ReportWire

Tag: Crime and Courts

  • Flight to Las Vegas returns to Boston over unruly passenger, police say

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    A flight from Boston to Las Vegas had to turn around Monday night because of an unruly passenger, Massachusetts State Police said.

    A man from Louisville, Kentucky, was set to face a charge of interfering with a flight crew on JetBlue Flight 777, according to police.

    The airline reported to police about 10 p.m. that the plane was returning to the gate at Boston Logan International Airport because of a non-compliant, verbally abusive passenger. Police didn’t share more details about the incident, or the 37-year-old passenger’s name.

    A flight-tracking website shows the flight turned around over western New York.

    JetBlue said the flight left for Las Vegas after the people involved got off the plane in Boston.

    “Safety is JetBlue’s first priority, and we appreciate everyone’s patience while we addressed this situation,” the airline’s statement said.

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    Asher Klein

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  • Pushy fraudsters have nabbed $170K in fake donations in Boston, police say

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    People aggressively soliciting for fraudulent charities have charged just over $170,000 from people in Boston across 11 recent incidents, police said Thursday, warning the public about the scams.

    In one case, Boston police said, someone had $50,000 charged from their account without authorization, in a scheme being reported across the country.

    The scammer or scammers typically approaches a woman in a parking lot asking for donations about a dead child or charity, then push the person to donate with their phone or credit card, sometimes using the payment method themselves.

    Those tactics have recently been used by small groups trying to raise money for a football team near South Station, police said Thursday.

    It’s a similar scheme to what police described last month in South Boston — though officials didn’t say if they were related. In those incidents, three people had money stolen outside of a Walgreens and a Whole Foods from a group of men claiming to be collecting donations.

    In each of those incidents, three men approached someone and pressured them into giving money by credit card over a tragedy in the family, according to police reports. While they indicated they were charging a small amount of money, $5 or $15, they ended up charging thousands.

    Experts have advice on how to keep your phone safe from thefts like several that are under investigation in Boston.

    Police on Thursday urged people not to hand their phone or credit card to people and to verify charities themselves before donating. Anyone who suspects they’re being targeted by one of the scams was urged to get away and report the activity to police.

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    Asher Klein

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  • Gov. Healey to give update on street takeover crackdown: Watch live at 12

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    Gov. Maura Healey says she will provide an update Wednesday on enforcement efforts related to illegal street takeover and car meet-ups taking place across Massachusetts.

    The governor and Massachusetts State Police Col. Geoffrey Noble will speak at 12 p.m. at the State House. You can watch it live in the video player above.

    Healey held a press conference last week to announce that she was ordering state police to crack down on these types of incidents.

    She said at the time that she had directed Noble to make sure state police resources are used to work with local police departments to apprehend and punish offenders. She said the state would also be monitoring online conversations about these meetups through the Commonwealth Fusion Center and other available avenues.

    “No more. No more,” Healey said last week. “You will be held accountable.”

    “I just want to be really clear,” she added. “Do not engage in that behavior. Anyone who engages in that conduct will be found and will be held accountable to the furthest extent of the law.”

    Mssachusetts leaders are condemning incidents of violence, but also calling on the Trump administration to stay away as the president attempts to deploy the National Guard to other cities.

    Noble said last week that combatting the incidents would take a thoughtful approach that digs into drivers’ motivation.

    “We have to look at this from a pre-event posture and try to intercept it before it happens,” he said.

    Healey’s news conference last week came on the heels of several street takeovers held earlier this month, including one in Boston and others in Brockton, Fall River, Middleborough and Randolph.

    Shortly after 2 a.m. on Oct. 5, Boston police responded to a report of a “large-scale vehicle takeover” at the intersection of Massachusetts Avenue and Tremont Street, and arrived to find a crowd of over 100 people, who allegedly started attacking marked police cruisers by throwing fireworks, cones, poles and other objects. Two people were arrested.

    It was chaos in the streets overnight in Randolph and Boston. Two separate towns, two violent cruiser takeovers. Now two men are facing serious charges.

    That incident happened around the same time as a vehicle takeover about 15 miles south, where masked individuals set off fireworks and attacked Randolph police cruisers there as officers attempted to break it up.

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    Marc Fortier

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  • Man passed out in pickup had 8 guns, ammo, drugs, Marion police say

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    A man found asleep in a pickup truck at a Marion, Massachusetts, gas station last week was ultimately found to have had eight guns, over 175 rounds of ammunition and drugs, police said Tuesday.

    Wareham resident Brian Ewan, 67, faces a slew of charges after his Oct. 4 arrest, including possessing an unlicensed assault weapon, possessing a sawed-off shotgun and drunken driving, according to Marion police.

    Ewan was found asleep behind the wheel of his vehicle, the key in the ignition and containers of alcohol open and in plain sight, about 3:34 p.m. on Wareham Road, police said. When a detective found a bulge on his waistband that appeared to be a weapon, Ewan allegedly resisted being searched, leading to a struggle.

    When he was detained, officers found a concealed handgun in a holster, then a shotgun inside the vehicle, at which point they stopped their search to obtain a search warrant, according to police.

    That search, police said Tuesday, uncovered four more handguns and two rifles, as well as BB guns, the ammunition and cocaine — some was found in a bag at his initial arrest. The charges indicated that the guns weren’t registered or had serial number defacement.

    “What began as an impaired driving investigation ultimately resulted in the recovery of eight firearms,” Marion Chief Richard Nighelli said in a statement. “I commend our officers and detectives for their thorough investigation and commitment to keeping our community safe.”

    Ewan was initially arraigned in Wareham District Court on gun, drugs, driving and alcohol charges and held on $7,500 bail, police said. He’s set to face new gun and drugs charges in court at a later date. It wasn’t immediately clear if he had an attorney who could speak to the charges.

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    Asher Klein

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  • Suspect in killing of Queens couple also allegedly tried to drain their bank accounts

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    The New York City man charged with killing a senior Queens couple and then setting their house on fire during a horrific home invasion in September had also attempted to drain their bank accounts before using their credit cards to go on a shopping spree, prosecutors said Tuesday.

    Jamel McGriff, a serial robbery suspect on parole, pleaded not guilty Tuesday to multiple counts of murder, kidnapping and arson, according to Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz’s office.

    The 42-year-old Bronx resident is charged in the Sept. 8 killings of Frank Olton, 76, and Maureen Olton, 77, in their home in the New York City borough of Queens.

    Prosecutors say McGriff had been going door-to-door asking residents if he could come in to charge his cellphone. They say he spoke with Frank Olton, who had offered to help, before McGriff forced his way into the couple’s home, where he remained for nearly five hours.

    Firefighters responding to a report of a house fire found Frank Olton’s body in the basement tied to a pole and with multiple stab wounds to his neck and chest. Maureen Olton’s badly burned body was found in the living room.

    Prosecutors in court Tuesday said McGriff had set the house on fire in an attempt to destroy evidence of the killings, the Daily News reports. They said Maureen Olton appears to have been tied to a chair and strangled to death.

    Prosecutors said McGriff also unsuccessfully attempted to transfer more than $10,000 from the couple’s accounts to his own.

    He took the couple’s credit cards as well, spending nearly $800 on clothes at a Macy’s in midtown Manhattan just hours after the killings, they said. McGriff was caught the following day after going to a movie in Times Square, prosecutors said in court Tuesday, the Daily News reports.

    The convicted felon, who was on parole after serving 16 years in prison, was ordered held until his next court date on Nov. 12. If convicted, McGriff faces a maximum sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole.

    The Legal Aid Society, which is representing McGriff, said in a statement Tuesday that it is in the early stages of investigating the case and urged the public “not to draw any conclusions until all the facts are known.”

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    The Associated Press

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  • Last of 10 New Orleans jail escapees from May is captured under a house in Atlanta

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    A monthslong search for the only Louisiana inmate still on the run after an audacious May jailbreak ended Wednesday when authorities say they found him hiding in a crawl space beneath an Atlanta home, bringing the last of the 10 escapees into custody.

    Derrick Groves, 28, was convicted of murder and facing a possible life sentence before the inmates escaped through a hole behind a toilet in a New Orleans jail. He had the most violent criminal record of the group and authorities offered a $50,000 reward for tips leading to his capture.

    A SWAT team spent hours searching the house for Groves after obtaining a warrant, Deputy U.S. Marshal Brian Fair said.

    “They couldn’t find him, they had to deploy gas multiple times into the house and basement,” Fair said. “Based on how long it took a seasoned, well-trained SWAT team to get him out, he had planned to hide for a while.”

    A police dog eventually located him, Atlanta police Deputy Chief Kelley Collier said. In video provided by the department, Groves — shirtless, shoeless and shackled at his wrists and ankles — blew a kiss and grinned at the camera as he was led into a police car.

    Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry applauded law enforcement for putting all 10 escapees “back where they belong: BEHIND BARS,” in a post on X.

    The tip that led to his capture came through New Orleans Crimestoppers, Fair said.

    Several people appeared to be helping Groves and could face charges for aiding and abetting, Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill said at a press conference Wednesday, adding that Groves is scheduled to be in court in Georgia Thursday for a hearing on extradition.

    The home’s garage door was collapsed inward Wednesday afternoon as police blocked off the scene. The brick house on a sloping lawn surrounded by trees is in a neighborhood beside Tyler Perry Studios, one of the nation’s largest movie production facilities. Inside the home, police also found a pistol and 15 pounds (6.8 kg) of marijuana, Murrill said.

    Groves’ attorney, Peter Freiberg, said he had not yet spoken with his client and declined to comment. He was appointed to represent Groves by the Orleans Public Defender conflict panel.

    “Literally all I know is the alert from the city of New Orleans saying he was arrested in Atlanta,” Freiberg said.

    The other nine inmates were recaptured within six weeks of the May 16 breakout, most inside Orleans Parish city limits.

    Officials in New Orleans announced 10 people broke out of an Orleans Parish jail early Friday morning. One inmate was captured and 3 officials were suspended.

    Escapee’s mother reacts to his capture

    “I’m all messed up, I’m just trying to talk to him,” said Groves’ mother, Stephanie Groves, who spoke to The Associated Press after learning about the arrest online.

    Fighting tears, she said she had urged her son to surrender peacefully and didn’t know why he went to Atlanta. She said her family had been followed and watched by law enforcement since the breakout.

    “I’m just glad it’s over with,” she said. “Of course he was going to get caught.”

    Groves had been convicted of second-degree murder in 2024 for opening fire on a family block party on Mardi Gras day, killing two people and injuring others. He faces life imprisonment without parole.

    The jailbreak in New Orleans

    Groves and the nine others yanked open a faulty cell door, squeezed through a hole behind a toilet, scaled a barbed-wire fence and vanished into the night. It was one of the largest jailbreaks in recent U.S. history.

    Their absence wasn’t discovered until a morning headcount hours later. Inside the cell, investigators found an arrow drawn toward the hole and a taunting message: “To Easy LoL.”

    Officials later blamed ineffective cell locks and said the lone guard monitoring them was getting food during the escape. But authorities insist the escape may have been an inside job.

    A jail maintenance worker was arrested for allegedly helping them escape by turning off water to the toilet. His lawyer said he was simply unclogging it and was unaware of the plot. Another former jail employee, identified as Groves’ girlfriend, is accused of helping coordinate the breakout.

    Search for the fugitives

    Hundreds of officers scoured New Orleans, using phone records and hundreds of tips to quickly track down some of the men.

    At least 16 people, many of them friends or relatives, were arrested on felony charges of helping the fugitives before or after the jailbreak by providing food, cash, transport and shelter.

    One escapee was captured in Baton Rouge after allegedly hiding in a vacant house his friend had been hired to paint. Two others were caught in Texas after a high-speed car chase. Antoine Massey, one of the last fugitives to be recaptured, allegedly posted photos and videos on social media while on the run.

    Orleans Parish Sheriff Susan Hutson, who has largely blamed the breakout on the lockup’s ailing infrastructure, has faced heavy criticism from state and local officials over her handling of the escape and management of the jail.

    Escapees face additional charges

    Many of the men were in jail awaiting sentences or trials over violent crimes, including murder. The nine other men pleaded not guilty to escape charges in July, appearing via video from Louisiana State Penitentiary.

    “Everyone is entitled to due process,” Murrill said. “But there’s a video of these detainees running out of the jail in the middle of the night. They were not heading to court hearings.”

    Orleans Parish District Attorney Jason Williams hailed the end of the search and said prosecutors “will pursue every available legal avenue” against Groves.

    All 10 men are charged with simple escape, punishable by two to five years in prison, on top of their original counts.

    Groves was booked into the Fulton County Jail in Atlanta on Wednesday afternoon. He’s charged with being a fugitive from justice, jail records show.

    ___

    Brook reported from New Orleans. Associated Press writers Charlotte Kramon in Atlanta and Sara Cline in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, contributed to this report.

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    Jeff Martin and Jack Brook | The Associated Press

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  • WATCH: Update in court on Michael Proctor evidence in other murder cases

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    A court hearing is set Tuesday for Norfolk County murder defendants’ attempt to get evidence materials related to former Massachusetts State Police Trooper Michael Proctor‘s phones used in the Karen Read trial.

    The Read trial evidence was given to the Norfolk District Attorney’s Office on condition that it would only be used in the Read trial and then destroyed. But attorneys for Brian Walshe and others have been trying to get them to see if there is any exculpatory evidence in their cases.

    Proctor investigated cases in the Norfolk County District Attorney’s Office.

    At a recent hearing, prosecutors told a judge that they believe they have a potential way of providing the materials, but still needed at least a couple more weeks to finalize the plan with the Massachusetts U.S. Attorney’s Office.

    Walshe had been scheduled to go on trial for the alleged murder of his wife, Ana Walshe, on Oct. 20, but it was delayed Monday as the suspect was sent to Bridgewater State Hospital to be evaluated for competency in the wake of his stabbing in jail.

    Lawyers for Walshe and other murder defendants have been waiting months for the Norfolk District Attorney’s Office to release critical evidence, including between 3,000 to 5,000 pieces of communication stored in Proctor’s cloud account. Similar evidence led to Proctor being fired for misconduct in the high-profile murder case of Read, who in June was found not guilty on the most serious charges she faced and guilty of the lowest form of a drunken driving charge.

    Rosemary Scapicchio, the defense attorney representing 25-year-old Myles King, raised concerns at a previous hearing that the date when the evidence can be destroyed is drawing closer. King is accused of fatally shooting Marquis Simmons in Milton back in July 2021.

    “I’m concerned that if at some point this court needs to make an order, we want to make sure we’re giving them enough time,” she said. “We can’t do what happened initially where the day before where we’re making phone calls and this stuff is getting destroyed tomorrow.”

    The judge disagreed, however, saying he thought that a lot of progress had been made over the previous 25 days.

    That brief hearing was continued until Tuesday, and the judge said that the hearing might not even be necessary, as the information might be able to be shared via letter. If the hearing is necessary, he said at the time that it would be used to determine next steps.

    Walshe, 48, of Cohasset, faces first-degree murder, misleading a police investigation and other charges in the death of his wife, whose body has never been recovered. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges.

    Ana Walshe, who is originally from Serbia, was last seen early on Jan. 1, 2023 following a New Year’s Eve dinner at her Massachusetts home with her husband and a family friend, prosecutors said.

    Listen to The Searches for Ana Walshe podcast for a deep dive into the case.

    Brian Walshe said she was called back to Washington, D.C., on New Year’s Day for a work emergency. He didn’t contact her employer until Jan. 4. The company — the first to notify police that Ana Walshe was missing — said there was no emergency, prosecutors said.

    Prosecutors have said that starting Jan. 1 and for several days after, Brian Walshe made multiple online searches for “dismemberment and best ways to dispose of a body,” “how long before a body starts to smell” and “hacksaw best tool to dismember.”

    Prosecutors have also said that Ana Walshe had taken out $2.7 million in life insurance naming her husband as the sole beneficiary.

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    Staff Reports

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  • Montgomery County official and day care owner now facing child sex abuse charges

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    A Montgomery County official, who also owns two day care facilities, is facing child sexual abuse-related charges in Pennsylvania after already facing charges of soliciting child pornography out of Maryland, court documents reveal.

    Nick Fountain, vice-chair of the Skippack Township Board of Supervisors, had been arrested last month on charges of sexual solicitation and solicitation of child pornography.

    Then on Sunday, October 5, 2025, while already in police custody, Fountain was charged with sexual abuse of a child in Pennsylvania.

    A police criminal complaint stated that the victim, reported that Fountain, who was an adult, sexually assaulted them of the course of years when they were between the ages of nine and 16-year-olds old.

    In an interview with detectives, the criminal complaint said that Fountain admitted to touching the victim, performing oral sex on the victim and having the victim perform oral sex on him. Fountain also admitted this happened on multiple occasions and that the last time it happened was just before the victim turned 16.

    Resources for victims of sexual assault are available through the National Sexual Violence Resources Center and the National Sexual Assault Telephone Hotline at 800-656-4673.

    After a town official in Skippack Township was arrested on child pornography charges, NBC10’s Deanna Durante obtained the court documents and has been asking questions about Nick Fountain. 

    For 12 years, Fountain has been the vice-chair of Skippack Township’s Board of Supervisors.

    He also runs a pair of daycare facilities in the area – The Magnolia Enrichment Center in Collegeville and Magnolia Children’s Academy in Gilbertsville.

    A note that was sent to parents and guardians read in part that Nick Fountain would no longer be affiliated with any Magnolia centers.

    NBC10 reached out to the daycares, they provided no comment.

    Additionally, a review of Fountain’s LinkedIn profile showed that he had been a kindergarten teacher at the Skippack Goddard School.

    Fountain is expected to be in court next week.

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    NBC10 Staff

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  • Oregon sues Trump administration over deployment of National Guard troops to Portland

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    The State of Oregon and the city of Portland have sued the Trump administration to stop it from deploying National Guard troops to Portland.

    The suit names as defendants President Donald Trump, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and the Defense Department, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and the Department of Homeland Security. The suit asks a federal court in Portland to stop the Trump administration from deploying troops and declare the deployment unlawful.

    White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said Trump’s actions were “lawful” and said they would “make Portland safer.”

    “President Trump is using his lawful authority to direct the National Guard to protect federal assets and personnel in Portland following months of violent riots where officers have been assaulted and doxxed by left-wing rioters,” Jackson said.

    A Pentagon spokesperson declined to comment on the suit and on the Oregon Army National Guard deployment, citing a standing policy of not commenting on active litigation.

    DHS did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the lawsuit Sunday night.

    In the suit, the state of Oregon and the city of Portland claim the federal government does not have grounds to call in the Guard, and said the city has seen “small” protests near an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in recent weeks.

    “When the president and I spoke yesterday, I told him in plain language that there is no insurrection or threat to public safety that necessitates military intervention in Portland or any other city in our state,” said Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek in a press release Sunday. “Despite this — and all evidence to the contrary — he has chosen to disregard Oregonians’ safety and ability to govern ourselves. This is not necessary. And it is unlawful. And it will make Oregonians less safe.”

    Crime statistics provided by the Portland Police Bureau’s Strategic Services Division indicate crime in the city so far this year is on par with the same period in 2024. The current year-to-date total of offenses tallies 37,893, while at the same time last year offenses totaled 37,859.

    However, the city did see a 50% drop in homicides and a 4% decline in aggravated assaults. Simple assaults, however, increased by 8%.

    In the complaint, the plaintiffs claimed Hegseth issued a memorandum Sunday calling 200 members of the Oregon National Guard into federal service.

    Kotek, a Democrat, said during a press availability Sunday evening that Trump had taken away her control of the National Guard, and said that the state did not have any information regarding timeline for deployment. The governor also said she did not have information on the number of troops set to be activated, or whether such troops would be armed.

    The plaintiffs claimed that the administration’s move to federalize the guard violated the Tenth Amendment of the Constitution, saying that police power lies with the states.

    Speaking to reporters on Sunday, Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield — a Democrat — compared the move to the administration’s efforts to deploy the National Guard to Los Angeles and Washington, D.C.

    A federal judge in California ruled earlier this month that the administration illegally deployed the Guard and Marines to Los Angeles in June. The judge, U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer, said the administration violated a 19th century law called the Posse Comitatus Act, which prohibits the use of the armed forces for domestic law enforcement.

    Trump on Saturday said he was directing Hegseth to “provide all necessary Troops” to Portland, calling the city “War ravaged.” He said Guardsmen had to protect ICE facilities that Trump claimed were “under siege from attack by Antifa and other domestic terrorists.”

    Trump’s announcement came after he spoke negatively about Portland, claiming that there was “anarchy” in the city.

    Kotek denied such characterizations of Portland during a Saturday press conference, and said she shared her assessment with Trump. The governor added that she had been in contact with other Democratic governors who faced similar threats from the administration, such as Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and California Gov. Gavin Newsom.

    Trump has threatened to deploy the National Guard in multiple cities run by Democrat mayors, including Chicago, Baltimore and New Orleans. He authorized the deployment of National Guard troops to Washington, D.C., in August.

    Earlier this month, he also established a task force to mobilize troops in Memphis, Tennessee — a move that the state’s Republican governor, Bill Lee, supported.

    Lindsey Pipia contributed.

    Florida Democrat Rep. Maxwell Frost and Republican Rep. Clay Higgins of Louisiana got into a heated exchange over the Trump administration’s use of the National Guard in the capital. “It’s just grand to sit here with other members who have higher murder rates than Washington, D.C., but not invite the president to occupy their own state with the military,” Frost said.

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    Raquel Coronell Uribe | NBC News

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  • 1 person dead and 9 injured in shooting at Michigan church, police say

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    Police say one person was killed and nine injured in a shooting at a Mormon church in Michigan, and the suspect is also dead.

    The shooting happened Sunday at The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Grand Blanc, about 50 miles north of Detroit, Grand Blanc Township Police Chief William Renye told reporters. The church was also set ablaze.

    Police said there is no ongoing threat to the public. Authorities have not released details on the surviving victims’ conditions.

    The church, circled by a parking lot and a large lawn, is located near residential areas and a Jehovah’s Witness church in Grand Blanc. The community of roughly 8,000 people is just outside Flint.

    Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer said in a statement that her heart is breaking for the Grand Blanc community. “Violence anywhere especially in a place of worship, is unacceptable,” she said.

    The shooting occurred the morning after Russell M. Nelson, the oldest-ever president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, died at 101. The next president of the faith, known widely as the Mormon church, is expected to be Dallin H. Oaks, per church protocol.

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    The Associated Press

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  • Manhattan woman charged with murdering 3 men in alleged drug-robbery scheme

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    A 36-year-old Manhattan woman faces multiple counts of second-degree murder, first-degree robbery and other charges in what officials describe as a deadly scheme to drug unsuspecting men and rob them, according to an indictment unsealed Wednesday.

    Tabitha Bundrick allegedly used fentanyl-laced drugs to rob four men, killing three of them, according to court documents. Court papers say the incidents happened between April 2023 and February 2024.

    They allege Bundrick intentionally drugged the men then robbed them while they were unconscious, stealing personal belongings including phones, money, watches, clothes and sneakers.

    Court papers outline a chilling timeline.

    In the first case, Bundrick allegedly approached two men in Washington Heights under the guise of selling them soap. She then offered sex for money and took them back to a West 159th Street apartment she broke into, prosecutors allege. Then Bundrick allegedly offered the men “cocaine” but gave them fentanyl-laced drugs.

    The next morning, one of the men woke up to find his 42-year-old friend dead beside him. That man had no memory of what happened and reported that his phone and other personal items were gone. Bundrick allegedly used that stolen cellphone to make calls, prosecutors say.

    Barely more than a month later, on Sept. 27, 2023, Bundrick allegedly met a 39-year-old and went back to his apartment on West 158th Street, where prosecutors say she gave him the same cocktail she allegedly gave the other men. Three days later, the victim’s brother found him dead. Many personal belongings were missing.

    Prosecutors allege Bundrick used his phone to make calls, too.

    Five months later, in February 2024, prosecutors allege Bundrick followed a 34-year-old man on the street toward his Upper Manhattan apartment building. They chatted outside before going upstairs. There, Bundrick allegedly gave that man the drugs, too. She was later seen going in and out of his building, taking several large bags out of the apartment, including his backpack, prosecutors allege.

    Court papers say she got in a cab and took the items back to her apartment. Fernandez’s credit card also was used over the next few days.

    Bundrick was arrested in early March when prosecutors say a search warrant executed at her home yielded four pairs of the victims’ sneakers. It wasn’t immediately clear if she entered a plea at Wednesday’s arraignment, nor was information on a possible attorney for her immediately available.

    “This callous behavior allegedly led to the deaths of three people,” Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said in a statement. “As alleged, each incident was calculated: Tabitha Bundrick knowingly provided fentanyl-laced drugs to incapacitate her victims so she could steal their personal belongings. As a result of our long-term investigation, she is now facing significant charges.” 

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    NBC New York Staff

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  • Hearing today in Karen Read wrongful death lawsuit. Here’s what to expect

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    The latest in Karen Read‘s legal saga is playing out in a Massachusetts courthouse on Monday — not a criminal case but a civil one.

    She has a status hearing in the wrongful death lawsuit brought against her by the family of John O’Keefe, her Boston police officer boyfriend. The hearing will be in Plymouth Superior Court, a different venue from where her criminal case played out over two trials.

    Watch the hearing at 2 p.m. above, and follow along below for updates.

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    Asher Klein and Marc Fortier

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  • Group of men ask for donations, charge Boston shoppers thousands, police say

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    Three people had money stolen outside popular Boston stores from a group of men claiming to be collecting donations, Boston police said Thursday, asking for help identifying the fraudsters.

    In each of the incidents, two on Saturday and one on Wednesday, three men approached someone and pressured them into giving money by credit card over a tragedy in the family, according to police reports. While they indicated they were charging a small amount of money, $5 or $15, they ended up charging thousands.

    The instances of fraud allegedly took place at a South End Whole Foods and a South Boston Walgreens Saturday, and the same Walgreens on Wednesday, according to police.

    In the case of the Walgreens incident, reported as a robbery, the men wouldn’t accept her saying “no,” then grabbed her phone and replied to an authorization message from her credit card company to OK a $4,000 payment.

    One of the men police are looking for was reported to have a tattoo that reads “Red” above his left eyebrow, officials said, asking for anyone with information to contact them.

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  • LAPD seeks help to solve 2023 Boyle Heights killing of man on way home from overnight janitor shift

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    Investigators asked for the public’s help Thursday in the search for the person who shot and killed a 25-year-old man two years ago in Boyle Heights.

    Noah Martinez was shot and killed June 13, 2023 on his way home from an overnight janitor shift. A $50,000 reward for information in the killing was offered in 2024, but no one has been arrested.

    “This reward has been on the table since 2024,” LAPD Lt. Ryan Rabbett said during a Thursday news conference. “We do look to the community to come forward, someone to come forward and give our investigators at Central Bureau homicide some information that would lead to the identity to the person or persons responsible for this crime.”

    The shooting was reported in the 3400 block of Emery Street, near Washington Boulevard and Grande Vista Avenue. Officers found Martinez, described by police as a high-functioning autistic man, dead at the scene.

    Shell casings were scattered at the location.

    Members of Martinez’s family spoke at the news conference and asked anyone with information to contact investigators.

    “Whatever you saw that early morning, please come forward and share what you have,” said father Jonathan Martinez.

    In a June 2023 interview after the shooting, Martinez’s father said the area was not part of his son’s usual route home from work. Family members said he might have been searching for recyclables, which he collected to make extra money.

    “Noah had friends of all ages,” Jonathan Martinez said. “He loved dancing and making people laugh.”

    Anyone with information was asked to call the LAPD’s Central Bureau Homicide Division at 213-996-4104.

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    Jonathan Lloyd

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  • Charlie Kirk murder suspect offered his roommate a confession and an explanation, officials say

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    The day conservative activist Charlie Kirk was gunned down while debating students on a Utah college campus, the man eventually charged with his murder sent his roommate a text message, officials said.

    “Drop what you are doing, look under my keyboard,” Tyler James Robinson wrote, according to court papers filed Tuesday by Utah County Attorney Jeff Grey.

    The roommate, whom Robinson referred to as “my love” and whose name police have not released, did so and found a note.

    “I had the opportunity to take out Charlie Kirk and I’m going to take it,” the note allegedly said.

    While the manhunt for Kirk’s killer was underway, Robinson’s parents began to suspect that the photo of the shooter flashing on the news might be their son and that the murder weapon might be the rifle he received as a gift.

    Officials said that as his parents grappled with those questions, Robinson continued to text his roommate, whom police described as “a biological male who was involved in a romantic relationship” with the suspect and transitioning to female.

    “My dad wants photos of the rifle,” Robinson wrote, according to the charging document. “Hes calling me rn, not answering.”

    Robinson told his roommate to “delete this exchange,” officials allege.

    The roommate didn’t, and the thread became evidence that Grey used to charge Robinson with aggravated murder in connection with the fatal shooting of Kirk on Sept. 10 during an appearance at Utah Valley University in Orem.

    Robinson, 22, is also charged with felony discharge of a firearm, obstruction of justice, witness tampering and several other counts, and officials said they would seek the death penalty.

    He told his roommate that he had been planning the attack for over a week and referred to the engravings on the bullets police recovered as a “big meme,” the charging document alleges.

    Utah Gov. Spencer Cox previously said inscriptions were found on at least four bullets discovered after Kirk’s assassination.

    One engraving read, “Hey fascist! Catch! ↑ → ↓↓↓,” a seeming reference, at least in part, to a video game that has been interpreted as a satire of fascism.

    Kirk, 31, a popular but polarizing podcast host and conservative activist who had been one of President Donald Trump’s most ardent supporters, was bantering with students when he was fatally shot from a rooftop about two football fields away.

    Conservative activist Charlie Kirk was shot while speaking at a Utah Valley University event.

    Officials allege that Robinson had already discarded the clothes he had been wearing and hidden the rifle after the shooting when he texted his roommate.

    The roommate at first didn’t believe he was involved in Kirk’s killing, according to the text exchanges in the charging document.

    “What?????????????? You’re joking right????” the roommate wrote back.

    Robinson wasn’t joking, the charging document alleges.

    “I had hoped to keep this secret till I died of old age,” he texted, according to the document. “I am sorry to involve you.”

    But Robinson’s roommate still didn’t believe it, noting that authorities said they had a person in custody.

    “No, they grabbed some crazy old dude, then interrogated someone in similar clothing,” Robinson purportedly texted. “I had planned to grab my rifle from the drop point shortly after, but most of that side of town got locked down.”

    Detectives later found a Mauser Model 98 bolt-action rifle in a wooded area near the university.

    The roommate also asked Robinson the question many Americans had been asking since the shocking shooting: “Why?”

    “I had enough of his hatred,” Robinson texted back, according to the charging document. “Some hate can’t be negotiated out.”

    Robinson was raised in a conservative family, and his mother told investigators that over the previous year her son “had started to lean more to the left — become more pro-gay and trans-rights oriented,” the court papers said.

    Officials said that Robinson’s parents didn’t start suspecting their son was involved in Kirk’s killing until the day after the shooting and that his mother “called her son and asked him where he was.”

    “He said he was home sick and that he had also been home sick on September 10th,” the papers stated.

    But neither she nor Robinson’s dad believed him.

    “In one conversation before the shooting, Robinson mentioned that Charlie Kirk would be holding an event at UVU, which Robinson said was a ‘stupid venue,’” the papers said. “Robinson accused Kirk of spreading hate.”

    Robinson allegedly texted his roommate that he and his dad were on different political pages, adding that “since Trump got into office [my dad] has been pretty diehard maga.”

    When Robinson’s parents were finally able to reach him, he “implied that he planned to take his own life,” the document stated.

    Instead, “Robinson’s parents were able to convince him to meet at their home,” it said.

    Once he was there, “Robinson implied that he was the shooter and stated that he couldn’t go to jail and just wanted to end it,” officials said in the document.

    “When asked why he did it, Robinson explained there is too much evil and the guy [Charlie Kirk] spreads too much hate,” the document stated. “They talked about Robinson turning himself in and convinced Robinson to speak with a family friend who is a retired deputy sheriff.”

    The family friend, who isn’t identified, persuaded Robinson to give himself up to officials.

    Utah Governor Spencer Cox announced Friday that law enforcement had arrested the man suspected of fatally shooting Charlie Kirk on Wednesday.

    Later in the text thread, Robinson allegedly told his roommate, “Im gonna turn myself in willingly, one of my neighbors here is a deputy for the sheriff.”

    Robinson allegedly told the roommate not to talk with the media and added, “if any police ask you questions ask for a lawyer and stay silent.”

    “You are all I worry about love,” Robinson texted, the charging document stated.

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    Doha Madani and Corky Siemaszko | NBC News

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  • Former New Jersey officer sentenced for hacking accounts, sharing explicit photos

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    A former New Jersey police officer has been sentenced to 12 years in prison after officials said he hacked into the social media accounts of multiple women and distributed nude images they had of themselves.

    In a news release, Burlington County Prosecutor LaChia L. Bradshaw announced that on September 5, 2025, a sentence was handed down in Superior Court in Mount Holly to Ayron Taylor, 25, of Moorestown.

    Taylor had pled guilty in March to Second-Degree Elements of Computer Theft and Second-Degree Official Misconduct.

    Officials said the investigation into Taylor began in September 2022 after a victim contacted Evesham Township police to report that an unknown person had hacked her Snapchat and Facebook accounts. That unknown person then sent nude photos she had taken of herself to her Snapchat contacts, messaged them to her Facebook friends, and posted them on her Facebook wall.

    According to officials, as the investigation continued, it was found that the commonality among all victims was that each one had a student email account through Rowan College at Burlington County.

    It was later found that Taylor had illegally obtained access to approximately 5,000 Rowan College at Burlington County email accounts.

    Officials said Taylor became a full-time officer in Mount Laurel after graduating from the police academy in October 2021. The charges reflect that Taylor was engaging in illegal computer activity from his own personal devices while on duty.

    Taylor was immediately suspended from the department following the initial charges, and officials said he then resigned after.

    “You cannot hide from us in cyberspace – we are there, too, and we know how to find you,” Prosecutor Bradshaw said. “This was an extremely nightmarish invasion of privacy for these victims. It was made even more egregious by the fact that the person who was terrorizing these young ladies was a law enforcement officer.”

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    Cherise Lynch

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  • Milpitas jewelry store owner opens fire during attempted robbery

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    Multiple suspects attempted to rob a jewelry store Wednesday afternoon in Milpitas but were possibly thwarted by a business owner with a gun, according to police. 

    Just before 1:30 p.m., officers responded to a call about a smash-and-grab robbery at a jewelry store by the Seafood City Supermarket near the 1530 block of Landess Avenue. 

    According to police, between 10 and 15 suspected rushed into the business; at the time, only the business owner and an employee were present. The business owner shot a gun, but no injuries have been reported. Nothing was stolen. The suspects fled the scene before officers arrived. 

    Anyone who has information related to this investigation is encourage you to call the Milpitas Police Department at (408) 586-2400. Additionally, the information can be given anonymously by calling the Crime Tip Hotline at (408) 586-2500 or via the Milpitas Police Department website at: https://milpitas.gov/crimetip.

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    Bay City News

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  • Person wounded in daylight Dorchester shooting, police say

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    A person was shot in Dorchester on Tuesday afternoon, Boston police said.

    Few details were immediately available as police began investigating the shooting on Bowdoin Street near Olney Street. No arrests had been made, according to police.

    They didn’t have the condition of the person who was wounded in the shooting.

    Officers were seen examining the area near the nearby intersection of Bowdoin and Topliff streets.

    This is a developing news story that will be updated.

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    Asher Klein

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  • 2 charged in theft of wedding gift box with $60,000 at Glendale banquet hall

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    Two men accused of stealing a wedding gift box from a couple at their banquet hall celebration in Glendale were charged Tuesday with second-degree burglary and other crimes.

    The box containing $60,000 in cash and checks, gifts from the newlyweds’ wedding guests, was stolen Aug. 31 at the Renaissance Banquet Hall on Central Avenue. Security camera video showed a man dressed in black walking around inside the venue, appearing to order drinks and entering a restroom before taking off with the box as guests celebrated on a dance floor.

    Armean Shirehjini, 41, of Sherman Oaks, and Andranik Avetisyan, 37, of Los Angeles, are each charged with one count of second-degree burglary, according to the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office. Shirehjini is also charged with one count of possession of a controlled substance while armed with a working firearm. Avetisyan is also charged with a misdemeanor count of child endangerment.

    Video from inside the wedding venue showed guests dancing on a nearby dance floor as the man appeared to fold and unfold a servers’ tray stand against a wall. Video showed the man pick up the gift box with both hands from a platform next to the wedding party table at the front of the room and bolt for the exit.

    “It’s such a vulnerable moment for us,” said bride Nadeem Farahat. “There’s someone in this hall, watching our guests, watching us, taking advantage of the situation. When he saw his opportunity, he went for it and darted out the back.”

    Police said the man took his time, waiting for about an hour before making his move. Security camera video from an alley showed the bald man dressed in black get into the passenger seat of a newer-model Mercedes Benz SUV that left the area.

    Detectives used the video to help identify the primary suspect in the theft as Shirehjini, according to a statement released by the police department. Shirehjini, who allegedly was in possession of a handgun, and Avetisyan were arrested Friday at Shirehjini’s home. Avetisyan was identified as the getaway driver the night of the theft, police said.

    “Detectives executed search warrants at both suspects’ residences and recovered a large amount of cash and dozens of checks made out to the victims from the wedding,” the department’s statement said. “In addition, several firearms and various narcotics were seized from both residences.”

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    Jonathan Lloyd

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  • LA woman accused of faking own kidnapping pleads not guilty

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    An undocumented immigrant who lives in South Los Angeles pleaded not guilty today to federal charge alleging she invented a story that she was “kidnapped” at gunpoint by masked immigration officers or bounty hunters and held hostage in a warehouse.

    Yuriana Julia Pelaez Calderon, 41, is charged with conspiracy and making false statements to federal officers, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

    At her arraignment in downtown Los Angeles, a trial date of Oct. 21 was set.

    An attorney representing Calderon’s family held a press conference June 30 to announce the woman had been kidnapped five days earlier at a Jack in the Box restaurant parking lot in downtown Los Angeles and brought to San Ysidro, where she was presented to a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement staffer and handed voluntary self-deportation paperwork.  

    The attorney said Calderon had refused to sign the paperwork and demanded to speak to a judge and a lawyer. In response, the lawyer said, “she was punished” by federal agents and sent to a warehouse in an undisclosed location where she was abused.

    Prosecutors said the press conference garnered media attention and stoked fear in the community. Meanwhile, Calderon’s daughter set up a GoFundMe page, requesting $4,500 and stating that Calderon “was taken by masked men in an unmarked vehicle … when she was on her way to work.”

    According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, the entire story was false and designed to generate sympathy and solicit donations. In July, the Department of Homeland Security released a statement saying the story was created to malign the administration’s immigration enforcement efforts.

    “Yuriana Julia Pelaez Calderon was never arrested or kidnapped by ICE or bounty hunters — this criminal illegal alien scammed innocent Americans for money and diverted limited DHS resources from removing the worst of the worst from Los Angeles communities,” DHS said. “Politicians and activist media peddled these smears that were designed to demonize law enforcement and evade accountability. Calderon will now face justice and the media and politicians who swallowed and pushed this garbage should be embarrassed.”

    Attorneys for Calderon’s family who discussed the case at the press conference did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    On July 3, when Calderon was still purportedly missing, federal agents “grew concerned” after confirming that Calderon was not in immigration custody, federal prosecutors said, and Homeland Security Investigations personnel began searching for Calderon over the July 4 holiday weekend.

    On July 5, agents tracked Calderon down in a shopping plaza parking lot in Bakersfield. According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, the Mexican national and self-described activist continued to falsely claim she was taken by masked men and held in custody with others.

    Prosecutors said video surveillance — including images of Calderon leaving the Jack in the Box parking lot and getting into a nearby sedan — as well as telephone records, bolster suspicions that Calderon fabricated the
    entire story.

    “Calderon and her family knew that law enforcement was searching for her and feared for her safety, but Calderon and her family did not come forward,” according to a statement from the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

    Instead, Calderon created what law enforcement alleges were fabricated photos of her “rescue,” made to look as if she was abused while in federal immigration custody and planned to hold a press conference on July 6 to increase donations to the GoFundMe page and to obtain other benefits, prosecutors said.

    “Dangerous rhetoric that ICE agents are `kidnapping’ illegal immigrants is being recklessly peddled by politicians and echoed in the media to inflame the public and discredit our courageous federal agents,” Acting
    U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli of the Central District of California said in a statement.

    “The conduct alleged in (the) complaint shows this hoax `kidnapping’ was a well-orchestrated conspiracy,” he continued. “The defendant and all those involved will face the full consequences of their conduct under federal
    law. I thank our partners at Homeland Security Investigations and all federal agents facing unprecedented levels of assaults for once again providing cool heads and professionalism during these difficult times.”

    If convicted of both charges, Calderon would face up to 10 years in federal prison, prosecutors noted.

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    City News Service

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