TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — Savannah Guthrie told the potential kidnappers of her mother Nancy Guthrie on Saturday that the family is prepared to pay for her safe return.
“We received your message, and we understand. We beg you now to return our mother to us so that we can celebrate with her,” Guthrie said in the video, flanked by her siblings. “This is the only way we will have peace. This is very valuable to us, and we will pay.”
It was not immediately clear if Guthrie was referring to a new message from someone who might have kidnapped Nancy Guthrie. The Associated Press reached out to the Pima County Sheriff’s department seeking additional details.
The frantic search for the 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie has entered a seventh day. Authorities have not identified any suspects or ruled anyone out, Sheriff Chris Nanos said this week.
Authorities think she was taken against her will from her home just outside Tucson over the weekend. DNA tests showed blood on Guthrie’s front porch was a match to her, Nanos said.
Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
BOSTON — Federal authorities have charged several men in a more than $1 million multistate SNAP fraud and stolen identity case and are blaming Massachusetts officials for failing to report the scheme.
U.S. Attorney for Massachusetts Leah Foley announced on Tuesday that four people, including two Venezuelan nationals, stole more than $440,000 in Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program benefits and fraudulently claimed more than $700,000 in pandemic unemployment benefits from Massachusetts, New York and several other states.
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WASHINGTON — The Department of Justice will allow members of Congress to review unredacted files on the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein starting on Monday, according to a letter that was sent to lawmakers.
What You Need To Know
The Department of Justice will allow members of Congress to review unredacted files on the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein
That’s according to a letter obtained by The Associated Press says that lawmakers starting Monday will be able to review unredacted versions of the more than 3 million files that the Justice Department has released
To access the files, lawmakers will need to give the Justice Department 24 hours advance notice
They will be able to review the files on computers at the Department of Justice, and only lawmakers and not their staff will have access to the files
The letter obtained by The Associated Press says that lawmakers will be able to review unredacted versions of the more than 3 million files that the Justice Department has released to comply with a law passed by Congress last year.
To access the files, lawmakers will need to give the Justice Department 24 hours’ notice. They will be able to review the files on computers at the Department of Justice. Only lawmakers, not their staff, will have access to the files, and they will be permitted to take notes, but not make electronic copies.
The arrangement, first reported by NBC News, showed the continued demand for information on Epstein and his crimes by lawmakers, even after the Justice Department devoted large numbers of its staff to comply with the law passed by Congress last year. The Justice Department has come under criticism for delays in the release of information, failing to redact the personal information and photos of victims and not releasing the entire 6 million documents collected in relation to Epstein.
Still, lawmakers central to the push for transparency, described the concession by the Justice Department as a victory.
“When Congress pushes back, Congress can prevail,” Rep. Ro Khanna, who sponsored what’s known as the Epstein Files Transparency Act, posted on social media.
Khanna has pointed to several emails between Epstein and individuals whose information was redacted that appeared to refer to the sexual abuse of underage girls. The release of the case files has prompted inquiries around the world about men who cavorted with the well-connected financier. Still, lawmakers are pressing for a further reckoning over anyone who may have had knowledge of Epstein’s abuse or could have helped facilitate it.
Epstein killed himself in a New York jail cell in 2019 while he faced charges that he sexually abused and trafficked dozens of underage girls. The case was brought more than a decade after he secretly cut a deal with federal prosecutors in Florida to dispose of nearly identical allegations. Epstein was accused of paying underage girls hundreds of dollars in cash for massages and then molesting them.
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — It’s been a week since “Today” show host Savannah Guthrie ‘s mother disappeared from her home in Arizona in what authorities say was a kidnapping.
Investigators have been examining ransom notes and looking for evidence but have not named a suspect. On Friday, officers returned to 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie ‘s home near Tucson and to the surrounding neighborhood to continue their search.
Here’s what to know about the case:
Family members told officials they last saw Guthrie at 9:48 p.m. on Jan. 31 when they dropped her off at home after they ate dinner and played games together. The next day, family learned she didn’t attend church. They reported her missing after they went to check on her.
Guthrie has a pacemaker and needs daily medication. Her family and authorities are worried her health could be deteriorating by the day.
Authorities think Guthrie was taken against her will from her home in an upscale neighborhood that sits on hilly, desert terrain. DNA tests showed blood on Guthrie’s front porch matched hers, the county sheriff has said.
Investigators found her doorbell camera was disconnected early Sunday and that software data recorded movement at the home minutes later. But investigators haven’t been able to recover the footage because Guthrie didn’t have an active subscription to the service.
“I wish technology was as easy as we believe it is, that here’s a picture, here’s your bad guy. But it’s not,” Nanos told the AP on Friday. “There are pieces of information that come to us from these tech groups that say ‘This is what we have and we can’t get anymore.’”
The president of the Catalina Foothills Association, a neighborhood group, thanked residents in a letter for being willing to speak with law enforcement, share camera images and allow their properties to be searched.
At least three media organizations reported receiving purported ransom notes, which they handed over to investigators. Authorities made an arrest after one ransom note turned out to be fake, the sheriff said.
It’s unclear if all of the notes were identical. Heith Janke, the FBI chief in Phoenix, said details included a demand for money with a Thursday evening deadline and a second deadline for Monday if the first one wasn’t met. At least one note mentioned a floodlight at Guthrie’s home and an Apple watch, Janke said.
Investigators said they are taking the notes seriously.
On Friday, KOLD-TV in Tucson said it received a new message, via email, tied to the Guthrie case. The station said it couldn’t disclose its contents. The FBI said it was aware of a new message and was reviewing its authenticity.
Concern about Guthrie’s condition is growing because authorities say she needs daily medicine that’s vital to her health. She has a pacemaker, high blood pressure and heart issues, according to sheriff’s dispatcher audio on broadcastify.com.
Police have not said that they have received any deepfake images of Nancy Guthrie.
Savannah Guthrie described her mother as a “kind, faithful, loyal, fiercely loving woman of goodness and light” and said she was funny, spunky and clever.
“Talk to her and you’ll see,” she said.
She spoke some words directly to her mom, saying she and her siblings wouldn’t rest until they’re all together again.
The FBI has offered a $50,000 reward for information about Guthrie’s whereabouts.
The White House said President Donald Trump called and spoke with Savannah Guthrie on Wednesday. He posted on social media that he was directing federal authorities to help where they can.
On Friday night, he told reporters flying with him to his Florida estate on Air Force One that the investigation was going “very well” and investigators had some strong clues.
Other notorious kidnappings in U.S. history have included the son of singer Frank Sinatra, the granddaughter of newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst and the 9-year-old girl for whom the AMBER Alert was named.
Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
OOLTEWAH, Tenn. — A former New York Jets first-round draft pick was arrested in Tennessee and charged with first-degree murder in the death of his girlfriend.
Darron Lee was identified Thursday as the suspect and taken into custody at the scene, according to the Hamilton County sheriff’s office.
The victim’s identity was not released.
The 31-year-old Lee played 58 games with the Jets, Kansas City and Buffalo from 2016 through the 2020 seasons. The former Ohio State linebacker was the 20th overall pick in 2016 by the Jets. He was the defensive MVP of the 2015 Sugar Bowl.
Lee was charged with first-degree murder and tampering with evidence. Additional charges could be pending following the outcome of the investigation, the sheriff’s office said.
Upon arrival, first responders located a female victim and attempted life-saving measures.
“Due to the condition of the victim and the residence, HCSO Criminal Investigative Services Detectives responded. Preliminary findings indicate the victim’s death was the result of a homicide,” the Hamilton County sheriff’s office said in a statement.
WASHINGTON, Feb 6 (Reuters) – A federal grand jury returned an indictment charging a 33-year-old man with threatening to kill U.S. Vice President JD Vance during his visit to the Ohio region in January, the Justice Department said on Friday.
Shannon Mathre, of Toledo, Ohio, is accused of making a threat to take the life of, and to inflict bodily harm upon, Vance, the Justice Department said in a statement.
Mathre allegedly stated, “I am going to find out where he (the vice president) is going to be and use my M14 automatic gun and kill him,” according to the indictment cited by the Justice Department.
Mathre was arrested by U.S. Secret Service agents on Friday. A representative of Mathre could not immediately be reached.
Experts have raised alarm about political violence and threats of violence in a polarized U.S. in recent years. Earlier this week, a January 6, 2021, rioter, who was pardoned by President Donald Trump, pleaded guilty to a harassment charge after being accused of threatening to kill U.S. House of Representatives Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries.
While investigating the alleged threats, federal agents also discovered multiple files of child sexual abuse materials in Mathre’s possession, the Justice Department said.
Mathre made his initial appearance before a U.S. Magistrate Judge for the Northern District of Ohio on Friday and remains in custody pending a detention hearing scheduled for February 11, the Justice Department said.
If found guilty as charged, Mathre faces a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a maximum statutory fine of $250,000 for threatening the life of the vice president, the Justice Department said. Mathre faces a maximum of 20 years in prison and a maximum statutory fine of $250,000 if found guilty of the child sexual abuse materials charge, it added.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
A Raleigh woman was arrested and faces multiple charges after Wake County deputies said she was reported for alleged fraud.
Deputies said a Wake County couple
reported 34-year-old Cassandra Carroll in October 2025 after seeing unusual
account activity from their bank account, including fraudulent transactions and
thousands of dollars in attempted transfers.
Deputies said after an
investigation with the Wake County District Attorney’s office, Carroll was
arrested on Thursday.
She is charged with felony
identity theft, exploitation of an older or disabled adult, obtaining property
by false pretense, attempting to obtain property by false pretense and
accessing computers.
Authorities are holding Carroll on a $50,000
bond. She is due back in court at 2 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 12.
A grand jury in New Mexico has indicted actor Timothy Busfield on four counts of criminal sexual contact with a child.
Bernalillo County District Attorney Sam Bregman announced the indictment Friday in a press release.
“As with all criminal proceedings, Mr. Busfield is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty in a court of law. This case will proceed through the judicial process and is expected to move forward to trial,” Bregman said. “The case will be prosecuted by the Special Victims Unit of the Bernalillo County District Attorney’s Office.”
Bregman emphasized that “protecting children remains a top priority for his office” and the Bernalillo County District Attorney’s Office “remains committed to doing everything possible to protect children and ensure justice for victims.”
The development comes two weeks after Busfield was released from jail in New Mexico while he awaits trial on child sexual abuse charges.
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Bernalillo County District Court Judge David A. Murphy rejected New Mexico prosecutors’ bid to keep Busfield, 68, detained. The prosecutors had outlined what they said was grooming behaviour and abuse of power by the Thirtysomething actor over three decades.
Busfield’s charges stem from allegations he inappropriately touched a minor on the set of the TV series, The Cleaning Lady, that he was directing in New Mexico.
West Wing actor Timothy Busfield charged with sexual contact of a minor, child abuse
Busfield’s lawyers argued the actor wasn’t a danger to the community and shouldn’t be behind bars while he awaits trial.
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Murphy said while the crimes Busfield is accused of are inherently dangerous and involve children, prosecutors didn’t prove he posed a risk to public safety if released.
The judge also said that the risk of Busfield committing more crimes “can be remedied through different conditions of release.”
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Under the order, Busfield may not contact the alleged victims or their families, discuss the case with witnesses or have any unsupervised contact with minors. He has also been ordered to appear for all his future court dates and is not allowed to possess any firearms or dangerous weapons or consume any alcohol or illegal drugs.
According to the criminal complaint, an investigator with the APD said a boy reported that Busfield touched him on his private areas over his clothing on one occasion when he was seven years old and a second time when he was eight. The boy’s twin brother told authorities he was also touched by Busfield, but he did not specify where and said he didn’t tell anyone because he feared he would get in trouble, the complaint said.
Timothy Busfield faces another sexual abuse claim as wife stands by his side
In a video shared before turning himself in, Busfield called the allegations against him “lies.”
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“They’re all lies and I did not do anything to those little boys and I’m gonna fight it. I’m gonna fight it with a great team, and I’m gonna be exonerated, I know I am, because this is all so wrong and all lies,” he said.
#EXCLUSIVE 🚨 Timothy Busfield surrenders to cops on child sex abuse charges.
NEW YORK, Feb 6 (Reuters) – Luigi Mangione, the man accused of fatally shooting a health insurance executive outside a hotel in New York City, will face trial for murder on June 8 in state court in Manhattan, a judge said on Friday.
Mangione, 27, is accused of gunning down UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson on a sidewalk in Midtown Manhattan. Public officials condemned the assassination, but it sparked an outpouring of criticism of U.S. health insurance industry practices.
Mangione has pleaded not guilty to murder, weapons and forgery charges. He also pleaded not guilty to stalking charges in a separate federal case that is set to go to trial on October 13.
Supreme Court Justice Gregory Carro set a trial date in the state case at a hearing on Friday where Mangione was present with his lawyers.
Prosecutors with the office of Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg have been pushing for a speedy trial in hopes of going before federal prosecutors.
Thompson, who led UnitedHealth Group’s health insurance business, was shot and killed on December 4, 2024 outside the Hilton hotel where he was staying for an investors’ meeting.
Mangione was arrested in Pennsylvania after a five-day manhunt and has been jailed ever since. He became an online folk hero for some Americans who decry steep healthcare costs and claim denial practices by insurance companies.
State prosecutors initially charged Mangione with terrorism, but Carro threw out that charge after finding there was not enough evidence to show Mangione’s alleged actions were aimed at influencing public policy.
Federal prosecutors with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York separately brought murder, weapons and stalking charges against Mangione and said they would seek the death penalty.
The judge overseeing that case threw out the murder and weapons charges on a legal technicality in January. That eliminated the possibility of the death penalty, but Mangione could face life in prison if he is convicted of stalking.
(Reporting by Jack Queen in New York; Editing by Chris Reese)
I am talking about a coordinated campaign launched by the religious right to overturn gay marriage, arguing it harms children. The effort is a direct attack on the Supreme Court’s 2015 Obergefell vs. Hodges decision making same-sex marriage a fundamental right of equality under the 14th Amendment, but also seeks to engage churches on the issue and change public opinion.
Good luck with that last part. Most Americans support marriage equality. But the Supreme Court? That’s much iffier these days.
But what disturbs me the most, while we wait for litigation, is that the campaign is yet another disingenuous ploy by MAGA to use children as an excuse for attacking civil rights, and attempting, Christian nationalist-style, to impose religious values on general society.
MAGA frames so much hate — especially around immigrants and diversity — as protection of children, and through decades’ worth of conspiracy theory has attempted to paint LGBTQ+ parents as deviant and predatory. (QAnon, for example, was all about saving kids from gay and Democratic predators.)
In reality, it’s the MAGA folks who are traumatizing children.
“Our children are afraid. They’re terrorized,” Chauntyll Allen told me. She’s the St. Paul, Minn., school board member who was arrested recently for her part in the church protest of a pastor who is also an ICE official.
“And we’re not just talking about immigrants,” she continued. All kids “are watching this, they’re experiencing this, and they’re carrying the terror in their body. What is this going to do for our society in 20 years?”
This campaign to undo marriage equality, far from protecting kids, is just another injury inflicted on them for political gain. It features twoCalifornia cases that are meant to show how terrible any form of same-sex parenting is, but mischaracterizes the facts for maximum outrage.
The campaign also specifically targets in vitro fertilization and surrogacy as dangerous gateways to promoting LGBTQ+ families, an increasingly common position in far-right religious circles that would like to see more white women having babies through sex with white husbands.
Attacking marriage equality isn’t about protecting children any more than deporting immigrants is about stopping crime. Allowing it to be framed that way actually puts in danger the stability of the approximately 300,000 kids nationwide who are being raised by about 832,000 couples in same-sex marriages.
It endangers the physical and mental health of LGBTQ+ kids in any family who are growing up in a world that is increasingly hostile to them — with gender and identity hate crimes on the rise.
And it endangers everyone who values a free and fair democracy that separates church and state by eroding the rights of the vulnerable as precedent for eroding the rights of whomever ticks them off next. If LGBTQ+ marriages aren’t legally protected, how long before racists come for the Loving decision, which legalized interracial marriage?
If you doubt the MAGA agenda extends that far, when Second Lady Usha Vance recently announced her fourth pregnancy, one lovely fellow on social media wrote, “There is nothing exciting about this. We will never vote for your race traitor husband.”
Hate is a virus that spreads how it pleases.
Those behind the effort to undo marriage equality say that by legalizing the ability for LGBTQ+ folks to tie the knot, America put “adult desires” ahead of children’s well-being, which is dependent on being raised in a home that includes a married man and woman.
Never mind the millions of kids being raised by single parents, grandparents (looking at you, JD Vance) or other guardians who aren’t the biological John-and-Jane mommy and daddy of conservative lore. Never mind the many same-sex marriages that don’t include kids.
“Americans need to understand the threat that gay marriage poses to children and that natural marriage is directly connected to children protection,” Katy Faust, the leader of the campaign, said in an interview with a Christian news website.
Of course, the campaign also makes no mention of the hundreds of children currently held in detention camps around the country — on some days, the number of children locked up just by ICE (not Border Patrol or in the care of other agencies) has skyrocketed to 400 under Trump, according to the Marshall Project.
Outside of lockup, Black and brown children are being traumatized daily by the fear that they or their parents will be taken or even killed by federal agents. Thousands of kids across the country, including in California, have stopped going to school and other public places for fear of endangering themselves or their families. Don’t expect to see these folks campaigning to protect those kids.
The campaign also ignores the fact that U.S. Department of Justice funding to combat sex crimes against children was just slashed, leaving victims and prosecutors without crucial resources to fight that real and undoubtedly harmful exploitation of our youth by sex traffickers.
And Epstein. I cannot even start on save-the-children folks who seemingly ignore the victims of the sex crimes detailed in those files — many of them children at the time — while wringing their hands over families who don’t look like their own. It is a mind-blowing amount of hypocrisy.
But of course, none of this is about saving children — yours, mine or anyone’s.
But framing it around protecting children is a powerful manipulation — a last-ditch effort as same sex marriage does in fact become more accepted. Because who doesn’t want to save our kids? From whatever.
Don’t be surprised if this effort gains traction in coming months. As we head into elections, the MAGA machine will attempt to turn the lens away from immigration and back to old-school issues such as feminism, abortion and same-sex marriage, which time and again its base has been willing to vote on regardless of what else is happening.
Because they actually don’t care about kids. They care about power, and they’re perfectly willing to exploit kids to get it.
O’SMACH, Cambodia, Feb 6 (Reuters) – In a Cambodian compound with rooms designed to look like Singapore and Australia police offices, papers were strewn across desks and floors: the detritus of a fraud factory abandoned in haste.
Among the documents were profiles of a 73-year-old Japanese retiree, complete with his phone number and bank account balance, and an American woman who disclosed that she was a victim of domestic abuse. Nearby were scripts to commit love scams and impersonate police, as well as a room set up to resemble a Vietnamese bank office.
This is what Reuters reporters found on Monday inside a bombed-out compound near the Thai-Cambodian border, which offers one of the clearest windows yet into the industrial-scale fraud that has fleeced billions of dollars from victims globally.
Police raids and military air strikes have forced criminal gangs to flee scores of scam compounds in Cambodia in recent weeks. The visit to the site, known as Royal Hill, was facilitated by the Thai military, which bombed it during a brief border conflict in December and has since occupied the surrounding area.
Reuters is the first news organization to authenticate some of the papers, which document the sophisticated manner in which the scams are carried out.
The news agency verified one of the documents by contacting the Japanese retiree, who said he had received a call late last year from someone claiming to be from an electricity company and who warned his power would be cut off if he did not provide the scammer with his bank details.
The target did not send any money, but disclosed personal information during the call, including details found in the log seen by Reuters. “If the power was cut off, that would be a real problem as I live up in the mountains,” he said. “I let (details) slip out without thinking and later thought that was a bad idea.”
Reuters could not establish what entity had ultimate control of the Royal Hill compound in Cambodia, where land records are not readily accessible.
Chinese-language documents found at the site outlined that the complex’s unidentified management had leased out space to different scamming groups. A person named Zhang who was identified in the documents as a tenant did not respond to calls seeking comment.
The Cambodian government said in a statement on Wednesday that the compound was a hotel that Thailand had occupied by force.
Interior Ministry spokesperson Touch Sokhak separately said in response to questions about Royal Hill that the government “has the will” to crack down on scam centers and repeated a government pledge to eliminate cyber fraud by April.
Southeast Asia has emerged in recent years as an epicenter of the global cyberfraud industry. Compounds which are mostly run by Chinese criminal gangs and staffed partly by trafficking victims living in brutal conditions have proliferated across Cambodia, Laos, the Philippines, and lawless areas of the Myanmar-Thai border.
Many of these countries have been pressured to crack down by foreign governments like the United States, which estimates that Americans lost $10 billion to Southeast Asian scam centers in 2024.
The December strikes by Thailand – whose military said the centers were also being used to stage drone attacks during the border conflict – and a crackdown by the Cambodian government have led to an exodus of more than 100,000 people from compounds across the country.
Many have lined up outside embassies in the capital, Phnom Penh, seeking help and funds to return home in what Amnesty International has called a “humanitarian crisis.”
Japan’s National Police Agency and the U.S. Embassy in Bangkok did not respond to requests for comment about the documents that appeared to show their citizens being targeted.
The compound visited by Reuters is located in the border town of O’Smach, which the U.S. State Department’s annual Trafficking in Persons Report highlighted in 2024 as a hub for abuses.
Files found in a part of the compound that the Thai military said appeared to be used by the site’s managers show the extent to which criminal gangs go to protect their operations.
One document showed how bosses demanded military-style anti-riot and emergency drills, while another included orders to security guards to stop people “loitering” nearby.
A property management notice also barred the use of food delivery services that could bring outsiders on-site. Other documents prohibited unspecified “illegal activity,” forbade workers from walking around shirtless, and demanded “civilized” behavior.
Reuters also found financial statements that outlined how the unidentified managers of the scam compound charged tenants several thousands of dollars a month in rent. Some of the criminal gangs were overdue on their rent, the statements show.
The news agency also discovered details about a cryptocurrency wallet in one of the documents. Nick Smart of blockchain-analysis firm Crystal Intelligence, which reviewed the wallet at Reuters’ request, said it had interactions with “many known high-risk services,” including gambling sites and cash-conversion locations.
At least some of the businesses in Royal Hill faced occasional struggles carrying out fraud, according to one of the documents, an October 2025 entry in a notebook.
That day, workers making calls faced “only abuse and scam answers” from their targets, the note read.
One former worker of another scam compound next to Royal Hill told Reuters that the conditions Reuters observed were reflective of what he experienced.
The worker, a Madagascar citizen who said he was a trafficking victim, spoke on condition of anonymity due to fear of retribution.
He said he was allowed by captors, who he did not identify, to leave the compound a few days after Thailand started bombing the area. The military action prompted the compound’s managers to return his passport, which they had seized, he said.
Scammers targeted by raids often relocate and reconstitute themselves into smaller operations, said Delphine Schantz, the regional representative for the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Her agency shares expertise with national law enforcement agencies.
“We see those scam centers now kind of mushrooming all over the world in different places, along the same model as what we’ve seen in Southeast Asia,” she said.
(Reporting by Poppy McPherson in O’Smach, Cambodia, Thomas Suen in Bangkok, and Satoshi Sugiyama and Tim Kelly in Tokyo; Editing by Katerina Ang)
WASHINGTON, Feb 5 (Reuters) – A January 6, 2021, rioter, who was pardoned by President Donald Trump, pleaded guilty to a harassment charge after being accused of threatening to kill U.S. House of Representatives Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, prosecutors said on Thursday.
Christopher Moynihan, 35, pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor harassment charge in a hearing in Clinton, New York, and will be sentenced in April. His representative could not immediately be reached.
“Threats against elected officials are not political speech, they are criminal acts that strike at the heart of public safety and our democratic system,” Dutchess County District Attorney Anthony Parisi said in a statement.
Moynihan, 34, was charged in October after he sent threatening text messages about an appearance Jeffries was scheduled to make in New York City, according to a complaint filed in New York state court in Clinton.
“Hakeem Jeffries makes a speech in a few days in NYC I cannot allow this terrorist to live. … I will kill him for the future,” the text messages read, according to the complaint.
“These text messages placed the recipient in reasonable fear of the imminent murder and assassination of Hakeem Jeffries by the defendant,” the complaint had said.
In February 2023, Moynihan was sentenced to 21 months in prison on charges including obstruction of an official proceeding, a felony.
He was among nearly 1,590 people charged in the storming of the U.S. Capitol by supporters of Trump on January 6, 2021, in an unsuccessful attempt to prevent the certification of former President Joe Biden’s 2020 presidential election victory over Trump.
On his first day back in office last year, Trump pardoned nearly everyone criminally charged with participating in the Capitol attack in a show of solidarity with supporters who backed his false claim of victory in the 2020 election.
Some other January 6 rioters have also been re-arrested, charged or sentenced for other crimes, according to a watchdog.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing by Michael Perry)
The Durham County Sheriff’s Office announced that a drug trafficking investigation resulted in the arrest of a man and the seizure of enough fentanyl to kill more than 2.3 million people.
On Wednesday night, the sheriff’s office’ Anti-Crime and Narcotics unit, with assistance from the State Bureau of Investigation, executed a search warrant at a home on Newland Place.
Law enforcement officers say they located several weapons, including an AR-15 and an AK-style assault rifle, a large sum of cash and narcotics. In addition to the 4.6 kilos of fentanyl, authorities said they seized 3.8 kilos of marijuana, 215 grams of cocaine, 12 grams of heroin and 23 grams of mushrooms.
Rodney Ephraim, 49, faces several charges. Those include trafficking in fentanyl and MSDP a controlled substance within 1,000 feet of a school.
“Two milligrams [of fentanyl] can be a lethal dose,” said Durham County Sheriff Clarence Birkhead. “According to DEA data, one kilo of fentanyl has the potential to kill 500,000 people. When you consider the population of Durham County is just under 350,000, it’s sobering to think of.”
Authorities are holding Ephraim in the Durham County Detention Center without bond.
Amy Spurlock didn’t cry, at least not that afternoon.
It was the week before Christmas, and she stood on Northwest 20th Street in Fort Worth’s north side looking at a wooden cross that marked where her 20-year-old son, Crawford Blake Bullock, had died almost exactly a year ago.
In the December chill, Spurlock watched her son’s friends from a church group in Midland, where Bullock grew up, decorate the cross with photos and mementos from a life cut short. Among the items was a light-up snow globe, the kind Spurlock said she would give her son at the holidays.
Jordan Clair, right, and friends place flowers at a memorial for his brother Blake Bullock on Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025. Bullock’s body was lying on Northwest 20th Street on the night of Dec. 15, 2025, and was subsequently struck by a police vehicle responding to a report of gunfire. Amanda McCoy amccoy@star-telegram.com
Photographs of Blake Burlock and his church group are taped to a wooden cross marking the area where he was found dead more than a year ago on Northwest 20th Street in Fort Worth. Amanda McCoy amccoy@star-telegram.com
Spurlock reminisced about Bullock and laughed with his friends, but underneath the stoicism and occasional smiles raged an undercurrent of grief, anger and frustration fueled by questions about what happened the night her son was hit by a Fort Worth police vehicle after an altercation with his girlfriend and her mother.
Bullock was later pronounced dead at the scene.
A night out turns deadly
In 2024, Bullock moved from Midland to Weatherford with his girlfriend, Chloe McDonald, 19, and their infant son.
That year, on Dec. 14, the couple, joined by Chloe’s mother, Tomlyn McDonald, 47, went out to Billy Bob’s in the Fort Worth Stockyards.
According to Chloe, Bullock was too drunk to get inside the bar when they arrived. With help from a stranger, she got Bullock back into the car, but she said they fought while they waited for her mother to come out of Billy Bob’s.
In a phone conversation, Chloe alleged Bullock was violent while also admitting she got physical with him.
“Don’t get me wrong, I was fighting him, too,” Chloe said.
The fighting continued in the car on the way home to Weatherford. In a phone interview, Tomlyn, who was driving that night, described it as “bickering” between Chloe and Bullock.
“They were yelling and screaming back and forth at each other,” she said.
Finally, Tomlyn said, she’d had enough. Just before 2:15 a.m. on Dec. 15, she stopped the car next to a wooded area on Northwest 20th Street, near the intersection of Ephriham Avenue. Tomlyn said she intended to intervene between her daughter and Bullock, but Bullock attacked her.
Tomlyn described it as a vicious beating. She said Bullock punched her and bit her. Finally, she said she got him out of the car, and she and Chloe drove away.
A few minutes later, Bullock, who was lying in the street, was struck by a Fort Worth police vehicle driven by an officer responding to a report of gunfire.
Surveillance, bodycam and dashcam footage tell the story of Bullock’s final moments
The Star-Telegram obtained from the Tarrant County Medical Examiner’s Office surveillance footage, police bodycam footage and police dashcam footage that was used in the investigation into Bullock’s death.
The surveillance footage was captured by a camera at a business directly across from where Chloe and Tomlyn left Bullock.
In that video, you see a white compact sedan turn right onto Northwest 20th Street from Ephriham Avenue. It stops with the driver’s side facing the camera. An occupant opens the passenger door. In the dome light, you can see someone throwing punches, though it’s unclear who it is.
A screenshot of a surveillance video shows a vehicle stopped on Northwest 20th Street and what appears to be a struggle taking place at the rear of the vehicle.
Someone then gets out and stands on the passenger side while movement continues inside the car for a few seconds, then everything is still for about a minute and a half. Somehow, Chloe ends up in the driver’s seat, and she moves the car forward a few feet.
That’s when you see Tomlyn and Bullock emerge from behind the vehicle and fall to the ground, one on top of the other, but it’s difficult to tell who’s who. The one on top punches the one on the bottom at least six times before Chloe gets out of the car and pushes that person away.
A struggle ensues, and all three end up on the ground. At this point, it’s impossible to tell what’s happening in the grainy surveillance footage. A few moments later, Chloe helps her mom up. Tomlyn gets in the driver’s seat, Chloe gets in the passenger seat, and they drive away, leaving Bullock in the road. He appears to raise and lower his arm, but there is no further movement.
Three minutes later, Tomlyn and Chloe come back. They idle in the car with the headlights on Bullock, who is lying still, then they drive off. Another vehicle passes Bullock shortly after, but the driver doesn’t stop.
Minutes after that, a Fort Worth police vehicle driven by Officer Brock Atkins turns right onto Northwest 20th Street with its lights flashing. For a second, Bullock is visible in the SUV’s headlights in the surveillance footage. The vehicle strikes Bullock, pushing him sideways, and the officer continues on.
Shortly after, four other police vehicles turn onto Northwest 20th Street. The first vehicle continues past Bullock, but the other three stop and officers get out. The surveillance footage used in the investigation ends at this point.
The officers, Atkins included, were responding to a report of gunfire made by John Garcia, a nearby resident who had called 911 a little after 2 a.m.
John Garcia, who lives on Northwest 20th Street, made the 9-1-1 call on the night of Blake Bullock’s death to report gunshots and the sounds of someone shouting. It was that call that brought police to the scene. Amanda McCoy amccoy@star-telegram.com
In phone conversations with the Star-Telegram, Chloe and Tomlyn were adamant that Bullock was fine when they left him. When asked what shape he was in, Tomlyn said he was “alive and well” and had just finished punching and biting her.
A post-mortem toxicology report showed Bullock was intoxicated, but Tomlyn doesn’t believe he passed out in the road, and she and Chloe both said they didn’t injure him.
Garcia, the 911 caller who lives on Northwest 20th Street, said the sound of gunshots isn’t uncommon in his neighborhood, but he also heard what sounded like a young man screaming “I don’t want to die.” Hearing that is what made him call the police that night.
In audio of the 911 call that Spurlock shared, Garcia tells the dispatcher he hears someone yelling out, but he can’t see the person.
In an interview, Garcia said it was too dark for him to tell where the shouts were coming from. But he said he did see Chloe and Tomlyn drive by, honking the car horn. After that, Garcia said, is when he heard the screaming.
Details of Bullock’s death
The medical examiner attributed Bullock’s death to blunt force trauma, but the manner of death was ruled “inconclusive.” In his report, the medical examiner raised the possibility that Bullock had suffered injuries from the altercation with Chloe and Tomlyn, noting abrasions and lacerations on Bullock’s head along with the skull fractures. Bullock also had abrasions on his hands, chest and upper back.
The toxicology report put Bullock’s blood alcohol level at between 0.13 and 0.19, numbers indicating a high level of intoxication.
A Texas Department of Transportation accident report said Bullock had been left “incapacitated” before Atkins’ vehicle hit him.
Viewing Atkins’ bodycam video from that night, there’s a bang after he turns onto Northwest 20th Street at the point where he struck Bullock, but Atkins doesn’t acknowledge he’d hit someone.
Atkins stopped about 200 yards from Bullock at Garcia’s home. Atkins talked with Garcia along with two other officers who responded to the call, then he left and drove around the block in search of the source of the gunshots.
When he returned to Northwest 20th Street, Atkins approached officers gathered near Bullock, who was lying in the road with blood streaming from his head. One officer was giving Bullock chest compressions while others searched for shell casings, believing Bullock had been shot.
(Left) Jordan Clair holds the first cross family members placed on the side of Northwest 20th Street where his brother, Blake Bullock, was killed in 2024. (Right) Amy Spurlock wears a necklace with a cross and fish hook to remember her son, Blake Bullock. Amanda McCoy amccoy@star-telegram.com
Atkins assisted at the scene, seemingly unaware of what had happened. When he saw a Fort Worth police sergeant several minutes later, though, the sergeant pulled him aside and told him he thought he might have hit Bullock. Atkins called the sergeant “Castillo” in the video. Sgt. Andrew Castillo was Atkins’ supervisor, according to personnel records obtained by the Star-Telegram.
The Star-Telegram attempted to reach Atkins for comment, but was unsuccessful. A police department official said he would see if Atkins and Castillo were willing to speak on the record. Neither has yet responded.
During the conversation captured on the bodycam, Castillo asked Atkins if he felt anything while driving.
“I felt, like bumps,” Atkins replied. “But it’s north side, so I didn’t know if I hit a bump or whatnot.”
Castillo told Atkins to download his dashcam video for review. Shortly after, Atkins watched the footage while sitting in his car, his bodycam showed. An unidentified officer joined him to view the video.
Watching the dashcam footage, Atkins saw Bullock lying in the road and realized that he did indeed hit him with his vehicle.
Upon seeing that, Atkins became visibly upset, the bodycam video showed. The other officer tried to comfort Atkins.
“Hey, bro, you got your mind set on one thing,” the officer told Atkins. “It sucks, but you got your mind set on one thing. And your intentions were good. You were trying to get here and not expecting that s–t at all.”
That officer then told Atkins not to talk to anyone. In a broken voice, Atkins told him he needed a minute to gather himself. After that, he shut off his bodycam.
The Star-Telegram asked three experts to review the video footage and other records associated with the case and give their opinions on what happened.
When asked how Atkins could have hit someone with his car without knowing it, Lyons and Haberfeld attributed it to elevated stress hormones. Lyons, a former police officer who holds a Ph.D. in forensic clinical psychology, said in an email that it was possible Atkins had tunnel vision when he turned onto Northwest 20th Street as he was entering what he believed could have been a dangerous situation. In Lyons’ view, reality dawned on Atkins after his cortisol levels dropped.
Likewise, Haberfeld believed an adrenaline spike could have initially clouded Atkins’ awareness.
“When police officers are on their way to a call for service, as was the case here, and especially when the call involves a potential violent encounter with a suspect, their adrenaline level goes up, fear kicks in and their attention to other environmental factors is impaired due to the stress that they are experiencing,” Haberfeld wrote in an email.
The Star-Telegram requested personnel records through an open records request, but a Fort Worth records clerk at first said there were no responsive documents. Subsequent requests for records through the city clerk’s office produced employment documents Atkins signed in 2022, apparently when he joined the police force. There was also an October 2024 performance review signed by Castillo, who gave Atkins an overall positive evaluation.
“Officer Atkins is a valuable asset to our department, exemplifying the qualities of dedication, integrity and a strong work ethic,” Castillo wrote in the performance review.
When asked if Atkins could be held liable for Bullock’s death, Falk said it was unlikely.
“Officers are generally pretty protected in their actions, unless those actions are really, really egregious, or it’s an ongoing pattern which makes it more egregious,“ Falk said.
From Falk’s perspective, what Atkins did was accidental, and it would be incredibly difficult to prove otherwise.
What did police make of Chloe and Tomlyn’s involvement?
Fort Worth police would not release records to the Star-Telegram related to a homicide investigation into Bullock’s death. A police spokesperson would only say investigators reviewed the evidence before declining to pursue charges against the McDonald women.
“After careful consideration of all information and applicable law, detectives determined that the evidence did not support filing criminal charges against Tomlyn or Chloe,” the spokesperson wrote in an email. “These decisions are never taken lightly and are based solely on the law and evidence.”
Spurlock said when she called the police department in early 2025, a sergeant with the homicide unit told her Chloe and Tomlyn would have been within their rights to shoot Bullock after what he’d allegedly done to them during the altercation that preceded his death.
Amy Spurlock is searching for answers about the night her son, Blake Bullock, 20, died over a year ago on Northwest 20th Street in Fort Worth. A large wooden cross marks the area where his body was found lying the street after being struck by a police vehicle responding to a report of gunfire. Amanda McCoy amccoy@star-telegram.com
The Star-Telegram requested comment on that allegation from Chief Eddie Garcia’s chief of staff, but he said he had no knowledge of the case and declined to speak on it.
Indeed, a history of violence marred Chloe and Bullock’s relationship. In October 2024, Bullock was arrested in Weatherford on charges of domestic violence against Chloe. Records reveal he was subsequently arrested two more times that November for violating a protective order.
In a phone conversation, Chloe said she and Bullock willingly broke the order meant to keep them apart.
“We were obsessed with each other,” she said. “It was stupid, young love.”
Police records showed there was another domestic disturbance at Chloe and Bullock’s apartment before they left for Billy Bob’s on Dec. 14. Weatherford police were dispatched, but no arrest was made after Chloe and Tomlyn told officers Bullock wasn’t there.
Talking with the Star-Telegram, Tomlyn admitted Bullock was, in fact, in the apartment.
In 2023, Tomlyn herself was charged with assault in Midland County after throwing a billiard ball at Bullock, according to court records and Tomlyn’s own statements. That charge was dismissed in June 2025 because Bullock was deceased.
Tomlyn said Bullock was living with her and Chloe at the time. According to Tomlyn, she and Bullock got into an argument, and he punched through a glass door at her house. Tomlyn said she ran behind a pool table to get away from Bullock and threw the ball in “anger and terror.”
The billiard ball, Tomlyn said, hit Bullock in the lower leg, and he called police. But Tomlyn disputed the allegation she hit him with the ball intentionally.
After leaving Bullock the night he died, Chloe and Tomlyn ran out of gas near Walsh Ranch Parkway and Interstate 30, on the Parker County border, law enforcement records showed.
A Parker County sheriff’s deputy first stopped to check on the stalled vehicle around 2:40 a.m. That deputy reported seeing blood on Chloe and Tomlyn. He also reported that both women appeared intoxicated.
Tomlyn and Chloe declined medical attention, but they told the deputy that Bullock had assaulted them earlier at Billy Bob’s.
Because of where the alleged assault took place and because the car was still in Fort Worth jurisdiction, the Parker County deputy contacted Fort Worth police, and an officer later arrived on the scene.
That officer’s report said Chloe and Tomlyn told the sheriff’s deputy they fled after Bullock assaulted them. The officer also quoted Chloe as admitting she beat Bullock up “because he was drunk in public, and it was embarrassing.”
Like the Parker County deputy, the Fort Worth officer also believed Chloe and Tomlyn were intoxicated, according to the report, and he noted they were “verbally combative” when asked about the incident with Bullock.
The officer reported that Chloe had bruising on her upper right arm and dried blood on her right hand. Tomlyn, the officer reported, had more extensive injuries and dried blood on her face.
Photos included with the police report showed Chloe with blood around her knuckles. Tomlyn had blood on her nose and around her mouth.
According to the police report, neither Chloe nor Tomlyn would provide written statements. Finally, another Fort Worth police officer who was near the end of his shift drove them home to Weatherford.
Video taken from inside that officer’s car showed Chloe at first laughing and Tomlyn joking about how hard the seat is in the back of the cruiser. Tomlyn then asks if Chloe is cold.
“I’m shivering from everything,” Chloe responded.
During the drive, Tomlyn alluded to Bullock biting her lip during the altercation earlier in the night, and Chloe said he’d bitten her before and that it was “scary.”
“And you think that’s OK?” Tomlyn asked, to which Chloe shook her head no. “Chloe, you’ve got to get this guy out of your life, dude,” Tomlyn continued.
During the conversation, Tomlyn repeatedly encouraged Chloe to break things off with Blake, saying their infant son deserved better and that the relationship was “toxic.” At one point, Tomlyn told Chloe to move and get a new phone number in order to stay away from Bullock.
While Tomlyn spoke, Chloe listened and seemed to agree.
“I wish I just would have not gone out tonight,” Chloe said.
“I just wish you would have never put so much faith in him,” Tomlyn replied, referring to Bullock. She later tells Chloe that she loved her so much that she “took an a– beating for you tonight, by a man.”
At no time does either woman appear to think Bullock may be dead. In fact, Tomlyn said she’d “kill him” if he showed up at the apartment.
“And you can quote me on that, cop,” she declared before laughing.
Tomlyn told the Star-Telegram she and Chloe let police know where they’d left Bullock. She also said she intended to go back and get him before running out of gas.
“I feel awful for leaving him,” Tomlyn said, though she added she did what she did to protect her daughter. When talking about Bullock’s death, Tomlyn got emotional. But she said what happened was “divine intervention” to end what by all accounts was a troubled relationship.
“If he wasn’t dead, she would be,” Tomlyn said.
Tomlyn strongly denied she left Bullock for dead on Northwest 20th Street. She said he could have gotten up and moved had he wanted to.
“I did not hurt that kid,” Tomlyn said. “I did not leave him on the side of the road dead … I did not kill that kid.”
After reviewing the available evidence, Falk, who previously worked as a prosecutor in Harris County and Dallas County, agreed with the Fort Worth Police Department’s decision to not file charges against Chloe and Tomlyn. First, Falk said, it would be nearly impossible to prove they had assaulted Bullock based on the surveillance footage, mainly because it’s unclear who the initial aggressor was in the altercation.
“In order to charge somebody with assault, you need to be able to disprove self-defense,” said Falk. And any claim of self-defense by Tomlyn or Chloe could be bolstered by Bullock’s prior domestic violence charge, Falk added.
Second, Falk said an assault charge would require proof of bodily injury. Given what happened to Bullock, it would be difficult to prove what injuries he sustained in the fight and what injuries he sustained from the vehicle.
As for Chloe and Tomlyn leaving Bullock in the road, Falk said she didn’t believe a crime was committed, especially if Chloe and Tomlyn argued that they feared for their safety. And based on the video taken from inside the police car on the ride from Fort Worth to Weatherford, it doesn’t look as though the McDonalds thought Bullock was seriously injured, so it would be hard to prove they had a legal obligation to render aid.
A mother’s search for answers
Spurlock and Chloe said separately they learned of Bullock’s death when they called the Tarrant County morgue after he didn’t come home and hadn’t phoned anyone.
Spurlock said she has been grieving ever since. She called Bullock her precious boy, and she took great care with placing the memorial where he died, hoping his memory will live on in that spot as it does in her heart. But dealing with the loss has only gotten harder, not easier, over the past year, Spurlock said.
Amy Spurlock walks away from a cross placed in memory of her son, Blake, on Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025. Spurlock is searching for answers about the night her son died over a year ago on Northwest 20th Street in Fort Worth. Amanda McCoy amccoy@star-telegram.com
Finding closure is understandably difficult given the circumstances. Spurlock wonders how Atkins missed seeing her son lying in the road. And she still questions what occurred during the fight outside the car between Bullock, Tomlyn and Chloe.
If Spurlock had those answers, she could move on. But she doesn’t. After initially releasing some records related to Bullock’s death to Spurlock, the city of Fort Worth has denied her more recent requests.
Chloe, too, said the last several months have been hard. She said she loved Bullock and called him her best friend. She told the Star-Telegram she fell into a depression after he died and had only recently come out of it.
Even Garcia, the man who called 911, said that night haunts him. He stopped by when Spurlock and Bullock’s friends were putting up the memorial and talked with them awhile, though he wasn’t sure what to say to comfort Spurlock.
In Falk’s estimation, Bullock’s death was the result of a tragic set of circumstances that aligned in the worst possible way.
Was Bullock the aggressor in the fight with Chloe and Tomlyn, and was he simply too intoxicated to get out of the road after the women left him? Or was there more to it?
“This case has a lot of puzzle pieces in order to really understand what happened,” Falk said. “And many of them are just missing.”
Family and friends stand beside a large wooden cross marking the area where Blake Bullock was found lying in the street after being struck by a police vehicle responding to a report of gunfire. Amanda McCoy amccoy@star-telegram.com
Matt Adams is a news reporter covering Fort Worth, Tarrant County and surrounding areas. He previously wrote about aviation and travel and enjoys a good weekend road trip. Matt joined the Star-Telegram in January 2025.
A sixth person was arrested Wednesday in connection with the shooting of a judge and his wife in their home in Lafayette, Indiana, in January, local officials said.
The Lafayette Police Department reported Wednesday night that 23-year-old Nevaeh Bell was taken into custody in the Jan. 18 shooting that wounded Tippecanoe County Superior Court Judge Steven Meyer and his wife, Kim.
Police said Bell faces 12 preliminary felony charges, including two counts of attempted murder and a count of conspiracy to commit murder.
Five others were arrested last month after what the Lafayette Police Department called “a coordinated, multi-state operation involving hundreds of investigative hours.”
They were identified as 38-year-old Raylen Ferguson and 61-year-old Zenada Greer of Kentucky, as well as Indiana residents Thomas Moss, 43, Blake Smith, 32, and 45-year-old Amanda Milsap.
Police have accused members of a motorcycle club and a street gang of targeting Meyer, alleging the shooting was part of a scheme to derail a domestic abuse case against Moss, a member of the Detroit-based Phantom MC motorcycle club with ties to the Vice Lords street gang.
Moss was charged with multiple violent felonies in June 2024 and was out on bond, according to court records, which also show that he was scheduled to go on trial in front of Meyer on Jan. 20 — two days after the shooting took place.
FILE — Steven Meyer, a state judge in Tippecanoe County in Indiana, who was hurt in a shooting at his home on Jan. 18, 2026. This photo is from Nov. 4, 2014.
The Purdue Exponent via AP
Meyer and his wife, Kim, were shot at their home. Steven Meyer suffered an injury to his arm, and Kimberly Meyer sustained an injury to her hip, according to police.
According to a recording of the emergency dispatch operator, the caller who reported the shooting said there was a knock on the door, someone told them we have your dog, and then a shot came through the door.
Kim Meyer said in a statement last month that she and her husband have “great confidence” in the Lafayette police investigation and thanked all the agencies involved.
“We are also incredibly grateful for the outpouring of support from the community; everyone has been so kind and compassionate,” she said. “We would especially like to thank the medical personnel who provided care and assistance to us following the incident.”
SYDNEY, Feb 5 (Reuters) – Australian authorities said on Thursday they were treating as a terrorism incident an attempt to bomb a rally protesting against the country’s national day on January 26, the first such charge in the state of Western Australia.
They arrested a 31-year-old man on accusations of hurling a homemade bomb into a crowd of several thousand people in the city of Perth. No one was injured because the bomb did not explode.
Police and state leader Roger Cook said the man held white supremacist views and the attack was an attempt to target Aboriginal people, one of Australia’s two main Indigenous groups.
“This charge … alleges the attack on Aboriginal people and other peaceful protesters was motivated by hateful, racist ideology,” Cook told a news conference. If proved, it carries a maximum sentence of life in prison.
Australia Day, which commemorates Britain’s colonisation of the country in 1788, is a public holiday marked by picnics, barbecues and ceremonies for new citizens but it has also attracted criticism from some including in the Indigenous community, with “Invasion Day” protest rallies nationwide.
Polling shows a majority of Australians oppose moving the date of the holiday.
(Reporting by Alasdair Pal in Sydney; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
PALO ALTO – A man forced a woman to the ground and assaulted her during an attempted robbery Tuesday in Palo Alto, police said.
The incident happened around 8:15 a.m. in the 700 block of East Meadow Drive near Mitchell Park, according to the Palo Alto Police Department.
The victim, a woman in her 40s, was walking in the neighborhood when she heard footsteps behind her, police said, adding that she was forced to the ground by the suspect.
The suspect then kicked the victim several times and demanded money, police said. The victim told the suspect she did not have any and yelled for help, after which he left the scene.
Police said the victim returned home and notified authorities about the attempted robbery.
The victim described the suspect as Latino and about 5 feet 8 inches tall with a thin build and shoulder-length hair. He was last seen wearing a black hooded sweatshirt.
An investigation is underway into the incident, police said, adding that no similar crimes have been reported recently in the area.
The victim complained of pain and bruising from being kicked and she sought medical treatment on her own.
Anyone with information related to the case can contact the police department at 650-329-2413. Those wishing to remain anonymous can call or text 650-383-8984 or email paloalto@tipnow.org.
PARIS, Feb 4 (Reuters) – Four people, including two Chinese nationals, have been arrested in France on suspicion of spying for China and have been brought before an investigative judge, the Paris public prosecutor’s office said on Wednesday
On February 4, the cybercrime division of the Paris public prosecutor’s office opened a judicial investigation into the affair, said the prosecutor’s office in a statement.
This followed the discovery that two Chinese nationals had entered French territory with the aim of capturing satellite data from the Starlink network and data from entities of vital importance, particularly military entities, in order to transmit it to their country of origin, namely China.
Four people were brought before the investigating judge, with two of them being remanded in custody, it added.
(Reporting by Dominique Vidalon;Editing by Sudip Kar-Gupta)
A Denver sheriff’s deputy accused of punching a man in a wheelchair while on duty in 2019 — in a lawsuit the city has now settled — was also arrested on accusations he punched another man in a wheelchair in December.
The Denver City Council approved the $325,000 settlement in the case over the 2019 incident involving Deputy Jason Gentempo, now 44, during a meeting Monday.
Gentempo, who has been a sheriff’s deputy since 2005, is now on investigatory leave from the sheriff’s department following his arrest in the newer matter in December. Both of his cases also involved allegations that other law enforcement officers attempted to cover up or change the factual records of the events.
Gentempo was cleared of any wrongdoing in the incident, according to internal investigation documents.
In December, the Denver Police Department arrested Gentempo and his wife, Sgt. Carla Gentempo, after they were accused of assaulting another man in a wheelchair while they were off duty. The couple learned that a 17-year-old they knew was at a Denver apartment where they believed there was a “sexual torture chamber,” according to affidavits filed in that case.
Jason Gentempo told investigators that he believed the man in the wheelchair met the teen in a chatroom and took the teen to his home, where he showed them “sexual bondage items” and put some of the items on the teen with their consent, an affidavit says.
When the Gentempos drove to pick up the teen, the man in a wheelchair, who is paraplegic, met them in front of his apartment building. The Gentempos then beat the man in an attack that was captured on surveillance footage, the documents say. They were arrested on suspicion of third-degree assault.
The man in the wheelchair, whose identity was redacted in court records, told The Denver Post in December that he didn’t do anything sexual with the teenager and refuted the deputies’ characterization of a “sexual torture chamber.”
A Denver police officer is accused of trying to cover up that assault. Officer Henry Soni, 26, was the responding officer who reviewed surveillance video of the attack and gave the man in the wheelchair a case number, according to an affidavit. He then failed to file a report or enter the surveillance video as evidence in the case.
In official records, Soni wrote that the man in the wheelchair “does not want to file a report at this time.” The officer’s body-worn camera footage of his response to the man’s home was automatically logged into the police evidence storage system as being connected to an assault call, but Soni manually changed the footage the next day to be classified as “All Other/Non-event,” according to an affidavit.
Soni was arrested on suspicion of attempting to influence a public servant, forgery, evidence tampering and misconduct. He was also accused of on-duty sexual assault in an unrelated case. In December, he was suspended without pay, pending the outcome of the criminal investigation.
Internal investigators found Gentempo improperly stored his firearm in 2021 and that he disobeyed rules related to his body-worn camera in 2024, disciplinary records show.
A man who rammed a vehicle into the front of a Petaluma jewelry store Saturday afternoon, Jan. 31, was attempting to thwart a robbery, according to police.
The robbery at Gold Rush Jewelers at 385 South McDowell Blvd. was reported about 4:46 p.m. Saturday to Petaluma police, the agency said. According to a preliminary investigation, six people wearing ski masks entered the store armed with hammers, pepper spray and at least one gun. One person held the four employees at gunpoint while the others smashed the display cases and removed jewelry.
A male bystander who happened upon the scene got into the suspects’ idling vehicle and slammed it into the business, damaging a roll-up door and some windows, Sgt. Ryan McGreevy said Tuesday. The man later told police that he had been trying to block the robbers inside.
McGreevy said the man’s method was “unorthodox,” but he is not suspected of any criminal charges.
The crash prompted the robbers to flee — four into the vehicle that had been rammed into the store and two on foot into a neighborhood across South McDowell Boulevard. One of the suspected robbers pepper-sprayed the bystander as he tried to get out of the car, police said.
With the assistance of the Sonoma County Sheriff’s helicopter Henry-1, officers later found the men they said fled on foot. One was spotted jumping down from a rooftop and trying to hide under a vehicle while the other was later seen sitting in a backyard, police said.
William Clarance Butler of Pittsburg and Mosha’e Koron Howell of Antioch were arrested and booked into the Sonoma County jail. On Monday, both of the 18-year-old men were charged in Sonoma County Superior Court with four counts of robbery and one count of conspiracy — all felonies. Both are being held without bail and set to appear Feb. 17 in court.
On Saturday, police also located a bag of jewelry between the store and the neighborhood where the two men had fled, McGreevy said Tuesday. The owner of the store is still determining how many pieces of jewelry were taken during the robbery and the value of those items.
The vehicle in which the other four robbers fled the jewelry store was found abandoned in a nearby neighborhood and authorities later determined it had been stolen in Brentwood. Authorities, including a K9 unit, searched for hours for the other four individuals to no avail. As of Tuesday, authorities have not identified the four robbers or located the gun used in the robbery.
None of the jewelry store employees were injured but told police they were emotionally shaken after the robbery.
Petaluma police are asking that anyone with information, including security camera footage, contact Detective Alyssa Hansen at 707-781-1291 or ahansen@cityofpetaluma.org.
You can reach Staff Writer Madison Smalstig at madison.smalstig@pressdemocrat.com. On X (Twitter) @madi_smals.