fridge not his, Kingsley told a court hearing. The damages were the loss of these nuts.”

Wojciechowski, meanwhile, said he’d already tossed out the testicles — and filed a? counterclaim for the same amount, claiming he’d been “humiliated” by coverage of the nutty case by “worldwide news outlets, the Detroit News reported.

But District Court Judge Jeremy Bowie denied both their claims, calling the whole matter a wash during a contentious hearing Wednesday adding that his decision cant be appealed, according to the outlet. 6 Brianna Kingsley, 40, right, a transgender Michigan woman, wanted her ex-boyfriend, William Wojciechowski, 37, left, to return her surgically removed testicles. Facebook / William Wojciechowski

The judge noted how hard it was to calculate potential damages in the bizarre case.

“I can put a dollar amount on, say, if you were missing work at $16 an hour,” he said. “But as to testicles, I can’t really put a number on it.”

The judge said Kingsley had the chance to retrieve her testicles when an Oakland County sheriffs deputy accompanied her to her former beaus home in January 2023.

At the time, Kingsley had just gotten out of jail, where she spent three days and was fined $100 for violating a personal protection order he had filed against her, the Detroit News reported.

“We allow a one-time visit with a sheriff’s officer in situations like that for people to go back to get their belongings,” Bowie said. 6 A judge threw out Kingsley’s lawsuit, which sought $6,500 in damages, calling the case “a wash.” 6 William Wojciechowski’s counterclaim seeking $6,500 for “humiliation” also was thrown out. The Detroit News

“Ms. Kingsley failed to retrieve the testicles from the refrigerator at that time. … If they were so important to her, she had the opportunity to grab them, and she didn’t, he said during the hearing.

Wojciechowski told the judge he tossed out the testicles in July.

“They were rotting in my fridge, and it was disgusting I’ve got food in there I wanted to eat,” he said. “She didn’t keep them in a biohazard container like she was supposed to.” 6 Kingsley posted a TikTok video apparently mocking her removed testicles. Facebook / William Wojciechowski

She told him her surgery at Henry Ford Hospital in March 2022 cost $20,000, but noted that the state covered the charge because shes disabled, according to the outlet.

The state paid for that, you didn’t. You’re not going to be unjustly enriched, the judge told her. 6 She is seen holding up a bag marked as a biohazard. Facebook / William Wojciechowski

The two said they met on Facebook Community in April 2020 and moved in together in the fall of 2021 in the house Wojciechowski bought. They broke up in December 2022.

Kingsley said ?she placed her testicles in a jar and stored them in the fridge “because I deal with trauma with comedy. Shakespeare did it.”

She went to Wojciechowskis house a second time after retrieving her belongings, but he said he denied his entry because he felt she was harassing him. 6 William Wojciechowski Facebook / William Wojciechowski

Bowie said he had a right to deny her entry because she’d already been inside a month earlier.

Kingsley appeared to poke fun at her missing gonads in a TikTok video in 2022 titled ?The ?Unboxing of Dees Nutz.

In it, she opens a box and removes a bag labeled a biohazard smiling coyly as she puts her fingers to her mouth and repackages it, suggesting they were her testicles and ending with a dance.

In October 2020, Kingsley pleaded guilty to misdemeanor assault and was sentenced to two months in the slammer after he pulled a knife on her then-roommate, also a trans woman, on Christmas Day.

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CNBC Daily Open: A Fed rate cut might not be festive enough

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CNBC Daily Open: A Fed rate cut might not be festive enough

An eagle sculpture stands on the facade of the Marriner S. Eccles Federal Reserve building in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Friday, Nov. 18, 2016.

Andrew Harrer | Bloomberg | Getty Images

On Wednesday stateside, the U.S. Federal Reserve is widely expected to lower its benchmark interest rates by a quarter percentage point to a range of 3.5%-3.75%.

However, given that traders are all but certain that the cut will happen — an 87.6% chance, to be exact, according to the CME FedWatch tool — the news is likely already priced into stocks by the market.

That means any whiff of restraint could weigh on equities. In fact, the talk in the markets is that the Fed might deliver a “hawkish cut”: lower rates while suggesting it could be a while before it cuts again.

The “dot plot,” or a projection of where Fed officials think interest rates will end up over the next few years, will be the clearest signal of any hawkishness. Investors will also parse Chair Jerome Powell’s press conference and central bankers’ estimates for U.S. economic growth and inflation to gauge the Fed’s future rate path.

In other words, the Fed could rein in market sentiment even if it cuts rates. Perhaps end-of-year festivities might be muted this year.

What you need to know today

And finally…

Researchers inside a lab at the Shenzhen Synthetic Biology Infrastructure facility in Shenzhen, China, on Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2025.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

U.S.-China AI talent race heats up

When it comes to brain power, “America’s edge is deteriorating dangerously,” Chris Miller, author of the book “Chip War: The Fight for the World’s Most Critical Technology,” told a U.S. Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee last week. It’s a lead that’s “fragile and much smaller” than its advantage in AI chips, he said.

Part of the difference comes from the sheer scale, especially as education levels rise in China. Its population is four times that of the U.S., and the same goes for the volume of science, technology, engineering and mathematics graduates. In 2020, China produced 3.57 million STEM graduates, the most of any country, and far outpacing the 820,000 in the U.S.

— Evelyn Cheng

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CEO of South Korean online retail giant Coupang resigns over data breach

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CEO of South Korean online retail giant Coupang resigns over data breach

Park Dae-jun, CEO of South Korean online retail giant Coupang has resigned, three weeks after the company became aware of a massive data breach that affected nearly 34 million customers.

Coupang

The CEO of South Korean online retail giant Coupang Corp. resigned Wednesday, three weeks after the company became aware of a massive data breach that affected nearly 34 million customers.

Coupang said CEO Park Dae-jun resigned due to the data breach incident — which was revealed on Nov. 18 — according to a Google translation of the statement in Korean.

“I am deeply sorry for disappointing the public with the recent personal information incident,” Park said, adding, “I feel a deep sense of responsibility for the outbreak and the subsequent recovery process, and I have decided to step down from all positions.”

Following his resignation, parent company Coupang Inc. appointed Harold Rogers, the Chief Administrative Officer and General Counsel, as interim CEO.

Coupang said that Rogers plans to “focus on alleviating customer anxiety caused by the personal information leak” and to stabilize the organisation.

Park, who joined the company in 2012, became Coupang’s sole CEO in May, after the company transitioned away from a dual-CEO system.

According to Coupang, he was responsible for the company’s innovative new business and regional infrastructure development, and led projects to expand sales channels for small and medium enterprises, among others.

South Korean companies are known for being “very, very cost-efficient,” which may have led to neglecting areas like cybersecurity, Peter Kim, managing director at KB Securities, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia” Wednesday.

“I think the core issue here is that we’ve had a number of other breaches, not just Coupang, but previously, telecom companies in Korea,” Kim added. “I understand some data companies consider Korea to be [the] top three or four most breached on a data, on an IT security basis in the world.”

Coupang breach a ‘double-edged sword’ for Chinese rivals due to security concerns: KB Securities

South Korean companies have been hit by cybersecurity breaches before, including an April incident at mobile carrier SK Telecom that affected 23.24 million people. The country previously saw one of its largest cybersecurity incidents in 2011, when attackers stole over 35 million user details from internet platforms Nate and Cyworld.

Nate is one of the most popular search engines in South Korea, while Cyworld was one of the country’s largest social networking sites in the early 2000s.

Prime Minister Kim Min-seok reportedly said Wednesday that strict action would be taken against the company if violations of the law were found, according to South Korean media outlet Yonhap.

Police also raided the Coupang headquarters for a second day on Wednesday, continuing their investigation into the data breach.

Yonhap also reported, citing sources, that the police search warrant “specifies a Chinese national who formerly worked for Coupang as a suspect on charges of breaching the information and communications network and leaking confidential data.”

Last week, South Korean President Lee Jae Myung called for increased penalties on data breaches, saying that the Coupang data breach had served as a wake-up call.

— CNBC’s Chery Kang contributed to this report.

How Coupang grew into South Korea's biggest online retailer

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Connecticut can’t take action against Kalshi for now, judge rules

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Connecticut can’t take action against Kalshi for now, judge rules

A US judge has granted prediction markets platform Kalshi a temporary reprieve from enforcement after the state of Connecticut sent it a cease and desist order last week for allegedly conducting unlicensed gambling.

The Connecticut Department of Consumer Protection (DCP) sent Kalshi, along with Robinhood and Crypto.com, cease and desist orders on Dec. 2, accusing them of “conducting unlicensed online gambling, more specifically sports wagering, in Connecticut through its online sports event contracts.”

Kalshi sued the DCP a day later, arguing its event contracts “are lawful under federal law” and its platform was subject to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s “exclusive jurisdiction,” and filed a motion on Friday to temporarily stop the DCP’s action.

An excerpt from Kalshi’s preliminary injunction motion arguing that the DCP’s action violates federal commodities laws. Source: CourtListener

Connecticut federal court judge Vernon Oliver said in an order on Monday that the DCP must “refrain from taking enforcement action against Kalshi” as the court considers the company’s bid to temporarily stop the regulator.

The order adds that the DCP should file a response to the company by Jan. 9 and Kalshi should file further support for its motion by Jan. 30, with oral arguments for the case to be held in mid-February.

Kalshi does battle with multiple US states

Kalshi is a federally regulated designated contract maker under the CFTC and, in January, began offering contracts nationally that allow bets on the outcome of events such as sports and politics.

Related: How prediction markets raise insider trading and credit risks

Its platform has become hugely popular this year and saw a record $4.54 billion monthly trading volume in November, attracting billions in investments, with Kalshi closing a $1 billion funding round earlier this month at a valuation of $11 billion.

However, multiple US state regulators have taken issue with Kalshi’s offerings, which have led to the company being embroiled in lawsuits over whether it is subject to state-level gambling laws.