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Tag: assault

  • Despite a detective saying he found “predatory grooming behaviors,” why a Minnesota band director wasn’t charged | WCCO Investigates

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    WCCO continues the series investigating the laws and policies surrounding grooming. We first introduced you to Hannah LoPresto. She told police her band director groomed and sexually assaulted her in high school, but he was never charged. Senior investigative reporter Jennifer Mayerle digs into why and how a change in law could lead to more accountability in future cases. 

    Eagan Police Department Detective Chad Clausen says he interviewed close to 50 staff, parents and students. Conducting the investigation into then-Eagan High School band director Brett Benson for nearly a year, beginning in 2022. 

    “There was some pretty strong allegations that there was some inappropriate things that a former band teacher was doing or had been involved with,” Clausen said. 

    Clausen says he interviewed close to 50 staff, parents and students. Conducting the investigation into then-Eagan High School Band Director Brett Benson for nearly a year, beginning in 2022. 

    “There was a lot of concerning behaviors that I observed, not necessarily saying that that all were crimes, or that they were chargeable crimes. But there was definitely some concerning behaviors that were seen by this former band teacher with numerous students to different degrees of concern,” Clausen said. 

    According to the police report, the behavior came into focus when a student spoke up about Benson’s “close relationship” with another student during an overseas band trip. 

    “Kinda try to put some pieces together. That would lead me down, you know, a path,” Clausen said. 

    Clausen says during his investigation, he also learned about LoPresto, a former student. Noting her story about interactions with Benson often mirrored what he was told happened with the other student. 

    “That’s kind of the scary thing with grooming. It’s almost like a playbook, so to speak. These patterns and behaviors, they can tend to be the same, the same exact patterns, and when you start to see those similarities in two different stories, it makes it all the more concerning,” Clausen said. 

    LoPresto says she didn’t realize what was happening to her at the time.  

    “I needed someone to call me, because I never, I never would have called myself,” LoPresto said. 

    But now, a decade removed, she says she believes all the attention paid to her — the texts, calls and alone time — were all a part of what she calls the grooming process. She says she told police it ultimately led to her being sexually assaulted on the last day of senior year. 

    “He had so deeply psychologically manipulated me to believe that I was an active participant, that I had allowed that to happen, that I was responsible for what happened. So I couldn’t have labeled that an assault, certainly not then. And it took many, many years after to be able to understand what that was,” LoPresto said. 

    The detective writes in the police report, “The sexual contact was not consensual in nature due to Brett’s grooming behaviors that started freshman year of High School.”  

    Clausen says it’s important to watch for warning signs of grooming. 

    “There’s this slow kind of control that the person in power can have over a student or a juvenile. It starts to normalize behaviors and things that, if it went quickly, people would see it faster and easier,” Clausen said. 

    “Why is grooming so concerning?” Mayerle asked. 

    “Our youth, they don’t have the capacity, necessarily, to understand things essentially. They are innocent. When the youth is preyed upon, it’s going to affect their lives forever,” Clausen said. 

    Clausen believes there were a number of inappropriate relationships with students which he detailed in the police report. The police report says, “While examining the evidence in this case, I uncovered a pattern of predatory grooming behaviors that Brett has had with numerous students.” 

    The police report goes on to say “these inappropriate relationships go back to 2011” when he was with another school district. Clausen writes, “It appeared Brett targeted a specific type of young female student … turning 18 years old towards the end of their senior year and often were shy and lacked self-confidence.” 

    LoPresto says it was learning that gave her the courage to speak up.  

    “I think because I could see that it was bigger than me for the first time. I really latched on to the fact that, like, if I could help other people if I do this. I think that also made me a little bit braver too.” LoPresto said. 

    Benson provided a statement. It reads in part, “I vehemently deny any allegations of wrongdoing. I deeply cared for the well-being of every student I have ever taught.” 

    He was never charged with a crime in connection with any of the alleged inappropriate relationships. In one instance, police say they believe they had probable cause for him to be charged with neglected or endangered a child, but the student “was not interested in pursuing charges.” 

    In that case, a document provided by Benson’s attorney says a Minnesota Department of Education investigation did not find maltreatment occurred.  

    Clausen presented LoPresto’s case to the Dakota County Attorney’s Office. A document she provided from the Office says, “In this case the decision not to charge was not based on a belief that we would not be able to prove the case beyond a reasonable doubt. The decision is based on the law in 2016, when he committed the offense involving you. The law in 2016 … only allowed us to prosecute a person in a position of authority if the child was between the ages of 16 and 17 years old.” 

    LoPresto was 18 at the time. That law has since changed. 

    “Even though I was prepared for the no, I mean, it still hurt for sure. Even though it doesn’t change what happened or what evidence there was to prove it, it still feels like you’re being let down, or like, like what happened to you doesn’t matter,” LoPresto said. 

    Benson was placed on administrative leave. The district informed police and police began their investigation. He later resigned. But he still had a valid teaching license. It could be automatically revoked if he was charged and convicted. Because he was not charged or convicted in LoPresto’s case, she filed a complaint with the Minnesota Professional Educator Licensing and Standards Board, known as PELSB, noting his alleged violations of statutes to try to have his license revoked.  

    In this case, the board pursued suspending or revoking Benson’s license. Instead of going through a contested case, Benson voluntarily surrendered his teaching license, resulting in this public stipulation agreement. We spoke with Dr. Yelena Bailey, who is the executive director and on the ethics board. 

    “What the stipulation does make clear is that, based on all the items outlined, we are happy with the outcome that this person no longer holds a teaching license in the state of Minnesota,” Bailey said.  

    Full statement of Brett Benson:  

    “I vehemently deny any allegations of wrongdoing. They are replete with mischaracterizations, exaggerations, and false statements that are wholly inconsistent with who I am as a person and who I was as a teacher. I deeply cared for the well-being of every student I have ever taught. The thorough police and Minnesota Department of Education investigations are closed, resulting in no criminal charges and findings of no student maltreatment. Now, however, I am compelled to defend myself against unproven allegations being aired in the public sphere. I strenuously object to this story, which violates core principles of journalistic ethics. My family and I are thankful this extensive investigation is closed.”


    Sexual Assault Resources

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    Jennifer Mayerle

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  • Denver man arrested in assault of pro-Trump ‘No Kings’ counter-demonstrator

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    Police have arrested a 20-year-old man for allegedly assaulting a middle-aged man who interjected himself into Denver’s downtown No Kings demonstration, shouted expletives and a slur, then fell in a street fracas and suffered a serious injury.

    The assault occurred after the older man declared: “‘Yes Trump,’” according to a Denver Police report.

    A video circulating on social media showed the older man, wearing a blue New York Giants logo shirt, gesturing at and deriding demonstrators on Saturday afternoon as they rallied near Denver’s Union Station. The man ran and fell against pavement on his face, the video shows.

    He got up and ran, again, then was tripped and fell onto the street by a curb against his head. Bleeding, he got up again and, with friends, ran, and clashed with demonstrators. Some demonstrators tried to help him, pointing to his head suggesting he needed medical care as blood covered the left side of his face.

    Denver police on Monday confirmed they arrested Jose Cardenas after tracking him from Wynkoop Street, where the assault occurred at about 2:30 p.m., to North Lincoln Street near the intersection with 14th Avenue, “where Cardenas attempted to run from officers.” Witnesses identified Cardenas as the one who assaulted the counter demonstrator, the police statement of probable cause for arrest said. “Cardenas was transported to the Denver Jail and charged with aggravated assault.”

    Police did not identify the victim. The report said he suffered “a serious laceration to his head.”

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  • Jury weighs former Denver cop’s liability for wounding 6 bystanders in LoDo shooting

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    After more than three years of painful recovery and an eight-day jury trial, six bystanders wounded during a 2022 police shooting in downtown Denver are hoping for some relief.

    “They were worried about the little things, like getting nervous around girls,” the plaintiffs’ attorney Omeed Azmoudeh told jurors in Denver District Court on Thursday during closing arguments in the civil case. “And then, in a moment: bang, bang, bang, bang.”

    In the early hours of July 17, 2022, the lively night atmosphere in Lower Downtown was shattered by gunshots as three Denver Police Department officers fired on 23-year-old Jordan Waddy, who they suspected had been involved in a fight near the Larimer Beer Hall.

    The officers — Brandon Ramos, Kenneth Rowland and Megan Lieberson — shot Waddy as he pulled out a gun hidden in his waistband. While Rowland and Lieberson shot the man from the front, Ramos fired from the side, toward the crowd behind Waddy.

    By the time Ramos fired, Waddy had already been shot by other officers and fallen to the ground, Azmoudeh said.

    Six bystanders in the crowd were injured that night, either by bullets or flying shrapnel, Azmoudeh said. Ramos’ “reckless and unreasonable” conduct constitutes battery on all six victims, he added.

    “(Ramos) can’t be the first and only person to shoot into a crowd and then say it was his only option,” Azmoudeh said, dismissing the officer’s self-defense claim. He said Ramos and his defense have talked about the community as “collateral to routine police work.”

    Peter Doherty, Ramos’ attorney, said during Thursday’s closing arguments that the now-former Denver police officer was trying to nip the threat of an active shooter in the bud.

    Police tried to direct Waddy back into the open street, away from the crowd, but he didn’t listen and reached for his weapon, Doherty said. Ramos, who he said routinely dealt with shootings and weapons-related violence in the area, decided Waddy “wouldn’t give up” and would likely escalate the situation.

    “The reasonableness of a particular use of force must be judged from the perspective of a reasonable officer on the scene, rather than with the 20/20 vision of hindsight,” Doherty said, referencing a 1968 U.S. Supreme Court decision.

    He said the entire trial has evaluated Ramos’s actions through that hindsight, with no allowances for the danger or high-stress situation.

    The victims suffered “egregious” injuries and went through an event that they shouldn’t have had to endure, but that doesn’t make Ramos responsible, Doherty said.

    From left to right shooting victims Willis Small IV, Bailey Alexander and Yekalo Weldewihet speak at Rathod Mohamedbhai law firm on Wednesday, Jan. 4, 2023. A grand jury indicted officer Brandon Ramos on 14 counts stemming from the shooting in 2022 in which he and fellow officers fired at a man in the crowded LoDo neighborhood, injuring bystanders. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)

    Both sides disagreed on the number of bullets Ramos shot and when he fired.

    The plaintiffs’ attorney said Ramos fired twice, pointing to two bullets found away from the main crime scene that are believed to have injured the six bystanders. The bullets tore through multiple people and ricocheted off nearby objects, sending shrapnel into the crowd, before settling on the pavement, Azmoudeh said.

    But Doherty told jurors the evidence could only prove Ramos fired once, and it wasn’t clear from the body camera video where he was aiming.

    While investigators recovered eight bullets, they only found seven shell casings at the scene, Doherty said. Nearby cameras also captured seven audio pulses and a total of seven rounds were missing from the officers’ weapons.

    Ramos’s gun magazine was equipped to fit an extra bullet, and any of the shots fired could have masked the sound of the eighth shot, since all rounds were fired in less than two seconds, Azmoudeh said.

    Doherty dismissed both explanations as speculation.

    “The defendants do not have a unifying theory as to what happened, but that’s not our burden to prove,” Doherty said. “…We’re not trying to throw smoke and mirrors, we’re just saying the evidence is missing.”

    The civil trial follows a criminal prosecution of Ramos by the Denver District Attorney’s Office.

    A grand jury indicted Ramos on 14 criminal counts in January 2023, including second-degree assault, third-degree assault, prohibited use of a weapon and reckless endangerment.

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  • Denver deputy’s arrest tied to domestic violence at Colorado Springs home, police say

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    A Denver jail deputy arrested after a domestic violence incident is accused of pulling a gun, threatening to harm the man his wife was seeing and destroying a computer and iPad, according to a Colorado Springs Police Department arrest affidavit.

    Darrel Killebrew, 33, was arrested on suspicion of felony menacing, assault, child abuse, criminal mischief and criminal tampering after officers were called to his home late Monday night.

    According to the affidavit, Killebrew began fighting with his wife — who had started divorce proceedings in April — after finding out she was cheating on him.

    Killebrew took her computer and iPad and refused to return them, then ordered her to call the other man, saying “Trust me, I got something coming for him” while drawing a gun from his waistband.

    The two fought, and Killebrew tossed the gun on the couch and knocked the woman to the floor before taking the devices into the kitchen and repeatedly slamming them onto the corner of the kitchen island, investigators wrote in the arrest report.

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  • Fourth person charged in Alabama shooting that killed 2 and injured 12

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    MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — A fourth person was arrested and charged Friday in connection with a shooting that killed two people and injured 12 others in a crowded downtown nightlife district in Alabama’s capital city in early October, police said.

    Kemontae Hood, 21, is charged with one count of capital murder and 12 counts of assault, according to Montgomery police.

    Hood is the fourth person charged in the Oct. 4 shooting that unfolded just before midnight in a crowded section of the city’s downtown filled with bars, hotels and restaurants. Police also arrested an unnamed juvenile last Friday, as well as Dantavious McGhee, 19, on Monday on capital murder charges and Javorick Whiting, 19, on Thursday on an attempted murder charge.

    It was not immediately known if Hood or the others had lawyers who could comment for them. Online jail records don’t list attorneys for them.

    A 43-year-old woman and a 17-year-old boy were killed, police said. Investigators said they determined that multiple people fired weapons in a crowd just after the Tuskegee-Morehouse College football game had ended blocks away, after a day celebrating the two historically Black schools’ longstanding rivalry. At the time, five of the wounded had life-threatening injuries and seven had non-life-threatening injuries.

    Investigators have not said what led to the shooting, but they said the initial gunfire targeted one of the 14 victims, prompting multiple people to pull their own weapons and start firing back. Seven of the 14 victims were under 20, and the youngest was 16. At least two of the victims were armed.

    Multiple weapons and shell cases were recovered from the scene, and more arrests are expected, police said.

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  • DNA from discarded cup leads to man’s arrest in 1990s sexual assaults in NY

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    NEW YORK — NEW YORK (AP) — A Georgia man accused of sexually assaulting five women during a New York City crime spree in the early 1990s was linked to the cases by DNA authorities obtained from a discarded cup, prosecutors said.

    Michael Benjamin, 57, of Conyers, was arraigned Thursday after being extradited to New York and was ordered held without bail due to his high flight risk, prosecutors said.

    While officers escorted Benjamin from a New York police station Thursday he told reporters he was innocent of the allegations.

    “I didn’t do this! I didn’t do none of this!” he screamed. “What witness? What fingerprints? I didn’t do this!”

    The assaults occurred between July 1995 and February 1997, with the attacker entering the residences through a window, prosecutors said. The victims ranged in age from 21 to 42 — including one woman who was assaulted on two separate occasions. Each victim was also robbed of money and valuables.

    Benjamin was linked to the assaults by DNA obtained last year from a discarded cup he had used inside the Rockdale County Sheriff’s office, prosecutors said. It was submitted for testing and matched DNA retrieved at the time the assaults occurred.

    Benjamin was arrested in Georgia on Sept. 22 and extradited to New York on Tuesday. He faces 17 counts, including sexual assault and burglary charges.

    “Although decades have passed, these cold cases were not forgotten,” Queens County District Attorney Melinda Katz said. “It is never too late for justice.”

    Benjamin’s lawyer, Joseph Amsel, said his client “vigorously, vehemently and vociferously” denies the charges. “Most of these charges are outside of the statute of limitations,” Amsel said.

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  • Navy Is Holding Survivors of Latest U.S. Strike Against Alleged Drug Boat

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    The U.S. is treating survivors from the latest attack on a suspected drug vessel in the Caribbean, according to two officials familiar with the matter. 

    The two survivors were rescued by the Coast Guard and transported to the USS Iwo Jima, which has a full medical staff. Others onboard the submersible died in the attack, the officials said.

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    Shelby Holliday

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  • Homeland Security says Marine’s father who was deported had faced domestic violence, assault charges

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    SAN DIEGO — SAN DIEGO (AP) — The father of a Marine who was arrested by immigration authorities when visiting his pregnant daughter at Camp Pendleton has a criminal record that includes charges of domestic violence and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, the Department of Homeland Security said Thursday.

    Esteban Rios was deported to Mexico in 1999, removed from the United States again in 2005 and ordered deported by an immigration judge in 2020 after entering the country illegally a third time, the department said.

    The statement was the first detailed account that Homeland Security provided since the Marine, Steve Rios, said last week that his father was detained after visiting the Southern California military base, released with ankle monitors and detained again when reporting days later to a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement office, as ordered.

    Homeland Security initially did not provide details when asked several times by The Associated Press on Tuesday for information on any criminal record Esteban Rios had, saying only that “criminal illegal aliens are not welcome in the U.S.” The department said it had no other information to release.

    On Thursday — one day after AP published a story on Esteban Rios, and two days after it sought details from the department — DHS released the detailed account of his criminal record. The department also accused the AP of having “deliberately obscured the facts,” despite the agency having not provided AP with the information it accused the news organization of obscuring.

    Steve Rios of Oceanside, California, told San Diego station KNSD that his parents inspired him to enlist in the Marines. He said they came to the U.S. from Mexico more than 30 years ago and have washed cars and cleaned houses for his whole life.

    “It was just making them proud, right? I’ve seen all the struggles they’ve gone through,” Steve Rios told the station. “The least I could do, right, and serve this country and try to, you know, put some time in.”

    Steve Rios said he and his parents were picking up his younger sister and her husband, who is also a Marine, at Pendleton on Sept. 28, as they have done that every weekend for the past few months while she is expecting her first child. After stopping at the gate, ICE officials arrived to detain both parents, later releasing them with ankle monitors. He said his father was deported Oct. 10.

    The Rios family told the station the parents had no criminal record, had pending green card applications sponsored by Steve and authorization to work.

    In response to inquiries from AP, Tricia McLaughlin, a Homeland Security spokeswoman, issued a statement Tuesday that read, “Under President (Donald) Trump and Secretary (Kristi) Noem, if you break the law — including domestic violence and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon — you will face the consequences. Criminal illegal aliens are not welcome in the U.S.”

    The statement did not say anything about Esteban Rios, including whether he was arrested or charged with any crime or if he had any immigration history.

    When AP followed up to ask if Esteban Rios and his wife had criminal histories, Luis Alani, a communications strategist at ICE, wrote, “By statute, ICE has no information on these aliens. To clarify, there is no information we can release.”

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  • Arrest log

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    The following arrests were made recently by local police departments. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty. Massachusetts’ privacy law prevents police from releasing information involving domestic and sexual violence arrests with the goal to protect the alleged victims.

    LOWELL

    • San Sin, 47, homeless; trespassing.

    • Daniel Dufault, 51, 51 Fetherston Ave., Lowell; warrant (probation violation for assault with dangerous weapon).

    • Jason Monteiro, 18, 84 School St., Lowell; failure to stop for police, operating motor vehicle to endanger, failure to stop at red light.

    • Jenna Noel, 40, homeless; trespassing.

    • Erick Ribeiro, 41, 3 Morton St., Lowell; trespassing.

    • Somara Chin, 37, 84 E St., Apt. 1, Lowell; warrant (assault and battery with dangerous weapon).

    • Brittany Forest, 40, 199 Manchester, N.H.; warrant (failure to appear for trespassing).

    • Jonathan Arce, 38, homeless; operating motor vehicle after license suspension, receive/buy/possess/conceal stolen motor vehicle.

    • Daniel Alicea, 25, 162 Lakeview Ave., Lowell; warrants (murder, distribution of Class B drug, operation of motor vehicle with suspended license, failure to appear for forge/misuse of RMV signature).

    • Carlos Rodriguez, 43, 80 Bowdoin St., Apt. 1, Lawrence; warrant (assault and battery).

    • Dennis Robinson, 41, homeless; trespassing.

    • Corey Fortin, 32, 193 Middlesex St., Lowell; trespassing.

    • Jason Rodriguez, 40, 137 Pine St., Lowell; trespassing.

    • Ivan Marquez, 45, 593 Market St., Apt. 335, Lowell; warrant (larceny under $1,200).

    • Jason Ayotte, 45, homeless; unlawful camping on public property.

    • Curtis Glenn, 38, 255 School St., Apt. A, Lowell; warrant (failure to appear for possession of Class B drug).

    • Krim Em, 58, 69 Walker St., Lowell; warrant (failure to appear for operation of motor vehicle with suspended license).

    • Melanie Listro, 38, homeless; warrants (failure to appear for larceny under $1,200, and trespassing).

    • Divene Sanabria, 31, homeless; warrants (failure to appear for miscellaneous municipal ordinance, and trespassing).

    • Joseph Moore, 37, 15 Maple St., Apt. 302, Dorchester; warrant (assault and battery with dangerous weapon), operating motor vehicle without suspension.

    • Kayla Chatham, 24, 1088 Dover Road, No. 103, Epsom, N.H.; warrants (larceny under $1,200, and assault and battery with dangerous weapon).

    • Michael Dalton, 35, 606 School St., No. 3, Lowell; disturbing peace, possession of Class E drug, possession of dangerous weapon (knife).

    • Victor Rivera, 42, homeless; warrant (failure to appear for trespassing).

    • Angel Macas Avila, 37, 57 Marshall Ave., No. 2, Lowell; operating motor vehicle after license suspension, operating motor vehicle to endanger, failure to stop for police, failure to stop at stop sign, operating motor vehicle without headlights.

    • Shawn Reardon, 41, 3 San Mateo Drive, Chelmsford; disorderly conduct, assault and battery of police officer, disturbing peace.

    • Shaine Clarke-Reynolds, 27, 35 Burns St., Lowell; warrant (assault with dangerous weapon).

    • Alyssa Wright, 27, 10 Sawyer St., Wareham; manufacturing/dispensing Class B drug, conspiracy drug law (felony), trafficking in cocaine (36 grams or more), warrants (failure to appear for assault and battery with dangerous weapon, use of motor vehicle without authority, and trespassing).

    • Omari Robinson, 28, 15 Elm St., Lowell; trafficking in cocaine (36 grams or more), assault and battery with dangerous weapon (shod foot), conspiracy drug law (felony), manufacturing dispensing Class A drug, resisting arrest.

    • Jocius Mercedes, 19, 115 Salem St., No. 1, Lowell; disorderly conduct, assault and battery on police officer, affray, resisting arrest.

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  • Denver Sheriff deputy arrested in Colorado Springs on several charges including child abuse, assault

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    DENVER — A Denver Sheriff deputy arrested in Colorado Springs recently is facing several charges, including child abuse and assault.

    Few details about the arrest have been released and Denver7 has contacted the Colorado Springs Police Department to find out what led to his arrest, but a spokesperson for the Denver Sheriff Department said Denver Deputy Sheriff Darrel Killebrew was placed on investigatory leave Tuesday.

    Killebrew has been charged with felony menacing, third-degree assault, criminal mischief, child abuse, and second-degree criminal tampering, according to a news release.

    The spokesperson said the Office of the Independent Monitor has been notified, and the Public Integrity Division has opened an investigation.

    Killebrew has been a deputy with the Denver Sheriff Department since 2023 and is assigned to the Downtown Detention Center.

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    Óscar Contreras

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  • Portland Woman In Court After Alleged Assault On ICE Officer – KXL

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    PORTLAND, OR – A Portland woman made her first appearance in federal court Wednesday, October 15th, after allegedly assaulting a federal officer near the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement office in South Portland.

    Oriana Korol, 38, has been charged by criminal complaint with the felony offense of assaulting a federal officer. Felony assault of a federal officer is punishable by up to eight years in federal prison.

    According to court documents, on the evening of October 12, 2025, federal officers detained Korol after she allegedly interfered with the arrest of another person. Officers claim Korol kicked and bit a federal officer as she was being detained, which is why she was charged with assault.

    Following her appearance before a U.S. Magistrate Judge. Korol was released on conditions pending further court proceedings.

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    Tim Lantz

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  • Former Frederick police officer sentenced to probation in suspect assault

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    A former Frederick Police Department officer was sentenced to a year of probation after pleading guilty to assault for hitting a man on the head while arresting him, according to court records.

    Trevor James McCourt, 34, was arrested on suspicion of second-degree assault, official misconduct and reckless endangerment in June 2024 after his department fired him for using his service gun to hit a suspect on the head while he was arresting him.

    The assault charge was a felony and the other charges were misdemeanors.

    McCourt pleaded guilty to third-degree assault, a misdemeanor, in June as part of a plea agreement and was sentenced to probation, court records show. Prosecutors dismissed the other charges as part of the plea deal.

    McCourt voluntarily gave up his state police certification in July, according to the Colorado Peace Officer Standards and Training database.

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    Katie Langford

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  • Supreme Court takes up Republican attack on Voting Rights Act in case over Black representation

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    WASHINGTON — WASHINGTON (AP) — A Republican attack on a core provision of the Voting Rights Act that is designed to protect racial minorities comes to the Supreme Court this week, more than a decade after the justices knocked out another pillar of the 60-year-old law.

    In arguments Wednesday, lawyers for Louisiana and the Trump administration will try to persuade the justices to wipe away the state’s second majority Black congressional district and make it much harder, if not impossible, to take account of race in redistricting.

    “Race-based redistricting is fundamentally contrary to our Constitution,” Louisiana Attorney General Elizabeth Murrill wrote in the state’s Supreme Court filing.

    A mid-decade battle over congressional redistricting already is playing out across the nation, after President Donald Trump began urging Texas and other Republican-controlled states to redraw their lines to make it easier for the GOP to hold its narrow majority in the House of Representatives. A ruling for Louisiana could intensify that effort and spill over to state legislative and local districts.

    The conservative-dominated court, which just two years ago ended affirmative action in college admissions, could be receptive. At the center of the legal fight is Chief Justice John Roberts, who has long had the landmark civil rights law in his sights, from his time as a young lawyer in the Reagan-era Justice Department to his current job.

    “It is a sordid business, this divvying us up by race,” Roberts wrote in a dissenting opinion in 2006 in his first major voting rights case as chief justice.

    In 2013, Roberts wrote for the majority in gutting the landmark law’s requirement that states and local governments with a history of discrimination, mostly in the South, get approval before making any election-related changes.

    “Our country has changed, and while any racial discrimination in voting is too much, Congress must ensure that the legislation it passes to remedy that problem speaks to current conditions,” Roberts wrote.

    Challenges under the provision known as Section 2 of the voting rights law must be able to show current racially polarized voting and an inability of minority populations to elect candidates of their choosing, among other factors.

    “Race is still very much a factor in current voting patterns in the state of Louisiana. It’s true in many places in the country,” said Sarah Brannon, deputy director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s Voting Rights Project.

    The Louisiana case got to this point only after Black voters and civil rights groups sued and won lower court rulings striking down the first congressional map drawn by the state’s GOP-controlled Legislature after the 2020 census. That map created just one Black majority district among six House seats in a state that is one-third Black.

    Louisiana appealed to the Supreme Court but eventually added a second majority Black district after the justices’ 5-4 ruling in 2023 that found a likely violation of the Voting Rights Act in a similar case over Alabama’s congressional map.

    Roberts and Justice Brett Kavanaugh joined their three more liberal colleagues in the Alabama outcome. Roberts rejected what he described as “Alabama’s attempt to remake our section 2 jurisprudence anew.”

    That might have settled things, but a group of white voters complained that race, not politics, was the predominant factor driving the new Louisiana map. A three-judge court agreed, leading to the current high court case.

    Instead of deciding the case in June, the justices asked the parties to answer a potentially big question: “Whether the state’s intentional creation of a second majority-minority congressional district violates the Fourteenth or Fifteenth Amendments to the U. S. Constitution.”

    Those amendments, adopted in the aftermath of the Civil War, were intended to bring about political equality for Black Americans and gave Congress the authority to take all necessary steps. Nearly a century later, Congress passed the Voting Rights Act of 1965, called the crown jewel of the civil rights era, to finally put an end to persistent efforts to prevent Black people from voting in the former states of the Confederacy.

    The call for new arguments sometimes presages a major change by the high court. The Citizens United decision in 2010 that led to dramatic increases in independent spending in U.S. elections came after it was argued a second time.

    “It does feel to me a little bit like Citizens United in that, if you recall the way Citizens United unfolded, it was initially a narrow First Amendment challenge,” said Donald Verrilli, who served as the Obama administration’s top Supreme Court lawyer and defended the voting rights law in the 2013 case.

    Among the possible outcomes in the Louisiana case, Verrilli said, is one in which a majority holds that the need for courts to step into redistricting cases, absent intentional discrimination, has essentially expired. Kavanaugh raised the issue briefly two years ago.

    The Supreme Court has separately washed its hands of partisan gerrymandering claims, in a 2019 opinion that also was written by Roberts. Restricting or eliminating most claims of racial discrimination in federal courts would give state legislatures wide latitude to draw districts, subject only to state constitutional limits.

    A shift of just one vote from the Alabama case would flip the outcome.

    With the call for new arguments, Louisiana changed its position and is no longer defending its map.

    The Trump administration joined on Louisiana’s side. The Justice Department had previously defended the voting rights law under administrations of both major political parties.

    For four years in the 1990s, Louisiana had a second Black majority district until courts struck it down because it relied too heavily on race. Fields, then a rising star in the state’s Democratic politics, twice won election. He didn’t run again when a new map was put in place and reverted to just one majority Black district in the state.

    Fields is one of the two Black Democrats who won election to Congress last year in newly drawn districts in Alabama and Louisiana.

    He again represents the challenged district, described in March by Roberts as “a snake that runs from one end of the state to the other,” picking up Black residents along the way.

    If that’s so, civil rights lawyer Stuart Naifeh told Roberts, it’s because of slavery, Jim Crow laws and the persistent lack of economic opportunity for Black Louisianans.

    Fields said the court’s earlier ruling that eliminated federal review of potentially discriminatory voting laws has left few options to protect racial minorities, making the preservation of Section 2 all the more important.

    They would never win election to Congress, he said, “but for the Voting Rights Act and but for creating majority minority districts.”

    ___

    Associated Press writer Gary Fields contributed to this report.

    ___

    Follow the AP’s coverage of the U.S. Supreme Court at https://apnews.com/hub/us-supreme-court.

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  • Family running San Jose jewelry store tries to recover after smash-and-grab, brutal assault

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    For the family that runs Kim Hung Jewelry in San Jose, Sep. 5 is a day they’ll never forget.

    What was once a thriving shop now sits boarded up, a reminder of the smash-and-grab robbery that changed everything. The family said 10 people stormed their San Jose store, after a stolen Jeep rammed into the storefront.

    Surveillance video shows the suspects smashing display cases and grabbing whatever they could before fleeing. During the chaos, the family’s 88-year-old uncle, the man who built and ran the business, was shoved to the ground.

    “It’s very sudden, and it’s very panicked,” said one family member, who agreed to speak but asked not to share her name. “You cannot imagine this happening to you.”

    Since then, the store has been closed its entrance covered with plywood and steel gates. The family said they’re still paying rent and expenses while they wait for the insurance process to move forward.

    “The business is closed. But we still pay rent. We still pay for everything in the store. You can’t not pay, right?” she said.

    Her uncle remains at home recovering. Family members have urged him not to return once the shop reopens, worried the trauma runs deeper than the visible damage.

    “His health is getting better, but he’s still traumatized,” she said.

    As for the investigation, San Jose police say they’ve made progress. On Oct. 3, seven people between the ages of 18 and 23 were arrested from across the Bay Area, including Dublin, Pacifica, San Jose, and Antioch. This week, an eighth suspect was arrested in Oakland.

    (Clockwise from top left) Angel Herrera, Toddisha Mayfield, Zakhari Blue-Gordon, Tom Donegan, Jacques Samuel, Cisco Lutu, Amari Green and Julian Gacutan, who are suspected in a Sep. 5, 2025 smash-and-grab robbery at Kim Hung Jewelry in San Jose.

    San Jose Police Department


    Police said they are still searching for at least two more suspects connected to the case.

    For the family, the arrests bring only limited comfort. The store remains shuttered… the damage still visible, the pain still raw.

    “When I look at it, I just get more sad,” she said. “I get more frustrated, and I just ask, why?”

    The family says their hope is to reopen in the next few months. Until then, they say they’ll keep speaking out not for attention, but to remind others that even when the cameras leave and the crime tape comes down, the healing takes much longer.

    “So please,” she said. “Don’t do it. Go to school. Have a successful life. This is not a life.”

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    CBS Bay Area

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  • Victim of random assault in St. Paul

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    A 20-year-old man is charged with attempted murder for allegedly beating a woman at random with a table leg on a St. Paul LRT platform during rush hour Tuesday — as several witnesses watched without intervening.

    According to court documents filed in Ramsey County, the attack occurred at 5:45 p.m. on the METRO Green Line platform at Fairview and University avenues.

    Officers arrived at the scene to find the 31-year-old victim “lying in a pool of blood, bleeding heavily from her head and face,” the charges state, and “a large wooden table leg” was found nearby.

    The suspect was soon found by officers a couple blocks west of the platform with “blood on both hands.”

    Court documents state surveillance footage showed the woman get off a bus and walk towards the platform. The suspect then jogged up behind her while “pulling up his pants with one hand … carrying the table leg with the other.”

    Footage then shows him striking her dozens of times, and continuing after she lost consciousness, according to the charges.

    Surveillance footage also showed “a group of five or six male bystanders” walk up to the suspect, but no one stopped the attack.

    “The bystanders did nothing to stop [the suspect] or hold him down — they let him slip away,” the complaint states.

    Two days later, the victim told investigators she didn’t know her attacker, and she “saw joy in [his] eyes when he beat her up,” the complaint states.

    She suffered a skull fracture and required staples to close her head wounds, and one of her eyes was “completely swollen shut,” according to court documents. She also suffered several fractures along her right arm “from her shoulder to her hand.”

    The complaint states the suspect is also charged with fifth-degree assault for allegedly punching a woman at random near the Hennepin County Government Center late last month.

    The suspect, whose given address is Catholic Charities Hope Street Youth Shelter in Minneapolis, is being held in the Ramsey County Adult Detention Center.

    He’s charged with second-degree attempted murder and first-degree assault. He faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted.

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    Stephen Swanson

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  • 8th suspect arrested in San Jose jewelry store smash-and-grab

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    An eighth suspect has been arrested in connection with a smash-and-grab robbery at a San Jose jewelry store that left the store’s elderly owner injured, authorities announced Thursday.

    According to San Jose police, detectives identified 19-year-old Julian Gacutan of South San Francisco as a suspect in the Sep. 5 robbery at Kim Hung Jewelry on Aborn Road. Warrants for his arrest and a search warrant for his home were obtained.

    With the assistance of the San Ramon Police Department, Gacutan was arrested in Oakland on Oct. 3 without incident.

    Julian Gacutan, a suspect in a Sep. 5, 2025 smash-and-grab robbery at Kim Hung Jewelry in San Jose, was arrested in Oakland on Oct. 3, 2025.

    San Jose Police Department


    “I said it before and I’ll say it again: hiding behind a mask in a crowd of thugs will not shield you from accountability,” San Jose assistant police chief Brian Shab said in a statement. “This additional arrest proves that your temporary flight from justice won’t stop us from finding you and arresting you.”

    According to officers, at least 10 people forced entry into the jewelry store by ramming a vehicle through the front door. Once inside, a suspect brandished a firearm at a man, while an elderly man was violently assaulted.

    The elderly victim, identified as the store’s 88-year-old owner, suffered a stroke during the incident. He was hospitalized with non-life threatening injuries and has since returned home to recover.

    Kim Hung Jewelry Robbery

    Kim Hung Jewelry


    Police said the suspects stole thousands of dollars’ worth of items before leaving the scene in multiple vehicles.

    “This was not just an attack on a hardworking family. It was an attack on a legacy business that represents the American dream,” Shab said during an Oct. 3 news conference announcing arrests in the case.  

    At the time, police said seven suspects were arrested during an operation that involved more than 100 officers from multiple agencies and four different SWAT teams. Arrests were made in communities throughout the region, including Dublin, Pacifica, San Leandro, San Jose, Manteca and Antioch.

    san-jose-jewelry-smash-and-grab-suspects-100325.jpg

    (Clockwise from top left) Angel Herrera, Toddisha Mayfield, Zakhari Blue-Gordon, Tom Donegan, Jacques Samuel, Cisco Lutu and Amari Green, who are suspected in a Sep. 5, 2025 smash-and-grab robbery at Kim Hung Jewelry in San Jose.

    San Jose Police Department


    The previously arrested suspects are identified as 21-year-old Angel Herrera of Pacifica, 31-year-old Toddisha Mayfield of San Leandro, 23-year-old Zakhari Blue-Gordon of East Palo Alto, 19-year-old Tom Donegan of Manteca, 18-year-old Jacques Samuel of San Francisco, 18-year-old Cisco Luti of South San Francisco and 21-year-old Amari Green of San Francisco.

    “With this latest arrest, we are one step closer to ensuring every single person involved in this cowardly crime faces the consequences of their actions,” San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan said Thursday.

    All suspects have been booked into the Santa Clara County Jail for robbery.

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    Tim Fang

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  • Man Sues Bellagio Over Alleged Assault by Would-Be Jackpot Thieves – Casino.org

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    Posted on: October 7, 2025, 07:17h. 

    Last updated on: October 7, 2025, 09:48h.

    A Las Vegas resident, Joel Vargas-Guitierrez, has filed suit against the Bellagio, alleging negligence and inadequate security after he was assaulted by three individuals attempting to claim his slot machine winnings.

    The alleged assault took place bin a slot machine area at the Bellagio in Las Vegas. (Image: Shutterstock)

    As part of the lawsuit — filed on October 3 in Clark County District Court and first reported by the Las Vegas Review-Journal on Tuesday — Vargas-Gutierrez is also suing his three alleged assailants (two men and one woman) for assault, battery and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

    The suit seeks damages exceeding $15,000, plus attorney fees, court costs, interest, punitive damages, and other relief deemed appropriate by the court.

    Incident Details

    According to the complaint, on December 12, 2024, Vargas-Gutierrez, a regular Bellagio patron, won a $2,600 jackpot on a “Mo Mummy” slot machine. Due to the size of the payout, standard casino protocol required him to wait for an attendant to verify and process the winnings.

    While waiting, according to Vargas-Gutierrez, he moved to a nearby slot machine to continue playing. During this time, three individuals approached the original slot, saw the jackpot display, and loudly proclaimed they were entitled to the winnings.

    As Vargas‑Gutierrez attempted to resolve the dispute, the complaint alleges, one of the men advanced toward him in a threatening manner. Outnumbered, he took a swing in self‑defense, sparking a physical altercation that a bystander attempted to break up.

    No security personnel were present for any of this, according to the filing.

    The woman in the group then slapped Vargas‑Gutierrez, triggering a second confrontation in which he was tackled to the ground by her two accomplices, the complaint states.

    Security guards allegedly arrived only after the altercation had escalated significantly.

    “As a direct result of the incident, Mr. Vargas‑Gutierrez has suffered physical injuries, and mental and emotional distress which required professional medical treatment and he continues to deal with these symptoms to the present day,” the lawsuit states.

     

     

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    Corey Levitan

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  • South Lake Tahoe mayor pro tem arrested for assault at bar

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    South Lake Tahoe’s mayor pro tem was arrested in connection with an incident at a bar in September.Cody Bass was arrested on Sept. 25 after allegedly approaching an employee at Lake Tahoe AleWorx in Stateline, Nevada.Despite Bass being banned from the business, he allegedly threatened to “have people kill” the the bar employee, Reno’s KRNV-TV reported. Arrest documents said Bass left the bar then returned 20 minutes later and allegedly cocked his arm as if to hit the employee, who kicked him in self-defense, according to KRNV. Deputies reviewed surveillance footage and determined Bass was the aggressor. He’s charged with misdemeanor assault, trespassing and harassment. The incident happened days before South Lake Tahoe’s mayor also made headlines. Local media published a letter Sunday by Mayor Tamara Wallace, in which she confessed to stealing from a church where she worked as an administrator. Wallace said she has been recovering from a suicide attempt and reflecting on the traumatic experiences in her life. She said she aimed to pay back “every cent I have taken.”“Sorry is not a strong enough word to explain the depths of my regret and shame,” Wallace wrote in the letter.The El Dorado County district attorney said it was investigating the stolen funds and Wallace’s confession.The city of South Lake Tahoe said in statements to KCRA 3 that it was aware of both investigations into the actions of its mayor and mayor pro tem. It said the DA’s office was handling the cases, which have not led to “fiscal harm” or impacted essential services for residents.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

    South Lake Tahoe’s mayor pro tem was arrested in connection with an incident at a bar in September.

    Cody Bass was arrested on Sept. 25 after allegedly approaching an employee at Lake Tahoe AleWorx in Stateline, Nevada.

    Despite Bass being banned from the business, he allegedly threatened to “have people kill” the the bar employee, Reno’s KRNV-TV reported.

    Arrest documents said Bass left the bar then returned 20 minutes later and allegedly cocked his arm as if to hit the employee, who kicked him in self-defense, according to KRNV.

    Deputies reviewed surveillance footage and determined Bass was the aggressor. He’s charged with misdemeanor assault, trespassing and harassment.

    The incident happened days before South Lake Tahoe’s mayor also made headlines.

    Local media published a letter Sunday by Mayor Tamara Wallace, in which she confessed to stealing from a church where she worked as an administrator.

    Wallace said she has been recovering from a suicide attempt and reflecting on the traumatic experiences in her life. She said she aimed to pay back “every cent I have taken.”

    “Sorry is not a strong enough word to explain the depths of my regret and shame,” Wallace wrote in the letter.

    The El Dorado County district attorney said it was investigating the stolen funds and Wallace’s confession.

    The city of South Lake Tahoe said in statements to KCRA 3 that it was aware of both investigations into the actions of its mayor and mayor pro tem.

    It said the DA’s office was handling the cases, which have not led to “fiscal harm” or impacted essential services for residents.

    See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

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  • Opinion | Perilous Times for Optimistic Jews in the U.K.

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    Gerry Baker is Editor at Large of The Wall Street Journal. His weekly column for the editorial page, “Free Expression,” appears in The Wall Street Journal each Tuesday. Mr. Baker is also host of “WSJ at Large with Gerry Baker,” a weekly news and current affairs interview show on the Fox Business Network, and the weekly WSJ Opinion podcast “Free Expression” where he speaks with some of the world’s leading writers, influencers and thinkers about a variety of subjects.

    Mr. Baker previously served as Editor in Chief of The Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones from 2013-2018. Prior to that, Mr. Baker was Deputy Editor in Chief of The Wall Street Journal from 2009-2013. He has been a journalist for more than 30 years, writing and broadcasting for some of the world’s most famous news organizations, including his tenure at The Financial Times, The Times of London, and The BBC.

    He was educated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford University, where he graduated in 1983 with a 1st Class Honors Degree in Philosophy, Politics and Economics.

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    Gerard Baker

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  • Man kills 2 in attack at English synagogue on Jewish holy day

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    MANCHESTER, England — An assailant drove a car into people outside a synagogue Thursday in northern England and then began stabbing them, killing two and seriously hurting at least three in what police called a terrorist attack on the holiest day of the Jewish year.

    Officers shot and killed the suspect at the synagogue in Manchester, police said, though authorities took some time to confirm he was dead because he was wearing a vest that made it appear as if he had explosives. Police later said he did not have a bomb.


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    By BRIAN MELLEY, PAN PYLAS and IAN HODGSON – Associated Press

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