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Tag: Crime

  • Danny Masterson blames rape convictions on lawyer, anti-Scientology bias – National | Globalnews.ca

    Former That ’70s Show actor Danny Masterson is blaming his trial lawyer for his 2023 rape convictions and accusing his defence team of “failure of due diligence.”

    Masterson, currently serving 30 years to life in prison for raping two women, filed a petition for habeas corpus — a legal action challenging the lawfulness of his imprisonment — on Monday, which blamed his trial lawyer, Philip Cohen, for failing to call any witnesses and for not pushing back on prosecutors’ claims about Scientology, Variety reports.

    Masterson, 49, “implored (Cohen) to present at least a minimal modicum of defense evidence, but counsel refused,” according to the filing.

    “Cohen had a longstanding aversion to presenting affirmative defense evidence in the cases he tried,” the filing said.

    “He personally spoke to only two of the more than 20 potential witnesses who had been strongly recommended by co-counsel Karen Goldstein and investigator Lynda Larsen. He wrote off the great majority of them without any personal contact, notwithstanding their manifestly exculpatory prior statements to the police and to investigators.”

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    In the petition, Masterson also alleges police and prosecutors were prejudiced against Scientology, partially due to the involvement of former Scientologist Leah Remini, who supported his accusers publicly.

    “She was welcomed into the prosecution fold as an adviser, strategist, authoritative arbiter on the policy and practices of the Church of Scientology, and advocate for the complaining witnesses,” said the petition. “She was welcomed even though the LAPD knew that she had an ongoing vendetta against petitioner.”


    The actor was found guilty of two of three counts of forcible rape during his retrial in May 2023. He had pleaded not guilty to the charges against him. The retrial was called after 2022’s original trial on the same three counts ended in a mistrial when a jury deadlocked, failing to reach unanimous verdicts.

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    During the second trial, deputy district attorney Reinhold Mueller and his team tried to paint Masterson as a serial rapist who had been protected by high-ranking officials in the Church of Scientology. (Masterson and his family are all members of the church.) They claimed Masterson, on separate occasions, put drugs into the drinks of a longtime girlfriend and two other women he knew through the church before he raped them.

    The victims claimed Scientology officials threatened them for years after they reported Masterson’s abuse to police. The Church of Scientology has denied all accusations of wrongdoing and was not a party in Masterson’s trial.

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    At the retrial, prosecutors called Claire Headley to the stand. She is an ex-Scientologist who testified that the church requires special permission to go to authorities.

    According to the new filing, the church’s lawyers urged Cohen to call Hugh Whitt, a longtime Scientologist, to speak to the claim, but Cohen and his co-counsel did not call him.

    “Why have we heard so much about Scientology?” Cohen asked in his closing argument instead of rebutting Headley’s claim. “Could it be there’s problems otherwise with the government’s case?”

    The petition argues that Cohen failed to interview numerous defence witnesses who might have helped Masterson’s case by challenging the credibility of his accusers.

    “This failure of due diligence violated the well-settled principle of Sixth Amendment case law that an attorney must interview potential defense witnesses as a necessary foundation for making a reasoned decision about trial strategy,” the petition added.

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    “In sum, the jury saw only the tip of the iceberg of available defense evidence in the form of the complaining witnesses’ inconsistent statements while the wealth of directly exculpatory evidence went unused for no viable tactical reason.”

    Masterson’s appellate lawyer, Eric Multhaup, claims that the jury “heard only half the story – the prosecution’s side.”

    “The unfairness of the second Masterson trial was the result of prosecutorial misconduct, judicial bias and the failure of defense counsel to present exculpatory evidence,” Multhaup said in a statement to the Los Angeles Times on Monday. “The habeas corpus petition is accompanied by 65 exhibits that document the evidence of innocence that could have been presented, but was not.

    “Danny deserves a new trial where the jury can hear his side as well.”

    Masterson’s lawyers filed a separate appeal last December, alleging that key witness testimonies morphed over time and “erroneous judicial rulings” skewed the jury’s view of the evidence against him.

    In a statement posted to the Cliff Gardner law offices website, the lawyers said there were “two fundamental flaws” in Masterson’s convictions, one being the aforementioned skewed view and the second a “stunning amount” of alleged exculpatory evidence “never presented to the jury.”

    His legal team went on to say that these are only “one part” of their planned challenge to his convictions, and they are working towards Masterson’s “complete exoneration.”

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    With files from The Associated Press 

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    Katie Scott

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  • U.K. Follows Europe and U.S. in Crackdown on Asylum Seekers

    LONDON—The U.K. government on Monday announced an overhaul of its immigration policy to deter asylum seekers from arriving on British shores, the latest European nation to tighten rules in response to growing dissatisfaction from voters at levels of illegal immigration.

    The Labour government of Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced a suite of policies including changing laws to make it easier to expel migrants, quadrupling the length of time they have to wait to become permanent residents to 20 years and regularly reviewing whether their home countries have become safer and can take them back.

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    Max Colchester

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  • Inside a Wild Bitcoin Heist: Five-Star Hotels, Cash-Stuffed Envelopes, and Vanishing Funds

    As Kent Halliburton stood in a bathroom at the Rosewood Hotel in central Amsterdam, thousands of miles from home, running his fingers through an envelope filled with €10,000 in crisp banknotes, he started to wonder what he had gotten himself into.

    Halliburton is the cofounder and CEO of Sazmining, a company that operates bitcoin mining hardware on behalf of clients—a model known as “mining-as-a-service.” Halliburton is based in Peru, but Sazmining runs mining hardware out of third-party data centers across Norway, Paraguay, Ethiopia, and the United States.

    As Halliburton tells it, he had flown to Amsterdam the previous day, August 5, to meet Even and Maxim, two representatives of a wealthy Monaco-based family. The family office had offered to purchase hundreds of bitcoin mining rigs from Sazmining—around $4 million worth—which the company would install at a facility currently under construction in Ethiopia. Before finalizing the deal, the family office had asked to meet Halliburton in person.

    When Halliburton arrived at the Rosewood Hotel, he found Even and Maxim perched in a booth. They struck him as playboy, high-roller types—particularly Maxim, who wore a tan three-piece suit and had a highly manicured look, his long dark hair parted down the middle. A Rolex protruded from the cuff of his sleeve.

    Over a three-course lunch—ceviche with a roe garnish, Chilean sea bass, and cherry cake—they discussed the contours of the deal and traded details about their respective backgrounds. Even was talkative and jocular, telling stories about blowout parties in Marrakech. Maxim was aloof; he mostly stared at Halliburton, holding his gaze for long periods at a time as though sizing him up.

    As a relationship-building exercise, Even proposed that Halliburton sell the family office around $3,000 in bitcoin. Halliburton was initially hesitant, but chalked it up as a peculiar dating ritual. One of the guys slid Halliburton the cash-filled envelope and told him to go to the bathroom, where he could count out the amount in private. “It felt like something out of a James Bond movie,” says Halliburton. “It was all very exotic to me.”

    Halliburton left in a taxi, somewhat bemused by the encounter, but otherwise hopeful of closing the deal with the family office. For Sazmining, a small company with around 15 employees, it promised to be transformative.

    Less than two weeks later, Halliburton had lost more than $200,000 worth of bitcoin to Even and Maxim. He didn’t know whether Sazmining could survive the blow, nor how the scammers had ensnared him.

    Joel Khalili

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  • Former Bangladeshi Leader Sheikh Hasina Sentenced to Death Over Protest Crackdown

    The decision

    A special court in Bangladesh sentenced the country’s former prime minister, Sheikh Hasina, to death on Monday for her role in the killing of at least 1,400 protesters who participated in nationwide demonstrations last year that ultimately led to her ouster.

    The International Crimes Tribunal ruled that Hasina and several of her top officials were guilty of crimes against humanity, including inciting and abetting organized violence against peaceful student protesters in July and August 2024, and conspiring in the killing of civilians, among other charges.

    Copyright ©2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

    Shan Li

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  • Young people held at Pueblo detention facility aren’t getting enough food, parents allege

    For the past few months, Emmanuel Porter-Taylor and other young men housed at Colorado’s Youthful Offender System detention facility in Pueblo have complained to their parents about being hungry.

    Meal portions seem to be getting smaller and smaller. The canteen, where incarcerated teens and young adults can buy snacks and other food items, is only reserved for those who have achieved higher privilege levels based on good behavior.

    Porter-Taylor lost 20 to 30 pounds in recent weeks, his mother told The Denver Post. His eyes began to yellow. He couldn’t keep water down. Staff gave him Tylenol and told him to sleep, his mother, Ivory Taylor, said in an interview.

    “Mom,” his mother said he told her last week, “I think they’re trying to kill me.”

    The 22-year-old ended up in the hospital, where doctors concluded that his condition was caused by malnutrition, according to his family. When Porter-Taylor was stable, the hospital released him back to the detention center with a referral to see a kidney specialist as soon as possible. Doctors also said he needed to double his daily food intake, the family said.

    Administrators at the state’s facility for young violent offenders said he’d have to wait six months to see a specialist, the family said. He was not given additional food.

    On Sunday, Porter-Taylor was rushed back to the hospital, suffering from full renal failure, according to a letter sent by a juvenile justice advocate to a state senator. He was flown the following day from Pueblo to a Denver hospital.

    His family, though, says they have no idea how he’s doing because the Colorado Department of Corrections reported they couldn’t find his “release of information” document, emails show. The family knows they filled it out.

    “I want him to pay his debts and get out alive,” Taylor said of her son, who isn’t eligible for parole for two more years. “I don’t want to bury my 22-year-old kid.”

    Parents say they’re worried their kids could be next. Ten mothers told The Post this week that they have watched their boys lose concerning amounts of weight over the past few months, as they complain about the lack of sufficient food at the 256-bed facility. Some have yellowing in their eyes. Others have fainted, become dizzy or found blood in their stool.

    These accounts led a juvenile justice organization, the National Center for Youth Law, to sound the alarm and alert Colorado lawmakers and state corrections officials.

    “They don’t even treat prisoners of war like this,” said one of the mothers. All but Taylor spoke to The Post on the condition of anonymity because they fear reprisal against their children.

    A spokesperson with the Department of Corrections, which runs the Pueblo facility, declined to provide information on Porter-Taylor’s condition, citing federal and state privacy laws.

    The department has gradually decreased the calorie count provided to those housed in the YOS detention facility in recent years to align with federal guidelines, said Alondra Gonzalez, a DOC spokesperson. Food is never withheld as a punitive measure, she said.

    “All individuals in our custody receive appropriate food and medical care,” she wrote in a statement provided to The Post on Friday evening.

    ‘We hardly get anything’

    The Colorado legislature established the Youthful Offender System, known as YOS, in 1993 in response to Denver’s “summer of violence,” a period marked by heightened youth homicides. Senate Bill 93S-009 provided the state with a new “middle tier” sentencing option, where certain youth offenders could be sentenced as adults directly into YOS.

    These individuals “serve their sentence in a controlled and regimented environment that affirms dignity of self and others, promotes values of work and self-discipline, and develops useful skills and abilities through enriched programming,” corrections officials said in the 2024 YOS annual report.

    The facility, which only houses violent offenders, was originally designed for those between the ages of 14 and 17 at the time of their offense, though a 2009 bill expanded the eligibility criteria to include 18- and 19-year-olds. Sentences cannot be shorter than two years and cannot exceed six years.

    YOS touts a three-level model, designed to reward positive behavior. At level 3, individuals get unlimited visits and phone calls, video games, movies and free weights. They can also buy items such as deodorant or snacks from the canteen.

    But those at lower levels cannot purchase food from the canteen, nor can they receive food packages from their family.

    That leaves them reliant on prison meals that keep getting smaller and smaller, the parents who spoke to The Post said. Portions began to shrink a few months ago, these mothers said. One said entrees could fit in the palm of their hand.

    Breakfasts have included an English muffin and a sausage. Lunch could be beans with two tortillas. Dinner might consist of four mini corndogs and a cup of macaroni and cheese.

    “You feed our dog more than what we get on our plate,” another parent recounted their teen telling them this week. “We hardly get anything.”

    YOS menus provided to The Post by the Department of Corrections show a variety of different meals. One recent lunch included one slice of cheese pizza, a cup of tossed green salad with olives and croutons, one cup of canned fruit and one cup of punch. A recent dinner consisted of one cup of spinach lasagna, salad, a slice of Texas toast and peach crisp.

    Parents say their children’s weight loss has been extreme and noticeable. Many lost as many as 30 pounds in less than two months.

    Without the ability to send food through the mail or use their canteen funds, parents have been forced to feed their children as much as they can during in-person visits. That means relying on whatever the vending machine in the lobby has left. Sometimes, it’s nearly bare.

    “When you see a dog on the street that hasn’t eaten in a week,” a third mother told The Post, “that’s what he looked like.”

    One individual who was incarcerated at YOS until last month said he relied on the canteen to supplement their meals. Without it, “it would have been tough,” he said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because they’re still on probation and fear reprisal. Sometimes, those on higher levels would try and sneak food to their lower-level friends, he said, but they risked being demoted themselves.

    Recently, a group of 12 young people wrote a letter to leadership requesting more food, among other changes, one parent said. The boy who wrote the letter got put in solitary confinement, they said.

    Gonzalez, the DOC spokesperson, said the level system is a “standard correctional practice to promote positive behavior,” but that meals are never withheld as a punitive measure. The DOC is “reviewing the current phases to determine whether any adjustments are necessary.”

    Last month, another mother wrote a letter to the DOC, pleading with leadership to address the food shortage and punitive commissary policy.

    “Adequate nutrition is not a privilege,” this woman wrote in the letter, which was reviewed by The Post. “It is a fundamental necessity for health and rehabilitation.”

    The mother said DOC never replied.

    In response to inquiries from state Sen. Judy Amabile this week, a corrections official acknowledged that YOS did “reduce caloric intake” for inmates due to the agency’s dieticians and the Department of Human Services “agreeing that the average (body mass index) of YOS offenders was higher than what was considered healthy within the age group.”

    The average age of YOS offenders has risen over time, which means less caloric needs, Kayla Shock, the DOC’s legislative liaison, said in an email reviewed by The Post. If an individual requires additional calories, they will be assessed by the medical provider and provided an additional snack, she wrote.

    YOS data shows the average age inside the facility has increased to 19.1 years old in 2024 from 16.8 years old in 2007.

    During fiscal year 2022-2023, males in YOS received 3,200 calories per day, while females received 2,600 calories, Gonzalez said. Beginning in 2024-2025, those numbers dropped to 2,700 calories for men and 2,200 for women.

    Gonzalez said the agency changed its food allotments to align with federal standards updated every five years by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. When these updates occur, she said, the state’s team of registered dietitians reviews the changes to ensure their menus are up to date.

    Amabile, a Boulder Democrat who has worked on juvenile justice bills, called the calorie reduction “surprising.”

    “If they’re cutting the number of calories that kids get every day — which includes people of different sizes — I would want to know: Is that healthier for them or is that a cost-cutting measure?” she said.

    ‘I don’t know if my son’s alive’

    Porter-Taylor’s biological mother and the woman who had been his legal guardian say they haven’t been able to get updates on their son’s condition.

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  • Hamas’s Popularity Rises in Gaza, Complicating Trump Plan to Disarm Militants

    Hamas’s popularity has edged up among Palestinians in Gaza since the cease-fire, ending a slide during the war and posing a challenge to President Trump’s plan to bring peace to the enclave by disarming the militant group.

    A major reason is security. Last month, as a cease-fire took root and Israeli forces pulled back, Hamas fighters re-emerged on the streets as police and internal-security forces, patrolling and targeting criminals along with rivals and critics. While many Gazans have a dim view of the U.S.-designated terrorist group and don’t like seeing the group reassert itself, Palestinians have welcomed a reduction in crime and looting.

    Copyright ©2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

    Sudarsan Raghavan

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  • Trump Dismisses Marjorie Taylor Greene’s Claim That His Attacks Put Her in Danger

    By Nandita Bose and Doina Chiacu

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump doubled down on his attacks against Republican lawmaker Marjorie Taylor Greene on Sunday, dismissing her claim that his criticism was endangering her and saying he did not believe anyone was targeting her.

    Greene said on Saturday that Trump’s online criticism had unleashed a surge of threats directed at her. On Sunday morning, she told CNN that Trump calling her a traitor was the “most hurtful” part of his remarks.

    Trump repeated the insult hours later. “Marjorie ‘Traitor’ Greene,” he said, referring to the lawmaker. “I don’t think her life is in danger…I don’t think anybody cares about her,” the president told reporters before boarding Air Force One on Sunday night for a return to Washington, D.C. from his Mar-a-Lago social club in Florida.

    Greene, a U.S. House of Representatives member from Georgia who was long known as a Trump loyalist, has recently taken positions at odds with the president. She said on Saturday she has been contacted by private security firms warning about her safety and that harsh attacks against her have previously resulted in death threats.

    She attributed her split with the president to her support for releasing records related to the late financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

    Trump has dismissed the furor over the Epstein case as a “hoax” pushed by Democrats, but Greene on Wednesday was one of only four House Republicans who joined Democrats in signing a petition to force a vote on releasing the full Justice Department files related to Epstein.

    The dramatic rupture between two longtime allies suggests a deeper fracture within Trump’s Republican base and raises questions about the stability of his support on the far right of the ideological spectrum.

    Trump broke with Greene on Friday night in a withering social media post in which he referred to Greene as “Wacky” and a “ranting lunatic” who complained he would not take her calls.

    He continued his criticism of her with more social media posts over the weekend, calling her a “Lightweight Congresswoman,” “Traitor” and a “disgrace” to the Republican Party. 

    The president also wrote that conservative voters in Greene’s district might consider a primary challenger and that he would support the right candidate against her in next year’s congressional election. 

    Despite his attacks on Greene, Trump on Sunday night wrote on social media that “House Republicans should vote to release the Epstein files, because we have nothing to hide …”

    Over the weekend, Trump had persistently pushed back against reporters’ questions about releasing the Epstein files. Reflecting his often combative relationship with media, at one point he said “quiet, quiet piggy” in response to a question from a female reporter.

    The White House did not respond to requests for comment on the clash between Greene and Trump or his remarks to the reporter.

    (Reporting by Nandita Bose and Doina Chiacu in Washington; Editing by Jamie Freed)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Reuters

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  • Trump Urges US House Republicans to Vote to Release Epstein Files

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump on Sunday called on his fellow Republicans in Congress to vote for the release of files related to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

    “House Republicans should vote to release the Epstein files, because we have nothing to hide,” Trump said in a post on Truth Social. “And it’s time to move on from this Democrat Hoax perpetrated by Radical Left Lunatics in order to deflect from the Great Success of the Republican Party, including our recent Victory on the Democrat ‘Shutdown’.”

    (Reporting By Matt Spetalnick; Editing by Christian Schmollinger)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Reuters

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  • Arrest log

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

    BEDFORD

    • Paul Gioiosa, 48, Bedford; warrants.

    BILLERICA

    • Jesse Rawson, 29, 12 Belva Road, Billerica; possession of Class B drug.

    • Flith Derival, 35, 158 Concord Road, Billerica; unlicensed operation of motor vehicle.

    • Abudala Luhembo, 36, 2 Hampshire Road, Reading; assault and battery, possession of Class B drug.

    • Megan Whittier, 53, 10 Roosevelt Road, Billerica; no inspection/sticker, operation of motor vehicle with suspended/revoked license.

    LOWELL

    • Priscilla Silva De Carvalho, 34, 11 Summit Ave., Third Floor, Lawrence; warrant (failure to appear for unlicensed operation of motor vehicle).

    • Melissa Rodriguez, 33, 48 Dublin St., Lowell; operating motor vehicle after license suspension.

    • Chivonne Williams, 44, 27 Jackson St., Apt. 312, Lowell; warrant (failure to appear for possession of Class C drug), possession of Class B drug.

    • Philip Haley, 66, 481 Bridge St., Lowell; possession of Class B drug.

    • Patricia Boisvert, 27, 18 Auburn St., Lowell; warrant (failure to appear for receiving stolen motor vehicle).

    • Dennis Foster, 46, homeless; warrant (shoplifting by asportation), possession of Class B drug.

    • Mounthy Vongxay, 35, homeless; warrants (failure to appear for assault and battery, breaking and entering building at nighttime, and larceny under $1,200).

    • Danny Santos, 36, 111 Fort Hill Ave., Lowell; warrants (failure to appear for two counts trespassing, and unlicensed operation of motor vehicle).

    • Rafael Deleon, 58, 58 Oak St., Lowell; warrant (malicious damage to motor vehicle).

    • Matthew Simard, 34, 701 Methuen St., Dracut; possession of Class B drug with intent to distribute, manufacturing/dispensing Class B drug.

    NASHUA, N.H.

    • Matthew Paul Story Jr., 20, 171 Hartt Ave., Manchester, N.H.; criminal trespass.

    • Christiana Braccio, 23, 16 Country Club Drive, Apt. 1, Manchester, N.H.; two counts of theft by unauthorized taking ($0-$1,000).

    • Thomas Abreu, 33, 69B Chandler St., Nashua; simple assault.

    • Calvin Degreenia, 39, 10 Courtland St., Nashua; warrant.

    • Gidean Andrade, 23, 871 Middlesex St., Apt. 7, Lowell; operation of motor vehicle without valid license.

    • Bernard Leard, 83, 12 Tumblebrook Lane, Nashua; failure to procure dog license.

    • Nicole Long, 35, 14 Cross St., Apt. 2, Nashua; operation of motor vehicle without valid license, driving motor vehicle without giving proof, driving motor vehicle after license revocation/suspension.

    • Marques Stanford, 37, no fixed address; operation of motor vehicle without valid license, driving motor vehicle after license revocation/suspension.

    • Sarah Felch, 43, no fixed address; warrant.

    • Eliezer Rosario-Medina, 26, no fixed address; criminal trespass.

    • David Perez, 37, no fixed address; nonappearance in court.

    • Daniel Frost, 30, 3 Dolan St., Apt. 2, Nashua; criminal mischief.

    • Jennifer Elaine Bowen, 52, 199 Manchester St., Manchester, N.H.; nonappearances in court.

    • Nicholas Deveau, 28, 11 Wildwood Road, Tewksbury; disorderly conduct.

    WESTFORD

    • Ismael Paulino Mendoza, 23, Groton Road, Chelmsford; operation of motor vehicle with suspended license, marked lanes violation.

    WILMINGTON

    • Morgan Lynch, 31, 4 Lockwood Road, Wilmington; unlicensed operation of motor vehicle.

    • Magno Moreira, 38, 345 Sutton St., North Andover; operation of motor vehicle with suspended license, speeding.

    Staff Report

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  • Viral YouTuber cuffed for drug possession while filming in Miami Beach, cops say

    You Tube star Jack Doherty with his new Lamborghini in 2023

    You Tube star Jack Doherty with his new Lamborghini in 2023

    A popular YouTube star was arrested on drug charges while trying to film content in the middle of a busy Miami Beach street early Saturday morning, police said.

    Plantation resident Jack Doherty, 22 was on the 700 block of Washington Avenue around 3:15 a.m. when officers saw Doherty and a group of people attempting to engage officers as part of video content. Pranks are a recurring theme in his social videos. With Doherty’s 2,000 YouTube videos, he’s amassed 15 million subscribers.

    Per police records, Doherty ignored officers’ commands to get out of the street. At one point, Doherty’s associates asked him to listen to police, but cops say he refused.

    When police detained Doherty, they discovered he was carrying an amphetamine pill and a black container holding three cannabis cigarettes that altogether weighed four grams.

    Doherty was arrested and transported to a Miami Beach Police jail. He faces charges for possession of controlled substances and resisting an officer with violence.

    Later Saturday night, Doherty posted a TikTok video showing him bonding out of jail with the caption “I got arrested last night and now I’m free,” CBS News Miami reported.

    Contact information regarding Jack Doherty’s representation was not immediately available.

    Michael Butler

    Miami Herald

    Michael Butler writes about minority business and trends that affect marginalized professionals in South Florida. As a business reporter for the Miami Herald, he tells inclusive stories that reflect South Florida’s diversity. Just like Miami’s diverse population, Butler, a Temple University graduate, has both local roots and a Panamanian heritage.

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  • US Border Patrol Arrests 81 on First Day of Charlotte Immigration Crackdown

    (Reuters) -Federal agents arrested at least 81 people in Charlotte, North Carolina this weekend, a senior commander said on Sunday, marking a sharp escalation in the Trump administration’s mass deportation campaign.

    Gregory Bovino, the U.S. Border Patrol official who led immigration crackdowns in Los Angeles and Chicago before he arrived in Charlotte this week, said on social media early Sunday that agents made the North Carolina arrests within a roughly five-hour span on Saturday, their first day of operating in Charlotte. Many of those arrested had “significant criminal and immigration history,” Bovino wrote.  

    Neither the Border Patrol nor Immigration and Customs Enforcement immediately responded to requests for comment on Sunday. The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees those agencies, did not respond to a request for comment.

    Mass deportation and strict enforcement of immigration laws have been a key part of U.S. President Donald Trump’s domestic policy agenda. Since Trump, a Republican, took office in January, federal immigration agents have carried out raids in largely Democratic-run cities, along with more conservative rural areas.

    The efforts have led to large protests in the impacted cities, with citizens often confronting immigration agents as they attempt to detain those suspected of being in the United States illegally. Immigration rights groups and others have accused the administration of illegally detaining scores of law-abiding citizens caught up in the raids.

    DHS officials on Saturday said that the raids in Charlotte were a response to the refusal of local officials to comply with almost 1,400 “detainer” requests by immigration officials to hold suspects for up to 48 hours beyond the time they would ordinarily be released.

    Charlotte Mayor Vi Lyles, a Democrat, and city commissioners have urged people to seek help, including from the Charlotte and Mecklenburg County Police Department, which is not participating in the federal raids. 

    (Reporting by Brad Brooks in Colorado; Editing by Diane Craft)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Reuters

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  • Russian Billionaire Abramovich Says Jersey Investigation Is Baseless and Unlawful

    MOSCOW (Reuters) -Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich’s spokesperson said on Sunday that a criminal investigation launched by the Jersey authorities against him in 2022 was baseless and that he had been allowed to introduce “claims of conspiracy” against the government.

    In April 2022, the Royal Court of Jersey imposed a formal freezing order on $7 billion worth of assets in trusts which Jersey said were linked to Abramovich and the Attorney General of Jersey said that Abramovich was a suspect in a criminal investigation.

    “No charges have been brought against Mr Abramovich in the 3.5 years since the investigation was commenced, and, to our knowledge, in fact no progress has been made on this case,” his spokesperson said.

    “Mr Abramovich was allowed earlier this year to introduce claims of Conspiracy against the Government of Jersey,” the spokesperson said.

    Jersey did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the statement.

    Abramovich’s spokesperson said that the conspiracy claim related to the government of Jersey admitting to having deleted data relating to the case as well as their overall failure to disclose data held on Abramovich.

    Abramovich, who also holds Israeli citizenship, was one of the most powerful businessmen who earned fabulous fortunes after the 1991 break-up of the Soviet Union. Forbes has put his net worth at $9.2 billion.

    (Reporting by Reuters; editing by Guy Faulconbridge)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

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  • Former NBA Guard Patrick Beverley Arrested on Felony Assault Charge in Texas

    ROSHARON, Texas (AP) — Former NBA guard Patrick Beverley was arrested and charged with felony assault in what police in Texas called a “family violence” incident.

    Beverley, 37, was arrested early Friday at a home in Rosharon, the Fort Bend County Sheriff’s Office said. Bail was set at $40,000.

    Via social media, Beverley asked that people “don’t believe everything you see on the internet.”

    He also reposted an unsigned statement saying he had unexpectedly found his sister, a minor, alone with an 18-year-old man.

    “He was understandably concerned, as any brother would be about his sister. However, we don’t believe what followed happened the way it’s been described and we look forward to the opportunity to address that in court,” the statement said.

    Beverley last played in the NBA for the Milwaukee Bucks in 2024. He previously was with the Houston Rockets, the Los Angeles Clippers and several other teams over his 12-year career.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

    Associated Press

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  • Shakopee shooting leaves man in critical condition, police investigating


    Police in Shakopee, Minnesota are investigating a shooting that took place in the early hours of Saturday morning. 

    According to police, they were called to Grove Drive around 3 a.m. for a weapons complaint. When officers arrived on the scene they found a 40-year-old man with multiple gunshot wounds. 

    The man was taken to a metro area hospital with life-threatening injuries. He is in critical condition, per police. 

    Police do not believe the shooting was a random act. There is no threat to the public. 

    Police continue to investigate and ask that anyone with information call Shakopee Police at 952-445-1411. 

    WCCO Staff

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  • Man charged with trying to sexually assault woman, grabbing three others in west and south suburbs

    DOWNERS GROVE, Ill. (WLS) — A Willowbrook man has been charged with trying to sexually assault a woman and grabbing three others in the south and west suburbs, officials said.

    Kwame Koranteng, 31, is charged with one count of Attempt Criminal Sexual Assault, two counts of Aggravated Battery in a Public Place, two counts of Aggravated Battery – Person Over Sixty and one count of Criminal Sexual Abuse, the DuPage County State’s Attorney’s Office said.

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    Officials said the first call came in last Friday around 3 p.m.

    A woman was walking on Brookbank Road in Downers Grove when Koranteng allegedly got out of his parked vehicle, ran up from behind, and passed her. He then allegedly turned around, walked past the woman and grabbed her buttocks while asking if “she can have sex.” He then fled the scene in a Toyota Corola.

    The next call came in from Hinsdale on Monday around 2:45 p.m.

    The alleged victim was walking with a 6-month-old child on a path on 59th Street. When she briefly stopped, she allegedly felt Koranteng grab her buttocks from behind with both hands. When she turned around, Koranteng allegedly reached down and touched the victim’s genitals over her clothes. When the victim screamed for help, he fled the scene.

    The third report came in from Darien on Friday around 10:15 p.m. A woman reported that Koranteng followed her into the lobby of her apartment building and grabbed her buttocks before leaving.

    After authorities identified Koranteng as a suspect in these cases, officers witnessed another alleged assault while conducting surveillance on him.

    It happened on Friday in the 7300-block of Fairmount Avenue in Downers Grove.

    Koranteng allegedly got out of his vehicle and approached a woman who was with her grandchild. While the grandmother was bending over to pick the child up, Koranteng allegedly grabbed her buttocks from behind and tried to wrap his arms around her. When the woman pushed him away, Koranteng fled back to his vehicle, where officers arrested him.

    A judge ordered Koranteng, of the 400-block of Ridgemoor Drive, detained ahead of his trial on Saturday morning. He is due back in court on Dec. 8.

    Copyright © 2025 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.

    WLS

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  • Lawmaker Marjorie Taylor Greene Blames Trump for Threats Against Her After Their Split

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Republican lawmaker Marjorie Taylor Greene accused U.S. President Donald Trump on Saturday of putting her life in danger, saying his online criticism has triggered a wave of threats against her.

    Greene, once a longtime Trump loyalist who has more recently taken positions at odds with the president, said she has been contacted by private security firms warning about her safety.

    “Aggressive rhetoric attacking me has historically led to death threats and multiple convictions of men who were radicalized by the same type (of) rhetoric being directed at me right now,” Greene, a U.S. House of Representatives member from Georgia, wrote in a post on X. “This time by the President of the United States.”

    Trump broke with Greene on Friday night in a withering social media post in which he referred to Greene as “Wacky” and a “ranting lunatic” who complained he would not take her calls. He continued his criticism on Saturday with two more social media posts, calling her a “Lightweight Congresswoman,” “Traitor” and a “disgrace” to the Republican Party. 

    GREENE SAYS TRUMP AGGRESSION FUELS ‘RADICAL INTERNET TROLLS’

    In her first response posted on Friday, Greene accused Trump of lying about her and trying to intimidate other Republicans before a House of Representatives vote next week on releasing files related to the late financier Jeffrey Epstein, a convicted sex offender who was friendly with Trump in the 1990s and 2000s before they had a falling out.

    On Saturday, Greene wrote that she now has a “small understanding” of the fear and pressure felt by Epstein’s victims.

    “As a Republican, who overwhelmingly votes for President Trump’s bills and agenda, his aggression against me which also fuels the venomous nature of his radical internet trolls (many of whom are paid), this is completely shocking to everyone,” she wrote.

    The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment on her post.

    On Wednesday, Greene was one of only four House Republicans who joined Democrats in signing a petition to force a vote on releasing the full Justice Department files related to Epstein.

    Trump has called the furor over Epstein, who died in a jail cell in 2019, a hoax pushed by Democrats.

    He suggested in his Truth Social post that conservative voters in Greene’s district might consider a primary challenger and that he would support the right candidate against her in next year’s congressional election. 

     Online backlash from Trump supporters is not unusual. Right-wing influencers and conservative media personalities have become a potent online force in amplifying talking points and false claims, and attempting to discredit Trump’s rivals. 

    (Reporting by Doina Chiacu and Nandita Bose;Editing by Rod Nickel)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Reuters

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  • Shelby and Eli Steele on Victim Politics in 2025 | RealClearPolitics

    Victim politics gave us pro-Hamas activism and a powerful reaction in the form of Donald Trump.

    Tunku Varadarajan, Wall Street Journal

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  • Actor Eva LaRue’s daughter Kaya says stalking ordeal “impacted every part of my life”

    “CSI: Miami” and “All My Children” actor Eva LaRue and her daughter Kaya Callahan share their harrowing ordeal with a relentless stalker that began in 2007 in a new two-part Paramount+ documentary, “My Nightmare Stalker: The Eva LaRue Story.” The pair joins “CBS Saturday Morning” to share more about their experience.

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  • Search heats up for escaped killer 60 years after Ohio teen’s murder

    COLUMBUS, Ohio — Investigators say a convicted child killer and known sexual predator could be anywhere except where he is supposed to be: behind bars.


    What You Need To Know

    • Lester Eubanks, 82, is one of the U.S. Marshals Service’s “15 Most Wanted Fugitives”
    • Eubanks was sentenced to death for the Nov. 1965 murder and attempted rape of Mary Ellen Deener, 14, but his sentence was commuted to life in prison without parole when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the death penalty unconstitutional in 1972
    • On Dec. 7, 1973, Eubanks escaped from custody during an unsupervised furlough at a Columbus shopping center

    Lester Eubanks, 82, is one of the U.S. Marshals Service’s “15 Most Wanted Fugitives,” and Dep. U.S. Marshal Vinny Piccoli is now the lead investigator tasked with tracking him down.

    “It’s kind of surreal and crazy to look back at a case from, you know, when this initial incident happened in 1965, and then now it’s come all this time and all this way,” Piccoli said.

    On Nov. 14, 1965, Mansfield police found Mary Ellen Deener’s body behind a vacant house on North Mulberry Street. Within hours, Eubanks confessed to killing the 14-year-old during an attempted rape.

    “My poor sweet sister,” said Myrtle Carter. “Gotta fight you. A person that has karate experience, black belts or yellow, whatever color. And you fight a child.”

    At the time, Eubanks was out on bond for another attempted rape.

    “He should have been in jail then, because it wasn’t his first one then,” Carter said.

    Carter said her mother sent Mary Ellen and another younger sister, Bonnie, to finish chores at the laundromat after their home washer or dryer broke. She said Mary Ellen went by herself to get some change for the machines and Eubanks grabbed her on her way back.

    Mary Ellen Deener. (U.S. Marshals Service)

    “If she hadn’t run out of change, it would have been a whole different story,” Carter said. “Because he would have had to fight both of them.”

    She said that when her little sister tried to resist Eubanks, he shot her and left the scene. She said Eubanks returned when he heard her moaning.

    “That’s when he hit her in the head with a brick and killed her,” Carter said.

    She said the laundromat the girls were using was next to their grandmother’s house.

    “And her mother lived, like, say, 10 houses down on the opposite side of the street,” Carter said. “So where Mary Ellen’s body was found, that’s like halfway between both houses.”

    She said Bonnie saw Eubanks outside the laundromat.

    “We don’t know what he came back for, but she saw him in the window,” Carter said. “And when he left, she ran over to my grandmother’s house.”

    Carter said their grandmother went looking for Mary Ellen and found a group of police officers. When she told them about her missing granddaughter, Carter said her grandmother was asked to identify Mary Ellen’s body.

    “I never recall her talking about it,” Carter said.

    Carter said she attended every day of the Eubanks’ trial.

    “I wanted him to turn around and see me,” she said. “I just wanted him to know that somebody was here and somebody was there for her.”

    “This is a court document from Nov. 26, 1968, from Richland County Court of Common Pleas showing that Eubanks was found guilty by a jury of his peers and sentence should be carried out,” Piccoli said, referring to a scanned document on his computer screen. “At the time, it was the death penalty.”

    But before Eubanks had his appointment with Ohio Penitentiary’s electric chair, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the death penalty unconstitutional in 1972. His sentence was commuted to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

    “But you get to go Christmas shopping,” Carter said. “Make it make sense.”

    On Dec. 7, 1973, Eubanks was treated to an unsupervised shopping trip in Columbus with other inmates as a reward for good behavior.

    “Who are you buying a gift for?” Carter said. “The people that let you out?”

    “Someone like him, he was supposed to be doing life,” Piccoli said. “He was literally sent to death and then was commuted to life in prison. So how he made his way onto an honor group, an honor assignment, is beyond me.“

    Eubanks used the opportunity to escape.

    “You look back at what he did, his crime back in 1965, and, you know, he spent roughly seven years in prison and then has been free for 50 plus years,” Piccoli said. “So it’s just, it’s not fair to Mary Ellen. It’s not fair to her family.“

    Piccoli now oversees the manhunt for Eubanks. In his first year as lead investigator, he brings a fresh perspective to the case.

    “I don’t believe that if he were to run, you know, now and try to escape, I don’t think he would be on the run for 50 years,” Piccoli said. “It’s just unfortunate. Back then, you know, investigators did all that they could with what they had. And he got lucky in a way.”

    “Fugitives … on the run,” U.S. Marshal Peter Elliott said, “will make up a story about their past where nobody’s going to go back and ask questions about. And they’re not going to have any family or friends, you know, to the ones they’re talking to, because they’re going to say that ‘my family was killed in a fire, traffic accident,’ or so on and so on.“

    But one thing Eubanks can’t change is his genetics.

    Elliott said 60 years after Mary Ellen’s murder, the Cuyahoga County Medical Examiner’s Office re-tested the clothes Eubanks wore that night and found his DNA in a pocket.

    “It’s a game changer,” Elliott said. “It’s going to get us a step closer to catching him. It’s only a matter of time.”

    Eubanks could be anywhere.

    Age-progression photos of what Lester Eubanks could look like now at age 82.

    Age-progression photos of what Lester Eubanks could look like now at age 82. (U.S. Marshals Service)

    One of his last known sightings was in Southern California where Piccoli said Eubanks likely worked in a mattress factory in the 1970s using the alias “Victor Young.”

    “There’s no doubt in my mind that someone has had recent contact with him,” Piccoli said. “You know, maybe not as recent as this week, but over, you know, the last month or years.”

    He hopes that person will offer information leading to the violent fugitive.

    “We have a job, and our job is to find individuals, no matter how long it takes to find individuals,” Piccoli said.

    The arrest would give Mary Ellen’s family some long-awaited closure.

    “I like to think I’d be like my mother would probably want me to be,” Carter said. “And say, ‘I forgive you.’”

    The U.S. Marshals Service is offering up to a $50,000 reward for information leading to Lester Eubanks. His only known distinguishing feature is a 1-to 3-inch scar or burn mark on the upper outer portion of his right arm.

    If you have any tips, call 1-866-4-WANTED.

    Jenna Jordan

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  • Lakewood police seek suspect, accomplices in assault of Arc Thrift Store employee

    LAKEWOOD, Colo. — Police in Lakewood are asking for the public’s help to locate three men believed to be connected to an assault of an Arc Thrift Store employee last month.

    Investigators said the victim was walking back to the store after a break when he was confronted by three men near the store located at 6791 W. Colfax Ave.

    Police said one of the men punched the victim in the face and knocked him down to the ground while the other wo stood nearby.

    All three men left the scene of the crime on foot, police said.

    If you have any information on this case, please reach out to Det. Hartner at 303-987-7222 or at nichar@lakewoodco.org.

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