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Tag: Domestic violence

  • Arrest log

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

    LOWELL

    • Tasha Perry, 39, 65 Summer St., Apt. 162, Lowell; warrant (failure to appear for assault and battery with dangerous weapon).

    • Ibrahim Mbouemboue-Yogno, 35, 218 Wilder St., Apt. 24, Lowell; keeper of disorderly house, disturbing peace, assault and battery on police officer, assault and battery with dangerous weapon (door).

    • Whitney Labossiere, 28, 1005 Westford St., Apt. 4, Lowell; disorderly conduct, trespassing after notice.

    • Kenneth Eng, 21, 27 Hastings St., Lowell; operating motor vehicle after license suspension, making illegal turn from wrong lane.

    • Jeremy McWhinnie, 35, 157 Summer St., Apt. L, Lowell; warrants (failure to appear for assault and battery on police officer, resisting arrest, and disorderly conduct).

    NASHUA, N.H.

    • Kevin Mulligan, 29, 7 1/2 Martin St., Nashua; simple assault.

    • Hayden Lee Wilburn, 32, 44 Amherst St., Nashua; warrant.

    • Ricardo Encarnacion, 31, 290 Ruggles St., Roxbury Crossing; three counts of theft by unauthorized taking ($0-$1,000).

    • Danielle Evans, 32, 39 Palm St., Apt. 2, Nashua; criminal trespassing.

    • Kenneth Gurski, 70, no fixed address; criminal trespassing, nonappearances in court.

    • Edgar McIntosh, 19, 20 Century Road, Nashua; disobeying an officer, speeding (26 mph over limit of 55 mph or less).

    • Rachel Tutein, 30, 16 Cold Spring Road, Westford; stalking (domestic violence).

    • Kimberlee Bryson Cora, 29, 104 Ash St., Nashua; nonappearances in court.

    • David Perez, 37, 18 Mulberry St., Nashua; nonappearance in court.

    • Brian Anthony Desautels, 54, 23 Cushing Ave., Nashua; simple assault.

    • Hector Solano, 54, 25 Amory St., Roxbury; lane control violation, driving motor vehicle after license revoked/suspended, nonappearances in court.

    PELHAM, N.H.

    • Victoria Coyle, 38, Dracut; suspension of vehicle registration.

    • Nicholas Gentile, 39, Chelmsford; suspension of vehicle registration.

    • Sara Beaulieu, 46, Tyngsboro; suspension of vehicle registration.

    • Jean Richard, 28, Lowell; suspension of vehicle registration.

    • Heloisa Moreira Oliveira, 28, Lowell; suspension of vehicle registration.

    • Michael Ingham, 50, Pelham; driving under influence.

    • Brian Arsenault, 39, Tyngsboro; suspension of vehicle registration.

    • Robert Carleton, 23, Pelham; simple assault (domestic violence).

    • Daniel McGillicuddy, 45, Dracut; two counts of violation of protective order.

    • Jessica Conway, 25, Dracut; driving motor vehicle after license revoked/suspended.

    • Luis Lopez, 55, Lowell; suspension of vehicle registration.

    • Tamy Smith, 33, Lowell; suspension of vehicle registration.

    • Frantz Letang, 48, Andover; arrest on another agency’s warrant.

    • Nathan Harrington, 49, Lowell; suspension of vehicle registration.

    • Carmen Ruiz, 25, Hudson, N.H.; suspension of vehicle registration.

    • James Frederick, 51, Hudson, N.H.; operating motor vehicle after certified as habitual offender, driving under influence (subsequent offense), driving motor vehicle after license revoked/suspended for driving under influence.

    WILMINGTON

    • Mohammed Ali Jones, 43, 25 School St., Apt. 2, Everett; operation of motor vehicle with registration suspended or revoked, uninsured motor vehicle, license not in possession.

    • Nolan Patrick Vigeant, 22, 42 Hanover St., Wilmington; operation under influence of alcohol, two counts of leaving scene of property damage, marked lanes violation, speeding.

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  • Arlington man who smothered wife gets 17 more years in prison than before appeal

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    Wasam Moussa

    Wasam Moussa

    Family of Wasam Moussa

    Just after he killed his wife in Arlington, Tareq Alkayyali predicted in a telephone call to a colleague that he would be going to prison for the rest of his life.

    Although he did not receive that bleak sentence, Alkayyali will at minimum be confined for about a decade longer than if had he not appealed his murder conviction.

    In a retrial compelled by the defendant’s successful appeal connected to a judge’s flawed jury instruction, a state district court jury in Tarrant County on Friday imposed a prison term 17 years longer than did the jury in his first trial.

    Alkayyali, an IHOP restaurant manager, was again found guilty of murder in the May 2019 killing of his new wife, Wasam Moussa, whose screaming mouth he covered with his hand inside their apartment.

    The jury that heard the case this week in the 396th District Court assessed Alkayyali’s punishment at 40 years in prison. Alkayyali, who is 43, will become eligible for parole once he serves 20 years.

    The jury’s verdict in the first trial in December 2021 carried a 23-year prison sentence. A retrial jury is not told that an earlier trial occurred.

    Both panels were directed to consider a term of five to 99 years, or life. Both juries rejected a defense argument that Alkayyali was under the influence of sudden passion, and would have considered a term of two to 20 years if they were persuaded by the argument.

    Alkayyali moved to Texas in 2009 and frequently traveled to and from Jordan, according to the case background in a Texas Court of Criminal Appeals opinion.

    In April 2017, Alkayyali met Moussa in Jordan. His uncle is married to Moussa’s sister. In November of that year, Alkayyali and Moussa were engaged and in August 2018, they married. Both the engagement and wedding took place in Jordan.

    Within 24 hours of the wedding, Moussa told Alkayyali and her relatives that she wanted a divorce, according to the Court of Criminal Appeals opinion. She did not provide an explanation.

    Alkayyali returned to Texas. Moussa continued living in Jordan until May 25, 2019, when she took a flight to Texas to live with Alkayyali.

    Three days later, at 6:29 a.m., Alkayyali called Vernie Smith, his friend and coworker, while he was driving to work, Smith testified this week during the retrial at which Judge Vincent Giardino presided.

    “He was crying, and he said he made a mistake, and he had hit his wife,” Smith testified.

    Alkayyali told Smith that he covered Moussa’s mouth “to keep her from screaming,” Smith testified.

    Moussa stopped breathing.

    Smith told Alkayyali to call 911. Alkayyali returned to the apartment in the 2500 block of Park Village Drive and called 911. Smith also called 911.

    Arlington Police Department officers found Moussa unresponsive on the floor, according to the Court of Criminal Appeals opinion. She was pronounced dead at a hospital.

    Tarrant County Medical Examiner’s Office pathologists concluded that asphyxiation caused Moussa’s death.

    Allenna Bangs, a deputy chief in the Tarrant County Criminal District Attorney’s Office’s criminal division, and Assistant District Attorney Madeline Jones represented the state in both trials. Defense attorney Kobby Warren represented Alkayyali in the retrial.

    In the first trial Alkayyali’s defense attorney, Shawn Paschall, argued the theory that Moussa’s death was an accident and that she died due to a pre-existing heart condition.

    Alkayyali testified that there was tension between himself and Moussa as soon as she arrived in Texas.

    The retrial instructions to the jury indicate that Alkayyali also testified at the retrial.

    The appellate court in Austin reversed Judge George Gallagher, who presided in the 396th District Court at the time of the first trial. It found egregious harm in an error in what is known as the jury instructions’ application paragraph, which repeated the language of the indictment prepared by the district attorney’s office.

    Both omitted the element “that causes the death of an individual” from the second paragraph, according to the Court of Criminal Appeals opinion.

    “So, while the first application paragraph required the jury to find every element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt, the second application paragraph did not,” according to the Court of Criminal Appeals opinion. ”Instead, the second paragraph informed the jury that it could nevertheless convict without determining whether [Alkayyali’s] actions caused the victim’s death.”

    Paschall did not object to the jury instruction.

    Related Stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Emerson Clarridge

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Emerson Clarridge covers crime and other breaking news for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He works days and reports on law enforcement affairs in Tarrant County. He previously was a reporter at the Omaha World-Herald and the Observer-Dispatch in Utica, New York.

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  • One man dead after domestic disturbance in Brighton on Sunday

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    The Brighton Police Department is investigating a fatal domestic disturbance that happened on Sunday night.

    The incident happened in the area of Beldock Street and Chavez Street, according to Brighton Police Department.

    Police responded to a disturbance in which a 48-year-old man fired a gun inside a home, BPD said. The suspect barricaded himself inside the home, police said, while police tried to communicate with him.

    Commerce City-Brighton SWAT team and crisis negotiators tried to communicate with the suspect, police said, but the man fired “several shots” at police. BPD said the officers did not return fire. No officers were injured during the incident, BPD said.

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    Elizabeth Hernandez

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  • NFL to review Tyreek Hill’s deposition as league probes wife’s abuse claims

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    Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill catches a pass in the first half against the New York Jets at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida, on Monday, September 29, 2025. Hill suffered a serious knee injury during the game.

    Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill catches a pass in the first half against the New York Jets at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida, on Monday, September 29, 2025. Hill suffered a serious knee injury during the game.

    adiaz@miamiherald.com

    The NFL will be reviewing parts of Tyreek Hill’s deposition in his divorce case as the league probes the star wide receiver for alleged domestic violence during his marriage, including accusations that he tried to punch his wife’s stomach while she was pregnant.

    In court on Wednesday afternoon, attorneys for Hill and his wife, Keeta Vaccaro, told Miami-Dade Circuit Court Judge Spencer Multack that they had reached an agreement on providing Hill’s deposition transcript to league officials. The attorneys said the deposition will be handed to the NFL with some portions redacted.

    In August, Multack issued an order to shield evidence in the case from being made public. The deposition may not be released publicly, and its use would be “limited strictly” to the NFL investigation, according to court documents.

    A month later, Vaccaro, 29, filed an amended divorce petition, alleging eight incidents, including that Hill shoved her to the floor, ripped her hair out and tried to punch her stomach while she was pregnant. The couple was married for a year-and-half at the time of the divorce filing in April 2025. They had their daughter in November 2024.

    The trial for the divorce — and domestic-violence claims — is expected to start in June, Multack noted in an order filed in January.

    READ MORE: NFL to interview Tyreek Hill’s wife amid domestic violence allegations, records show

    Vaccaro went to court in December asking for Hill’s deposition to be released to the NFL before her scheduled interview with league officials. The NFL is investigating Hill, 31, for possibly violating the league’s personal conduct policy, according to court records.

    Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill (10) talks with his wife, Keeta Vaccaro, before the start of his NFL game against the New York Jets at MetLife Stadium on Sunday, Jan. 5, 2025, in East Rutherford, N.J.
    Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill (10) talks with his wife, Keeta Vaccaro, before the start of his NFL game against the New York Jets at MetLife Stadium on Sunday, Jan. 5, 2025, in East Rutherford, N.J. MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiherald.com

    The December filing marks the first time details about the NFL investigation have been publicly discussed. The NFL generally does not disclose which players are being investigated. From the document, it appears Vaccaro is cooperating with the probe.

    READ MORE: Tyreek Hill’s wife says marriage was marred by physical abuse, divorce file shows

    The couple’s contentious divorce proceedings have painted an unflattering picture of Hill, who has faced previous allegations of violence toward women dating back to his days at Oklahoma State University.

    In recent weeks, the judge admonished Vaccaro for purchasing a $196,000 Bentley as she asked the NFL star for almost $40,000 a month in temporary support and more than $325,000 in child support, according to Us Weekly.

    READ MORE: After years of chaos, Tyreek Hill says he’s cleaning up his life. ‘I lost my true self’

    Hill is recovering from a major knee injury, and a suspension would also likely affect his market value if the Dolphins release him.

    Hill, who sustained a season-ending knee injury in Week 4 against the Jets, made $27.7 million this season. He’s due to make $29.9 million next season, but none of that money is guaranteed and the Dolphins aren’t expected to retain him on that contract.

    Grethel Aguila

    Miami Herald

    Grethel covers courts and the criminal justice system for the Miami Herald. She graduated from the University of Florida (Go Gators!), speaks Spanish and Arabic and loves animals, traveling, basketball and good storytelling. Grethel also attends law school part time.

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  • Colorado program finds foster care for people’s pets as they recover from addiction, abuse, mental health issues

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    When Ashlee Chaidez’s black Lab mix, Duck, charged toward her and rubbed his face — a little more gray than the last time she had seen him — against her cheek, she knew her struggles over the past several months had been worth it.

    Six months ago, Chaidez, 27, and 6-year-old Duck were living out of her car around the Front Range. Chaidez dropped Duck off at doggy daycare to get him out of the summer heat while she delivered orders for Instacart, narrowly earning the money to board her beloved dog.

    Chaidez barely broke even financially, was off her mental health medication and needed help, she said. But the thought of giving up Duck — her best friend and reason for getting up in the morning — while she sought inpatient psychiatric care was a blow that felt insurmountable.

    After reaching out to animal shelters, Chaidez learned about a program through the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals that finds foster caregivers for people’s pets while they recover from addiction, abuse or mental health problems.

    Through that program, Duck lived with a foster family while Chaidez got back on her feet.

    “One of the main things preventing me from getting help was that I didn’t want to give him up because he’s my family,” Chaidez said. “This gave me the peace of mind to get the help I needed, and I don’t think I would be where I am now without this program.”

    The program, Pawsitive Recovery, launched in Denver in 2021 and is so popular that the organization is looking to expand it across the country.

    “This program gave me a lot of hope when I didn’t really see any,” Chaidez said.

    Serena Saunders got sober from alcohol about five years ago through an inpatient program. The former veterinary technician told her therapist at the time that she wished she could work with dogs while going through recovery. That was the impetus for Pawsitive Recovery, a nonprofit Saunders started out of her Denver home, where she cared for the cats and dogs of people in recovery.

    Two years ago, Saunders met an employee with SPCA International who became interested in her work. The longstanding animal advocacy organization hired Saunders and folded her nonprofit into their mission.

    “It was probably the best decision of my life,” Saunders said.

    Pawsitive Recovery partners with mental health treatment and sober living facilities across Colorado. People who need inpatient care but have pets they don’t want to leave behind get referred to the SPCA and connected with a foster caregiver.

    The organization and its host of volunteers care for around 30 to 40 animals at a time — mostly cats and dogs, although Saunders has looked after 10 tarantulas in her office and found temporary homes for guinea pigs, too.

    The fosters are typically volunteers from the recovery space — therapists, people in long-term recovery, parents of family members impacted by addiction, Saunders said. (Anyone interested in volunteering or getting connected with the program can find information at spcai.org/our-work/pawsitive-recovery.)

    Sometimes, due to challenges like homelessness, the pets have trauma that can lead to behavioral issues, Saunders said. The program partners with a training facility in Brighton that takes on behaviorally challenged animals, she said.

    Ashlee Chaidez, right, hugs SPCA volunteer Sara Broene after being reunited with her dog, Duck, after six months apart while Chaidez sought psychiatric care, on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2025, at Hounds Town dog daycare and boarding in Denver. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)

    They also have a standing arrangement with local boarding facility Hounds Town, which can take in pets quickly, Saunders said. A fast placement can be critical if a client is escaping a domestic violence situation and needs to leave right away, she said.

    “We are not limited to dogs that are in perfect shape,” Saunders said. “We can take broken ones, too, which is amazing because the dog and the person get to heal simultaneously.”

    Pawsitive Recovery commits to fostering pets for six months, giving the person in recovery time to figure out their next move, Saunders said. The SPCA charges $100 per month for a boarding fee, which Saunders described as an accountability tool for the person in recovery.

    “It’s part of their responsibility, having a little skin in the game when it comes to the care of their animal,” Saunders said. “If they’re in treatment, a lot of these people are not working, so what we do is set up a fundraiser for them, and as they start rebuilding their life, they can go in and make payments. It’s all situational.”

    For Chaidez, the program was life-changing.

    She got the medical care she needed, secured a job at a Starbucks in Vail and got her own apartment.

    When times in recovery got hard, the thought of reuniting with her furry friend kept her motivated, she said.

    Ashlee Chaidez give a kiss to her dog, Duck, after being reunited after six months apart while Chaidez sought psychiatric care, on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2025, at Hounds Town dog daycare and boarding in Denver. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)
    Ashlee Chaidez give a kiss to her dog, Duck, after being reunited after six months apart while Chaidez sought psychiatric care, on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2025, at Hounds Town dog daycare and boarding in Denver. (Photo by Timothy Hurst/The Denver Post)

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    Elizabeth Hernandez

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  • Despite history of domestic violence, victim in Christmas shooting in Southfield never called 911, police say

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    Police investigating the Christmas Day deaths of two people at an apartment complex say neither the victim nor her friend ever called 911, despite a history of domestic violence in the victim’s relationship.

    Southfield Police Chief Elvin V. Barren shared this update Monday, hoping that a lesson could be learned from the situation. 

    Just after 9:30 p.m. on Christmas, Southfield Police were called to the Riverstone Apartments on Shiawassee Road for reports of a shooting. Investigators said that, earlier that day, a 23-year-old woman and her 30-year-old boyfriend got into an argument.

    “They began arguing over damaged property and allegations of infidelity, where she believed that he had been unfaithful,” Barren said. “The female victim told officers that she was slapped, strangled and kicked multiple times during the assault.” 

    Instead of calling 911, the woman called her friend to help gather her boyfriend’s belongings.

    “The victim stated that she did not contact law enforcement due to the relationship she had with the suspect’s 3-year-old child, and she didn’t want the suspects arrested, which would prevent him from being with his child,” Barren said. 

    That friend brought her 20-year-old boyfriend from Madison Heights, who was carrying a 9-millimeter handgun. 

    They say the 30-year-old returned later that night, and when they wouldn’t let him inside, he kicked down the door. After another brief altercation between the couple, the 30-year-old gained possession of his AR-15 rifle.

    “Both men immediately began shooting at each other,” Barren said. “Guns will get you in more trouble than they will ever get you out of.” 

    The friend took her boyfriend to the hospital, where he later died.

    Meanwhile, the 23-year-old victim hid in a bedroom, but she could hear her boyfriend, who had been shot eight times, pleading for help.

    “She exited the nearby bedroom and walked towards the living room to check on him. She observed him hunched over the couch. She observed the assault rifle next to him. He made eye contact with her and shot three rounds at her,” Barren said.

    She walked away with only a gunshot wound to her thumb. Her boyfriend eventually succumbed to his injuries. The 3-year-old boy was in the apartment at the time. He wasn’t hurt and has since been reunited with his biological mother.

    “What I will ask the community or anyone who is the victim of domestic violence — it is the utmost importance if you are a victim of domestic violence, please call 911, after any type of assault,” Barren said.

    Police say they will not be releasing the names of everyone involved.

    An ATF investigation has been opened into the purchase of the AR-15 rifle. 

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  • Joe Hunter’s Mission

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    Joe Hunter’s Mission – CBS News









































    Watch CBS News



    A “Survivor” contestant believes his sister was murdered and is determined to be her voice. “48 Hours” contributor Natalie Morales reports.

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  • Here’s how Denver police fly drones to 911 calls, triggering fears about privacy and surveillance

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    In a windowless room at Denver police headquarters on a recent Thursday afternoon, Officer Chris Velarde activated a police drone to investigate a potential car break-in.

    Officer Chris Velarde flies a drone and monitors live footage from its camera from Denver Police Department headquarters on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)

    Several floors above, the drone launched from the roof and flew itself — essentially on autopilot — to the site of the call, reported as a man breaking into a car with a crowbar near the Santa Fe Arts District.

    The drone whizzed along, 200 feet up, in a straight line across blocks, buildings and streets during the roughly mile-long flight from police headquarters at 1331 Cherokee St. Velarde didn’t pick up the Xbox video-game controller that manually pilots the drone until it reached the area of the call. Then he took control and trolled the block for the supposed break-in, watching live video footage transmitted from the drone on his computer monitor as he flew.

    After a few moments, Velarde spotted two people jiggering the passenger-side window of a vehicle. He zoomed in on the pair, and on the car’s license plate. He ran the plate to see whether the vehicle was stolen; it was not. The people on the street didn’t look up. They didn’t seem to know a police drone was hovering above them, that they were being recorded and watched a mile away by officers and a reporter.

    Two more people joined the pair at the vehicle’s window and Velarde made the call — this didn’t look like a vehicle break-in. More likely, someone had just locked their keys in their car. He cleared the call with 911 dispatchers and told them there was no need to send an officer to the scene. Then he sent the drone back to headquarters; it flew itself to the rooftop dock, landing autonomously on a platform stamped with bright blue-and-yellow QR codes.

    The Denver Police Department began testing drones as first responders — that is, sending them out on 911 calls — in mid-October after signing up for two free pilot programs from rival drone companies Skydio and Flock Safety. The effort has raised concerns among privacy advocates, Denver politicians and the city’s police oversight group, particularly regarding the department’s contract with Flock, the company behind the city’s controversial network of automated license-plate readers.

    Police see the drones as a way to speed up call-response times and provide more information to officers as they arrive on scene, improving, they say, both public safety and officer safety. If a drone arrives at a scene before officers, and the drone pilot can tell police on the ground that the man with the knife actually put down the weapon before the officers arrived, that helps everyone, police said.

    “The more knowledge, information and intelligence that we can provide our officers on the ground, the better methods that they can use to respond to certain situations, which may cause them to not escalate unnecessarily,” said Cmdr. Clifford Barnes, who heads the department’s Cyber Bureau.

    Critics say the eyes in the sky raise serious privacy concerns both with how the drones and the data they collect are used now, and with how they might be used in the future as the technology rapidly changes. They worry that the drones could create a citywide surveillance network with few legal guardrails, that the footage they collect will be used to train private companies’ AI algorithms or that police will misuse emerging AI capabilities, like facial recognition.

    “When it comes to the decision of, are we going to use this thing that could potentially increase public safety, that will erode privacy rights — no one should get to decide the public is willing to give away our constitutional rights, except the people,” said Anaya Robinson, public policy director at the American Civil Liberties Union of Colorado.  “And when law enforcement makes that decision for us, it becomes extremely problematic.”

    Almost 300 drone flights in 55 days

    So far, only Skydio drones have flown as first responders over Denver.

    Denver police signed a zero-dollar contract with Flock — without public announcement — in August for a year-long pilot of drones as first responders, but the company has yet to set up its autonomous aircraft. Skydio, on the other hand, moved quickly to get drones in the air after Denver police in October signed a contract to test up to four of the company’s drones during a free six-month pilot.

    Skydio’s drones can reach about a 2-mile radius around the Denver police headquarters. The company advertises a top speed of 45 mph with 40 minutes of flight time; Denver pilots have found the drones average around 28 mph and around 25 minutes of battery life per flight.

    From the first flight on Oct. 15 through Tuesday, two Skydio drones flew 297 times, according to data provided by Denver police in response to an open records request. Most of those flights — 199 — were to answer calls for service; another 82 were training flights, according to the data.

    Skydio drones also surveilled events — a function police call “event overwatch” — seven times, the police data shows. Overwatch might include flying over a protest to track where the demonstrators are headed and alert officers on the ground for traffic control, Barnes said. (The police data showed that all seven overwatch flights occurred on Oct. 18, the day of Denver’s “No Kings” rally.)

    The drones flew to 29 calls about a person with a weapon, 21 disturbances, 20 assaults in progress, a dozen suspicious occurrences and 11 hold-up alarms, according to data from Denver’s 911 dispatch records.  The drones also flew to 39 other types of calls, including reports of prowlers, fights, burglaries, domestic violence and suicidal people.

    The most common outcome for a call was that the officers were unable to locate an incident or the suspect was gone by the time the drone or police officers arrived, the records show. Across about 200 calls for service that included drone responses, police made 22 arrests and issued one citation, the dispatch data shows.

    When responding to calls for service, the drones reached the scene before patrol officers 88% of the time, the police data shows. A drone was the sole police response in 80 of 199 calls for service, or about 40% of the time.

    Barnes said answering calls with solely a drone improves police efficiency.

    “If an officer on the ground doesn’t need to respond, and the drone pilot is comfortable with cancelling the other officers coming, we can assign those officers to more important, more pressing matters, so call-response times come down,” he said.

    That approach raises questions about what the drones (which are equipped with three different cameras and a thermal imager) can and can’t see, and how officers are making decisions about call responses without actually speaking to anyone at the scene, the ACLU’s Robinson said.

    “Humans have bias,” he said. Drone pilots might be more inclined to send officers to a potential car break-in in a low-income neighborhood and more likely not to in a higher-income neighborhood, he said. Or they might miss something from above that they could have seen at street level.

    Officer Chris Velarde flies a drone and monitors live footage from its camera from Denver Police Department headquarters on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
    Officer Chris Velarde flies a drone and monitors live footage from its camera from Denver Police Department headquarters on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)

    But minimizing in-person police interactions with residents, particularly in over-policed neighborhoods, can also be a positive, said Julia Richman, chair of Denver’s Citizen Oversight Board, which provides civilian oversight of the police department.

    “Where my head goes is the other outcome, where they roll up on those people who are trying to get keys out of the car and then they shoot them,” she said. “Actually, (the drone-only response) seems like a really good outcome.”

    The oversight group has talked with Denver police over the last two years about developing its drone program, she said. The department created a seven-page policy to guide their use; the policy aims to ensure “civil rights and reasonable expectations of privacy are a key component of any decision made to deploy” a drone.

    But Richman said she was surprised by aspects of the police department’s pilot programs despite the ongoing conversations with department leadership.

    “What was never discussed, not once, was the idea of a third party running those drones or those drones being autonomous,” she said, referring to the drone companies. “What has changed with this latest pilot is the key features and key aspects that would create public concern had never been discussed with us.”

    Both Flock and Skydio advertise autonomous features powered by artificial intelligence. Skydio uses AI for its autonomous flight paths, obstacle avoidance and tracking people and cars.

    Flock, which also offers autonomous flight, advertises its drones as integrating with its automated license-plate readers. The license-plate readers — there are more than 100 around Denver — automatically photograph every car that passes by them. If a license plate is stolen or involved in a crime, the license-plate readers alert police within seconds.

    Police Chief Ron Thomas and Mayor Mike Johnston defended the surveillance network as an invaluable crime-solving tool this year against mounting public discontent around how much data the machines collected and how that data was used — particularly around sharing information with the federal government for the purposes of immigration enforcement.

    That privacy debate around Flock’s license plate readers unfolded in communities across Colorado and nationwide this year. In Loveland, the police department for a time allowed U.S. Border Patrol agents to access its Flock cameras before blocking that access. In Longmont, councilmembers voted Wednesday to look for alternatives to replace the 20 Flock license plate readers in that city.

    Flock in August announced it was pausing operations with federal agencies over the widespread concerns.

    When Denver City Council members, some driven by privacy concerns, voted against continuing Flock’s license-plate readers in May, Johnston extended the surveillance anyway through a free five-month contract extension with Flock in October that did not require approval from the council. Against that backdrop, Denver police quietly signed on for Flock’s drone pilot in August.

    Barnes said the police department will not use any license-plate reader capabilities available on Flock drones. Such a feature would constitute “random surveillance,” which is prohibited under the department’s drone policy. The drones never fly without an officer’s direct involvement, he added.

    The blue 2-mile-radius line seen on a computer screen shows the range of Denver police Skydio drones flown from Denver Police headquarters. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
    The blue 2-mile-radius line seen on a computer screen shows the range of Denver police Skydio drones flown from Denver Police headquarters. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)

    The policy also prohibits drones from filming anywhere a person has a reasonable expectation of privacy unless police have a warrant, and says officers should take “reasonable precautions … to avoid inadvertently recording or transmitting images of areas where there is a reasonable expectation of privacy.”

    Denver police do receive search warrants to fly drones for particular operations outside of the drones-as-first-responder program. In October, a Denver police detective sought and received a warrant to fly a drone over a shooting suspect’s home in Cherry Hills Village to check whether a truck involved in the shooting was parked at the wooded property.

    The warrant noted that when driving home from anywhere outside Cherry Hills Village, the suspect could not reach his house without passing by Flock license-plate readers, and that photos from those license-plate readers suggested the truck was at the property.

    Denver Councilwoman Serena Gonzales-Gutierrez and Councilman Kevin Flynn both told The Post they were not aware of the police department’s Skydio drone pilot before hearing about it from the newspaper, even though they are both on the city’s Surveillance Technology Task Force. The new group began meeting in August largely to consider Flock license-plate readers, as well as other types of surveillance technology, Gonzales-Gutierrez said.

    “We haven’t talked about it in the task force, and the charge of our work in the task force is to come up with those guardrails that need to be put in place for these types of technology being utilized by law enforcement,” she said. “I feel like they just keep moving on without us being able to complete our work.”


    Police don’t need permission from the City Council to carry out the pilot programs, Gonzales-Gutierrez said, but she was disappointed by the lack of communication and collaboration from the department.

    Flynn sees the potential of police drones, particularly in speeding up officer response times, which can sometimes be dismal in the far-flung areas of his southwestern district.

    “If a drone can get there to a 911 call and it can help an officer at headquarters assess the scene before a staffed car could get there, I would love that,” he said.

    But he wants to be sure they are used in a way that respects residents’ rights. He would not support using the drones for general patrolling or surveillance, he said.

    “This pilot is an excellent opportunity to test all of those boundaries and see if there are ways to operate a system that can be very useful for public safety without crossing boundaries,” he said.”…And maybe we don’t keep using them. That is the point of a pilot.”

    ‘These are flying cops’

    The Skydio drones film from the moment they are launched until they drop in to land.

    When the drone is on its way to a call — flying at the 200-foot altitude limit set by the Federal Aviation Administration — its cameras remain pointed at the horizon. In Denver’s denser neighborhoods, the Skydio drones at that height flew among buildings, sometimes at eye-level with balconies, offices and apartment windows, according to video of four flights obtained by The Post through an open records request.

    “What if someone is in their apartment unit in one of these giant buildings and they’re changing, and they have their window open because they’re way up high and they don’t think anyone is watching them?” Gonzales-Gutierrez said. “That is crazy.”

    The drones buzzed over rooftop decks, balconies and elevated apartment complex pools, the videos show. On one trip, a drone flew past the Colorado State Capitol Building, recording three people on a balcony on the tower under the building’s golden dome. Another time, the drone pilot zoomed in on a license plate so tightly that the car’s small, decorative “LOVE” decal was clearly visible.

    Flynn noted that a 200-foot altitude would put the drones well above most of the homes in his less-dense district, and that people on their porches or balconies aren’t somewhere private.

    “If someone is out on a balcony, sitting there reading a book… generally speaking, if you are out in public there’s no expectation of privacy,” he said.

    The Skydio drones recorded about 54 hours of footage in the first eight weeks of their operation, according to data provided by the police department. Police leadership opted to have the drones’ cameras on and recording whenever the drone is in flight to boost transparency about how the drones are being used, Barnes said.

    “It makes sense to keep the camera rolling,” Barnes said. “Then, if there’s an allegation, we just make sure that footage is recorded and treated like digital evidence, uploaded to the evidence management platform so it could be reviewed as necessary. We’re just trying to make sure we establish that balance, being as transparent as possible.”

    Drone footage unrelated to criminal investigations is automatically deleted after 60 days, he said. While it’s retained, it’s stored in an evidence system that keeps a record of anyone who looks at it. The drone unit’s sergeant, Brent Kohls, also audits the flight reports monthly. (Footage used in criminal investigations will be on the same retention schedule as body-worn camera footage, police said.)

    Kohls noted it would be unusual for the drone footage to be viewed only by the pilot. The feed is often displayed on the wall of the police department’s Real-Time Crime Center as it comes in.

    ACLU attorney Nathan Freed Wessler, deputy director of the organization’s speech, privacy and technology project, would rather see police keep the recording off while flying a drone to a call, even if the camera is still livestreaming to police headquarters. In that scenario, a drone pilot might still see a woman tanning topless on her rooftop pool deck, he said, but the government wouldn’t then keep a recording of that privacy violation, amplifying it further.

    “The thing we are really worried about is police start deploying drones as first responders for the majority of their calls for service and suddenly you have this crisscrossing network of surveillance all over the city,” Freed Wessler said. “You have the potential for a pervasive record of what everyone is doing all the time.”

    Kohls said an officer flying a drone who spotted a different crime occurring while en route to another call would stop to report and respond to that secondary crime, just like an officer would on the ground.

    “Absolutely, if an officer sees a crime happening, they’re going to get on the radio, alert dispatch to what they’re observing,” Kohls said. “Hopefully, if they have a few minutes of battery time left still, they can extend their time and circle or overwatch on that scene to provide hopefully life-saving radio traffic, whatever information they need to relay to dispatch to get other officers heading, or the fire department heading that way.”

    State and federal laws have not yet caught up to how police are using drones, Freed Wessler said. The Fourth Amendment has what’s known as the plain-view exception, which allows police officers who are lawfully in a place to take action if they see evidence of a crime happening in plain sight.

    “The problem here is we are not talking about police doing a thing we would normally expect them to do,” Freed Wessler said. “We are talking about police taking advantage of a new technology that gives them a totally new power to fly at virtually no expense over any part of the city at any time of day and see a whole bunch of stuff happening.”

    A Denver police drone lands on its docking station on the roof of Denver Police headquarters in Denver, on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
    A Denver police drone lands on its docking station on the roof of Denver Police headquarters in Denver, on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)

    The Colorado Supreme Court drew a distinction between what a human police officer can see and what technology can do for surveillance in 2021, when the justices found that Colorado Springs police officers violated a man’s constitutional rights when they installed a raised video camera on a utility pole near his home to spy over his fence 24/7 for three months without obtaining a warrant.

    Police have broad leeway to watch suspects without first getting a search warrant — like by peering through a fence or climbing the steps of a nearby building to look into a yard. But that’s different from using a subtle video camera to record a person 24/7 for months, the justices concluded.

    So far, that’s the closest ruling in Colorado on the issue of drone surveillance, Freed Wessler said. Robinson, the policy director at the ACLU of Colorado, said lawmakers should act to regulate police drone use — either at the state or local level.

    “These are flying cops,” said Beryl Lipton, senior investigative researcher at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a nonprofit focused on digital privacy. “That is another one of those slippery slopes.”

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  • Loudoun Co. students launch nonprofit to help prevent teen dating violence – WTOP News

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    What started as a school project for Sukhi Mahadevan and Rithika Kanakamedala when they were sophomores in high school has become a larger effort to curb domestic violence in Virginia.

    What started as a school project for Sukhi Mahadevan and Rithika Kanakamedala when they were sophomores in high school has become a larger effort to curb domestic violence in Virginia.

    The pair wanted to do something to give back to their Loudoun County community, so they began arranging local fundraisers. But then, they came across Loudoun County’s women’s shelter and Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault Services. It draws people from nearby jurisdictions and those as far as Richmond, and some of them are looking for legal help or financial resources, Mahadevan said.

    The circumstances inspired them to try and do more.

    The revelation ultimately led to the launch of Her Voice, a nonprofit that aims to help teens prevent dating violence. Using events and a podcast, the group is evolving to spread potentially life-saving messages.

    “We felt that obviously domestic violence and sexual assault are incredibly common problems within our age group that often go really under-looked or over-stigmatized within so many minority households,” Mahadevan told WTOP.

    The group created “Her Voice, Her Story,” a nearly hourlong podcast during which survivors of domestic violence share their stories. It’s very focused, senior Ishita Sharma said. Nobody usually chimes in, except to ask a question.

    “It’s kind of a place where we give a lot of people the opportunity to have a voice, when a lot of other people said no to them and didn’t want to hear their stories,” Sharma said.

    Anyone interested in sharing their story on the podcast can fill out a form online.

    For many people, Kanakamedala said, domestic violence is misunderstood. Some think it’s “just physical. But we want to tell people that it can come in any form. There’s a lot of different ways that you can see it develop. You want to find the red flags first.”

    They attended basketball and football games, selling shirts as part of their fundraising efforts, and they hosted an event at a middle school last year. In partnership with a business, they also hosted a self-defense class with about 40 attendees, offering defense tips if facing a threat or if a family member is an abuser.

    Student Ved Bhandare said he “didn’t fully understand the importance of domestic violence awareness and how prevalent it is in the local area. But with their project, I was impacted and I found out the importance.”

    The group has meetings with its board of directors twice per month, and Kanakamedala said they’re hoping to get more of their peers involved through volunteering. They’re planning a gala, which will feature activities and guest speakers.

    “It’s really important that kids our age don’t fall into the same kinds of patterns that a lot of adults might have faced when they were younger,” Sharma said.

    Meanwhile, Mahadevan said, their work aims to create meaningful conversations: “It’s 2025, almost 2026, and these stigmas and preconceptions of DV and SA still exist.”

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Scott Gelman

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  • Suspected drug dealer arrested on San Mateo County coast

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    MOSS BEACH – A suspected drug dealer was arrested early Wednesday in Moss Beach, authorities said.

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    Jason Green

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  • Minneapolis man sentenced to decades in prison for deadly crime spree

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    A judge sentenced a Minneapolis man to decades in prison on Monday for killing a man and injuring another during a high-speed police chase in central Minnesota.

    Ameer Matariyeh, 27, entered a Norgaard plea in August for second-degree murder and attempted second-degree murder. The Norgaard plea means Matariyeh admits to the crime and acknowledges he is not innocent, but does not remember the incident. 

    Charges of first-degree assault and fleeing a peace officer in a motor vehicle were dismissed at Matariyeh’s sentencing. His sentencing for the two guilty pleas was set at 306 months and 153 months, to be served consecutively.

    Matariyeh is also charged with three counts of felony second-degree assault with a dangerous weapon and one count of misdemeanor domestic assault in Hennepin County in connection with a domestic violence-related standoff that occurred in Minneapolis shortly before the chase.

    Minneapolis police were first called to an apartment building off Lyndale Avenue South and West 29th Street around 12:30 p.m. on Oct. 22, 2024, on a report of domestic violence. As officers arrived, Matariyeh opened fire from his apartment balcony at his ex-girlfriend — who is the mother of his child — and her current boyfriend. Neither were hurt.

    When police eventually made their way into Matariyeh’s apartment, no one was inside. Crisis negotiators then made contact with him via phone and discovered he was driving west of the Twin Cities.

    Around 1:53 p.m., Kandiyohi County deputies learned of a stolen Chevy Malibu traveling west on Highway 7. A short time later, deputies were updated that the Chevy was at a home along the highway in the Lake Lillian area and the suspect, identified as Matariyeh, was on the front lawn of the property.

    At 2:02 p.m., deputies received a 911 call from the residence saying a man had been shot in the chest. His wife, who was at home with him during the shooting, told police that her husband had been outside and she heard a pop. Charges say the husband then came back inside and told her to get his gun, as he had been shot.

    Matariyeh then got back into the stolen vehicle and continued to drive west on Highway 7, reaching speeds up to 130 mph.

    As deputies pursued Matariyeh, they were informed negotiators with the Minneapolis Police Department were on the phone with him and that Matariyeh said he was going to “attempt suicide by cop,” charges say.

    Deputies contacted OnStar to remotely disable the vehicle around 2:25 p.m. Matariyeh then got out of the car and approached a small green pickup truck that was driving on the road. That’s when investigators say he shot and killed the driver, 55-year-old Jerome Skluzacek, of New London, Minnesota.

    Charging documents say Matariyeh then ran across the highway into the median, came back toward the road and raised his hands over his head. Deputies gave him loud, verbal commands not to move, and he was taken into custody.

    While in the back of the squad car, Matariyeh told officers that he was throwing his life away because he had been cheated on, documents say. 

    Note: The video above originally aired on Oct. 24, 2024.


    For anonymous, confidential help, people can call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233 or 1-800-787-3224.

    If you or someone you know is in emotional distress, get help from the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline by calling or texting 988. Trained crisis counselors are available 24 hours a day to talk about anything.In addition, help is available from the National Alliance on Mental Illness, or NAMI. Call the NAMI Helpline at 800-950-6264 or text “HelpLine” to 62640. There are more than 600 local NAMI organizations and affiliates across the country, many of which offer free support and education programs.

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  • Man Allegedly Beat Ex, Stole Her Car, Kidnapped Her Kids & Threatened To Kill Them ‘Like Travis Decker’ – Perez Hilton

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    [Warning: Potentially Triggering Content]

    This story from Monroe, Washington will stop you cold, even amid an endless sea of awful things going on in the world.

    An unidentified woman contacted police in that city last Friday night claiming her ex-boyfriend [not pictured above (that’s Travis Decker)] assaulted her, stole her car, and sped away into the night… with her kids in tow.

    Per People and others, she told officers the man tried to run her over as she rushed back to the house to check on their two children, who are reportedly just seven years old and ten months old. And when she finally made it inside after the altercation over the car, both kids were GONE.

    Related: When Did Father Of 3 Murdered Girls Change? Travis Decker’s Brother Speaks Out…

    Authorities in Monroe have not released the suspect’s name, so it’s tough to know everything about what’s going on. But the details laid out in subsequent court documents reported on by KOMO News on Monday and other local outlets paint a terrifying picture.

    And here’s the worst part: the mother told investigators that her ex allegedly said he was going to be “like Travis Decker.”

    Yes, really. Decker, of course, is the Washington father who infamously kidnapped and killed his three daughters earlier this year before taking his own life. That tragedy, still painfully raw for families across the state, happened just sixty miles away from Monroe. So, to hear it invoked in a fresh domestic violence case sent cops into overdrive.

    Officers immediately issued a statewide “Be on the Lookout” alert in this case. Doing so mobilized departments far beyond Monroe and enlisted neighboring counties to join the hunt. The fear, of course, was the children could be in imminent danger.

    And then, as the Washington State Police worked with Monroe authorities to prepare an Amber Alert, a thread of hope emerged: a call came in from a Kittitas County Sheriff’s Office deputy who had located the missing vehicle. Even more stunning, he had found the father and both children. And they were alive.

    Monroe officers traveled to Kittitas County to take custody of the man, and did so without further incident. Thankfully, that brought an intense search to a close before it could end in another unspeakable tragedy. And even more importantly, the children were apparently safe and sound.

    According to a police press release, the father was taken to the Snohomish County Corrections Bureau, where he is being held on $200,000 bail. He faces suspicion of two counts of first-degree kidnapping, felony harassment for threats to kill, and second-degree domestic violence assault.

    We’re just happy this story didn’t have a much, much worse ending.

    If you have sincere cause to suspect child abuse, call the Childhelp National Child Abuse Hotline at 1-800-4-A-Child or 1-800-422-4453, or go to www.childhelp.org.

    If you or someone you know is experiencing domestic violence, help is available. Consider calling the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 800-799-7233, or text START to 88788, or go to https://www.thehotline.org/.

    [Image via Wenatchee Police Department]

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    Perez Hilton

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  • The Five Minute Read

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    PrideStar Trinity EMS donates ambulances to Ukraine

    LOWELL — PrideStar Trinity EMS has donated two ambulances to US Ambulances for Ukraine, an Illinois-based organization dedicated to sending used American ambulances and fire engines to Ukraine. These vehicles are being sent to replace emergency units that have been destroyed during the ongoing Russian invasion.

    Toward the end of November, the ambulances will be trucked to US Ambulances for Ukraine’s storage facility in New Jersey. Once there, they will be stocked with additional medical supplies before being shipped directly to Ukraine and turned over to Ukrainian first responders.

    “As EMS professionals, we understand the critical role these vehicles play in saving lives every day,” said PrideStar Trinity EMS President and CEO David Daly. “When we learned about this initiative, we knew we had to step up and help. Our hope is that these ambulances will provide vital support to the brave emergency responders in Ukraine who continue to serve their communities under unimaginable conditions.”

    This donation will be part of a larger shipment of fire engines and ambulances from the East Coast scheduled to be shipped in November and arrive in late December. To date, US Ambulances for Ukraine has delivered 78 ambulances and 11 fire engines and multiple law enforcement and fire SUVs now operating in Ukraine. These vehicles have been distributed to frontline military units, fire departments, nongovernmental organizations, hospitals, and other Ukrainian entities in urgent need of lifesaving transportation.

    “It is amazing to think that we have hit over 100 vehicles in Ukraine by December, with more already lined up for the next shipment,” said Chris Manson, founder of US Ambulances for Ukraine. “It is because of donors like PrideStar Trinity EMS that we can continue this mission. Their generous contribution of two ambulances will be immediately put to use saving lives in Ukraine.”

    This will be the 20th shipment of used emergency vehicles sent to Ukraine from the United States since the effort began in March 2022.

    Alternative House opens Fresh Start Free Store

    LOWELL — Alternative House recently opened its Fresh Start Free Store, a welcoming and supportive space designed for survivors of domestic violence. The store provides access to essential clothing, personal care items, and food at no cost and is dedicated to empowering individuals as they work toward stability and independence.

    “The Fresh Start Free Store is about more than meeting basic needs,” said Maria Crooker Capone, executive director of Alternative House. “It’s about restoring a sense of control, choice, and community for those who have endured so much. Every detail, from the layout to the way we greet each shopper, was designed with care and compassion.”

    The Fresh Start Free Store operates on a referral-only basis to ensure that every shopper receives personalized support and is connected to ongoing services. Individuals must be referred by a case worker from a partner agency or program, ensuring holistic assistance tailored to their needs and goals.

    The store is open Tuesday through Friday, with shopping by appointment only. Each shopper is paired with a volunteer trained in trauma-informed and survivor-centered approaches who guides them through the store.

    Partner agencies and advocates can submit referrals to the Fresh Start Free Store at alternative-house.org/fresh-start-free-store.

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  • New task force hopes to reverse domestic violence increase in Prince George’s Co. – WTOP News

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    A big surge in domestic violence in recent years has leaders in Prince George’s County, Maryland, teaming up and trying to figure out a way to reverse that trend.

    A surge in domestic violence cases in recent years has leaders in Prince George’s County, Maryland, teaming up to figure out a way to reverse the saddening trend.

    While overall crime has been declining in recent years, crimes of domestic violence, which includes more than just romantic partners, is up about 30%.

    “A fourth of Prince George’s County will be impacted by domestic violence, whether you are a victim, a family member or a friend,” Council member Wanika Fisher said. “When you go home, you should not be experiencing violence in any aspect.”

    The new task force will be far bigger than most that get put together by the county. The 24-member board will be represented by law enforcement and social service agencies, nonprofits, religious groups and even developers.

    “We’ve only really had a very reactionary footprint when it comes to DV victims and their families, which is, you are a victim of domestic violence, there is a crime, there is a case, you go to court,” Fisher said. “But there hasn’t been a strategy when it comes to housing, when it comes to resources, when it comes to wraparound services.”

    Council member Krystal Oriadha, who said she’s a survivor of domestic violence, said covering all those bases is important, because the abuse isn’t always just physical, but also verbal, psychological or financial.

    “One of the biggest issues we’ve had when we’re trying to help survivors leave the home is the ability to say, ‘Well, I haven’t been in the workforce or I can’t afford to pay for rent and food and child care and to take care of the kids. And where am I going to go?’” Oriadha said. “So there’s a lot of isolation that’s very intentional that happens in abusive situations.”

    Jeanette Brandon, CEO and founder of the nonprofit Together, We Can, said that’s the recurring theme she sees with people trying to get out.

    “The abuser controls with the money,” she said. “So when the victims want to get out, they have nowhere to go. Most of the time, the victims are not working. So that’s how the abuser controls them, because they’ll control their financials.”

    Denise McCain, director of the Prince George’s County Family Justice Center, said that’s also why so many victims go back to their abusers after they leave.

    “Sadly, it is a factor of socioeconomics, lack of housing,” McCain told WTOP. “’Where am I going to go? Who’s going to help me take care of my children? Help me pay my bills? I can’t do that by myself.’”

    And she said the resources often available tend to serve as more of a Band-Aid than a solution.

    “We’ll give them a resource, we’ll take them to counseling, we’ll get them connected with legal aid, someone that can help with the problem,” McCain said. “But the larger issue is that they are not self-sufficient, and so they feel that they have no options.”

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    John Domen

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  • Women face a much higher risk of homicide, especially from guns, during pregnancy

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    (CNN) — On April 9, 2020, after Shirley Scarborough made her daily call to a prayer line, she went to work and got another call: from the police department in Richmond, Virginia. Her youngest daughter, Francesca Harris-Scarborough, had been killed the night before.

    Police had found the 31-year-old’s car still idling. Scarborough’s daughter, who was three months pregnant, had been shot twice in the heart.

    “I wasn’t ready for it. I lost control of everything,” Scarborough said. “Everything went blank.”

    Francesca was part of a terrible trend in the United States: Homicide is the No. 1 way pregnant women die, research has showed, but a new study finds that they are even more vulnerable than other women of childbearing age when there’s a gun involved.

    The study, published Monday in the journal JAMA Network Open, looked at more than 7,000 homicides of women of childbearing age between 2018 and 2021. Pregnant women were found to have a 37% higher firearm homicide rate than women who weren’t pregnant, and more than two-thirds of pregnancy-associated homicides involved firearms.

    The presence of a firearm is known to be a key risk factor of intimate partner homicide. The new study showed that every 1% increase in state-level firearm ownership was associated with a 6% increase in all-cause homicide and an 8% increase in the firearm-specific homicide rate in pregnant women, even after adjusting for other factors.

    “Even incremental increases in firearm availability may contribute to measurable increases in homicide risk in pregnant women,” the researchers wrote.

    Shirley Scarborough, left, is shown with her daughter, Francesca Harris-Scarborough. In 2020, Francesca was found shot to death in her car. Credit: Shirley Scarborough via CNN Newsource

    “It was really not surprising, if you think about it, that if firearms are more available, then that certainly it does increase your risk of homicide in general,” said study co-author Dr. Lois Lee, a senior faculty adviser in the Office and Health Equity & Inclusion and an associate professor of pediatrics and emergency medicine at Harvard Medical School. “So you could imagine, if you take away or at least decrease the number of firearms, then there would likely be many fewer deaths during pregnancy.”

    “And unlike medical conditions, which, yes, we do have many medical advances and can save many lives, but in some ways, those conditions are much less preventable, like eclampsia and sepsis,” Lee added. “This is predictable and potentially preventable.”

    The highest proportion of homicides in pregnant women was among those 20 to 24 years old. Among women who weren’t pregnant, it was ages 25 to 29. Most homicide victims were Black, whether they were pregnant or not.

    “Those findings suggest that these risks of homicide during pregnancy are shaped not just by individual factors but by broader systems of inequity and structural racism,” Lee said. “So it’s not just a solution at the individual level that’s needed, but there needs to be urgent change at a policy level, as well.”

    The study authors recommend safe storage laws and domestic violence firearm prohibitions.

    Although most states prohibit people with final protective orders from purchasing or possessing firearms, such laws should be expanded to require people to surrender their firearms even when there’s an emergency protective order on the books, said Dr. Kelly Roskam, director of law and policy at the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Solutions, who was not involved with the new research.

    “Usually, the first stage of that order process is often the most dangerous time for individuals experiencing intimate partner or family violence, since it is usually the first indication that an individual is going to be separating from an abuser,” Roskam said.

    Roskam said the most successful gun surrender laws also have strong follow-up. She points to a program in King County, Washington, that created a multidisciplinary team of prosecutors, law enforcement and court administrators who serve on a regional domestic violence firearm unit. It scours court documents and databases to make sure every individual involved in a domestic violence offense gives up every firearm.

    According to King County, firearms are used in domestic violence homicides more than all other weapons combined in Washington state.

    “They really show respondents that they are very serious about ensuring this firearm relinquishment compliance. And since they have started doing this, they have been recovering a much larger number of firearms from these protective orders,” Roskam said.

    Scarborough has been working on her own programs so more women are spared her daughter’s fate. She created a nonprofit called Cry Loud, Spare Not, Speak Up that’s dedicated to empowering women affected by domestic violence and abuse in Virginia.

    In reading her daughter’s journals after her death, Scarborough said, she realized that although her daughter was successful and seemed happy, she had confidence issues that began when she was younger. Scarborough also started a program for girls ages 12 and up to cultivate self-esteem and grow their confidence. Scarborough also wrote about her own experience in her memoir “Shattered But Not Destroyed A Mother’s Journey from Heartbreak to Hope.” She said she hopes it can help readers find strength and purpose, even when life is at its most difficult.

    Each year, near the anniversary of Francesca’s death, Scarborough hosts another empowerment program for girls and women called “I Am Enough, I Know My Worth.”

    “This way she will never die. We can always try to help somebody,” Scarborough said. “Her death has really been my teacher. It’s changed my life. It will never be the same.”

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  • Woman seen in video of possible Aurora kidnapping found safe

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    A woman seen on surveillance videos being forced into a SUV was found safe, Aurora police said Friday night.

    The Aurora Police Department issued an alert about a possible domestic violence kidnapping Friday afternoon.

    The video showed a woman being forced into an SUV after arguing with a man in the 1400 block of Emporia Street at 9 p.m. Wednesday.

    She was found safe as of 9 p.m. Friday, and the case is still under investigation, police officials said.

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  • Champion boxer Christy Martin fights back after being shot, stabbed by husband:

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    It’s hard for most people to believe that a boxer known for knocking out 32 of 49 opponents could be the victim of domestic violence, but that is what Christy Salters-Martin lived to tell a jury and CBS News contributor David Begnaud. Her husband tried to kill her, she says, but she refused to die. “I told him, ‘You cannot kill me,’ and I meant it. Just like the sun came up this morning, I meant it.”

    “Christy Martin – The Fight of Her Life,”  reported by Begnaud for “48 Hours,” is streaming on Paramount +.

    Christy Martin was a worldwide sensation in the boxing ring and was even on the cover of Sports Illustrated

    Getty Images


    Christy Salters-Martin says she is an advocate for women in abusive relationships because of what she survived. On Nov. 23, 2010, after 19 years of marriage, Christy says she was sitting on her bed putting on her running shoes when her husband, Jim Martin, entered the bedroom armed with a knife and gun. 

    About an hour later, Christy managed to flag down a stranger on her street in Apopka, Florida, who rushed her to a nearby emergency room. Christy had been stabbed four times in the chest, her left lung was punctured, her left leg was cut to the bone, and there was a bullet lodged three inches from her heart. 

    She says she was able to get up off the floor and escape when Jim decided to take a shower. “I would love to see the look on his face when he got out of the shower, came back to the room and I was gone.”

    While doctors worked to save Christy’s life, Jim Martin disappeared. Police found him seven days later not far from the crime scene. Martin, who still had the knife used to stab Christy, declared himself innocent. He said he was the victim of a vicious attack by his wife and ran in fear to a neighbor’s shed, where he says he slipped in and out of consciousness until just before police dogs found him.

    Martin’s defense attorney Bill Hancock tells Begnaud that his client was a loving and devoted husband who would never have attacked his wife. “There is not convincing evidence in this case, beyond a reasonable doubt that Mr. Martin intended to kill Christy,” he says.  

    Orange County prosecutors Ryan Vescio and Deborah Barra disagree. They believe Jim was the heavyweight in the marriage and that he turned a champion boxer into an abused wife. Vescio describes Martin as manipulative, cruel and controlling: “Jim’s control and abuse led to psychological abuse, physical abuse. … He started to provide her with controlled substances and … put Christy in a very compromised position to where she had to rely on Jim or else her career would be over.”

    Christy Salters met Jim Martin when she was just 22 and he was 47. She was a rarity — a promising female boxer. He was a well-regarded coach and, while Martin didn’t believe that women belonged in the boxing ring, he agreed to train the young phenom. Christy says Jim saw dollar signs. “He thought … ‘It’ll be a sideshow, but I think I can get her in a position where we can make some money,’” she tells Begnaud.

    As the two grew closer, the relationship turned romantic. A year later, they were married, but according to Christy, it was more business partnership than love story. She also says it was a way to finally please her parents, who had spent years trying to turn her into someone she is not.

    Christy was in the fifth or sixth grade when she says she realized she was a lesbian. “Did you confide in anyone?” asks Begnaud.  “No,” says Christy, not until she met high school sweetheart Sherry Lusk. Christy tried to keep her dating life a secret, but her parents eventually found out and their disapproval pushed her from the family home. Jim Martin knew all of that and more, and Christy says he used it to control her. “He would always say, ‘I’m gonna tell the world you’re a lesbian.’ And for whatever reason, you know, I just wasn’t strong enough in me to say, ‘Go ahead.’ I know that people think that I should be strong and tough and all those things. But … I didn’t have that same type of mental strength to overtake him.” Christy says she lived in fear of her husband’s threats to expose or kill her if she ever left him, so she stayed. Just days before the attack, knowing it would cause a life-or-death battle, Christy says she finally told Jim Martin she was leaving him for her high school sweetheart, Sherry.

    “I think it’s a remarkable story because you have a world-famous champion boxer and she could still be in a domestic violence relationship,” says prosecutor Deborah Barra. “Because that isn’t about physical strength. It’s about mental abuse.”  

    Barra and Vescio say they fully expected Jim Martin to plead not guilty by reason of self-defense. At the time of the attack, Jim Martin was 66 years old and had recently had heart surgery. Christy was 42 and training for a big comeback fight. Pleading self-defense against a professional boxer was Martin’s best shot at winning, says Vescio. A jury might believe that Christy was the bigger threat — one that had required excessive force.

    In his interview with Ryan Vescio, Begnaud set the stage for the trial that the prosecutor calls the most memorable of his career: “Christy was the boxer. Jim was the opponent. The jury was the audience. And the judge was the referee.” Vescio responded: “And what was the most interesting thing was, Christy had always talked about she wanted to win 50 fights in her life. Well, Christy won 49 professional boxing matches in her career. That courtroom was the 50th fight.”

    Christy sees it differently, “Finally, I have been able to come to terms with, I got the 50th win, when I got up off the floor November 23, 2010, and got out of my house. That was my 50th win.”

    In 2012, Jim Martin was found guilty of attempted murder, but not pre-meditated, and sentenced to 25 years.  

    On Nov. 26, 2024, Jim Martin died in custody. He was 80 years old.

    If you or someone you know needs help, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233 [SAFE].    

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  • How

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    People often discuss which Hollywood star might play them in a movie about their life. For legendary boxer Christy Martin, the actor turned out to be Sydney Sweeney. Sweeney transformed into “Christy,” which hits theaters on Nov. 7. 

    Before Martin’s story was told on the big screen, she sat down with “48 Hours” in 2020 to share her story. An encore of “Christy Martin – the Fight of her Life” airs Saturday, Nov. 8, at 9/8c on CBS and streams on Paramount+.

    Raised as a coal miner’s daughter in a small town in West Virginia, to becoming a world championship boxer, Martin made headlines as a pioneer in women’s boxing. But few knew of the personal battles she was facing outside the ring.

    Christy Martin, left, and Sydney Sweeney at the AFI Fest 2025 premiere of “Christy” on Oct. 25, 2025 in Los Angeles. Sweeney stars in the movie based on the life of Martin, a former professional boxer.

    Getty Images


    In the episode, “48 Hours” details the story of Martin’s struggles with identity, acceptance, drug addiction, and domestic violence at the hands of her former husband and trainer, Jim Martin. “The same story that you guys got, Sydney puts out there for the people to see and to gain inspiration from,” Martin recently told “48 Hours.”   

    Sweeney spent months preparing for the role, including intense boxing training to recreate Martin’s actual fights. In addition to physical preparations, Sweeney told “48 Hours” about the research she did to play Christy. “I mean, I had a lot to be able to pull from and go off of. She had her book, there was the ’48 Hours’ special … There were interviews and fight footage. So there was a lot I could prepare with before I met Christy, and then I had Christy in my corner, so I was able to ask her questions and have her by my side and be able to watch her.”

    Martin requested the writers not to “Hollywoodize” her life as they scripted her story. Martin said writer Mirrah Foulkes responded, “There’s enough crazy s*** that’s happened in your life, we don’t have to.”

    As her survival story continues to reach more people, Martin hopes it can help inspire others. “We’re showing a pathway to get out of a domestic violence situation. We’re showing how important it is for parents, relatives, friends to be accepting of someone who’s a little different … But I’m the ultimate underdog … If you can believe it, you can achieve it. Dream big. My Dad used to tell me to dream big, and I think I did.” 

    If you or someone you know needs help, contact the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233 [SAFE]. 

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  • Man fatally shot by La Plata County deputy during domestic violence incident

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    A man was shot and killed by a La Plata County sheriff’s deputy on Tuesday afternoon after coming at the deputy with an ax handle and baseball bat during a traffic stop for what appeared to be domestic violence, according to the Colorado Bureau of Investigation.

    Multiple people called 911 at around 2:40 p.m. Tuesday about a man and woman who were fighting inside a moving vehicle driving north on U.S. 550 leaving Durango, CBI officials said in a news release Wednesday.

    A La Plata County deputy and Durango police officer spotted the vehicle in the 28000 block of U.S. 550, about six miles north of Durango, and pulled the driver over.

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  • Daughter of woman killed within hour of seeking police protection from ex sues Boynton

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    Miami Herald

    The daughter of a woman who was shot to death less than an hour after she went to the Boynton Beach police station seeking protection from her ex-boyfriend is suing the city.

    Fridelene Daniel, 34, arrived at the police station on Nov. 8, 2023, telling officers that her ex-boyfriend, Robens Cesar, was going to kill her, according to the complaint and a probable cause affidavit. Cesar, who was stalking her, followed her into the station. But instead of separating the two, investigating Cesar or offering Daniel further protection, a police officer spoke to her for only a short time, made fun of her Haitian accent, and then let her leave with Cesar still following her, the complaint alleges.

    Within an hour, Cesar had shot Daniel dead, according to police. He is facing first-degree murder charges.

    Daniel’s daughter, Abigail Orelien, now 18, filed the wrongful death lawsuit Thursday, close to the two-year anniversary of her mother’s death.

    “Fridelene was a strong and proud woman, who came to this country, built a life of purpose, became a U.S. citizen, and raised her daughter on her own,” Orelien’s attorney, Gary Susser, told the South Florida Sun Sentinel. “She achieved much through perseverance and integrity, yet her life was tragically and brutally cut short despite her efforts to seek protection from the harm she had, moments before, foretold.”

    Go to Sun-Sentinel.com for the full story

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    Shira Moolten

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