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Tag: Death

  • PD: Manteca day care owner was intoxicated when 5-month-old infant stopped breathing, later dying

    The owner of a day care in Manteca has been arrested in connection with a 5-month-old infant’s death while he was under her care, officials said Monday.Roxanne Helus, owner of the Cherished Years Daycare that is run at her home along the 2300 block of Merlin Lane, faces a charge of felony child endangerment, the Manteca Police Department said. The agency plans to file additional charges, which would include causing death to a child under 8 years old.Police said at 1:25 p.m. on Oct. 22, officers went to the day care for a report of an infant not breathing. There, they found an adult at the scene providing CPR to the infant, later identified as Christian Olvera.Officers took over CPR until the Manteca Fire Department and medics arrived to also perform CPR, police said. Christian was taken to a nearby hospital and was later transferred to Oakland Children’s Hospital, where he died on Oct. 24.Police said there were no signs of trauma, and Christian’s cause of death will be determined by the results of an autopsy.”We hear about this happening all the time, and you never think it’s going to happen to you,” said Christian’s aunt, Erica Valdivia.When officers first got to the day care, police said they learned that Helus was intoxicated when Christian stopped breathing. There were three other adults and three day care children at the time. The children were checked and found to be unharmed.Helus was booked in the San Joaquin County Jail, but police said she has since bailed out.”It’s just been an unbearable pain and loss for our family,” Valdivia said.It is not known how long Helus’ day care has been in business, and police were also not immediately aware of her prior history. California Community Care Licensing, which has jurisdiction over licensed day cares, is assisting police with the investigation.Anyone with information related to the case is asked to call police at 209-456-8101 and reference case No. 25-04723.See news happening? Send us your photos or videos if it’s safe to do so at kcra.com/upload.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

    The owner of a day care in Manteca has been arrested in connection with a 5-month-old infant’s death while he was under her care, officials said Monday.

    Roxanne Helus, owner of the Cherished Years Daycare that is run at her home along the 2300 block of Merlin Lane, faces a charge of felony child endangerment, the Manteca Police Department said. The agency plans to file additional charges, which would include causing death to a child under 8 years old.

    Police said at 1:25 p.m. on Oct. 22, officers went to the day care for a report of an infant not breathing. There, they found an adult at the scene providing CPR to the infant, later identified as Christian Olvera.

    Emily New Born Photography

    Officers took over CPR until the Manteca Fire Department and medics arrived to also perform CPR, police said. Christian was taken to a nearby hospital and was later transferred to Oakland Children’s Hospital, where he died on Oct. 24.

    Police said there were no signs of trauma, and Christian’s cause of death will be determined by the results of an autopsy.

    “We hear about this happening all the time, and you never think it’s going to happen to you,” said Christian’s aunt, Erica Valdivia.

    Baby Christian

    When officers first got to the day care, police said they learned that Helus was intoxicated when Christian stopped breathing. There were three other adults and three day care children at the time. The children were checked and found to be unharmed.

    Helus was booked in the San Joaquin County Jail, but police said she has since bailed out.

    “It’s just been an unbearable pain and loss for our family,” Valdivia said.

    It is not known how long Helus’ day care has been in business, and police were also not immediately aware of her prior history. California Community Care Licensing, which has jurisdiction over licensed day cares, is assisting police with the investigation.

    Anyone with information related to the case is asked to call police at 209-456-8101 and reference case No. 25-04723.

    See news happening? Send us your photos or videos if it’s safe to do so at kcra.com/upload.

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

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  • Police chases in Aurora skyrocket after policy change, injuries more than quintuple

    Police chases increased tenfold in the six months after Chief Todd Chamberlain broadened the Aurora Police Department’s policy to allow officers to pursue stolen vehicles and suspected drunk drivers, a move that made Aurora one of the most permissive large police agencies along the Front Range.

    Aurora officers carried out more chases in the six months after the policy change than in the last five years combined, according to data provided by the police department in response to open records requests from The Denver Post.

    The city’s officers conducted 148 pursuits between March 6 — the day after the policy change — and Sept. 2, the data shows. That’s up from just 14 police chases in that same timeframe in 2024, and well above Aurora officers’ 126 chases across five years between 2020 and 2024.

    The number of people injured in pursuits more than quintupled, with about one in five chases resulting in injury after the policy change, the data shows. That 20% injury rate is lower than the rate over the last five years, when the agency saw 25% of pursuits end with injury.


    Chamberlain, who declined to speak with The Post for this story, has heralded the department’s new approach to pursuits as an important tool for curbing crime. Aurora Mayor Mike Coffman believes the change has already had a “dramatic impact” on crime in the city.

    However, the effect of the increased pursuits on overall crime trends is difficult to gauge, with crime generally declining across the state, including in Denver, which has a more restrictive policy and many fewer police pursuits.

    “You throw a big net out there, occasionally you do catch a few big fish,” said Justin Nix, a criminology professor at the University of Nebraska Omaha. “But you also end up with the pursuit policy causing more accidents and injuries.”

    More people died in police chases in this Denver suburb than in the state’s biggest cities

    Impact of Aurora’s pursuits

    Eighty-seven people were arrested across more than 100 pursuits in Aurora between April and August, according to an Oct. 15 report by the independent monitor overseeing court-ordered reforms at the Aurora Police Department.

    Of those 87 arrestees, 67 had a criminal history, 25 were wanted on active warrants, 18 were on probation and seven were on parole, the monitor found.

    “What we find is that people who steal cars, it’s not a joyriding thing, it’s not a one-off, they tend to be career criminals who use these vehicles to commit other crimes,” Coffman said. “There seems to be a pattern that when we do apprehend a car thief, they tend to have warrants out for their arrest, and we do see the pattern of stealing vehicles to commit other crimes. So we are really catching repeat offenders when we apprehend the driver and/or passengers.”

    The soaring number of pursuits was largely driven by stolen vehicle chases, which accounted for 103 of the 148 pursuits since the policy change, the data shows.

    Auto theft in Aurora dropped 42% year-over-year between January and September, continuing a downward trend that began in 2023. In Denver, where officers do not chase stolen vehicles, auto theft has declined 36% so far in 2025 compared to 2024.

    Denver police officers conducted just nine pursuits between March 6 and Sept. 2, and just 16 so far in 2025, data from the department shows. Four suspects and one officer were injured across those 16 chases.

    “I think there are broader societal factors at work,” Nix said of the decline in crime, which has been seen across the nation and follows a dramatic pandemic-era spike. “When something goes up, it is bound to come down pretty drastically.”

    Aurora officers apprehended fleeing drivers in 53% of all pursuits, and in 51% of pursuits for stolen vehicles between March and September, the police data shows.

    Coffman said that shows officers and their supervisors are judiciously calling off pursuits that become too dangerous. He also noted that every pursuit is carefully reviewed by the police chain of command and called the new policy a “work in progress.”

    “I get that it is not without controversy,” Coffman said. “There wouldn’t be the collateral accidents if not for the policy. So it is a tradeoff. It is not an easy decision and it is going to always be in flux.”

    Thirty-three people were injured in Aurora police chases between March 6 and Sept. 2, up from six injured in that time frame last year. Those hurt included 24 suspects, five officers and four drivers in other vehicles.

    One bystander and one suspect were seriously injured, according to the police data.

    The independent monitor noted in its October report that it was “generally pleased” with officers’ judgments during pursuits, supervisors’ actions and the post-pursuit administrative review process, with “two notable exceptions” that have been “elevated for additional review and potential disciplinary action.”

    The monitor also flagged an increase in failed Precision Immobilization Technique, or PIT, maneuvers during pursuits, which it attributed to officer inexperience. The group recommended more training on the maneuvers, which are designed to end pursuits, and renewed its call for the department to install dash cameras in its patrol cars, which the agency has not done.

    “It sounds reasonable,” Coffman said of the dash camera recommendation. “They are not cheap and we need to budget for it.”

    ‘No magic number’

    It’s up to city leadership to determine if the benefits of police chases outweigh the predictable harms, and there is no “magic number,” Nix said.

    “When you chase that much, bad outcomes are going to happen,” he said. “People are going to get hurt, sometimes innocent third parties that have nothing to do with the chase. You know that is going to be a collateral consequence of doing that many chases. So knowing that, you should really be able to point to the community safety benefit that doing this many chases bring.”

    The majority of large Front Range law enforcement agencies limit pursuits to situations in which the driver is suspected of a violent felony or poses an immediate risk of injury or death to others if not quickly apprehended.

    Among 18 law enforcement agencies reviewed by The Post this spring, only Aurora and the Arapahoe County Sheriff’s Office explicitly allow pursuits of suspected drunk drivers. The sheriff’s office allows such pursuits only if the driver stays under the posted speed limit.

    Aurora officers pursued suspected impaired drivers 13 times between March and September, the data shows, with five chases ending in injury.


    Omar Montgomery, president of the Aurora NAACP, said he is a “cautious neutral” about the policy change, but would like Aurora police to meet with community members to explain the impact in more detail.

    “People in the community do not want people on the streets who are causing harm to other individuals and who are committing crimes that makes our city unsafe,” he said. “We want them off the streets just as bad as anyone else. We also want to make sure that innocent people who are not part of the situation are not getting harmed.”

    Topazz McBride, a community activist in Aurora, said she has been disappointed by what she sees as Chamberlain’s unwillingness to engage with community members who disagree with him.

    “Do I trust them to use the process effectively and responsibly with all fairness and equity to everyone they pursue? No. I do not trust that,” she said. “And I don’t understand why he wouldn’t be willing to talk about it. Why not?”

    Montgomery also wants police to track crashes that happen immediately after a police officer ends a pursuit, when an escaping suspect might still be speeding and driving recklessly.

    “They are still going 80 or 90 mph and they end up hitting someone or running into a building,” he said. “And now you have this person who that has caused harm, believing that they are still being chased.”

    The police department did not include the case of Rajon Belt-Stubblefield, who was shot and killed Aug. 30 by an officer after he sped away from an attempted traffic stop, among its pursuits this year. Video of the incident shows the officer followed Belt-Stubblefield’s vehicle with his lights and sirens on for just under a minute over about 7/10ths of a mile before Belt-Stubblefield crashed.

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  • Drunken driver arrested in fatal Wheat Ridge crash

    A man has been arrested in a four-vehicle crash that killed one person and injured two others, according to the Wheat Ridge Police Department. Police said the man was under the influence at the time of the crash.

    Cesar Hernandez Sanchez, 32, was traveling westbound on Colorado 58 just after 7 p.m. on Oct. 17 when he crossed over the dirt median into eastbound traffic, striking three vehicles.

    One person was pronounced dead at the scene, while two other victims were taken to the hospital with serious bodily injuries. Wheat Ridge police said both are expected to be okay at this time.

    Sanchez was also hospitalized with serious injuries, but was discharged from the hospital on Thursday. Since then, he has been booked into the Jefferson County Jail.

    Sanchez faces charges including two counts of vehicular homicide, four counts of vehicular assault, reckless driving and driving under the influence. He also faces seven traffic offenses, including failure to display lights with low visibility, failure to drive in single lane and driving the wrong way on a one-way roadway.

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  • June Lockhart, Beloved On-Screen Mother, Dead at 100

    Lockhart in 1957.
    Photo: Earl Leaf/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

    June Lockhart, beloved on-screen mother on the farm in Lassie and in the stars with Lost in Space, died on October 23 in California at the age of 100. “Mommy always considered acting as her craft, her vocation, but her true passions were journalism, politics, science and NASA,” her daughter June Elizabeth shared in a statement to Deadline. “She cherished playing her role in Lost in Space and she was delighted to know that she inspired many future astronauts, as they would remind her on visits to NASA. That meant even more to her than the hundreds of television and movie roles she played.” Her decades-long career in Hollywood began in 1938 with her family, as she starred in The Christmas Carol alongside her parents, Gene and Kathleen Lockhart, as the Cratchit family. Several years later, she played a small role in the movie Son of Lassie, a foreshadowing of her role as the mother in the television series, her takeover of the role as the Martin matriarch began in 1958 on CBS. It became her first series regular show.

    Her next big on-screen role, after many guest-starring gigs, came from an extraterrestrial in Lost in Space — she played Maureen Robinson, a mother of three, who crashed with her family on an alien planet as they tried to escape Earth. Despite being a pseudo-mother to anyone with a Border Collie, Lockhart always surprised fans with the unexpected when it came to her personal interests. “I love rock ‘n’ roll and going to the concerts. I have driven Army tanks and flown in hot air balloons,” she told AP in 1994. “And I go plane-gliding — the ones with no motors. I do a lot of things that don’t go with my image.”

    Alejandra Gularte

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  • First West Nile virus death confirmed in L.A. County, as studies show that drought conditions may increase risk

    The first recorded death from West Nile virus this year in L.A. County was confirmed Friday by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health.

    The individual, whose details have been kept anonymous, was hospitalized in the San Fernando Valley for neurological illness caused by the mosquito-borne virus. In Southern California, October is the middle of mosquito season.

    Across Los Angeles County, 14 West Nile virus infections have been documented in 2025; half have been in the San Fernando Valley.

    L.A. has had an average of 58 West Nile infections per year since 2020, with an average of one death per year, according to data from the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health.

    West Nile virus affects around 2,000 Americans a year, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Viral infection can a number of symptoms, with mild illness symptoms consisting of fever, headache, body aches, vomiting, rash or diarrhea, the CDC says.

    A more severe and concerning case can cause neck stiffness, stupor, disorientation, tremors, convulsions, muscle weakness, vision loss, numbness, or paralysis. Officials warn that the effects of severe illness could be permanent or result in death.

    In some cases, infection does not cause symptoms.

    The California Public Health Department notes that there are a number of species within the Culex mosquito genus, which is a primary carrier of the virus, found throughout Los Angeles County.

    The San Fernando Valley area recently suffered from water outages and has, over the last 12 months, consistently experienced below-average rainfall and drought conditions.

    In a 2025 study from the National Institutes of Health, research showed that droughts raised risk factors for West Nile virus. Data from more than 50,000 traps revealed that while drought conditions reduced overall mosquito populations and standing bodies of water, it consolidated the infected mosquitos and birds, which also carry the disease, around limited water sources. The result is faster transmission rate among the smaller populations, which go on to infect humans. In the San Fernando Valley, where drought conditions are expect to continue through a dry La Niña season, the reduced water sources may lead to higher infection rates.

    To avoid contracting West Nile virus, the CDC recommends reducing outside activities during the daytime, when mosquitos are most active. Officials also say that emptying or replacing containers of standing water (where mosquitos tend to breed), installing window screens, and wearing protective skin coverings or using insect repellent when outside can also reduce exposure.

    Katerina Portela

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  • Vaccine skeptics said that COVID shots would cause mass death. We’re still here.

    Millions, perhaps even billions of us who got ourselves vaccinated against COVID-19 should be dead by now, or if not yet, very soon. For years, prominent wellness influencers and other internet personalities have predicted that mRNA vaccines will lead to mass casualties. Infectious disease clinician Neil Stone has helpfully (and amusingly) compiled a number of such dire predictions.

    First up, enjoy health hustler David Wolfe’s graphic from 2021.

    Wolfe

    Stone jauntily observes: “5 billion of us got Covid vaccines. Apparently we all have 2 months left to live. Better make the most of it!”

    In 2021, Dolores Cahill, an immunologist at the School of Medicine of University College Dublin, notoriously asserted in an independent documentary that “everybody who has an mRNA injection will die within 3 to 5 years, even if they have had only one injection.” In August, Stone puckishly asked, “Anyone out there who got a Covid vaccine and is still alive?”

    In August 2024, vaccine naysayer Steve Kirsch snarkily posted that “25% of people who got the COVID shot regret it. The others are dead.” Stone snarked back, “Anyone out there who has had the Covid vaccine, is not dead, and does not regret it? I’ll start. Me.” Me, too.

    On August 23, conspiracy theorist Alex Jones expanded the amount of time that we vaccinated folks have left before we shuffle off this mortal coil when he posted that “27 peer reviewed Doctors stated that 100% of those who are vaccinated will die by 2028 due to the mRNA tech in the vaccine.” Stone drily observed, “Apparently 3 years left for me and 6 billion others. How shall we spend them?”

    And let’s not forget perhaps the most absurd claim, this time from our current Health and Human Services secretary, who in 2021 called the Pfizer mRNA COVID-19 vaccine “the deadliest vaccine ever made.”

    Claims like these have been proven wrong time and again. Given the counterfactual nature of such estimates, it is hard to pin down just how many lives the COVID-19 vaccines globally saved. Estimates range from a high of about 20 million in the first year after vaccines became available to a low of around 2.5 million deaths averted by 2024.

    If mass vaccine deaths are imminent, it is not evident in the global life expectancy trends. Since the rollout of billions of mRNA shots beginning in 2021, global life expectancy has risen from 70.9 years to 73.2 years in 2024. (Life expectancy fell during the pandemic from 72.6 years in 2019 to 70.9 years in 2021.)

    Despite these dire warnings, President Donald Trump, who presided over Operation Warp Speed, the fastest vaccine rollout in history, got his COVID-19 booster shot earlier this month.

    Disclosure: I have had nine mRNA COVID-19 shots so far. 

    Ronald Bailey

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  • California chess superstar Daniel Naroditsky, a grandmaster at 17, has died at age 29

    Alan Kirshner, a youth chess tournament organizer and political science professor, had for years been evasive when asked if he’d ever seen a chess “prodigy.”

    That changed when he first saw San Mateo’s Daniel Naroditsky, then a first-grader, in action.

    “It was apparent from the way he concentrated and was focused, but was relaxed at the same time,” said Kirshner, a retired Ohlone College of Fremont political science and history professor. “I ran to his dad, grabbed him by the arm and said, ‘He is a prodigy.’”

    The youngster proved Kirshner prophetic. He ultimately rose to the level of chess grandmaster — the highest ranking possible — while authoring a series of strategy books and eventually appealing to a new generation of chess enthusiasts through social media.

    Naroditsky’s star unexpectedly dimmed Monday as his death was announced by the Charlotte Chess Center, where the 29-year-old had worked as a coach.

    “Let us remember Daniel for his passion and love for the game of chess, and for the joy and inspiration he brought to us all every day,” the North Carolina center posted on social media.

    The center added: “Daniel was a talented chess player, commentator, and educator and a cherished member of the chess community, admired and respected by fans and players around the world. He was also a loving son and brother, and a loyal friend to many.”

    No cause of death was given by the center, nor were funeral arrangements announced.

    Naroditsky was born in San Mateo and competed throughout the Bay Area as a youngster.

    Although he impressed Kirshner as a first-grader, it was four years later when Naroditsky won the 32nd annual CalChess Scholastic competition high school bracket as a fifth-grader. The tournament is the equivalent of the Northern California championships.

    Kirshner wrote in a recap of the event that Naroditsky was the youngest champion at that high-school-level competition in tournament history.

    Fortunately for Naroditsky’s competitors, he was too young to represent Northern California in the Denker Tournament of state high school champions later that year, which was reserved for high schoolers only.

    Naroditsky had bigger goals, though.

    In December, he employed a chess tactic known as the “Sicilian Defense” to defeat Russia’s Ivan Bukavshin in the final round of a two-hour match for the Under-12 World Youth Chess Championship in Antalya, Turkey.

    The following year, Naroditsky enrolled in sixth grade at Crystal Springs Uplands School in Belmont, Calif., and attended school there for two years.

    After a year off, he re-enrolled in the local high school as a 10th-grader in 2011.

    The school posted a 2011 update from Naroditsky’s brother, Alan, who noted Daniel had earned the international master title, the second-highest honor in the chess world.

    A year earlier, the 14-year-old Naroditsky published his first chess strategy book, “Mastering Positional Chess.” In 2015, he added a second book, “Mastering Complex Endgames: Practical Lessons on Critical Ideas & Plans.”

    Naroditsky enjoyed a banner 2013 that included winning the U.S. Junior Chess Championship in June, while earning the coveted title of grandmaster in July.

    In 2019, Naroditsky graduated from Stanford University with a bachelor’s degree in history.

    Shortly after his graduation, he began to post chess strategy videos on YouTube and other platforms, including Twitch. He gained 500,000 YouTube followers.

    His final, hourlong video, posted Friday, was entitled, “You thought I was gone! Speedrun returns!”

    “I’ve been sort of taking kind of a creative break, deciding future avenues of content,” Naroditsky said. “So, I won’t delve too much into it right now because I know everyone is excited about some chess game.”

    Crystal Springs school official Kelly Sortino said the campus was “deeply saddened by the passing.”

    “During his years at Crystal, Daniel was known not only for his extraordinary intellect and chess mastery, but also for his warmth, humility, and kindness,” Sortino wrote in an emailed statement. “Our hearts go out to his family and loved ones, as well as to all who were inspired by his talent and character. His loss is felt deeply within the Crystal community.”

    Andrew J. Campa

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  • Human remains found in wooded area of Marion County

    Human remains found in wooded area of Marion County

    SURE TO BRING IT TO YOU ON AIR AND ONLINE. NEW TONIGHT. HUMAN REMAINS FOUND IN MARION COUNTY. THE SHERIFF’S OFFICE SAYS THAT SOMEONE WAS WALKING THROUGH THE WOODS OFF OF 441 IN SUMMERFIELD. AND THEY MADE THE DISCOVERY ON SUNDAY. WESH 2’S HAYLEY CROMBLEHOLME JOINING US LIVE FROM THAT AREA TONIGHT. HAYLEY. THERE’S STILL SOME CRIME SCENE TAPE UP WHERE YOU ARE. THEY HAVE BEEN OUT HERE FOR MORE THAN A DAY AT THIS POINT. THIS IS AS CLOSE AS WE CAN SAFELY GET HERE. BUT THAT RED TAIL LIGHT YOU CAN SEE IN THE DISTANCE, THAT IS A DEPUTY’S CRUISER. AND JUST IN FRONT OF IT YOU CAN SEE CRIME SCENE TAPE STILL UP AROUND THOSE WOODS. NOW, AT THIS POINT, THE SHERIFF’S OFFICE SAYS THEY DON’T KNOW HOW THIS PERSON DIED, BUT THEY ARE SAYING THESE REMAINS ARE NOT RELATED TO THE REMAINS FOUND JUST DAYS BEFORE IN MARION OAKS. I DON’T KNOW, IN THIS AREA, LIKE, YOU KNOW, ANYTHING CAN HAPPEN. IT’S NOT BEING SECURE LATELY. LEO DOMINGUEZ WORKS IN THE PLAZA IN SUMMERFIELD, ACROSS FROM THE WOODS WHERE SHERIFF’S DEPUTIES HAVE BEEN STATIONED FOR MORE THAN A DAY. HE SAID PLENTY OF CUSTOMERS HAVE BEEN COMING IN ASKING WHAT’S GOING ON? ASKING THE SAME QUESTION BECAUSE THE CAR’S BEEN THERE FOR A WHILE ALREADY. THE MARION COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE TELLS US A PERSON WALKING THROUGH THESE WOODS OFF OF 441 CALLED IN AND REPORTED FINDING WHAT THEY THOUGHT WERE HUMAN REMAINS SUNDAY NIGHT, JUST BEFORE SEVEN, THEY SAID. DETECTIVES, FORENSIC TECHS IN THE MEDICAL EXAMINER’S OFFICE ALL CAME OUT AND CONFIRMED THE REMAINS WERE HUMAN. THEY DON’T KNOW HOW LONG THE REMAINS HAVE BEEN OUT THERE, BUT BECAUSE OF THE STATE THEY WERE IN, THEY DON’T BELIEVE IT’S RECENT. HUMAN REMAINS. ANYTHING COULD HAPPEN. SO WE’VE GOT TO BE SECURE BY MONDAY. THE SHERIFF’S OFFICE STILL HASN’T DETERMINED HOW THE PERSON DIED. IF IT COULD BE NATURAL CAUSES OR SOMETHING SUSPICIOUS. BUT FOR ONE MAN WHO LIVES NEARBY, THE NEWS REMAINS WERE FOUND WAS STILL ENOUGH TO PUT HIM OFF HIS REGULAR WALKS IN THE AREA. BECAUSE I’M SCARED THERE MAY BE NOTHING NEFARIOUS ABOUT THE REMAINS FOUND IN THE SHERIFF’S OFFICE SAID THERE ISN’T ENOUGH EVIDENCE TO DETERMINE IF THEY COULD BE RELATED TO ANY OF THEIR ACTIVE CASES, BUT HE’S CONCERNED ALL THE SAME. I’M A FATHER TO A CHILD AND A HUSBAND TO A WIFE. I CANNOT RISK MYSELF, YOU KNOW, GETTING KILLED. I DON’T WANT TO END UP IN THE WOODS OR WHATEVER. LIKE I SAID, I GO WALKING ALL THE TIME AND I FEEL ENDANGERED RIGHT NOW. YOU KNOW WHO WOULDN’T? KNOW? THE SHERIFF’S OFFICE SAYS THEY WILL BE BACK OUT HERE TOMORROW. THEY’LL BE LOOKING FOR AND COLLECTING MORE EVIDENCE. AND THEY WILL ALSO BE RECOVERING THOSE REMAINS AS SOON AS WE KNOW WHO THIS PERSON WAS AND HOW THEY DIED. WE’RE GOING TO BRING THAT TO YOU ON AIR AND ONLINE@WESH.COM COVERING MARION COUNT

    Human remains were found in a wooded area in Summerfield, according to the Marion County Sheriff’s Office.This is the second time in the last week where the MCSO was called in to investigate or respond to an incident involving human remains being discovered. The MCSO responded to the 17000 block of South Highway 441, where forensic technicians and the medical examiner’s office confirmed the contents were human. The investigation aims to determine the person’s identity and what the cause and manner of death are. The remains were reported Sunday night just before 7 p.m. The sheriff’s office said they are not related to remains found in Marion Oaks Friday. Monday night the sheriff’s office was still investigating how the person died. They don’t yet know if it’s natural causes or a suspicious death. They don’t know how long the remains have been out there, but because of the state they were in, they don’t believe it’s recent.At this time, the MCSO is uncertain if the remains found are related to any current cases. >> This is a developing story and will be updated as new information is released

    Human remains were found in a wooded area in Summerfield, according to the Marion County Sheriff’s Office.

    This is the second time in the last week where the MCSO was called in to investigate or respond to an incident involving human remains being discovered.

    The MCSO responded to the 17000 block of South Highway 441, where forensic technicians and the medical examiner’s office confirmed the contents were human.

    The investigation aims to determine the person’s identity and what the cause and manner of death are.

    The remains were reported Sunday night just before 7 p.m. The sheriff’s office said they are not related to remains found in Marion Oaks Friday.

    Monday night the sheriff’s office was still investigating how the person died. They don’t yet know if it’s natural causes or a suspicious death. They don’t know how long the remains have been out there, but because of the state they were in, they don’t believe it’s recent.

    At this time, the MCSO is uncertain if the remains found are related to any current cases.

    >> This is a developing story and will be updated as new information is released

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  • Former NFL player Doug Martin died in Oakland police custody, officials say

    Officials with the Oakland Police Department said a man who died while in police custody over the weekend has been identified as former NFL running back Doug Martin.

    In a statement Monday, police confirmed Martin died following a reported break-in at a home on Ettrick Street shortly after 4 a.m. Saturday. Police said Martin was involved in the break-in and when officers attempted to detain him, a brief struggle occurred.

    Martin became unresponsive after being taken into custody, police said. Paramedics responded to the scene and rendered aid.

    Police said Martin was transported to a local hospital, where he later died.

    “Since Saturday, OPD has been in contact with Martin’s family. The family has requested privacy as they grieve this tragic loss,” Oakland police said in a statement.

    In a statement on behalf of the family, Athletes First and CEO Brian Murphy said Martin’s parents had called local authorities for medical assistance for Martin. 

    “Following recent media reports about Doug’s untimely passing, the family wishes to clarify the circumstances. Doug’s parents were actively seeking medical assistance for him and had contacted local authorities for support. Feeling overwhelmed and disoriented, Doug fled his home during the night and entered a neighbor’s residence two doors down, where he was taken into custody by police. An investigation into what transpired as he was detained is underway,” Murphy said.

    Martin, 36, was born in Oakland and grew up in Stockton, where he attended Saint Mary’s High School. A standout at Boise State, Martin was drafted by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers as the 31st pick of the 2012 NFL Draft.

    In the NFL, Martin played five seasons with Tampa Bay, being named to the Pro Bowl twice. Martin finished his professional career with the then-Oakland Raiders in 2018.

    “From his record-setting rookie season in 2012 to his multiple Pro Bowl selections during his six seasons as a Buccaneer, Doug made a lasting impact on our franchise,” the team said in a statement, noting he was honored as one of the top 50 Buccaneers of all time.

    “The condolences of the entire Raider Nation are with Doug’s family at this time,” the Raiders said in a statement.

    Mayor Barbara Lee said in a statement Monday, “We mourn the loss of Doug Martin, an Oaklander who had a distinguished NFL career and tragically passed away Saturday morning. Our condolences are with his family and loved ones, and my office has reached out to Mr. Martin’s family. They have asked for privacy during this time.”

    Police said the officers who were involved in the incident have been placed on paid administrative leave.

    The incident is being investigated by the department’s homicide unit and internal affairs, along with the Oakland Police Commission, the Community Police Review Agency and the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office.

    Tim Fang

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  • Former professor sues Auburn employees over firing tied to post on Charlie Kirk’s death

    A former educator at Auburn University and the University of Alabama is suing several school leaders over her firing, which she says occurred due to a statement she made on social media regarding the assassination of conservative activist and Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk.Candice Hale, formerly a lecturer in Auburn’s College of Liberal Arts, argues her comments about Kirk’s death were constitutionally protected speech on matters of public concern and that the university’s decision to fire her was a violation of her First Amendment rights.”Such retaliation cuts to the heart of democratic principles, where open discourse and the free exchange of ideas are essential to the preservation of liberty and justice,” the complaint reads.The statement that allegedly led to Hale’s firing was posted to Facebook on Sept. 11, the day after Kirk was killed.On Sept. 17, Auburn University released a statement announcing the termination of employees who had made “social media posts that were hurtful, insensitive and completely at odds with Auburn’s values of respect, integrity and responsibility in violation of our Code of Conduct.”While Kirk’s death was not mentioned in the statement, U.S. Senator and former Auburn football coach Tommy Tuberville attributed the move to comments about the assassination.”Thank you, @AuburnU, for taking action and FIRING these sick people who mocked the assassination of Charlie Kirk,” Tuberville posted on X, formerly known as Twitter, Wednesday. “They have NO PLACE in our state’s public education system.”That same day, Hale alleges that she was asked to join an online meeting with Scott Forehand, Director of Compliance, Investigations, and Security at Auburn University, and Chris Hardman, a Behavioral Threat Assessment Coordinator.Hale says she was asked several questions regarding her post, including:”How students who were in the University’s Turning Point USA chapter would feel about her comments.””How she would interact with white male students if they identified themselves with Kirk’s views.””If she had access to firearms or had any intent to harm anyone in the Turning Point USA chapter at Auburn.”Hale said that, following the meeting, Forehand and Hardman found her not to be a threat to the safety of those on campus.However, two days later, Hale was requested for another meeting, this time with Tami Poe, Senior Manager of Human Resources in the Dean’s Office, and Jason Hicks, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts. Ahead of the meeting, Hale was told that she was being placed on paid leave and would not be allowed to contact her students. On Sept. 22, Hale alleges she was told by Poe that she could not have legal counsel during the meeting. Hale joined the second online meeting the next day and was told they planned to fire her and offered her a severance agreement.Poe, Hicks, Forehand, Hardman and Auburn President Christopher Roberts are all named in the suit, which seeks both monetary compensation and job reinstatement, along with measures to prevent future retaliation.Hale said she is also pursuing legal action against leadership at the University of Alabama, where she was employed in an adjunct position and allegedly fired for her comments on Kirk’s death as well.”Both institutions have tried to silence my voice,” she said in a Facebook post Thursday. “I reject these efforts. I remain steadfast in defending my right to speak truth to power and to challenge white supremacy, misogyny, and injustice — especially within academic spaces.”

    A former educator at Auburn University and the University of Alabama is suing several school leaders over her firing, which she says occurred due to a statement she made on social media regarding the assassination of conservative activist and Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk.

    Candice Hale, formerly a lecturer in Auburn’s College of Liberal Arts, argues her comments about Kirk’s death were constitutionally protected speech on matters of public concern and that the university’s decision to fire her was a violation of her First Amendment rights.

    “Such retaliation cuts to the heart of democratic principles, where open discourse and the free exchange of ideas are essential to the preservation of liberty and justice,” the complaint reads.

    The statement that allegedly led to Hale’s firing was posted to Facebook on Sept. 11, the day after Kirk was killed.

    On Sept. 17, Auburn University released a statement announcing the termination of employees who had made “social media posts that were hurtful, insensitive and completely at odds with Auburn’s values of respect, integrity and responsibility in violation of our Code of Conduct.”

    While Kirk’s death was not mentioned in the statement, U.S. Senator and former Auburn football coach Tommy Tuberville attributed the move to comments about the assassination.

    “Thank you, @AuburnU, for taking action and FIRING these sick people who mocked the assassination of Charlie Kirk,” Tuberville posted on X, formerly known as Twitter, Wednesday. “They have NO PLACE in our state’s public education system.”

    That same day, Hale alleges that she was asked to join an online meeting with Scott Forehand, Director of Compliance, Investigations, and Security at Auburn University, and Chris Hardman, a Behavioral Threat Assessment Coordinator.

    Hale says she was asked several questions regarding her post, including:

    • “How students who were in the University’s Turning Point USA chapter would feel about her comments.”
    • “How she would interact with white male students if they identified themselves with Kirk’s views.”
    • “If she had access to firearms or had any intent to harm anyone in the Turning Point USA chapter at Auburn.”

    Hale said that, following the meeting, Forehand and Hardman found her not to be a threat to the safety of those on campus.

    However, two days later, Hale was requested for another meeting, this time with Tami Poe, Senior Manager of Human Resources in the Dean’s Office, and Jason Hicks, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts. Ahead of the meeting, Hale was told that she was being placed on paid leave and would not be allowed to contact her students.

    On Sept. 22, Hale alleges she was told by Poe that she could not have legal counsel during the meeting. Hale joined the second online meeting the next day and was told they planned to fire her and offered her a severance agreement.

    Poe, Hicks, Forehand, Hardman and Auburn President Christopher Roberts are all named in the suit, which seeks both monetary compensation and job reinstatement, along with measures to prevent future retaliation.

    Hale said she is also pursuing legal action against leadership at the University of Alabama, where she was employed in an adjunct position and allegedly fired for her comments on Kirk’s death as well.

    “Both institutions have tried to silence my voice,” she said in a Facebook post Thursday. “I reject these efforts. I remain steadfast in defending my right to speak truth to power and to challenge white supremacy, misogyny, and injustice — especially within academic spaces.”

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  • Swedish Death Cleaning, but for Your Digital Life

    What do you want people to have now? Why wait for death to share things you want to share? For example, you might want to give people access to photos and videos. You might also share important documents that are actively in use—health files, children’s immunization records, pet health records—with one or two trusted people.

    The best cloud storage services let you securely share files and folders. Keeping documents in cloud storage also means they’re backed up, so copies of your documents are safe in the event of a fire, flood, theft, or local data loss.

    What do you want a trusted person to access quickly and easily if you’re incapacitated or die unexpectedly? One of my fears is that I’ll be hospitalized and no one will remember that I prepared and signed an advance health care directive. If you don’t have a lawyer who holds your important documents (and maybe even if you do), make sure at least two people can access digital copies of them quickly and easily.

    Just as with other important documents, you can share these files securely via cloud storage, but put them into a clearly labeled folder, like _IMPORTANT FILES. Using an underscore ensures that the folder appears at the top of the list when files are sorted alphabetically. Because these documents contain sensitive information, make sure you review the security settings when you enable sharing so that only your trusted persons can access them.

    Examples of papers to include are your will, power of attorney form, advance health directive, deeds and titles, certificates (birth, marriage, divorce), and identity papers (Social Security cards, naturalization papers).

    What do you want people to have only after you die? You might not want your sibling or your spouse to have the keys to your email or your Instagram account now, but do you want them to post on your behalf after you die? Do you want them to permanently delete any accounts once you’re gone?

    Jill Duffy

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  • Moment Tourists ‘Risk Their Lives’ For Beach Photo Where Girl Recently Died

    A group of tourists in Iceland came perilously close to losing their lives while posing for a photo on a dangerous area of beach land.

    Photographer Gabriel Antal shared heartstopping footage to Instagram, under the handle hybaj_na_island, of the moment the group stopped to take pictures on the rocks at Reynisfjara, a famous black sand beach located in southern Iceland, near the town of Vík í Mýrdal.

    “We were filming from a safe distance and saw these tourists taking turns and climbing on basalt rocks even though the waves were smashing them,” Antal told Newsweek. “So it was very predictable that one of them would be washed down sooner or later.” 

    A popular tourist spot, due to its distinctive basalt columns, the Reynisdrangar sea stacks, and volcanic black sand, visitors to Reynisfjara must exercise caution due to the powerful and often unpredictable “sneaker” waves that can appear with little warning and are capable of dragging people out to sea.

    On August 2, a 9-year-old German girl who was visiting the beach with her father and sister died after being swept away by one of these dangerous waves.

    As a precaution, visitors are advised to never turn their back on the ocean and keep a safe distance from the water’s edge. Unfortunately the tourists who feature in Antal’s video failed to heed those warnings, much to his obvious frustration.

    In the video, an individual in an orange jacket can be seen sitting on the rocks, close to the water, at the side of the beach, posing for a photo while another tourist in a red jacket and another in a white one stand close by taking pictures.

    Everything changes a moment later, however, when a series of waves begin the crash against the rocks. The photographers in the red and white jackets run for cover, but the individual in the orange jacket is not so fortunate. 

    Instead, they are engulfed in the waves and, as the video ends, are nowhere to be seen. “Crazy that some people risk their lives for a photo,” Antal wrote alongside the video.

    Filmed on October 7, Antal confirmed that, despite the dramatic nature of what he captured in the video, everyone was fine, if a little wet. 

    He was nevertheless shocked by what he witnessed that day, particularly as someone had died so recently there. “I have not seen such crazy behavior at this beach before,” he said. People should be definitely more cautious. Not long ago a little girl died at this beach.”

    If nothing else, Antal hopes that by posting the video on social media he can alert any future visitors to the potential dangers posed. “Hopefully they will realize how dangerous nature can be,” he said.

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  • Ace Frehley cause of death: What we know after ‘Kiss’ guitarist dies age 74

    Ace Frehley, the influential founding guitarist of KISS, died on Thursday, his family confirmed. He was 74.

    While no official cause of death has been confirmed, TMZ—who cited anonymous sources—reported that the rocker was on life support after falling in his studio a few weeks ago and suffering a brain bleed.

    The Context

    Known for his “Spaceman” persona and distinctive guitar work, Frehley’s death marks the first passing among the original members of one of America’s most iconic rock bands. His influence extended across generations of musicians and fans, helping to define the sound and spectacle of arena rock. The loss leaves a significant mark on the history of American music and culture, with tributes highlighting his artistic legacy and personal impact.

    What To Know

    Frehley died on October 16 in Morristown, New Jersey. In addition to TMZ’s report, NBC News cited a now-deleted Instagram post that reportedly stated doctors had advised him not to travel following the fall, forcing him to cancel some upcoming concerts.

    He later canceled the remainder of his tour dates altogether. “Due to some ongoing medical issues, Ace has made the difficult decision to cancel the remainder of his 2025 dates,” a statement posted to Frehley’s official Instagram account read on October 6.

    This is a breaking story and will be updated.

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  • Ace Frehley, Kiss’ original lead guitarist, dies at 74

    Ace Frehley, the original lead guitarist and founding member of the glam rock band Kiss, died on Thursday, his family and agent said. He was 74.

    Frehley died peacefully surrounded by family in Morristown, New Jersey, following a recent fall, his agent told The Associated Press.

    Family members said in a statement to AP that they are “completely devastated and heartbroken” but will cherish his laughter and celebrate the kindness he bestowed upon others.

    Frehley’s former Kiss bandmates, Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons, said in a statement they were “devastated” by Frehley’s passing. 

    “He was an essential and irreplaceable rock soldier during some of the most formative foundational chapters of the band and its history,” the two said. “He is and will always be a part of KISS’s legacy. Our thoughts are with Jeanette, Monique and all those who loved him, including our fans around the world.” 

    Frehley is the first death among the four founding members.

    Frehley was recovering from a “minor fall” that forced him to cancel a scheduled performance in late September, his tour manager, John Ostrosky, also known as John Ostronomy, said in a Facebook post last month addressed to fans. Doctors advised Frehley not to travel following his fall, Ostrosky said. 

    Ace Frehley performs onstage at iTHINK Financial Amphitheatre on Oct. 10, 2021, in West Palm Beach, Florida.

    Jason Koerner / Getty Images / Jason Koenrer


    Born in 1951 in the Bronx, Frehley grew up surrounded by music and received his first electric guitar as a Christmas present in 1964. Before joining Kiss, he played in local bands around New York City and was a roadie for Jimi Hendrix at age 18.

    Frehley co-founded Kiss in 1973 alongside Stanley, Simmons and Peter Criss. He played on many of Kiss’ classic albums, including “Destroyer,” “Rock and Roll Over” and “Love Gun.” Today, Kiss has more gold albums than any other American band and has sold more than 100 million records worldwide.  

    Kiss, whose hits include “Rock and Roll All Nite” and “Detroit Rock City,” was known for its intense stage shows, which included fireworks, smoke and eruptions of fake blood performed by band members in black-and-white painted faces, platform boots and black wigs.

    Kiss members in concert in 1999

    L-R: Gene Simmons, Ace Frehley and Paul Stanley of KISS performing in Germany on March 8, 1999.

    Brill/ullstein bild via Getty Images


    Band members took on the personas of comic book-style characters — Frehley was known as “Space Ace” and the “Spaceman.” The New York-born entertainer often experimented with pyrotechnics, making his guitars glow, emit smoke and shoot rockets from the headstock.

    The band was extremely popular, especially in the mid-1970s, selling tens of millions of albums and licensing its iconic look to sell numerous products. “Beth” was its biggest commercial hit in the U.S., peaking at No. 7 on the Billboard Top 100 in 1976.

    Frehley later released his first solo album, “Ace Frehley,” in 1978, and his song “New York Groove” quickly became a hit. Frehley frequently feuded with Stanley and Simmons through the years and left Kiss in 1982 to form the band Frehley’s Comet and later continued recording under his own name.

    In 1996, Frehley rejoined Kiss for their 1996 reunion tour but left again in the early 2000s. The band continued with replacement members wearing the Frehley and Criss makeup and costumes. Kiss performed a farewell tour in 2023.

    When the original four entered the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2014, a dispute scrapped plans for them to perform. Simmons and Stanley objected to Criss and Frehley being inducted instead of then-guitarist Tommy Thayer and then-drummer Eric Singer. 

    Simmons told Rolling Stone magazine that year that Frehley and Criss “no longer deserve to wear the paint.” “The makeup is earned,” he added. “Just being there at the beginning is not enough.”

    Frehley and Kiss also had a huge influence on the glammy style of 1980s so-called hair metal bands, including Mötley Crüe and Poison.

    “Ace, my brother, I surely cannot thank you enough for the years of great music, the many festivals we’ve done together and your lead guitar on Nothing But A Good Time,” Poison front man Bret Michaels wrote Thursday on Instagram.

    As the Kennedy Center’s new chair, President Trump named Kiss as one of this year’s honorees.

    In 2024, the band sold its catalog, brand name and intellectual property to Swedish company Pophouse Entertainment Group in a deal estimated to be more than $300 million.

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  • KISS Guitarist Ace Frehley Dead At 74 Weeks After Scary Accident At His Home – Perez Hilton

    Oh, no. The rock world has lost a true original: Ace Frehley, the iconic founding guitarist of KISS and the man behind the band’s legendary “Spaceman” persona, has tragically passed away at the age of 74.

    The news broke Thursday and sent shockwaves right away. According to a heartbreaking statement from his family, the rocker died earlier that day in Morristown, New Jersey, following complications from a fall he suffered at his home several weeks ago.

    Related: Diane Keaton’s Cause Of Death Revealed

    In their message, sent to People on Thursday night, his family wrote:

    “We are completely devastated and heartbroken. In his last moments, we were fortunate enough to have been able to surround him with loving, caring, peaceful words, thoughts, prayers and intentions as he left this earth.”

    And the family didn’t stop there. They made sure to pay tribute to who Ace was as a person, beyond just the leather and loud guitars:

    “We cherish all of his finest memories, his laughter, and celebrate his strengths and kindness that he bestowed upon others. The magnitude of his passing is of epic proportions, and beyond comprehension. Reflecting on all of his incredible life achievements, Ace’s memory will continue to live on forever!”

    Oof. That hits hard.

    TMZ had previously reported Ace was placed on life support due to a brain bleed caused by the fall, which happened at some point last month. Just a few weeks ago, on September 25, he addressed fans directly via Instagram, downplaying the incident as a “minor” fall and citing doctor’s orders as the reason he had to cancel a show in Lancaster, California.

    At the time, fans were reassured with a statement saying he was “fine” and still hard at work on his next solo album, Origins Vol. 4. But that optimism slowly faded. On October 6, less than two weeks before his passing, Frehley officially canceled the rest of his 2025 tour due to “ongoing medical issues.” And now we know just how serious those issues were.

    Born Paul Frehley in the Bronx, Ace skyrocketed to fame in the ’70s as the original lead guitarist of KISS. He helped form the band in 1973 alongside Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, and Peter Criss. His “Spaceman” alter ego was a cultural stamp on rock history.

    Ace officially left KISS in 1982 after internal tensions with the band. He had a thriving solo career, and then reunited with KISS for a successful reunion in 1996. His final performance with them came in 2018 on the KISS Kruise.

    So sad. Ace was a rockstar in every sense of the word.

    RIP.

    [Image via Andres Otero/WENN/KISS/YouTube]

    Perez Hilton

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  • Diane Keaton’s Family Reveals Her Cause of Death

    Diane Keaton’s unexpected death on Saturday, October 11, at the age of 79, sent shockwaves through the world. When the news broke, a spokesperson for Keaton’s family released a statement saying that there were “no further details available at this time” and asking for privacy “in this moment of great sadness.” Four days later, Keaton’s family has broken the silence, revealing Keaton’s cause of death.

    “The Keaton family are very grateful for the extraordinary messages of love and support they have received these past few days on behalf of their beloved Diane, who passed away from pneumonia on October 11,” reads a statement sent to People.

    Keaton had kept a low profile in recent years, preferring to lead her life far from the spotlight, holed up in her California villa. Her health “declined very suddenly,” a friend told People on October 11. “In her final months, she was surrounded only by her closest family, who chose to keep things very private. Even longtime friends weren’t fully aware of what was happening,” the same source said.

    “She loved her animals and she was steadfast in her support of the unhoused community,” continues the statement from Keaton’s family. “Any donations in her memory to a local food bank or an animal shelter would be a wonderful and much-appreciated tribute to her.”

    Keaton leaves behind a cinematic legacy spanning several decades. Her career was marked by her titular role in Woody Allen’s Annie Hall, a film inspired by their past romance, which won her the Oscar for best actress in 1977. Keaton established herself as a film icon with indelible roles in Francis Ford Coppola’s Godfather trilogy; Warren Beatty’s 1981 drama, Reds; Charles Shyer’s 1991 romantic comedy, Father of the Bride; and Nancy Meyers’s 2003 romantic comedy, Something’s Gotta Give.

    Over the course of her life, Keaton had a number of famous romances with stars including Allen, Beatty, and her Godfather husband, Al Pacino. However, she preferred to lead the life of a single woman. “I don’t think it would have been a good idea for me to have married, and I’m really glad I didn’t,” she declared to People in 2019. She leaves behind two children, Dexter and Duke, whom she adopted in 1996 and 2001.

    Original story appeared in VF France.

    Vanity Fair

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  • Uruguay’s legislature votes to legalize euthanasia, a first for South America

    Uruguay’s senate passed a law decriminalizing euthanasia on Wednesday, putting the South American nation among a handful of other countries where seriously ill patients can legally obtain help to end their lives.

    It makes Uruguay the first country in predominantly Catholic Latin America to allow euthanasia via legislation. Colombia and Ecuador have decriminalized the practice through Supreme Court decisions.

    In Chile, left-wing President Gabriel Boric recently revived a push for the approval of an euthanasia bill long stalled in the Senate.

    After two decades living with Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), Beatriz Gelos was hoping Uruguay’s Senate would finally pass a euthanasia bill on October 15, 2025, ending years of parliamentary back-and-forth and resistance.

    EITAN ABRAMOVICH/AFP/Getty


    Fierce debates and spirited activism around the practice has gripped the region in recent years.

    “Public opinion is asking us to take this on,” Sen. Patricia Kramer of Uruguay’s governing leftist coalition told lawmakers in the country’s capital of Montevideo.

    The law, which moved forward in fits and starts over the last five years, cleared its final hurdle on Wednesday as 20 out of 31 senators voted in favor. The lower house approved the bill in August with a large majority. All that’s left is for the government to implement the regulations.

    During the debate, senators from the ruling Broad Front coalition delivered impassioned defenses of the right to die, comparing the euthanasia movement to the legalization of divorce and same-sex marriage.

    “We all believe and feel that life is a right, both in health and in sickness, but it should never be an obligation because others don’t understand such unbearable suffering,” Sen. Daniel Borbonet said, after quoting testimony from Uruguayan patients with irreversible medical conditions.

    Most opposition to euthanasia in Uruguay came from the Catholic Church. Before the vote, Daniel Sturla, the archbishop of Montevideo, called on Uruguayans “to defend the gift of life and to remember that every person deserves to be cared for, accompanied and supported until the end.”

    But secularization has eroded resistance to the practice in this country of 3.5 million people, which bans any mention of God in oaths of office and calls Christmas “Family Day.”

    URUGUAY-HEALTH-EUTHANASIA-BILL

    Beatriz Gelos, who suffers from Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) and hopes to end her life through euthanasia, is wheeled to her room at the nursing home where she lives in Montevideo, Uruguay, Oct. 10, 2025.

    EITAN ABRAMOVICH/AFP/Getty


    Officials hailed the law’s passage as reinforcing Uruguay’s reputation as among the most socially liberal nations in the region. The country was first in the world to legalize marijuana for recreational use and passed pioneering legislation allowing same-sex marriage and abortion over a decade ago. Both laws were passed by secular, socially liberal former President José Mujica, who died aged 89 in May.

    “This is a historic event, which places Uruguay at the forefront in addressing deeply human and sensitive issues,” said Vice President Carolina Cosse.

    The legislation permits euthanasia, performed by a healthcare professional, but not assisted dying, which involves a patient self-administering a lethal dose of prescribed medication.

    Unlike laws in U.S. states, Australia and New Zealand restricting assisted dying to those with a life expectancy of no more than six months or a year, Uruguay sets no time limits. It also does not require a waiting period, and allows anyone suffering from an incurable illness that causes “unbearable suffering” to seek assisted death, even if their diagnosis is not terminal.

    Uruguay requires those seeking euthanasia to be mentally competent.

    Although the law does not outright ban euthanasia for those with mental conditions like depression, it requires that patients get two doctors to rule that they are psychologically fit enough to make the decision.

    Unlike Belgium, Colombia and the Netherlands, Uruguay will not allow euthanasia for minors.

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  • Diane Keaton’s Cause of Death Revealed by Family as They Thank Fans for Support

    extratv.com

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  • D’Angelo, Grammy-winning R&B singer, dies of cancer at 51

    R&B legend D’Angelo has died, his family confirmed to CBS News on Tuesday. The singer, whose real name was Michael D’Angelo Archer, was 51.

    D’Angelo’s family said the Grammy-winning artist died Tuesday after a “prolonged and courageous battle with cancer.” 

    “We are saddened that he can only leave dear memories with his family, but we are eternally grateful for the legacy of extraordinarily moving music he leaves behind,” the family said. 

    His family asked for privacy and that his fans “join us in mourning his passing while also celebrating the gift of song that he has left for the world.” 

    D’Angelo performs live at the Byron Bay Bluesfest on March 24, 2016, in Byron Bay, Australia.

    Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images


    D’Angelo was born in Virginia and dropped out of school as a teenager to try to break into the music industry. He first came to fame after co-producing Black Men United’s 1994 single “U Will Know.” He released his debut album “Brown Sugar” in 1995. The record was certified platinum. 

    D’Angelo’s next album, “Voodoo,” was released in 2000. It won the Grammy Award for Best R&B Album, while a single on the album was awarded the Grammy for Best Male R&B Vocal Performance. In 2014, he released  “Black Messiah,” his third album. It won the Grammy Award for Best R&B Album, and a song on the album won the award for Best R&B Song. It was also nominated for Record of the Year. 

    During his career, D’Angelo collaborated with major artists including Lauryn Hill, Erykah Badu and Jay-Z. 

    RCA Records called D’Angelo a “peerless visionary who effortlessly blended the classic sounds of soul, funk, gospel, R&B, and jazz with a hip hop sensibility” and a “known perfectionist” whose albums “were widely celebrated as masterpieces by both the music community and his beloved fans around the world.” 

    “D’Angelo’s songwriting, musicianship, and unmistakable vocal styling has endured and will continue to inspire generations of artists to come,” the company said. “Our hearts are with his family and friends during this difficult time.”

    In May 2025, D’Angelo was set to headline Roots Picnic, a Philadelphia music festival, but announced a week before the scheduled performance that he would no longer be able to do so because of an “unforeseen” delay related to an earlier surgery. In a statement shared by the festival, D’Angelo said that his doctors had advised he not perform. D’Angelo did not specify what kind of surgery he had had or what complications he was experiencing. 

    In his statement, D’Angelo indicated that he was working on new music. 

    D’Angelo is survived by three children: Imani, Michael and Morocco Archer. He was never married. 

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  • Mitt Romney’s sister-in-law dead after possible fall or jump from parking structure, authorities say

    The sister-in-law of former Utah Sen. Mitt Romney, Carrie Elizabeth Romney, was found dead near a Santa Clarita shopping mall on Friday.

    Her cause of death remains under investigation. Investigators are speculating, however, that the 64-year-old Valencia resident fell or jumped from a five-story parking structure, according to L.A. County Sheriff’s Department spokesperson Nicole Nishida.

    Homicide investigators responded to the 24000 block of Town Center Drive near the Valencia Town Center shopping mall around 9 p.m. Friday, according to the Sheriff’s Department.

    The L.A. County medical examiner is still running tests to confirm the cause of death, Nishida said.

    Romney’s cause of death was listed as deferred on the medical examiner’s website. It could take months for toxicology tests to be completed and information to be updated.

    Mitt Romney served as the governor of Massachusetts from 2003 to 2007 and was the Republican Party’s 2012 presidential nominee. He was elected U.S. senator from Utah in 2018 and left office at the end of his term in January.

    Carrie Elizabeth Romney appeared to be the wife of Mitt’s older brother, G. Scott Romney, an attorney who has supported Mitt on the campaign trail over the years.

    Clara Harter

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