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Tag: murder

  • Suspect in NYC shooting of Jets cornerback Kris Boyd charged with attempted murder

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    Frederick Green, a Bronx man who authorities said has four prior arrests, was charged Tuesday with attempted murder, assault and weapons possession in the shooting of New York Jets defensive back Kris Boyd on Nov. 16 outside a Midtown restaurant.

    Green, 20, was hiding in his girlfriend’s apartment in upstate New York and identified through social media posts and a Crime Stoppers tip, police sources told the New York Daily News. U.S. marshals took him into custody Monday in Amherst, N.Y., a suburb of Buffalo.

    Boyd, 29, was walking out of Asian fusion restaurant Sei Less with two teammates and another friend around 2 a.m. when he was shot in the abdomen and taken to Bellevue Hospital in critical condition. The bullet lodged near his right lung in the pulmonary artery, police said.

    He posted on social media Nov. 19 that he was “starting to breathe on my own,” but two weeks ago was readmitted to the hospital because of health complications. However, Boyd had recovered enough that last week he made a surprise appearance at the Jets’ practice facility and attended a special teams meeting.

    NYPD Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny said at a news conference last month that the shooting occurred after a group of four to five men “chirped” at Boyd and his companions outside the restaurant, making fun of their fashionable attire.

    The confrontation continued when Boyd, Jets teammates Irvin Charles and Jamien Sherwood and another friend left the restaurant minutes later after deciding not to dine there. As they left, the same group again began to “verbally insult them, and once again, questioning their clothing,” Kenny said.

    A brawl ensued and one of the fighters — later allegedly identified as Green — fired two rounds from a gun, striking Boyd. Investigators released surveillance footage of the gunman and asked the public’s help identifying him.

    In an email to The Times on Nov. 17, an NYPD spokesman said, “The sought individual is described as male, medium complexion. He was last seen wearing a black cap, black sweatshirt, black pants, multi-colored sneakers, and carrying a black bookbag.”

    Green has four prior arrests, including one in 2024 for reckless endangerment and another in 2018 for robbery that was sealed because he was a juvenile, police told the Daily News.

    Boyd’s teammates were delighted to see him at the practice facility Dec. 3.

    “I’ve had friends that didn’t survive gunshot wounds, so to be able to see him walking around with a smile on his face, be able to [talk] with him, I mean, it’s always a blessing,” Jets edge rusher Jermaine Johnson told ESPN. “[Guns] aren’t toys and they’re very deadly, so the fact that he walked away from it is a blessing.”

    Boyd is in his first year with the Jets after playing the last two seasons with the Houston Texans and from 2019-2022 with the Minnesota Vikings, who drafted him in the seventh round in 2019 out of Texas.

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    Steve Henson

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  • Lawrence stabbing suspect captured by SWAT team

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    LAWRENCE — The suspect in a stabbing Sunday morning was captured after police officers with specialized SWAT team training were deployed to a Kent Street home, police said. 

    Police Chief Maurice Aguiler said a man suspected of stabbing another man in the vicinity of South Union and Kent streets was taken into custody by Lawrence Police Department entry team members at 2:30 p.m. Sunday. 

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    By Jill Harmacinski | jharmacinski@eagletribune.com

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  • Utah man eyed in Colorado murder believes victim’s spirit urged him to buy sweatshirt that helped clear him

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    On the afternoon of Dec. 14, 2023, Anthony Holland was watching TV when law enforcement showed up to his home near Salt Lake City, Utah.

    “I honestly thought I was going to jail for something,” Holland recalled during an interview with “48 Hours.” But he says he had no idea what crime he committed.

    “Have you ever heard of the name Kristil Krug?” one of the investigators asked him. Holland said he once dated a woman named Kristil Krug. In fact, she was his first love. They broke up in the fall of 2000 and had not spoken in years.

    Unbeknownst to Holland, 43-year-old Kristil Krug — a mother of three young children — had been murdered in the garage of her Broomfield, Colorado, home at around 8 a.m. that day.



    Young mom murdered after receiving menacing messages from stalker

    02:30

    Kristil Krug’s death and the investigation into who killed her is the subject of “The Setup Murder of Kristil Krug” an all-new “48 Hours” reported by correspondent Peter Van Sant airing Saturday, Nov. 29 at 10/9c on CBS and streaming on Paramount+.

    In the weeks before her death, Kristil Krug had told police she and her husband Dan Krug had received threatening texts and emails from a stalker, who she believed was Holland.

    So within hours after Kristil Krug’s murder, investigators in Colorado asked police in Utah to pay Holland a visit at his home about 500 miles away from the crime scene.

    But Holland had an airtight alibi. At 12:16 p.m. the day of the murder he was at a local department store buying a sweatshirt, making it impossible for him to have made the journey to Colorado and back. He showed police a time-dated stamped receipt. He was immediately cleared by police.

    Anthony Holland, left, with “48 Hours” correspondent Peter Van Sant. The green sweatshirt he purchased the day of Kristil Krug’s murder is draped on his shoulders. 

    CBS News


    Holland told “48 Hours” he believes Kristil’s “spirit” played an important role in establishing his sweatshirt alibi and exonerating him that day.

    “What was it about that morning that you had to have this new sweatshirt?” Van Sant asked Holland. “I just got an urge. I need another one. I don’t have enough,” Holland replied.

    Holland added his late mother also played a part in clearing his name.

    “I do believe, like, either my mom or Kristil, because she was murdered before I went to the store, a little bit before … her spirit could have traveled, and I believe that they had some part of it because I just had an urge,” he said.

    “It was just like go to the store. Go to the store. So, I went,” Holland explained. “And then I got home and I was hanging out, just laying on my bed, watching TV, and I heard a pounding at the door.”

    Two days after Kristil Krug’s death, police arrested her husband Dan Krug and charged him with stalking and murder.

    Holland still owns that sweatshirt. Its value to him extends beyond a piece of clothing, but as a symbol of justice for a woman he once loved.

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  • Two teenagers, 21-year-old charged, held on $2M bond in ‘brutal’ Fruita murder

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    Between the late evening hours Friday night and early morning Saturday, two teenagers and their 21-year-old friend allegedly conspired and carried out a brutal bludgeoning murder in Fruita.

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  • Suspect in custody after U.S. man killed in Tobago, police say

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    Homicide detectives in Trinidad and Tobago are investigating the suspected murder of an American man after reportedly going out to try to purchase marijuana.

    The victim has been identified as Christopher Brown, 43, a builder from Silverthorne, Colorado, according to a local police report.

    Police were told that Brown had dinner and drinks with friends on Wednesday night in Castara, a small fishing village on the island of Tobago. He then left his friends, telling them he was going to buy marijuana, the police report said.

    Shortly after 10:30 p.m. local time, officers from the Trinidad and Tobago Police Service responded to a report that Brown was found unresponsive in the area, and he was later pronounced dead at the scene. 

    Investigators believe he was stabbed, as they said there were several wounds about his body, and a metal object was found protruding from his back. Investigators are still trying to determine the motive for the killing.

    Castara Bay in Tobago. 

    Westend61


    “I can confirm that a suspect is currently in custody,” Police Commissioner Allister Guevarro told The Associated Press on Thursday afternoon.

    Authorities did not immediately say whether Brown was visiting Tobago at the time of this death or when he arrived on the island.

    Tobago’s Division of Tourism condemned the killing, saying this was “the first such act of violence” in the fishing village, which is known for being safe and welcoming, officials said. 

    Trinidad and Tobago has recorded over 330 homicides so far this year, according to police statistics. A state of emergency is currently in effect for the twin-island nation. Authorities implemented the measure in July, accusing a criminal network in prisons across the country of plotting to kill key government officials and attack public institutions.

    The U.S. Embassy in Trinidad and Tobago recently issued a warning for Americans in the country. The alert cautioned Americans in the island nation to stay away from American government facilities amid growing tensions between the U.S. and Venezuela. Venezuela is just miles away from Trinidad. 

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  • Charges filed 5 years after man found shot dead in Native American community:

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    Unconditional love. That’s what Vangie Randall-Shorty felt the moment she first held her son. She still feels it – even though Zachariah Shorty is now gone.

    “I carry him in my heart every day,” she said, while trying to find the words to describe the wave of emotions that washed over her Monday when she learned that federal authorities had charged three people in connection with her son’s killing on the Navajo Nation in 2020.

    She had waited so long for answers, telling herself with each new year that she would finally see justice for her 23-year-old son. Her wait ended as the U.S. Department of Justice announced the results of the latest deployment under Operation Not Forgotten.

    Under the operation this year, more than 60 extra FBI agents, analysts and other personnel were temporarily assigned to field offices in 10 states, ranging from Albuquerque and Phoenix to Seattle, Salt Lake City, Detroit, Minneapolis and Jackson, Mississippi. Over six months, they investigated unsolved violent crimes in Indian Country with the goal of addressing a crisis of disappearances and killings that have left Native American communities frustrated and heartbroken.

    Federal statistics show that Native Americans experience some of the highest per capita rates of violent victimization of any racial or ethnic group in the United States. Indigenous women go missing and are murdered at disproportionately high rates in the U.S. and Canada, compared with other groups, and experts say the crisis is rooted in historical wrongs

    At the beginning of the 2025 fiscal year, the FBI’s Indian Country program had about 4,300 open investigations, including over 900 death investigations, 1,000 child abuse investigations, and more than 500 domestic violence and adult sexual abuse investigations.

    “We will never forget the crime victims whose cases remain unsolved, and we will continue our pursuit until justice is served,” Attorney General Pamela Bondi said in a statement.

    Vangie Randall-Shorty holds up a photograph of her son Zachariah Shorty during a stop in Bernalillo, N.M., Nov. 24, 2025.

    Susan Montoya Bryan / AP


    As part of its intensified operations this year, the FBI’s Indian Country initiatives netted 1,123 arrests, along with the recovery of over 300 weapons. More than 450 children who were victims of crimes were identified or located.

    FBI Director Kash Patel described Operation Not Forgotten as “a major step forward” in giving tribal communities the justice that they deserve.

    “One of the biggest problems tribal communities face is the vast amount of land to account for, requiring significant resources to crush violent crime,” Patel said in a statement.

    Work to bring more attention to the crisis has spanned decades. President Donald Trump was the first president to formally recognize the issue when he signed an executive order during his first term, establishing a task force to tackle the high rate of killings and disappearances among Native Americans and Alaska Natives. Former U.S. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland during her tenure created a national commission to explore ways to bridge jurisdictional gaps and other challenges to curbing crime in tribal communities.

    Officials said this year’s operation marked the longest and most intense deployment of FBI resources to date to address Indian Country crime.

    Advocates say the investment should be made permanent. They fear now that cases will continue to sit on the back burner with fewer federal resources in the field.

    Randall-Shorty believes the extra resources helped in her son’s case.

    She can’t help but wonder what her son could have accomplished had his life not been taken. A father himself, Zachariah Shorty loved art and music and aspired to be a tattoo artist. She showed off some of his work, pointing to the inked treble clef on her left hand.

    Shorty was last seen at the Journey Inn Motel in the northwestern New Mexico city of Farmington, where he was out with friends to make music, his mom said. He was found days later in a field near the Navajo community of Nenahnezad. He had been shot multiple times.

    The indictments provide no details about what might have let to the shooting or how Shorty was connected to the people charged in his death. Defense attorneys say they have yet to be provided with any discovery related to the case.

    Austin Begay, 31, is charged with first-degree murder, while Jaymes Fage, 38, is accused of aiding and abetting. Both Navajo men and a third defendant, 40-year-old Joshua Watkins, also face charges for lying to investigators to conceal the killing.

    Shorty’s mom has spent the last five years attending town halls, task force meetings, prayer circles and community marches to keep the case in the spotlight and to advocate for other families. While she’s pleased that charges have been brought, she knows the next step will stir more emotions because she still misses her son.

    “My heart is heavy,” she said. “But I will continue advocating for Zach and continue being his voice.”

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  • San Diego jury convicts Palm City man of kidnapping, murder

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    A courtroom gavel. (File photo)

    A man who killed one woman and raped another at his Palm City home will be sentenced next year following his conviction on murder, rape, and kidnapping charges.

    Rafael Reyes Banda, 47, was found guilty by a San Diego jury last week of killing Jayme Dawn Morton, whose body was found at his home in March 2023.

    Prosecutors said he also held another woman captive at the home, raped her, and demanded she help him dismember Morton’s body.

    That woman was able to escape the house and flag down a passerby, leading to Banda’s arrest.

    While prosecutors said Banda tied up Morton and beat her over the belief that she had stolen property from him, one of Banda’s defense attorneys, Gretchen Von Helms, argued her client lacked injuries to his hands that would indicate he had struck someone.

    Von Helms told jurors it was more likely that Morton died of a drug overdose and argued the case against Banda was concocted by the woman who claimed Banda raped her.

    Banda is slated to be sentenced in March.


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  • Opinion | The Truth About the War in Sudan

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    Khartoum, Sudan

    Sudan is a country with a long memory: Our history stretches back to the biblical Kingdom of Kush, one of Africa’s greatest civilizations. The war now waged by the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) militia is unlike anything we’ve ever faced. It is tearing the fabric of our society, uprooting millions, and placing the entire region at risk. Even so, Sudanese look to allies in the region and in Washington with hope. Sudan is fighting not only for its survival, but for a just peace that can only be achieved with the support of partners who recognize the truth of how the war began and what is required to end it.

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

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    Abdel Fattah al-Burhan

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  • Body found in SC was missing NC man, coroner says. Now two people are arrested

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    The body of a missing North Carolina man was recently found in South Carolina and two people have been arrested, according to the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office.

    On Nov. 20, the body of 33-year-old Mocksville, North Carolina, resident Jonathan Charles Shores was found in a wooded area near Newberry Road, the Fairfield County Coroner’s Office said. That’s in a part of Winnsboro between I-26 and I-77, and it’s about 130 miles from Mocksville, which is in Davidson County, North Carolina.

    The Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office said it was working with members of the Davidson County (N.C.) Sheriff’s Office to find Shores, who was believed to have been shot and killed Nov. 9 — in Lexington, N.C. His remains were left by two people driving through South Carolina, before they continued on to Georgia, according to the Davidson County Sheriff’s Office.

    It appears that South Carolina’s only connection to Shores’ death is that it was where his body was dumped by 26-year-old Jose Guadalupe Lopez and his 31-year-old girlfriend Brennan Summer Alexander, Fairfield County Sheriff Will Montgomery said in a news release.

    Lopez is accused of shooting Shores then leaving North Carolina in the victim’s vehicle, the Davidson County Sheriff’s Office said. Alexander joined Lopez in the car, and neither of them provided aid to the victim nor reported the shooting to law enforcement, according to the Davidson County Sheriff’s Office.

    There was no word on a motive for the shooting, or what, if any, connection Shores had to Lopez or Alexander prior to the gunfire.

    Lopez was taken into custody in Richmond County, Georgia, where he’s being held until extradition back to North Carolina will be arranged, the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office said. Lopez, a convicted felon, was taken into custody Nov. 10 in Georgia on a possession of a firearm by a felon charge, the Davidson County Sheriff’s Office said. At that time, Shores had not yet been reported missing, and deputies released the vehicle to Alexander.

    On Nov. 11, Shores was reported missing in Davidson County by his family, the coroner’s office said.

    That was the same day that Alexander was arrested in Columbia County, Georgia, by members of the Columbia County Sheriff’s Office for a hit-and-run collision while driving Shores’ vehicle, according to the Davidson County Sheriff’s Office.

    Deputies noted that the vehicle was associated with an active missing person investigation, and a possible bullet hole and biological evidence were discovered inside the vehicle, the Davidson County Sheriff’s Office said. The Columbia County Sheriff’s Office seized the vehicle and Alexander was booked into the Columbia County Jail, according to the Davidson County Sheriff’s Office.

    In North Carolina, Lopez is facing a first-degree murder charge in addition to counts of conceal/fail to report death, felony assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury and two counts of felony robbery with a dangerous weapon, law enforcement said.

    Alexander will be charged with accessory after the fact in multiple counts in North Carolina, according to the Davidson County Sheriff’s Office. Like Lopez, Alexander is waiting to be extradited back to North Carolina.

    Based on evidence and investigative work, detectives developed a timeline that placed Lopez and Alexander along with the victim’s body traveling through Fairfield County during the early morning hours of Nov. 10, the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office said. That’s when their counterparts from Davidson County asked the Fairfield County Sheriff’s Office for help in searching areas of interest in South Carolina.

    A canvas of local camera systems and their surveillance footage corroborated Davidson County’s timeline of movements in the Winnsboro area on Nov. 10.

    Despite the arrests, the Davidson County Sheriff’s Office said it’s continuing to investigate the shooting, along with the Fairfield County Coroner’s Office.

    “Partnerships and thorough forensic and digital investigative work were essential in locating Mr. Shores and advancing this investigation,” Davidson County Sheriff Richie Simmons said in a news release.

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    This is a breaking news story

    In a breaking news situation, facts can be unclear and the situation may still be developing. The State is trying to get important information to the public as quickly and accurately as possible. This story will be updated as more information becomes available, and some information in this story may change as the facts become clearer. Refresh this page later for more updated information.

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    Noah Feit is a Real Time reporter with The State focused on breaking news, public safety and trending news. The award-winning journalist has worked for multiple newspapers since starting his career in 1999.
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    Noah Feit

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  • Fremont man accused of killing sex offender expected back in court soon

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    An attorney for the Fremont man charged with the murder of an elderly registered sex offender asked a judge Thursday for an extension to enter a plea due to the man’s alleged mental health issues, according to NBC Bay Area.

    Varun Suresh, 29, appeared in the East County Hall of Justice in Dublin as the judge granted his defense more time before entering a plea in the case that reportedly left David Brimmer, 71, dead from multiple stab wounds in a neighborhood near the Fremont Hills.

    Suresh’s attorney told NBC Bay Area in a recent interview that “there are significant mental health issues we are exploring.” Suresh is expected back in court on Dec. 17.

    In the case, Suresh is accused of using the Megan’s Law website, a state database which tracks the home addresses of registered sex offenders, to develop a plan to stab Brimmer to death.

    Suresh allegedly posed as a door-to-door accountant looking for clients to coax Brimmer into speaking with him at Brimmer’s home. Suresh allegedly chased Brimmer into another nearby home with a knife, slashed him in the kitchen and stalked the bloody man to the front yard before fatally stabbing him several times. Suresh then allegedly stood up, smoked a cigarette and gave himself up to police.

    The fatal incident police originally reported as a fight in a hillside neighborhood near Mission Peak was the result of Suresh’s pre-planned plot to kill “child molesters” and “sex offenders,” according to court documents. After Suresh surrendered to police, he reportedly admitted the whole scheme to investigators.

    Suresh allegedly told police that he chose Brimmer because he wanted “someone who is easy to kill” and that “white guys are so much more graceful. … They have no victimhood.”

    “I’m hoping … that because he’s a pedophile … like, everyone hates pedophiles … so like, it should be cool,” Suresh said, according to police. “I honestly don’t like pedophiles. They deserve to die.”

    According to the Megan’s Law website, Brimmer, who lived at 743 Solstice Ct., had four prior convictions of sexual offenses involving children in Alameda County between 1995 and 2004.

    The incident marked Fremont’s fifth homicide of the year.

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    Kyle Martin

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  • Tracker Dakota Black | Post Mortem

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    “48 Hours” correspondents Anne-Marie Green and Peter Van Sant discuss Dakota Black, a tracker and detective who hunted for answers when Makayla Meave went missing in 2023.

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  • Martinez mother faces murder charge in stabbing death of daughter

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    MARTINEZ — A 36-year-old Martinez mother is facing a felony murder charge in connection with the stabbing death of her 19-year-old daughter, prosecutors said Friday.

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    Jason Green

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  • Woman linked to murders of American and Australian surfers in Mexico sentenced to 20 years in prison

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    A Mexican court sentenced a woman to 20 years in prison for her involvement in the April 2024 killings of two Australian surfers and an American at a surfing hotspot in Baja California, judicial authorities said Thursday.

    The victims were Australian brothers Jake and Callum Robinson, aged 30 and 33, respectively, and Jack Carter Rhoad, a 30-year-old U.S. citizen.

    The three had been camping in a remote beachside area when they were killed in what investigators believe was an attempt to steal their pickup truck.

    A Mexican judge in Ensenada sentenced Ary Gisell Silva, 23, who admitted during the trial that she had instigated and participated in the robbery of the tourists’ belongings, which subsequently led to the murder of the three surfers.

    “They have good phones and good tires” on their truck, the young woman allegedly told her three accomplices before they committed the murder, according to evidence gathered in the prosecutor’s investigation.

    Silva was found guilty of crimes related to “violent robbery,” according to the ruling published Thursday in the public records of the judicial authority of Baja California, bordering the United States.

    Aerial view of National Guard vehicles guarding a state prosecutors investigative search at the site where three surfers were camping before disappearing last week during a surf trip in Ensenada, Baja California state, Mexico, on May 6, 2024. Baja California State Prosecution Office confirmed the deaths of Australian brothers Jake and Callum Robinson and their American friend Jack Carte on May 5.

    GUILLERMO ARIAS/AFP via Getty Images


    According to evidence presented by the prosecution, Silva was the first to make contact with the tourists and noticed they had valuables. That prompted her to urge her boyfriend and the other two men to commit the robbery.

    She initially told a court that her boyfriend confessed to killing the three friends after returning home from their campsite, the BBC reported. She told investigators he showed up at her house on April 28, telling her he had done something to “three gringos,” the BBC reported. She said she asked what he meant, and he replied “I killed them”, the court was told.

    The three other individuals have already been arrested and charged with murder, but they are being tried in separate proceedings.

    The surfers were reported missing on April 27, 2024, while camping in Ensenada, where they had traveled from the United States to surf.

    According to the prosecution, the assailants “intentionally surprised the surfers and shot them with firearms, taking their lives on Sunday, April 28.”

    The crime caused great indignation and sadness in their home countries, where an intense search campaign was launched in the media and on social networks.

    The bodies were found on May 3, 2024, hidden in a cliff.

    Callum Robinson played professional lacrosse in the United States, where he became known as “the big koala,” according to his mother. After the killings, the U.S. Premier Lacrosse League left a message on its website saying the lacrosse world was “heartbroken by the tragic loss” of the trio.

    Mexico Missing Foreigners

    The photos of the foreign surfers who disappeared are placed on the beach in Ensenada, Mexico, Sunday, May 5, 2024. Mexican authorities said Friday that three bodies were recovered in an area of Baja California near where two Australians and an American went missing last weekend during an apparent camping and surfing trip.

    Karen Castaneda / AP


    Other foreign tourists visiting the Mexican Pacific region had already been targets of criminal attacks.

    In November 2015, two other Australian surfers, Dean Lucas and Adam Coleman, were murdered and their bodies later burned while traveling through the state of Sinaloa.

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  • The Plot to Kill Dr. Sievers

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    The Plot to Kill Dr. Sievers – CBS News









































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    Did a Florida man hire a look-a-like to kill his wife? A GPS leads police right to the hit man’s door. “48 Hours” correspondent Erin Moriarty reports.

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  • The Devil’s Twin

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    The Devil’s Twin – CBS News









































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    A young mother is dead and identical twin brothers are the suspects. Did studying TV crime shows help them come close to pulling off the perfect crime? “48 Hours” correspondent Erin Moriarty reports.

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  • Court docs show prosecutors believe disabled Sacramento man was killed by caretaker months before found

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    HIM. A SACRAMENTO FAMILY IS MOURNING THE LOSS OF A MAN DESCRIBED AS A LOVING AND FIERY SPORTS FANATIC. IT’S TOUGH. IT’S FRUSTRATING. AFTER WEEKS OF SEARCHING, WE WEREN’T GETTING ANY ANSWERS FROM HIM. THE FAMILY OF 59 YEAR OLD RICHARD MCCLINTOCK NOW WANT ACCOUNTABILITY. WE’RE NOT GOING TO STOP UNTIL UNTIL WE GET JUSTICE FOR RICHARD MCCLINTOCK, WHO HAD CEREBRAL PALSY RELIED ON CARETAKERS FOR SUPPORT. NOW, THE WOMAN HIRED TO HELP HIM IS CHARGED WITH HIS MURDER. 41 YEAR OLD CHRISTINA COHEN WAS ARRAIGNED ON MURDER AND FRAUD CHARGES. THE COURT NOT ALLOWING KCRA 3 TO SHOW HER FACE, BUT IT’S ONE HIS FAMILY KNOWS WELL. THIS IS WHAT WE SUSPECTED ALL ALONG. THE FAMILY SAYS COHEN’S WAS RICHARD’S CARETAKER FOR YEARS. THEY NEVER NOTICED ANYTHING WRONG UNTIL HIS SISTER DIED. AND SUDDENLY THEY COULDN’T GET IN CONTACT WITH RICHARD. MY AUNT SHELLY, SHE WENT OVER TO HIS APARTMENT, KNOCKED ON THE DOOR, AND THERE WAS NO ANSWER. ALL OF A SUDDEN. THEN WE STARTED GETTING TEXT MESSAGES FROM HIS FACEBOOK ACCOUNT. MESSAGES, THEY SAY LOOKED UNUSUAL. AND WHEN THEY CAME BACK THAT SAME NIGHT, THE CARETAKER WOULD NOT LET HER SEE OR WOULD NOT LET HER SEE RICHARD. THE FAMILY ASKED POLICE FOR A WELFARE CHECK ON OCTOBER 25TH. SACRAMENTO POLICE SAY OFFICERS WENT TO THE APARTMENT BUT DIDN’T FIND MCCLINTOCK. NEARLY TWO WEEKS LATER, POLICE FOUND RICHARD’S REMAINS AFTER GETTING A WARRANT TO SEARCH HIS APARTMENT TO KNOW THAT SOMEBODY IS CAPABLE OF DOING THIS TO A DISABLED PERSON. AND MY UNCLE’S CONDITION IS IS JUST OUTRAGEOUS. COHEN’S WAS INITIALLY ARRESTED FOR UNLAWFUL DISPOSAL OF HUMAN REMAINS, GRAND THEFT, AND ATTEMPT TO CONCEAL A DEATH. SHE’S NOW CHARGED WITH MURDER AND WELFARE FRAUD. HER ATTORNEY ASKED FOR CONTINUATION IN COURT TODAY. SHE’LL BE BACK IN COURT ON NOVEMBER 24TH. LIVE IN THE NEWSROOM CECIL HANNIBAL KCRA THREE NEWS. ALL RIGHT. CECIL, THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THE UPDATE. COURT RECORDS ALSO SHOW COHEN WAS ARRAIGNED ON FELONY EMBEZZLEMENT CHARGES BACK IN JULY, BUT WE DON’

    Sacramento man with cerebral palsy was killed by caretaker in July, court documents allege

    Updated: 4:53 PM PST Nov 20, 2025

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    Newly-released court documents shed new light on the death of a Sacramento man with cerebral palsy who was believed to have been killed by his caretaker. Richard McClintic was reported missing by his family on Oct. 25. His body was found in his apartment on the night of Nov. 6, the Sacramento Police Department said, after officers executed a search warrant. (Previous coverage in the video player above.)Christina Cowens, 41, McClintic’s caretaker, was arrested in connection with his death. She was initially charged with unlawful disposal of human remains, grand theft, and concealment/attempt to conceal a death, before she was also charged with McClintic’s murder and making fraudulent claims to an officer. A felony complaint filed in Sacramento County on Nov. 10 indicates prosecutors believe McClintic was murdered on or about July 3, more than four months before his body was found. The circumstances surrounding McClintic’s death remain unknown, and it’s unclear how Cowens may have concealed McClintic’s remains after his death. Sacramento police said they had carried out a welfare check at his apartment soon after he was reported missing, but initially did not find him. Just a couple of weeks after McClintic’s death, Cowens was also charged with fraudulently appropriating a U-Haul truck, sometime between July 15 and 21. It’s not clear if that was related to the concealment of McClintic’s death.McClintic’s family described him as “a fiery guy,” who was “fun to be around.” “Very strong guy, 59 years old, with cerebral palsy and pushed through his entire life with that condition and never complained,” his nephew, Ryan Klagenberg, previously told KCRA 3.Cowens first appeared in court on Nov. 10. At that hearing, her attorney requested a continuation. She will return to the courtroom on Nov. 24. 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

    Newly-released court documents shed new light on the death of a Sacramento man with cerebral palsy who was believed to have been killed by his caretaker.

    Richard McClintic was reported missing by his family on Oct. 25. His body was found in his apartment on the night of Nov. 6, the Sacramento Police Department said, after officers executed a search warrant.

    (Previous coverage in the video player above.)

    Christina Cowens, 41, McClintic’s caretaker, was arrested in connection with his death. She was initially charged with unlawful disposal of human remains, grand theft, and concealment/attempt to conceal a death, before she was also charged with McClintic’s murder and making fraudulent claims to an officer.

    A felony complaint filed in Sacramento County on Nov. 10 indicates prosecutors believe McClintic was murdered on or about July 3, more than four months before his body was found.

    The circumstances surrounding McClintic’s death remain unknown, and it’s unclear how Cowens may have concealed McClintic’s remains after his death. Sacramento police said they had carried out a welfare check at his apartment soon after he was reported missing, but initially did not find him.

    Just a couple of weeks after McClintic’s death, Cowens was also charged with fraudulently appropriating a U-Haul truck, sometime between July 15 and 21. It’s not clear if that was related to the concealment of McClintic’s death.

    McClintic’s family described him as “a fiery guy,” who was “fun to be around.”

    “Very strong guy, 59 years old, with cerebral palsy and pushed through his entire life with that condition and never complained,” his nephew, Ryan Klagenberg, previously told KCRA 3.

    Cowens first appeared in court on Nov. 10. At that hearing, her attorney requested a continuation. She will return to the courtroom on Nov. 24.

    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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  • Daughter of ex-intelligence official found guilty in retrial for 2020 stabbing death of friend – WTOP News

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    A D.C. woman was again found guilty of second-degree murder on Thursday in connection to the fatal stabbing of a 24-year-old Bethesda man in 2020.

    A D.C. woman was again found guilty of second-degree murder on Thursday in connection to the fatal stabbing of a 24-year-old Bethesda man in 2020.

    In Montgomery County Circuit Court on Thursday, 32-year-old Sophia Negroponte, the daughter of former director of national intelligence John Negroponte, was found guilty in a retrial.

    In January 2024, the Maryland appeals court tossed out Negroponte’s conviction and ordered a new trial. Three judges with the Appellate Court of Maryland said the trial court made a mistake in letting the jury hear “contested portions of the video interrogation” and allowing a prosecution’s expert to weigh in on Negroponte’s credibility.

    The case began in February 2020, when first responders arrived at a home in the 400 block of West Montgomery Avenue after a report of a stabbing. Inside, they found 24-year-old Yousuf Rasmussen, of Bethesda, fatally stabbed in the neck.

    According to court documents, Negroponte and Rasmussen got into a physical altercation during an “alcoholic rage” after a night of heavy drinking. During this time, court documents state that Negroponte stabbed Rasmussen.

    Negroponte and Rasmussen were longtime friends, with Negroponte even describing Rasmussen as her best friend in interviews with police.

    In 2024, experts for the defense testified Negroponte and Rasmussen’s blood alcohol levels were higher than 0.08.

    “We look forward to Negroponte finally being held accountable for her actions,” Montgomery County State’s Attorney John McCarthy said.

    In a written statement from 2023, the Rasmussen family remembered Yousuf as “a kind and gentle soul,” and thanked officials and the community for their support through their grief.

    Negroponte faces up to 35 years in prison and is scheduled for sentencing on Feb. 19.

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    Ciara Wells

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  • Aurora police arrest man in October homicide

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    Aurora police on Tuesday arrested a second person in connection with a homicide last month.

    Diego Jimenez, a 26-year-old Aurora resident, was wanted on suspicion of second-degree murder in an Oct. 24 fatal shooting near East 6th Avenue and Del Mar Circle, police said on social media. Jimenez was also arrested on outstanding warrants from Weld County for aggravated motor vehicle theft, as well as a theft warrant out of Boulder.

    Police previously arrested Sheena Fuentes, 41, on suspicion of accessory for her alleged role in the shooting, which occurred after Jimenez and the victim got into an altercation, authorities said.

    The victim’s identity has not yet been released by the Arapahoe County Coroner’s Office.

    Anyone with any information is asked to contact Metro Denver Crime Stoppers at 720-913-STOP (7867). Tipsters can remain anonymous and could be eligible for a reward of up to $2,000.

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    Sam Tabachnik

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  • Wayne County prosecutors accused of freeing innocent man only if he agreed not to sue – Detroit Metro Times

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    Before Gregory Berry could walk out of prison in December 2020 after more than 17 years behind bars for a murder he didn’t commit, he said he had faced a difficult choice: Agree not to sue for wrongful imprisonment or remain incarcerated for life.

    Berry says his attorney told him that Wayne County prosecutors insisted on the waiver and that he had to make a decision soon whether to accept the offer. At the time, he says he was extremely ill with COVID-19 and feared he was going to die in custody. It was one week before Christmas, and he wanted to see his family. 

    It seemed like a great deal at first. He was serving a life sentence for his alleged role in a fatal shooting at a gas station in Detroit. 

    The case was rushed through so quickly that the judge acknowledged she had not been given time to review the file in advance, according to court files obtained by Metro Times.

    “I only had about a day to consider the deal,” Berry says. “They told me the only way they would release me was if I took the plea. It’s unheard of.”

    The Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office adamantly disputes that claim, calling it “completely untrue.” 

    In a detailed written response to Metro Times, spokeswoman Maria Miller said prosecutors “did not in any way make Mr. Berry’s plea contingent on an agreement that he agree not to file a civil suit.” 

    Miller added, “The CIU has never done that in any case. There is nothing that supports his contention.”

    Miller said no such arrangement was discussed on or off the record and described Berry’s version as “completely disingenuous.”

    “His voluntary no contest plea basically amounted to an effective waiver of his rights to file any lawsuit because he has a conviction arising from the criminal incident,” Miller wrote.

    The Wayne County Prosecutor Office’s Conviction Integrity Unit (CIU), which investigates potential wrongful convictions, got involved in the case after Berry’s co-defendant Antonio Hamilton, an illiterate high school dropout, swore in an affidavit in 2016 that he lied about Berry’s involvement. During his original interview with police in 2004, Hamilton said a Detroit cop punched him, kicked him in the ribs, and choked him, demanding he say Berry gave him the gun and encouraged him to rob the victim. Hamilton also said he gave Berry the firearm after the shooting. 

    In exchange for testifying against Berry, Hernandez’s murder charge was reduced, even though he was the shooter, and he was sentenced to 13½ to 22½ years in prison. He was paroled in September 2019.

    A second witness later came forward and passed a polygraph, saying Hamilton had given him the gun after the killing, which contradicts Hamilton’s original claim that Berry supplied and retrieved the weapon.

    What Berry didn’t know at the time was that the detective who took Hamilton’s statement was Barbara Simon, who has a long history of coercive interrogations, false confessions, and tactics that courts have found unconstitutional. At least 18 federal lawsuits have been filed against Simon, according to a complaint filed with the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ). Four of them have resulted in roughly $25 million in taxpayer-funded settlements

    The DOJ complaint also alleges that dozens of people may still be imprisoned because of Simon’s tactics.

    Hamilton said he told Simon about a cop beating him, but she “brushed it off.” 

    Berry says he would not have taken the plea if he had known about Simon’s controversial past.

    “For them not to make me aware of the misconduct history of Barbara Simon and her coworkers — that was flat-out wrong,” he tells Metro Times. “If I had known her history, I would never have taken the plea. I would have fought for a new trial.”

    He claims Wayne County prosecutors intentionally withheld Simon’s history from him so he would take the plea deal and not sue. In the years since his release, Berry has fought to withdraw his plea, arguing that he was misled, rushed, and deprived of critical information, including the CIU’s investigative file, which he has repeatedly requested.

    His current attorney, Cecilia Quirindongo, argues in court filings that the CIU’s records about Simon should have been disclosed and constituted Brady material, which is evidence prosecutors are required to share if it could aid the defense. She also claims that requiring defendants to waive civil suits is “a customary practice” in Wayne County, a point the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office strongly denies.

    In August, a Wayne County Circuit Court denied Berry’s request to withdraw his plea. He plans to appeal. 

    The Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office countered that Newman explicitly placed Simon’s role on the record during the hearing. 

    “That was not a hidden fact,” Miller said.

    Although Simon’s name was mentioned, Berry said he didn’t know about her controversial past. 

    The case dates back to September 2003, when 23-year-old Octavio Hernandez was fatally shot at 4:30 a.m. while pumping gas on Vernor Highway in Detroit. Berry and Hamilton were together that night. Berry admits he drove to the gas station but says he had no idea Hamilton was armed or intending to rob anyone. According to trial testimony, Hamilton fired the fatal shot, then dove through Berry’s car window as Berry sped away. 

    The case against Berry depended almost entirely on Hamilton. At Berry’s trial, Hamilton said Berry planned the robbery, provided the gun, and ordered him to commit the crime.

    Two other witnesses testified that Berry was not involved, but they didn’t sway the jury, which found him guilty. He was sentenced to life in prison. 

    By late 2020, the CIU had concluded that Hamilton’s testimony was unreliable and that “significant problems” had emerged “that undermine the integrity of the verdict.” 

    On Dec. 18, 2020, Valerie Newman, head of the CIU, told Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Kelly Ramsey that a new trial would likely produce “a different result.”

    “That is the reason why the prosecutor’s office agreed to vacate his convictions and sentence in this matter,” Newman told Ramsey.

    Still, the prosecutor’s office said it could not substantiate “actual innocence,” and Berry was given a choice: Plead no contest to accessory after the fact, which carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison, or remain convicted of murder and serve the rest of his life in prison. 

    The judge then sentenced Berry to time served and ordered his immediate release.

    “I’m certainly pleased to see that that information came forward to change your role in this unfortunate set of circumstances,” Ramsey told Berry. “And on behalf of the court, we wish you the very best.”

    The transcript shows the hearing was hurried. The judge had received the file only that morning and noted from the bench that it was “too thick to go through.” Newman asked the judge to consult Berry about the charges because she could not recall all three. The plea form wasn’t transmitted ahead of time, and the judge asked whether Berry’s attorney could sign for him if he wasn’t available.

    Miller said the timing of the release reflected the realities of the pandemic. She noted it was Newman who coordinated with the Michigan Department of Corrections to ensure Berry could speak with his attorney both before and on the day of the hearing. The judge also “thoroughly questioned” Berry about his appellate rights, Miller said, and he stated on the record that he understood them.

    Berry argues that he was manipulated by prosecutors. He was sick with COVID, the holidays were days away, the judge did not have the file until the morning of the hearing, the plea form was missing, and prosecutors had already acknowledged that the case was deeply flawed.

    “They waited until I was sick with COVID and seven days before Christmas,” Berry said. “I feel like I got hoodwinked in that plea.”

    Berry’s case raises new questions about how Wayne County prosecutors are handling convictions tainted by the work of Simon. Despite multiple federal lawsuits, millions in settlements, and findings that Simon coerced statements in other cases, prosecutors say they can only act on evidence specific to each case.

    Exoneree Lamarr Monson, who spent nearly 30 years in prison after Simon obtained a false confession from him, recently filed a civil rights complaint with the U.S. Department of Justice warning that “men whose convictions were tied to Simon remain incarcerated, unable to secure justice due to lost files, missing evidence, and institutional resistance.”

    Berry says he believes his case shows why “outside agencies should be looking at Barbara Simon,” and why defendants need full access to CIU records to make informed decisions.

    “I don’t understand how the Prosecutor’s Office is going to police itself,” he says. “We are never going to get a fair investigation without outside oversight.”


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    Steve Neavling

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  • Commentary: Trump and Saudi crown prince bond over their contempt — and fear — of a free press

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    In October of 2018, U.S.-based journalist and Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi was murdered inside Saudi Arabia’s embassy in Istanbul, Turkey. The CIA concluded that the assassination was carried out by Saudi operatives, on order of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. The prince denied the accusations, although other U.S. intelligence agencies later made the same formal assessment.

    Tuesday, President Trump showered the Saudi leader with praise during his first invitation to the White House since the killing. “We’ve been really good friends for a long period of time,” said Trump. “We’ve always been on the same side of every issue.”

    Clearly. Their shared disdain — and fear — of a free press was evident, from downplaying the killing of Khashoggi to snapping at ABC News reporter Mary Bruce when she asked about his murder.

    “You don’t have to embarrass our guest by asking a question like that,” Trump said, then he proceeded to debase a journalist who wasn’t there to report on the event because he’d been silenced, forever. Referring to Khashoggi, he said, “A lot of people didn’t like that gentleman that you’re talking about. Whether you like him or didn’t like him, things happen.”

    Mohammed bin Salman, left, and Jamal Khashoggi.

    (Associated Press / Tribune News Service)

    Fender-benders happen. Spilled milk happens. But the orchestrated assassination of a journalist by a regime that he covers is not one of those “things” that just happen. It’s an orchestrated hit meant to silence critics, control the narrative and bury whatever corruption, human rights abuses or malfeasance that a healthy free press is meant to expose.

    Bruce did what a competent reporter is supposed to do. She deviated from Tuesday’s up-with-Saudi-Arabia! agenda to ask the hard questions of powerful men not used to being questioned about anything, let alone murder. The meeting was meant to highlight the oil-rich country’s investment in the U.S. economy, and at Trump’s prompting, Prince Mohammed said those investments could total $1 trillion.

    Prince Mohammed addressed the death of Khashoggi by saying his country hopes to do better in the future, whatever that means. “It’s painful and it’s a huge mistake, and we are doing our best that this doesn’t happen again.”

    And just in case the two men hadn’t made clear how little they cared about the slain journalist, and how much they disdain the news media, Trump drove those points home when he referred to Bruce’s query as “a horrible, insubordinate, and just a terrible question.” He suggesting that ABC should lose its broadcasting license.

    Trump confirmed Tuesday that he intends to sell “top of the line” F-35 stealth fighter jets to Riyadh. It’s worth noting that the team of 15 Saudi agents allegedly involved in Khashoggi’s murder flew to Istanbul on government aircraft. The reporter was lured to the Saudi embassy to pick up documents that were needed for his planned marriage to a Turkish woman.

    The prince knew nothing about it, said Trump on Tuesday, despite the findings of a 2021 report from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence that cited “the direct involvement of a key adviser and members of Mohammad bin Salman’s protective detail.” It concluded that it was “highly unlikely that Saudi officials would have carried out an operation of this nature without the Crown Prince’s authorization.”

    To no one’s surprise, the Saudi government had tried to dodge the issue before claiming Khashoggi had been killed by rogue officials, insisting that the slaying and dismemberment was not premeditated. They offered no explanation of how a bonesaw just happened to be available inside the embassy.

    President Trump shakes hands with Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman at the White House in 2018.

    President Trump shakes hands with Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman at the White House in 2018.

    (MANDEL NGAN/AFP/Getty Images)

    Five men were sentenced to death, but one of Khashoggi’s sons later announced that the family had forgiven the killers, which, in accordance with Islamic law, spared them from execution.

    The president’s castigation of ABC’s Bruce was the second time in a week that he has ripped into a female journalist when she asked a “tough” question (i.e. anything Newsmax won’t ask). Trump was speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One last Friday when Bloomberg News’ Catherine Lucey asked him follow-up question about the Epstein files. The president replied, “Quiet. Quiet, piggy.”

    Trump’s contempt for the press was clear, but so was something else he shares with the crown prince, Hungary’s Victor Orban and Vladimir Putin: The president doesn’t just hate the press. He fears it.

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    Lorraine Ali

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