ReportWire

Tag: released

  • Judge Orders Release Of Actor Timothy Busfield From Jail Pending Child Sex Abuse Case In New Mexico – KXL

    ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — A judge has ordered that actor Timothy Busfield be released from jail during a detention hearing on child sex abuse charges.

    The order Tuesday by state district court Judge David Murphy is linked to accusations that Busfield inappropriately touching a minor while working as a director on the set of the series “The Cleaning Lady.”

    The judge ordered that the defendant was released on his own recognizance, pending trial. Busfield will be supervised upon release by a pretrial service in Albuquerque, and can leave the state to live at home, the judge said.

    Busfield, an Emmy Award-winning actor who is known for appearances in “The West Wing,” “Field of Dreams” and “Thirtysomething,” was ordered held without bond last week at his first court appearance. Busfield called the allegations lies in a video shared before he turned himself in.

    At the hearing Tuesday, Busfield was handcuffed and dressed in an orange jail uniform at the hearing in a New Mexico state district court, while wife and actor Melissa Gilbert watched from the court gallery.

    Gilbert was tearful while exiting the courtroom after the judge ordered Busfield’s release.

    Gilbert, who played Laura Ingalls in the 1970s to ’80s TV series “Little House on the Prairie,” is on the list of potential witness submitted ahead of the hearing.

    Albuquerque police issued a warrant for Busfield’s arrest earlier this month on two counts of criminal sexual contact of a minor and one count of child abuse. A criminal complaint alleges the acts occurred on the set of the series “The Cleaning Lady.”

    According to the criminal complaint, an investigator with the police department says the child reported Busfield touched him on private areas over his clothing on one occasion when he was 7 years old and another time when he was 8. The boy’s twin brother told authorities he was also touched by Busfield, but did not specify where. He said he didn’t say anything because he didn’t want to get in trouble.

    On Monday, Busfield’s attorneys submitted two brief audio recordings of initial police interviews in which the children say Busfield did not touch them in private areas. The attorneys in a court filing argue that the complaint characterizes the interviews as a failure to disclose abuse, but an “unequivocal denial is materially different from a mere absence of disclosure.”

    According to the criminal complaint, one of the boys disclosed during a therapy session that he was inappropriately touched by the show’s director. Those records were obtained by police during the investigation.

    Arguing Tuesday for Busfield’s continued detention, Assistant District Attorney Savannah Brandenburg-Koch called evidence of abuse against Busfield strong and specific.

    “The boys’ allegation are supported by medical findings and by their therapist,” Brandenburg-Koch said. “Their accounts were specific and not exaggerated.”

    She also described a documented pattern of sexual misconduct, abuse of authority and grooming behavior by Busfield over the past three decades. Prosecutors also say witnesses have expressed fear regarding retaliation and professional harm.

    “GPS is not going to tell this court if he is around children or talking to witnesses,” Brandenburg-Koch said.

    Busfield’s attorneys have argued that the allegations emerged only after the boys lost their role in the TV show, creating a financial and retaliatory motive. The filings detailed what the attorneys said was a history of fraud by both the boys’ father and mother. They cited an investigation by Warner Bros. into the allegations that found the allegations unfounded.

    Busfield also submitted letters vouching for his character, and his attorneys say he passed an independent polygraph test.

    Legal experts say New Mexico is among a few states that allow polygraph evidence in criminal cases, but a judge has final say over whether one can be used. There are strict requirements for admission.

    More about:

    Jordan Vawter

    Source link

  • Sheriff’s Office releases video on Lakeside shooting involving deputy

    A San Diego County Sheriff’s deputy’s patch. (File photo courtesy of the San Diego County Sheriff’s Office)

     The San Diego County Sheriff’s Office has released body-worn video from a shooting involving a deputy in Lakeside earlier this month.

    Deputy Chris Bearss fired harmlessly on Eric Mitchell Ralls, 30, of Poway, on Dec. 10 after the latter claimed to have a gun and then made a threatening move toward him, authorities said.

    In the video and accompanying briefing released Wednesday, the sheriff’s office said the events began shortly before 10:30 a.m. that day, when the Lakeside Fire Department received a report of a man possibly experiencing a drug overdose in the 9200 block of Briette Place.

    Sheriff’s deputies also responded to the emergency call at the request of firefighters and arrived to find Ralls no longer there. They began searching the neighborhood and found him on an embankment in the neighborhood near Lake Jennings.

    Bearss approaches Ralls from the other side of a chain-link fence, and the suspect allegedly tells him he is armed with a gun, then “reaches behind his back towards his waistband as if he is reaching for the gun eventually getting into a shooting stance with his hands,” sheriff’s officials said. “Deputy Bearss fires his weapon at the man, but misses. The man then runs away. Deputy Bearss chases after him.”

    Ralls was eventually arrested by multiple deputies a short distance away.

    Ralls, who allegedly went on to assault a medic while en route to Sharp Grossmont Hospital in La Mesa for a post-arrest evaluation, was booked into San Diego Central Jail on suspicion of resisting arrest and battering an emergency worker.

    No weapon was located at the scene, authorities said.

    Bearss has been with the county law enforcement agency for about two years.

    The San Diego Police Department is investigating the shooting per a Memorandum of Agreement signed in 2022 to avoid appearances of a conflict of interest in law enforcement shootings.

    — City News Service


    Source link

  • Justice Department Begins Releasing Long-Awaited Files Tied To Epstein Sex Trafficking Investigation – KXL

    WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department released thousands of files Friday from its investigation into convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein even as it acknowledged that its documents disclosure about the wealthy financier, known for his connections to President Donald Trump and other influential people, was incomplete.

    The records arrived with public anticipation that they could offer the most detailed look yet at nearly two decades worth of government investigations into Epstein’s sexual abuse of young women and underage girls. But it remained unclear how much substantive new information was included in the photos, call logs, grand jury testimony and interview transcripts, or how much if any additional insight might be gleaned about Epstein’s relationships with rich and powerful contacts.

    The files were being released in accordance with a congressionally set deadline of Friday, but the Justice Department signaled that it would not fully meet that mark, with Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche telling Fox News Channel that he expected the department to release “several hundred thousand” records Friday and then several hundred thousand more in the coming weeks.

    Their release has long been demanded by a public hungry to learn whether any of Epstein’s rich and powerful associates knew about — or participated in — the abuse. Epstein’s accusers have also long sought answers about why federal authorities shut down their initial investigation into the allegations in 2008.

    Bowing to political pressure from fellow Republicans, Trump on Nov. 19 signed a bill giving the Justice Department 30 days to release most of its files and communications related to Epstein, including information about the investigation into his death in a federal jail. The law’s passage was a remarkable display of bipartisanship that overcame months of opposition from Trump and Republican leadership.

    What the law allows
    That law allows for redactions about the victims or ongoing investigations but makes clear no records shall be withheld or redacted due to “embarrassment, reputational harm, or political sensitivity.”

    Attorney General Pam Bondi said on Nov. 14 that she had ordered a top federal prosecutor to investigate Epstein’s ties to Trump’s political foes, including former President Bill Clinton. Bondi acted after Trump pressed for such an inquiry, though he did not explain what supposed crimes he wanted the Justice Department to investigate. None of the men Trump mentioned in a social media post demanding the investigation has been accused of sexual misconduct by any of Epstein’s victims.

    In July, Trump dismissed some of his own supporters as “weaklings” for falling for “the Jeffrey Epstein hoax.” But both Trump and House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., failed to prevent the legislation from coming to a vote.

    Trump did a U-turn on the files once it became clear that congressional action was inevitable. He insisted that the Epstein matter had become a distraction to the Republican agenda and that releasing the records was the best way to move on.

    The Epstein investigations
    Police in Palm Beach, Florida, began investigating Epstein in 2005 after the family of a 14-year-old girl reported she had been molested at his mansion. The FBI joined the investigation, and authorities gathered testimony from multiple underage girls who said they had been hired to give Epstein sexual massages.

    Ultimately, though, prosecutors gave Epstein a deal that allowed him to avoid federal prosecution. He pleaded guilty to state prostitution charges involving someone under age 18 and was sentenced to 18 months in jail.

    Epstein’s accusers then spent years in civil litigation trying to get that plea deal set aside. One of those women, Virginia Giuffre, accused Epstein of arranging for her to have sexual encounters, starting at age 17, with numerous other men, including billionaires, famous academics, U.S. politicians and Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, then known as Britain’s Prince Andrew.

    All of those men denied the allegations. Prosecutors never brought charges in connection with Giuffre’s claims, but her account fueled conspiracy theories about supposed government plots to protect the powerful. Giuffre died by suicide at her farm in Western Australia in April at age 41.

    Federal prosecutors in New York brought new sex trafficking charges against Epstein in 2019, but he killed himself in jail a month after his arrest. Prosecutors then charged Epstein’s longtime confidant, British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell, with recruiting underage girls for Epstein to abuse.

    Maxwell was convicted in late 2021 and is serving a 20-year prison sentence, though she was moved from a low-security federal prison in Florida to a minimum-security prison camp in Texas after she was interviewed over the summer by Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche. Her lawyers argued that she never should have been tried or convicted.

    The Justice Department in July said it had not found any information that could support prosecuting anyone else.

    Lots of Epstein records were already public
    After nearly two decades of court action and prying by reporters, a voluminous number of records related to Epstein is already public, including flight logs, address books, email correspondence, police reports, grand jury records, courtroom testimony and transcripts of depositions of his accusers, his staffers and others.

    Yet, the public’s appetite for more records has been insatiable, particularly for anything related to Epstein’s associations with famous people including Trump, Mountbatten-Windsor and Clinton.

    Trump was friends with Epstein for years before the two had a falling out. Neither he nor Clinton has ever been accused of wrongdoing in connection with Epstein, and the mere inclusion of someone’s name in files from the investigation does not imply otherwise.

    Mountbatten-Windsor denied ever having sex with Giuffre, but King Charles III stripped him of his royal titles this year after Giuffre’s memoir was published after she died.

    Jordan Vawter

    Source link

  • Man Mistakenly Released From Jail Re-Arrested In Florence – KXL


    FLORENCE, Ore. – A 26-year-old man mistakenly released from the Multnomah County Detention Center earlier this week has been taken back into custody, according to the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office (MCSO).

    Ty Sage, who was indicted in May on charges of second-degree murder and first-degree robbery, was arrested without incident around 1 p.m. Thursday at a gas station off Highway 101 in Florence. The U.S. Marshals Fugitive Task Force assisted in the arrest.

    Sheriff Nicole Morrisey O’Donnell expressed regret over Sage’s release, which occurred Monday, September 22, after MCSO staff allowed him to post bail despite a court order indicating he should remain in custody.

    “Ty Sage should never have been able to post bail,” said Sheriff Morrisey O’Donnell. “To the family of Lowgunn Ivey, the young man killed, I want to acknowledge the fear and trauma that this mistaken release has caused.”

    Lowgunn Ivey was the victim in the murder case for which Sage had been indicted. His family was informed of the re-arrest Thursday afternoon.

    Sage’s mistaken release appears to stem from a misinterpretation of a court order issued September 17 and filed the following day, the sheriff’s office said. Although MCSO staff sought clarification from the court, Sage was still permitted to post bail and leave custody.

    “Lowgunn’s family deserved better,” Sheriff Morrisey O’Donnell added. “As Multnomah County’s sheriff, I am committed to making sure this does not happen again.”

    MCSO says a full inquiry into the release is ongoing. Sheriff Morrisey O’Donnell has pledged to review and strengthen internal processes to prevent similar mistakes in the future.

    Sage will be booked back into the Multnomah County Detention Center and held without bail.

    Sheriff Morrisey O’Donnell also thanked the U.S. Marshals Service, the Multnomah County Circuit Court, the Multnomah County District Attorney’s Office, the Gresham Police Department, and the MCSO team for their efforts in locating and arresting Sage.

    No further details about the arrest have been released due to the ongoing investigation.

    More about:


    Jordan Vawter

    Source link

  • Barry Morphew out on $300M bond after 2025 murder indictment

    ALAMOSA, Colo. — Barry Morphew, accused of killing his wife, Suzanne Morphew, in 2020, was released from the Alamosa County Jail on Friday after supporters helped him post $300,000 of his $3 million bond.

    According to the Alamosa County Jail, one of his daughters was present on Thursday with the bondsman to meet the bail.

    Barry Morphew will be under strict house arrest and wear an ankle monitor. He will also be required to abstain from drugs and alcohol, and surrender his passport.

    On June 20, 2025, Barry Morphew was rearrested in Arizona on first-degree murder charges and subsequently extradited to Colorado after murder charges stemming from his 2021 arrest were dismissed in 2022.

    Suzanne Morphew disappeared from the Maysville area of Chaffee County on May 10, 2020. Three years later, investigators discovered her body in an area of Moffat, in the San Luis Valley.

    A 2024 autopsy report said Suzanne Morphew died of “unspecified means” but ruled it a homicide. While there was no indication of trauma in her remains, a drug cocktail used to tranquilize wildlife was found in one of her bones, the report said.

    Prosecutors and law enforcement say they remain committed to seeking justice for Suzanne Morphew.

    ◼️ Key moments from Denver7’s prior coverage of the Suzanne Morphew case

    Robert Garrison

    Source link

  • Dune: Awakening story teased in new cinematic trailer

    Dune: Awakening story teased in new cinematic trailer

    It’s been about a year and a half since we first caught wind of Dune: Awakening, the massively multiplayer online survival game set on the planet of Arrakis. On Friday, Funcom released a story-focused trailer at Summer Game Fest, teasing that the game will focus on an alternate telling of the story of Paul Atreides — but we’ll have to wait until Gamescom in Aug. 2024 for a gameplay trailer.

    The game drops players first-person into the world of Dune (well, at least, the world of Arrakis) where they’ll traverse the desert, using the land and relying on its other inhabitants to survive and thrive. Players will be able to join house Atreides or the Harkonnen, or live a quieter existence as a crafter or trader — but they won’t be able to kill or ride sandworms, unfortunately.

    The game harnesses the simultaneously desolate and claustrophobic setting of the desert to push players to their survival game limits: You’ll have to avoid the sun, evade sandworms, craft tools, and find water wherever it exists (and yes, that includes enemies’ bodies). But it’s not all treacherous walks through Arrakis — vehicles include thopters, thumpers, and sand bikes, and the Voice is at your disposal should you need to sway your enemies one way or another.

    While past Dune games have (very successfully, mind you) leaned on real-time strategy to encapsulate the vibe of the books and films, Dune: Awakening promises the most immersive experience yet. We’ll have to see if it delivers on that promise when it’s released on PlayStation 5, Windows PC, and Xbox Series X.

    Zoë Hannah

    Source link

  • Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth demo released on PS5

    Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth demo released on PS5


    Square Enix has released a free demo for Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth on PlayStation 5, after showing off the second part of its remake of the 1997 classic in a dedicated State of Play stream on Tuesday.

    The demo comes in two parts, with the second to be added later in an update. The first part, available now, is almost the first full chapter of the game. It lets you play as hero Cloud and antagonist Sephiroth in an early flashback section called “the Nibelheim episode,” based on a memorable moment from the original game. It’s very dramatic, and makes a brilliant jumping-on point for the Final Fantasy 7 story.

    The second part of the demo, which will be added between now and the game’s release on Feb. 29, gives players a taste of combat and exploration in a more open setting, Junon, ending in a boss fight at the fishing village of Under Junon. In this second section, you can pick from Cloud, Tifa, Aerith, Barret, and Red XIII to form a party of three, and experiment with the characters’ synergies as you hunt down monsters on the world map before facing a boss. Polygon had the opportunity to play this section back in September, and it’s a great taster for what the majority of Rebirth will play like.

    Sadly, since the demo features sections from across Rebirth, progression won’t carry over to the full game once it releases for PS5 on Feb. 29.

    Elsewhere in the State of Play, Square Enix offered a deep dive on Rebirth’s structure and features, including the often surreal and funny side quests and minigames that will flesh out what looks to be a colorful and expansive adventure.

    Polygon recently had a chance to play the opening hours of Rebirth. After that momentous first chapter recalling the Nibelheim Incident, the action moved to the picturesque town of Kalm, where Cloud and his friends are resting after the events of Final Fantasy 7 Remake. There, we could chat with the party and locals and explore some of the game’s systems, including a promising Gwent-alike collectible card game called Queen’s Blood. After an escape from a Shinra raid on Kalm, the action moved out onto the Grasslands for open exploration reminiscent of the Junon section of the demo.



    Oli Welsh

    Source link

  • UPDATE: Kodak Black Pleads Not Guilty After Being Hit With Multiple Charges Including Drug Possession

    UPDATE: Kodak Black Pleads Not Guilty After Being Hit With Multiple Charges Including Drug Possession

    Kodak Black has pleaded not guilty after being arrested in Florida. As The Shade Room previously reported, the 26-year-old rapper was arrested in Plantation, Florida, on Wednesday, December 6.

    RELATED: REPORT: Kodak Black Arrested On Drug Charge In Florida

    Why Was The Rapper Arrested?

    As The Shade Room previously reported, Plantation authorities allegedly found the rapper in his Bentley vehicle earlier this week. The rapper’s car blocked a road at the time, and his taillights were on.

    When the officer approached the vehicle, they reportedly observed the rapper asleep with the window halfway down. Additionally, they noticed the smell of “burnt weed” and a cup of alcohol, per XXL.

    While the officer reportedly ran the rapper’s driver’s license information, they observed white powder “falling from the rapper.” It was then determined that the substance was coming from Black’s mouth.

    The rapper was arrested and booked into the Broward County Sheriff’s Office. He was charged with possession of cocaine, tampering with evidence, and an “improper stop/stand/park/.”

    At the time, it was reported that the rapper’s bail would be revealed after a bond hearing.

    Additionally, it was reported that Black would appear in court on Thursday, December 7.

     

    More Details Regarding Kodak Black’s Case, Plea & Release

    According to case records via the Broward County Clerk of the Courts, Kodak Black’s Broward County case number is 23012882CF10A, and the case was officially filed on Friday, December 8, in the Central Courthouse.

    The rapper, whose real name is Bill Kapri, will have his case overseen by Judge Michael Lynch.

    Additionally, the case record states that Kodak Black’s bond amount for his possession of cocaine charge was set at $5,000 on Thursday, December 7.  The bail amounts for charges of tampering with evidence and improper stop/stand/park remain undisclosed.

    Furthermore, the record reveals that the rapper entered not-guilty pleas to all his charges on Friday, December 8, and was subsequently released with his bond being posted that same day.

    According to a Notice of Appearance filed in Kodak Black’s case, he reportedly requests a trial by jury.

    What The Court Expects Of Kodak Black Ahead Of His Trial

    A Pretrial Services Supervision Order states that “upon receipt of bond,” the rapper must remain in Broward County, as well as the state of Florida. Additionally, Kodak Black must not violate state or federal laws and attend all hearings before his trial.

    The 26-year-old will reportedly be on “standard pretrial supervision” and must report to his designated Pretrial Services Office twice a week via telephone.

    The rapper is also required to submit to a substance abuse evaluation ten days after his release and attend any “recommended follow-up treatment.” Black may not consume alcohol or illegal substances under his pretrial supervision and will also submit to random drug and alcohol tests.

    At this time, Kodak Black has not publicly addressed his recent arrest.

    RELATED: Woman Arrested After Attempting To Burn Down Martin Luther King Jr.’s Birth Home

    Jadriena Solomon

    Source link