Twogether is a stunning love story that bursts out of the indie scene to capture your heart with its raw emotion and authenticity. Unlike your typical Hollywood romance, Twogether offers a gritty, real-world narrative featuring characters who think deeply and feel profoundly. This gem, crafted by writer-director Andrew Chiaramonte after nearly a decade of dedication, stars the incredible duo Nick Cassavetes and Brenda Bakke, who bring remarkable depth to their roles.
Cassavetes shines as John Madler, a passionate and unpredictable Venice-based painter. He’s the kind of guy who leverages his good looks and the enigmatic allure of being an artist to live life on his terms. At a gallery event supporting a Greenpeace-esque cause, he locks eyes with volunteer Allison McKenzie, played by Bakke. The chemistry is instant and electric, leading to a wild night in Vegas that ends with an unexpected marriage.
Determined to part ways like “mature, intelligent adults”—in Allison’s words—they plan a quick divorce. However, when Allison visits John’s Venice hideaway to finalize the papers, they find themselves in bed once again, resulting in an unplanned pregnancy. They initially agree on an abortion but are ultimately unable to follow through, setting the stage for an intense journey of mutual discovery.
Chiaramonte masterfully propels the story forward with sharp montages and a keen sense of what to leave out, ensuring the film never drags. We join John and Allison as they navigate their evolving relationship, a strategy that draws us in completely.
Allison emerges as the film’s standout revelation. Behind her confident exterior lies a woman haunted by a painful past, the neglected daughter of a rigidly conservative Bel-Air family. As John falls for her, she moves in during her pregnancy, but his pride and fierce independence keep him from admitting his true feelings, even to himself.
At its core, Twogether is about the universal struggles of making choices, setting priorities, and the harsh realities of relationships. It highlights the challenges of responsibility, the pitfalls of immaturity and self-absorption, and the journey toward self-awareness and growth, regardless of age.
Chiaramonte elicits deeply honest performances from Cassavetes and Bakke, who expose their souls and bodies on screen. If there’s any justice in the world, Twogether will catapult their careers to new heights. The supporting cast is equally strong, with Damian London standing out as the tough-minded art gallery owner.
Twogether is a heartfelt indie film that wears its emotions proudly and has the potential to break into the mainstream.
Twogether Cast: Nick Cassavetes: John Madler Brenda Bakke: Allison McKenzie Damian London: Mark Saffron Jeremy Piven: Arnie
Twogether is currently being distributed by Freestyle Digital Media and available to watch for free or on-demand. Writer-director Andrew Chiaramonte. Producers Emett Alston, Chiaramonte. Co-producer Todd Fisher. Cinematographer Eugene Shlugleit. Editors Fisher, Chiaramonte. Costumes Jacqueline Johnson. Music Nigel Holton. Production designer Phil Brandes. Art director Phil Zarling. Sound Kip Gynn. Running time: 2 hours, 2 minutes.
‘Young & Cursed’, a Chiaramonte Films, Inc. production, is a new horror movie / psychological thriller which is set to be released in early 2024.
LOS ANGELES, CA, UNITED STATES, November 1, 2023 — Audiences are excited about this new cinematic experience as the talented team of Andrew Chiaramonte and Emmett Alston unites to present their gripping horror / psychological thriller film, “Young & Cursed,” scheduled for release in 2024.
Beneath the eerie canopy of an impending Blood Moon Lunar Eclipse, “Young & Cursed” unveils a harrowing tale that will grip the souls of horror enthusiasts. The narrative unravels around five young souls from diverse backgrounds, drawn unknowingly to a desolate and enigmatic cabin in the wilderness.
Maria (Jennifer Rosas), tormented by the ghostly specter that haunts her every waking moment, and Jason (Stevarion Allen), a gifted musician stalked by a nightmarish demonic version of himself, are drawn together by forces beyond their comprehension.
Trudy (Morgan Franz) harbors her own unspeakable terrors, besieged by a grotesque demon that mercilessly torments her during the dark hours. Tahoma (Reda Fassi-Fihri) finds himself pursued by a evil Skinwalker, while Donny (CJ Malone), a tech prodigy with a conflicted past, grapples with a demonic possession that has finally reached its terrifying zenith.
Their lives intertwine with that of Kyra (Madison Hubler), a spellbinding enigma residing within the cabin, who appears to be simultaneously oblivious and all-knowing. Within her, lurks one of the most sinister demons to ever haunt mankind, Lilith (Britt Crisp), a malevolent entity that has endured since time’s inception, serving a nefarious purpose that will send shivers down the viewer’s spine.
Leading the charge in this thrilling cinematic endeavor are the brilliant director and producer duo, Andrew Chiaramonte and Emmett Alston, who have combined their creative prowess and extensive experience to produce, “Young & Cursed”, a movie that will enthrall audiences worldwide.
When asked about the inspiration behind “Young & Cursed,” Chiaramonte and Alston cited their fascination with the enigmatic Blood Moon, a celestial phenomenon steeped in mystery and superstition. This rare lunar event offered the ideal canvas for weaving a narrative that seamlessly merges elements of horror, suspense, and psychological drama.
“Young & Cursed” boasts an ensemble cast of exceptional actors who bring their characters to life with unwavering incisive understanding and depth, immersing the audience further into the haunting world of the film.
More than just a run-of-the-mill thriller, “Young & Cursed” is a meticulously crafted masterpiece that plays with the audience’s emotions, ensuring they remain on the edge of their seats throughout. The film’s atmospheric cinematography by Gary Ahmed, and haunting score by composer Patrick O’Malley, in perfect harmony to create an immersive experience that indelibly impacts the viewers world.
Months prior to its release, “Young & Cursed” has already generated substantial buzz within the film industry and among eager movie fans. With its unique storyline, impeccable direction, and exceptional performances, the film is poised to become a breakout hit. “Young & Cursed” is an exciting cinematic venture that promises to be a standout addition to the horror thriller genre. With its talented creative team, bewitching plotline, and stellar cast, the film is primed to dominate the box office and capture the hearts of audiences worldwide.
For more information, please visit the official website of “Young & Cursed” at youngandcursed.com.
About Chiaramonte Films, Inc.
Chiaramonte Films, Inc. is a renowned film production company known for delivering captivating and groundbreaking cinematic experiences. With a commitment to pushing creative boundaries, Chiaramonte Films, Inc. has consistently delivered critically acclaimed films that leave a lasting impact on audiences worldwide. For more information, visit chiaramontefilms.com .
Merck’s Maurice R. Hilleman Center for Vaccine Manufacturing photographed on Apr. 2, 2021, in Durham, N.C.
Casey Toth
ctoth@newsobserver.com
The pharmaceutical giant Merck will stop producing the HPV, or human papillomavirus,vaccine Gardasil at its north Durham facility, a decision it attributes to lower global demand for its second-best selling drug.
In a Feb. 24 WARN letter to the North Carolina Department of Commerce and Durham County, Merck said this move will result in 154 layoffs. Separations are expected to begin May 1.
Merck’s decision comes one year after the New Jersey company unveiled a new $1 billion manufacturing plant on Durham’s Old Oxford Road to make Gardasil and Gardasil 9. This facility added 225,000 square feet of production space to a campus that already produced vaccines against measles, rubella, mumps and chickenpox, among other illnesses.
In her WARN letter this week, plant manager Amanda Taylor wrote Gardasil production would cease at this site due to “the recent worldwide reduction in demand for this product.” Businesses must file WARN notices to North Carolina officials at least 60 days before conducting certain mass layoffs, including the closing of a site “that affects at least 50 employees during any 30-day period.”
In its latest annual report, released Tuesday, Merck recorded a significant drop in what remains its No. 2 product: Gardasil. The company sold about 40% less last year compared to 2024, dropping from $8.6 billion in Gardasil revenue to $5.2 billion.
Merck attributed this decrease to suppressed demand in China and Japan, during an investors call in early February. Its executives noted U.S. sales were up, though “largely due to price.”
Merck’s long history in Durham
Merck has been in north Durham since 2004. Last year, the company told The News & Observer it had roughly 1,000 employees in the city. The company has told The N&O its layoffs will only impact HPV vaccine manufacturing operations at the site.
“We continuously assess our operations and evolving business needs,” Merck’s media relations team wrote in an email.
Seven years ago, Merck signed incentive deals with North Carolina and local governments to expand its operations in Durham and Wilson County. As of 2022, the company had met or surpassed its incentive requirements by creating 353 jobs and retaining 1,247 positions between these two campuses, state records provided to The N&O show. In 2024, the company estimated its Bull City campus produced 70.7 million doses.
Merck is the world’s 48th-largest public company, by market capitalization, behind fellow drugmakers Eli Lilly and Roche but ahead of than Amgen and Novo Nordisk. Its top-selling product, by a wide margin, is the cancer treatment Keytruda.
In July, Merck made one of the last year’s largest health care acquisitions when it spent around $10 billion to buy the British drugmaker Verona Pharma, which has its U.S. headquarters in Raleigh. Verona makes a treatment for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or COPD, that the Food and Drug Administration approved in June 2024.
Brian Gordon is the Business & Technology reporter for The News & Observer and The Herald-Sun. He writes about jobs, startups and big tech developments unique to the North Carolina Triangle. Brian previously worked as a senior statewide reporter for the USA Today Network. Please contact him via email, phone, or Signal at 919-861-1238.
(FOX40.COM) — A man who intentionally dumped hundreds of gallons of oil into a Stockton waterway faces up to six years in prison after he was found guilty of multiple felony charges, San Joaquin County District Attorney Ron Freitas announced Thursday. A jury found 52-year-old David Andrew Sump guilty of knowingly discharging a pollutant into […]
Kevin West, the former fire chief of the Camas-Washougal Fire District, was sentenced to 25 years in prison for strangling his wife Marcelle “Marcy” West in January 2024.
Feb 27 (Reuters) – U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi said on Friday the Department of Justice had unsealed an indictment charging 30 additional people in a case stemming from an ICE protest at a Minnesota church.
“At my direction, federal agents have already arrested 25 of them, with more to come throughout the day,” Bondi said on social media platform X.
(Reporting by Bhargav Acharya, Writing by Christian Martinez)
The 2026 PLL and WLL Championship Series runs from Feb. 27 to March 8, featuring the top four teams from the PLL’s 2025 season along with the four teams from the WLL.
The event uses the Sixes format, which is what will be used when lacrosse returns to the Olympics in 2028 in Los Angeles, and has key differences from outdoor “field” lacrosse and indoor “box” lacrosse.
“The Sixes format offers a perfect on-ramp for new lacrosse fans because it’s very similar to basketball or hockey with a 5-on-5 format plus goaltenders,” ESPN analyst Quint Kessenich said. “The flow of the game is similar to hoops. You’ll see pick-and-rolls, fast breaks and settled sets with two-point [lacrosse] shots instead of threes [in basketball]. The elimination of long poles and faceoffs boils the game down to an easy-to-consume, fast-paced, high-scoring event.
“The venue is supercharged with energy, with close confines for fans. The intensity level is high each night. Don’t blink, because the action is nonstop.”
Two teams representing Boston won the PLL and WLL Championship Series in 2025. The WLL’s Boston Guard will be back to defend their crown, while the PLL’s Boston Cannons did not qualify.
Here’s a look at the schedule, rosters for each team, and predictions for which teams will win and who will earn the Golden Stick, courtesy of ESPN’s broadcast team. Fans can catch all of the Championship Series action in the ESPN App and in the PLL and WLL streaming hubs.
Predictions
Who is the most intriguing player in the PLL Championship Series?
Carolina Chaos forward Jackson Eicher is a compelling player. I’m eager to see how his skill set and size translate into the Sixes format. Last summer, the rookie out of Army was extremely productive, and if he can get the ball on the right handed wing, he could put up monster numbers. — Quint Kessenich
Good luck defending California’s Andrew McAdorey. He demands a pole — but there are no poles in sixes. McAdorey scored 13 unassisted goals last summer. That’s the most of any Championship Series participant. With two-way ability and a turbo-charged motor, McAdorey can dominate the Championship Series. — Anish Shroff
Which player will win the PLL Golden Stick?
It’s hard to pick against Bryan Costabile. He’s been lit by lightning in this format. Costabile has tallied 62 points in nine previous Champ Series games. He’s a threat from deep having connected on 13 two-pointers. He’s registered three double-digit scoring games in the Champ Series. — Shroff
Which team is going to win the PLL Champ Series?
The Chaos will win the event. I like the roster. — Kessenich
Goalies have an outsized hand in this format. Enter Denver’s Logan McNaney. All he does his play in championship games (four at Maryland, one with the Outlaws). His precision outlet passing becomes a weapon off saves and goals. While Denver won’t have many of its usual suspects on offense, they do have the brick wall from the glass town. He is by far the best goalie in this tournament. Colin Kirst and Sean Sconone have both shown that strong goalie play is necessary to win the Championship Series. — Shroff
Who is the most intriguing player in the WLL Championship Series?
Ally Mastroianni does it all. The California Palms star runs the field, wins the gritty balls, scores when it matters, and locks down possession. Simply put — she’s the one you want with the game on the line. — Sheehan Stanwick Burch
I’m excited to see Ally Kennedy, a two-way midfielder who has been a star on the international stage for Team USA now makes her WLL debut for the Maryland Charm. In the sixes format, a player as talented as Kennedy on both sides of the ball is a valuable asset. — Jay Alter
Which player will win the WLL Golden Stick?
Even with reigning champion Emily Hawryschuk returning for the New York Charging — and poised for another strong series — my gut says Boston Guard’s Charlotte North will claim the 2026 Golden Stick Award. The addition of the two-point line plays perfectly to her strengths. Her ability to finish in tight spaces and stretch defenses from the outside gives her the edge. — Burch
Izzy Scane. Such a versatile scorer and she was the runner-up in last year’s inaugural Golden Stick race. This year I think she claims the top spot. — Alter
Which team is going to win the WLL Champ Series?
It’s hard to bet against the defending champion Boston Guard and their stacked roster, but I have a feeling the New York Charging are going to make this a battle. I really like their goaltending duo of Madison Doucette and Molly Laliberty — they can change the momentum of a game in an instant — and an offense led by Izzy Scane is never easy to contain. — Burch
I like the Boston Guard to go back to back. They have the best player on the planet, Charlotte North, and a strong defense. Plus, they are the only team that returns their entire coaching staff. That continuity will give them a head-start and an edge! — Alter
Schedule
Note: All times Eastern.
Friday, Feb. 27
6 p.m.: New York Charging vs. Boston Guard (WLL) 8 p.m.: New York Atlas vs. Denver Outlaws (PLL)
Saturday, Feb. 28
Noon: California Palms vs. Boston Guard (WLL) 2 p.m.: Maryland Charm vs. New York Charging (WLL) 6:30 p.m.: Denver Outlaws vs. California Redwoods (PLL) 8:30 p.m.: Carolina Chaos vs. New York Atlas (PLL)
Sunday, March 1
10:30 a.m.: California Palms vs. Maryland Charm (WLL) 12:30 p.m.: California Redwoods vs. Carolina Chaos (PLL)
Thursday, March 5
6 p.m.: Carolina Chaos vs. Denver Outlaws (PLL) 8 p.m.: New York Charging vs. California Palms (WLL)
Friday, March 6
6 p.m.: Boston Guard vs. Maryland Charm (WLL) 8 p.m.: New York Atlas vs. California Redwoods (PLL)
Madison Ahern Andie Aldave Dempsey Arsenault Maddie Burns Kasey Choma Hannah Dorney Kaylee Dyer Rachel Hall Charlotte North Brittany Read Courtney Taylor Cassidy Weeks Jackie Wolak
What to know: Charlotte North and the Guard won the title last season. North finished third for the Golden Stick with 15 goals, behind Emily Hawryschuk (19) and Izzy Scane (17). Can North pull off both titles this year?
California Palms (WLL)
Roster
Sammy Jo Adelsberger Erin Bakes Anna Brandt Kait Devir Sam Geiersbach Ellie Masera Ally Mastroianni Taylor Moreno Emily Nalls Gabby Rosenzweig Jill Smith Caroline Steele Caitlyn Wurzburger
What to know: California’s Taylor Moreno has a great many interests: She kicked for her high school’s football team, and overall earned varsity letters in five different sports — lacrosse, soccer, football, indoor track and basketball. She is also a first-degree black belt in Taekwondo, and designed the mural at the University of North Carolina that its players tap on the way to the field.
Maryland Charm (WLL)
Roster
Sydni Black Abby Bosco Aurora Cordingley Grace Griffin Megan Douty McKenzie Blake Olivia Dirks Ally Kennedy Sam Swart Ashley Humphrey Kelly Denes Paulina DiFatta Caylee Waters
What to know: This will be the WLL debut of Ashley Humphrey, who was the No. 3 prospect on Sheehan Stanwick Burch’s 2025 big board. In college she set the NCAA single-season assists record with 88 in 2022, then set a new standard with 90 in 2025.
New York Charging (WLL)
Roster
Meg Carney Erin Coykendall Madison Doucette Lauren Gilbert Kendall Halpern Emily Hawryschuk Molly Laliberty Izzy Scane Samantha Smith Katie Goodale Chase Boyle Grace Fujinaga Emerson Bohlig
What to know: The two-point line is new to WLL this season. During last year’s games, there were only 14 total shots from that range (13 yards), and the only two women to score from that distance are on the Charging roster (Emily Hawryschuk and Meg Carney).
California Redwoods (PLL)
Roster
Josh Balcarcel Michael Boehm Connor Cmiel Aidan Danenza Romar Dennis BJ Farrare Matt Knote Andrew McAdorey Chris Merle Dylan Molloy Carter Rice Brian Tevlin Zach Vigue
What to know: Romar Dennis was a star at the inaugural Champ Series in 2023, but has battled injuries since. Dennis told the PLL’s Phil Shore that he’s close to being back to healthy now in time for the 2026 event.
Carolina Chaos (PLL)
Roster
Chris Aslanian Cole Williams Ray Dearth Austin Kaut Ross Scott Mark Glicini Jackson Eicher Brendan Nichtern Shane Knobloch Sergio Perkovic Charlie Bertrand JC Higginbotham Christian Scarpello
What to know: Brenden Nichtern — the 2022 Rookie of the Year — is returning to lacrosse after military commitments. Fellow West Point grad Jackson Eicher will welcome him on the roster after the two played together for Army in 2022.
Denver Outlaws (PLL)
Roster
Justin Anderson Fulton Bayman Graham Bundy Jr. Ryan Cohen Zach Geddes Dylan Gergar Jack Gray Lance Madonna Owen McElroy Logan McNaney Ryan Tierney Jack VanOverbeke Greg Weyl
What to know: One key for Denver: goaltender Logan McNaney’s clean saves and outlet passing. McNaney broke the PLL record for clean save percentage in 2025 (60.6%), and that ability will be even more useful in sixes, with a shorter field and the ability to set up transition offense for his team.
New York Atlas (PLL)
Roster
Tyler Carpenter Chet Comizio Bryan Costabile Chris Davis Kyle Jackson Myles Jones Jack Koras Max Krevsky Eric Malever Will Mark Brian Phipps Michael Rexrode Matt Traynor
What to know: New York’s Xander Dickson suffered a left leg injury during the U.S. Bank Championship game last summer, which the Atlas won over the Outlaws. Unable to play at the Champ Series, Dickson will be an assistant coach for the Atlas.
In a small, piercingly bright room inside a state prison in northeast Florida, Frank Walls was strapped to a gurney and injected three times: first with a sedative meant to render him unconscious, then a paralytic to prevent any visible movement, and finally potassium acetate to induce cardiac arrest.
Walls’ execution on December 18, 2025, capped Florida’s deadliest year in modern history. With 19 executions last year, Florida more than doubled its own record, and put more people to death than Texas, Alabama, and South Carolina combined. This execution spree came even as Florida’s lethal injection protocol has come under scrutiny, prompting fears that those executed are at risk of complications and needless suffering.
In his final appeal, Walls asked Florida to review its three-step protocol, arguing that the way the state’s been carrying out executions would violate his Eighth Amendment right to be free of cruel and unusual punishment. His attorneys documented allegations that even though men in the death chamber couldn’t physically show the effects due to Florida’s three-drug protocol, some may have suffered and died with the feeling of drowning. And an analysis of court records, prison logs, redacted autopsy reports, and eyewitness testimonies by Mother Jones found documented issues in half the executions last year before Walls.
In at least nine executions from February to September 2025, there were signs of underdosings, the use of expired drugs, drug substitutions, or flaws in drug logs maintained by the Florida Department of Corrections.
“Mr. Walls will die a needlessly cruel death if Florida insists on trying to kill him with Florida’s version of lethal injection,” wrote anesthesiologist Dr. Joel Zivot, who met Walls at the Florida state prison five months before his execution, in an affidavit Walls’ defense team submitted to the District Court in Tallahassee.
Autopsy results for Walls, who was sentenced to death for the 1987 killings of an Air Force airman and his girlfriend, have not yet been released. But Zivot feared the three-drug protocol could cause pulmonary edema, a condition that’s been found in previous autopsies of people executed by Florida, and which Zivot said causes “the terror that accompanies drowning and asphyxiation as they choke on their own blood.”
The Florida Attorney General’s office didn’t dispute Walls’ assertion that he could experience the sensation of drowning and gasping for air after the second drug is injected. They called it “irrelevant.”
The state has been similarly unmoved by problems in recent executions.
In June 2025, logs included in a lawsuit showed that one man was executed with half of the required amount of paralytic, and another man didn’t receive a full dose of the drug meant to swiftly induce cardiac arrest.
Florida Department of Corrections’ own records indicated that the execution team used expired sedatives in four deaths, raising concerns about the effectiveness of the drugs and the risk of complications, including severe pain. They also recorded the use of a local anaesthetic that’s not part of the state’s execution protocol, and listed dates for use of the drugs that don’t match execution dates.
Each of these issues would violate Florida’s own protocol. Rather than order an investigation, the state’s governor and past presidential candidate, Republican Ron DeSantis, has already scheduled four executions this year.
The death penalty has waxed and waned in public opinion over the years, with botched executions, racial disparities, and wrongful convictions under scrutiny in recent years. Florida alone has seen at least 30 exonerations from its death row.
But reviving the federal death penalty is a key tenet of President Donald Trump’s tough-on-crime agenda—and DeSantis has positioned Florida at the vanguard of the Trump-led Republican Party. His own political future is unclear after his failed presidential run, but he’s echoing loud and clear the president’s enthusiasm for harsh and swift executions. Florida is leading the death penalty’s resurgence.
“The exact reasons as to why DeSantis has chosen to ramp things up now—I don’t think we know,” said Hannah Gorman, who teaches death penalty law at the Florida International University’s College of Law.
But she said the pace of Florida’s executions have ramifications nationally and internationally. In 2025, executions in the U.S. nearly doubled, and 40% of them were in Florida alone.
“Florida is an outlier in the U.S.,” said Gorman. “But this is also a massive message coming out of America.”
DeSantis has issued death warrants for 32 people since he took office in 2019, and 250 people remain on Florida’s death row.
DeSantis’s office didn’t respond to a list of questions by Mother Jones. But in November 2025, DeSantis said he was doing his “part to deliver justice” to victims’ families by executing those who have been on death row for decades. And the governor has unusually broad power to enact this penalty: he both sets execution dates and proceeds over the clemency hearings that could halt his own execution orders.
The last review of lethal injection protocol by the Department of Corrections Secretary Ricky Dixon was in February 2025, after the year’s executions had already begun. Dixon wrote in a letter to Gov. DeSantis that his department’s lethal injection procedure was in line with decency standards and “dignity of man.”
“The foremost objective of the lethal injection process is a humane and dignified death,” Dixon wrote. “The process will not involve unnecessary lingering or the unnecessary or wanton infliction of pain and suffering.”
The one-page letter didn’t explain what Dixon’s review entailed, and the Florida Department of Corrections didn’t respond to questions about the review.
A month after this letter was sent to Tallahassee, in March 2025, Florida executed Edward James. Prison drug logs disclosed in court records show James was given a local anesthetic—lidocaine—that’s not mentioned in the 14-page protocol signed off by Dixon.
It’s unclear why that drug was administered or who authorized it.
To Ron McAndrew, a former Florida State Prison warden who led Florida’s executions from 1996-98 and oversaw three electric chair executions, Florida ought to slow down and examine its protocol before executing anyone else.
“To put a warden and a death team through 19 executions in one year was a horrible thing for the Governor to do.”
Now an anti-death penalty advocate, McAndrew’s concerns extend beyond procedure. He worries about the toll on staff. The ones doing the “dirty work.”
McAndrew has overseen and witnessed executions gone wrong. He was in charge in 1997, when Pedro Medina’s head burst into flames on the electric chair. The former warden said he wouldn’t wish that on anyone, especially prison staff.
“To put a warden and a death team through 19 executions in one year was a horrible thing for the Governor to do,” McAndrew said. “These are the people that are going to wake up screaming in the middle of the night. These are the people that are going to suffer for the rest of their lives because the people they have killed are going to come visiting with them on a regular basis. They’re going to sit on the edge of their bed at night and talk to them.”
In the past,botched executions or deviations from established execution procedures have prompted death penalty states to pause. Under Gov. Jeb Bush, Florida prison officials botched a lethal injection in 2006, and Bush temporarily halted executions. In Oklahoma, Republican Gov. Mary Fallin had to delay executions twice, after the botched execution of Clayton Lockett in 2014 and again after the revelation that the state substituted a new drug to stop Charles Warner’s heart in 2015. Warner’s final words, the Associated Press reported, were: “My body is on fire.” A grand jury investigation found “negligence” and serious errors in the state’s executions.
In 2022 in Tennessee, Republican Gov. Bill Lee paused all executions and sought an independent review of its execution protocol over concerns about independent testing of the lethal drugs. When the review ended in 2024, citing fewer opportunities for mistakes, Tennessee moved from a three-drug protocol to a single drug, as at least 1o other states and the federal system have now done.
Florida has been using the same three-drug combination since 2017. Florida’s governor, however, is yet to announce any investigation into this method or its recent executions, let alone slow his pace in signing death warrants, despite repeated pleas and public accounts.
In 2025 alone, media coverage described troubling scenes in at least three executions in Florida. In April, Michael Tanzi’s chest heaved for about three minutes, the Associated Press reported. Tanzi was given the unauthorized sedative, lidocaine, prison logs later showed.
During the execution of Thomas Gudinas in June, media reported that his eyes rolled back and his chest spasmed. Drug logs filed in court records showed that Gudinas was injected with half the amount of paralytic required by Florida’s protocol. Then in November, NBC News reported that former Marine Bryan Jennings’ chest heaved and his arms twitched. Jennings’ autopsy report found that he experienced pulmonary edema—which mirrors the feeling of drowning, and the condition a medical expert feared would happen to Walls at his December execution.
After Walls’ execution, a spokesperson for the governor’s office said there were no complications with his three-step lethal injection. There were close to 30 witnesses in attendance, including relatives of Walls’ victims. The Pensacola News Journal reported “about six minutes of labored breathing.”
And Maria DeLiberato, Walls’ former attorney and the legal and policy director for Floridians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty, said she saw Walls gasping and his chest heaving: “Like he’s choking.” What she witnessed, she said, didn’t match the state’s media briefing from the Raiford prison.
“I thought something was wrong,” DeLiberato said.
In January, Gov. DeSantis signed his first death warrant of this year for Ronald Heath, who was convicted for the 1989 armed robbery and murder of a traveling salesman near University of Florida. A jury sentenced him to death on a 10-2 vote.
Unanimous jury decisions were not required when Heath was convicted. They became law in Florida after a landmark 2016 Supreme Court judgement, but in 2023, Gov. DeSantis signed a bill into law requiring only 8 of 12 jurors to vote for death.
Heath’s final appeal urged the U.S. Supreme Court to look into Florida’s three-step lethal injection method, citing previous use of expired drugs, inconsistent dosing and inaccurate logs about what happened in the death chamber. The state argued that the Eighth Amendment prohibits cruel and unusual punishment, “not inaccurate bookkeeping.”
The Supreme Court denied Heath’s request, and Heath’s execution was quick and without outward signs of complications, according to news coverage and a witness. Two weeks later, as Melvin Trotter’s execution date loomed for the murder of a grocery store owner in 1986, he asked for a stay of execution based on the risk of a mangled execution. Though the Supreme Court also rejected Trotter’s petition, this time, Justice Sonia Sotomayor expressed her concern about Florida’s “troubling” execution records.
Sotomayor agreed with denying Trotter’s petition, but acknowledged that prisoners like him are caught in a Catch-22: because they don’t have enough evidence of cruel and unusual punishment, they have been denied the records they’d actually need to prove it. “The very reason” they are seeking these documents, she noted in a four-page statement, is to prove their claims.
“By continuing to shroud its executions in secrecy, Florida undermines both the integrity of its own execution process and, potentially, this Court’s ability to ensure the State’s compliance with its constitutional obligations,” Sotomayor wrote.
As Trotter was executed on Feb. 24, he breathed heavily and his body twitched, PBS News reported. Details about the drugs used in Trotter’s execution won’t be revealed until the autopsy reports are made public.
DeSantis has already ordered two more executions, Billy Kearse on March 3 and Michael King on March 17. And Sotomayor’s words are already reverberating on the busy death row. Within a day of Sotomayor’s statement, her critique of Florida’s secrecy had already been cited in a new appeal—and state officials had already dismissed the justice’s concerns as “speculation.”
AI company resists Pentagon demand over unrestricted use
Anthropic, an artificial intelligence firm, has publicly rejected a Pentagon demand that would allow the U.S. Department of Defense to use its AI system “for all lawful purposes.” The administration set a firm deadline for the company to grant broad access; Anthropic said the request was unacceptable because it would strip away the guardrails the company has built to prevent misuse.
Company leaders and some AI executives argue that unfettered use by the military could enable applications that undermine democratic values or lead to harmful autonomous capabilities. Pentagon officials maintain they need flexible access to leverage advanced AI for national security. The dispute has progressed into a high‑profile impasse, with the administration reportedly weighing tough options if Anthropic does not comply.
Why this matters
National security vs. safety norms: The clash pits defense needs for adaptable tools against industry commitments to safety, ethics and limits on certain uses.
Precedent for tech controls: The outcome could set a national and international precedent on how private AI developers negotiate terms for government use — shaping procurement, oversight and export rules.
Market and innovation risks: Heavy‑handed demands could push companies to relocate, restrict cooperation, or slow adoption; conversely, limits could constrain military capabilities that lawmakers say are essential.
What is unresolved
Whether a mediated compromise will be reached or the administration will pursue coercive measures to secure access.
How other AI firms will respond and whether coordinated industry standards can bridge the gap between safety commitments and defense requirements.
The standoff is a test case for how democracies will balance rapid technological change, commercial innovation, and the ethical limits of military use.
Guwahati played host to the Filmfare Awards Assamese 2026 with the Jeevan Ram Mungi Devi Goenka Memorial Public Charitable Trust on February 27, as the city witnessed a night of celebration and cinematic pride.
The red carpet set the tone with striking appearances from Vidya Rao, Nirupom Saikia, Urmila Mahanta, Barsha Phukan, Ajan Akash Baruah and more bringing glamour and star power to the evening. From elegant traditional ensembles to sharp contemporary silhouettes, the fashion on display reflected both heritage and modern flair.
This article originally appeared on the High Adam newsletter. Subscribe here.
For 2026, the California Cannabis Awards adds a new category for the backyard farmer. Here’s what you need to know.
Are you a Golden State ganja green thumb with a knack for growing backyard bud? If so, the California Cannabis Awards is giving you a chance to prove your pot prowess thanks to a newly added Home Grow – Flower competition.
According to the organization’s February 23 announcement, the new competition category is “designed to recognize cannabis flower cultivated by California residents for personal, non-commercial use,” and will be judged using the same methods and criteria as the professionally grown flower in the annual agricultural event that awards an assortment of gold, silver and bronze medals in the run up to the California State Fair in mid-July where best-of-the-best Golden Bear awards are handed out.
If you think your home harvest has what it takes, here’s what you need to know — and do — to officially enter the competition:
How much time do I have to grow my potentially award-winning weed?
The submission window for the home grow competition — and the rest of the 2026 California Cannabis Awards categories — is open through May 22, 2026. That means your magical plant needs to have been grown, harvested, dried and cured by then.
The reality of this deadline is that this year’s award-winning weed has almost certainly already been harvested.
How much does it cost?
Each submission requires a $250 entry fee, which covers laboratory testing, chemometric analysis and eligibility for medal awards.
What do I need to do?
Start by filling out the official California Cannabis Awards entry form completely (incomplete forms won’t be accepted). Then, create an SC Labs account either through the link in the registration portal or by going directly to www.sclabs.com.
Next, seal and label seven grams of cannabis flower per entry according to SC Labs’ submission requirements and schedule your sample(s) to be picked up by the lab folks.
What will SC Labs be testing for?
The lab’s analysis will look at potency, terpene concentration and cannabinoid concentration and generate a chemometric report (think of it as a kind of chemical fingerprint), which will be the basis for competition scoring. This is important because the competition medals will be awarded exclusively on those laboratory results.
What categories will medals be awarded in?
Gold, silver and bronze hardware will be handed out in the following categories:
The highest concentration of the following six specific terpenes: limonene, myrcene, beta-caryophyllene, pinene, ocimene and terpinolene
The co-dominant terpene profile MCL (Myrcene-Caryophyllene-Limonene)
Total terpene concentration
Primary cannabinoids CBG and CBD
Overall cannabinoid concentration
Is this the same criteria used for judging the professionally farmed flower categories?
Kind of. The chemotype-based sub-categories are the exact same ones used for judging commercial flower entries. The only difference is that the Home Grow entries won’t be separated by cultivation method; sun-grown, indoor and mixed-light submissions will compete together within each category.
Once I’ve submitted my entry, then what?
All gold medal winners in the Home Grow competition will be invited to participate in a live, on-site judging panel held on Saturday, July 25, at the California State Fair to compete for a Golden Bear trophy and the title of “Best Home Grow in California.”
This is crucial: Since the panel of expert judges — the same ones judging the commercial flower categories — will need to sample the gold-medal herb,it’s important that all entrants keep an additional 14 grams of product on hand until the medal winners are announced.
Where can I find out more information?
An extensive competition guide as well as additional information about the 2026 California Cannabis Awards can be found online at www.calcannabisawards.com/awards.
This article is from an external, unpaid contributor. It does not represent High Times’ reporting and has not been edited for content or accuracy.
Hey, everybody! Tim, Kristen, and I are back this week to talk about the horrors of Racoon City, Reanimal, and trying to conquer your backlog before a wave of new games comes for us all. Along with our various journeys through Greece in God of War Sons of Sparta.
God of War Sons of Sparta The Pit blog — Time to test your Spartan resolve in the roguelike challenge mode. See how to unlock this mode early and take it on solo or with local co-op. missions and objectives.
Life is Strange: Reunion hands-on report — Chloe and Max are back for more time manipulation shenanigans. Check out new features, including the ability to play as both the protagonist and the interactive notebook.
The Elder Scrolls Online Collection: Gold Road | PS5, PS4
The Cast
Thanks to Dormilón for our rad theme song and show music.
[Editor’s note: PSN game release dates are subject to change without notice. Game details are gathered from press releases from their individual publishers and/or ESRB rating descriptions.]
Japan is preparing its financial system for a world of stablecoins and tokenized assets, with banks, regulators and financial conglomerates working to bring the yen economy onchain.
The country is the world’s fourth-largest economy, and its yen is one of the most important currencies in global finance. According to the International Monetary Fund, the yen accounted for 5.82% of global foreign exchange reserves, ranking third worldwide.
A major reason for the yen’s systemic importance is the carry trade. Due to low interest rates, investors borrow cheap yen, convert it into other currencies and invest in higher-yield assets, making the yen one of the most trusted funding currencies for global markets.
The yen is consistently ranked as the third-largest currency by foreign exchange reserves, behind the US dollar and euro. Source: IMF
Still, Japan’s central role in global finance has not been represented in the blockchain economy. That began to change after US President Donald Trump took office in January last year, which accelerated crypto policy discussions worldwide.
Like the US, Japan’s ruling party has stated its ambition to become a global center of Web3. Achieving that goal may depend on stablecoins capable of bringing the yen onchain. However, retail crypto activity in Japan remains relatively muted, even though the local industry is backed by some of the largest financial conglomerates and banks.
Japan’s crypto industry has the blessings of the government and conglomerates
Sanae Takaichi became Japan’s first female prime minister in October 2025. In just a few months in office, she dissolved the lower house for a snap election. Her Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) secured a two-thirds supermajority victory on Feb. 8, and lawmakers voted to reelect Takaichi for a second term 10 days later.
Startale Group CEO Sota Watanabe told Cointelegraph that she is widely seen as politically and strategically aligned with the Trump administration, which is accelerating local crypto adoption.
In April 2024, Takaichi’s LDP released a Web3 white paper to state its ambition to “make Japan the center of Web3.” The document outlined 11 crypto issues to address “immediately,” including income tax reform for individuals, stablecoins and security tokens.
Those priorities are also set in the blockchain strategy of SBI Group, which is one of the largest financial conglomerates in Japan, led by Yoshitaka Kitao.
“Kitao-san is the best person to commit to the crypto revolution in Japan because he created SBI under the evolution of the internet,” said Watanabe, whose Startale Group co-developed SBI’s Strium blockchain. The layer 1 aims to become the settlement infrastructure for institutional trading of tokenized equities and real-world assets (RWAs).
Kitao previously held executive positions at Nomura, Japan’s largest securities broker, and later at SoftBank alongside Masayoshi Son, who is second in Forbes’ Japan rich list. Kitao then founded SBI for SoftBank.
Watanabe claimed that SBI views crypto’s next onchain evolution as securities and stocks, though that requires the green light from the government.
“Right now, it is easy to make a derivative onchain, but to implement actual onchain dividends, actual voting rights of the stock, it needs to be regulation-compliant,” said Watanabe, who added that he is in talks with the Japanese government.
Also, dividends for onchain assets can’t be paid offchain, so a yen-backed stablecoin is needed.
Why a yen stablecoin matters
Japan’s interest rates and the yen carry trade are major forces that can move markets. The Bank of Japan raised interest rates in March 2024 from -0.1% to 0.1%, its first hike in 17 years. The following July, the central bank announced a more aggressive increase to 0.25%, rattling global markets and Bitcoin (BTC).
Bitcoin fell more sharply than the Nikkei after BOJ’s rate hike in August 2024. Source: TradingView
A yen-backed stablecoin could extend the carry trade into blockchain markets by bringing Japan’s low borrowing costs onchain.
For example, an investor could borrow a yen-denominated stablecoin at low interest rates. Those funds could then be used as collateral to borrow US dollar stablecoins, which can be deployed into decentralized finance (DeFi) lending, liquidity provision or other yield-generating strategies.
On Friday, Startale unveiled its own yen-backed stablecoin, JPYSC, targeting a second-quarter launch. According to Watanabe, the stablecoin is specifically designed to enable the yen carry trade onchain.
“Once we implement the trust bank-backed stablecoin, it will become possible for global investors and institutions to execute the yen carry trade onchain,” he said.
Carry trades typically take time. The process can take one or two days to complete, as Japan’s and US’ business hours don’t overlap.
“But if we could do it onchain, we can do it 24/7 and instantly,” said Watanabe.
Theoretically, this could bring institutional yen borrowing to DeFi. But Justin d’Anethan, head of research at Arctic Digital, told Cointelegraph that an onchain carry trade won’t be impactful unless it comes with massive backers and a large market cap.
Watanabe told Cointelegraph that he has been in talks with the largest financial institutions in the US that are interested in carry trades and intraday swaps, though he declined to disclose names. He said that he has also been in contact with “top players” in DeFi.
The process still needs approval from Japanese authorities, while the regulatory treatment of stablecoins on bank balance sheets remains unresolved. Authorities such as the US Securities and Exchange Commission are still working to clarify capital and accounting requirements.
SEC cuts broker-dealer stablecoin haircut from 100% to 2%. Source: SEC
Japan’s crypto scene is accelerating, but retail is left out
A yen-backed stablecoin already exists in Japan in the form of JPYC, but it is primarily designed for payments. At the time of writing, its relatively small market capitalization of around $20 million makes it unsuitable for carry trades, which require deep liquidity and large borrowing capacity.
SBI isn’t the only financial institution exploring stablecoins in Japan. Three of the country’s largest banks — Mitsubishi UFJ, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation and Mizuho — are reportedly looking to jointly issue a yen-pegged stablecoin.
Despite the interest from local traditional finance giants and the government, the retail industry activity is muted.
The slow retail adoption is often blamed on the up-to-55% tax levy crypto investors face. That could also be shifting. Japan is exploring the reclassification of crypto from a payment tool to a financial product, which would drop the crypto tax to 20% and allow for exchange-traded funds based on crypto.
Watanabe said retail will join the blockchain economy once the tax is cut. Source: Sota Watanabe
The tax deduction reform is expected to start from 2028. This isn’t good enough, according to Watanabe.
“The Japanese government is very slow,” he said. “Given that the US is accelerating onchain finance, to catch up, tax deduction in 2027 is necessary.”
For decades, the yen has served as a global funding currency through carry trades, but it is largely absent in the crypto industry. Retail participation remains limited by hefty tax rules, but the government and institutions are already positioning the yen to operate inside blockchain-based capital markets.
Cointelegraph Features and Cointelegraph Magazine publish long-form journalism, analysis and narrative reporting produced by Cointelegraph’s in-house editorial team and selected external contributors with subject-matter expertise. All articles are edited and reviewed by Cointelegraph editors in line with our editorial standards. Contributions from external writers are commissioned for their experience, research or perspective and do not reflect the views of Cointelegraph as a company unless explicitly stated. Content published in Features and Magazine does not constitute financial, legal or investment advice. Readers should conduct their own research and consult qualified professionals where appropriate. Cointelegraph maintains full editorial independence. The selection, commissioning and publication of Features and Magazine content are not influenced by advertisers, partners or commercial relationships.
GUADALAJARA — The notorious drug kingpin was sick, his kidneys failing.
To ensure smooth management of his multibillion-dollar cartel while he underwent dialysis, Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes, known as “El Mencho,” delegated day-to-day control to several top lieutenants.
Each managed a separate region, had his own group of hit men and developed his own fearsome reputation.
Mexican soldiers killed Oseguera on Sunday in a raid on his remote mountain hideout. Immediately, his appointed commanders ordered a nationwide campaign of terror: cartel fighters carried out arson attacks and blocked roads across more than a dozen states and ambushed security officers, killing 25 members of the National Guard.
A bus burned by cartel operatives after the killing of the kingpin known as “El Mencho.”
(Armando Solis / Associated Press)
The fires are now out, but key questions remain.
What will happen to the Jalisco New Generation cartel and its fragile coalition of ruthless leaders?
Will they agree to share power? Or elevate a single man as head honcho?
Many Mexicans fear a troubling third scenario: a bloody power struggle that fragments the cartel, opening new fronts of conflict in an already volatile criminal landscape.
A photograph of Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes, center, known as “El Mencho,” provided by federal prosecutors.
(U.S. District Court)
“What comes next will not resemble a clean succession,” Ghaleb Krame Hilal, a former security advisor in the state of Tamaulipas, wrote in the online magazine Small Wars Journal. “It will be a struggle over who holds the center of gravity inside the organization, and that result is not preordained.”
The scenario is complicated because Oseguera’s only son, Rubén Oseguera González, known as “El Menchito,” is serving a life sentence on drug charges in the United States.
Juan Carlos Valencia González, seen in a wanted photo released by the U.S. Department of State in 2021. He is one of the possible successors to “El Mencho” as the leader of the Jalisco New Generation cartel.
(U.S. Department of State)
That leaves Oseguera’s cadre of regional commanders as the most likely inheritors of his drug empire.
Perhaps the most powerful among them is Oseguera’s stepson, Juan Carlos Valencia González, known as 03. Other monikers includ El Pelon, El JP and Tricky Tres.
Valencia, 41, is the commander of the paramilitary Grupo Elite and belongs to a clan that runs the cartel’s money-laundering operation.
His mother, Rosalinda González Valencia, was arrested in Guadalajara in November 2021 and accused by Mexican authorities of being a “financial operator” for the Jalisco cartel. His biological father was the co-founder of the now-defunct Milenio cartel, where Oseguera got his start.
Valencia was born in the Orange County city of Santa Ana, one of many sons and daughters of high-ranking cartel figures born in the United Sates in recent decades. After Valencia’s father went to prison, Oseguera married his mother.
The U.S. State Department is offering up to a $5-million reward for information leading to Valencia’s arrest.
A group of Jalisco New Generation cartel fighters.
(Juan José Estrada Serafín / For The Times)
Here are the other contenders:
Ricardo Ruiz, alias RR, is known for producing slick cartel propaganda, including a viral social media video that showed dozens of cartel fighters dressed in fatigues alongside a column of armored vehicles and homemade tanks. “We are Mencho’s men!” they shout while firing automatic weapons into the sky.
Authorities blamed Ruiz for the death of Valeria Márquez, a 23-year-old model and beauty influencer shot to death last year while broadcasting live on TikTok.
Audias Flores Silva, a leader widely known as “El Jardinero,” controls methamphetamine factories in Jalisco and Zacatecas states, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration. He has a fleet of airplanes and tractor trailers used to traffic drugs from Central America into the United States, U.S. officials say.
Flores is believed to have engineered the Jalisco cartel’s recent alliance with a faction of the warring Sinaloa cartel, which is led by two sons of imprisoned drug lord Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán.
And then there is 29-year-old Abraham Jesús Ambriz Cano, alias “El Yogurth.” Ambriz has built a small army of foreign mercenaries, mostly former soldiers from Colombia who have experience in bomb-making and counterinsurgency tactics. Some of those combatants say they were lured to Mexico under false pretenses and forced to fight.
Together the men help lead one of the most power and feared cartels in history — a criminal enterprise that traffics tons of cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine and fentanyl to the United States but which also profits from extortion, fuel theft, illegal mining and logging and timeshare fraud inside Mexico.
The avocado fields in the Mexican state of Michoacán, where the Jalisco New Generation cartel and other criminal groups tax producers and have their own crops.
(Gary Coronado/Los Angeles Times)
Security analysts say the group’s horizontal, franchise-like structure allowed it to engineer a rapid response to Oseguera’s killing — and will allow it to do business as usual in the coming months.
Many believe the remaining leaders of the cartel will try to work together — for now.
“At the moment they perceive a huge common enemy: the government of Mexico,” said David Saucedo, who advises local and state governments on security policy.
But, Saucedo cautioned, “it’s possible that the cartel will fracture at some point as conflicts arise over control of profits, trafficking routes and contact with political officials.” Personal conflicts and the encroachment of rival cartels could also provoke problems, he added.
The inner workings of cartels are intentionally opaque to the outside world.
To understand shifts inside the gangs, analysts and officials track social media communiques, changes to drug flows and outbreaks of violence. Many keep close watch on narco corridos, or drug ballads, which chronicle cartel politics.
Saucedo noted that multiple songs recently have described Flores as Oseguera’s successor. Another song venerates Valencia (“He was born in Orange County, where the sun burns differently,” it begins.)
It’s unclear if any of the current leaders would possess the gravitas of Oseguera, who wielded unquestioned authority even as his health deteriorated and he was forced to live on the run. That is in part because of his unflinching willingness to violently punish anyone who threatened or crossed him.
He was blamed for the 2020 assassination attempt of Omar García Harfuch, then the police chief of Mexico City and now the top public security official under President Claudia Sheinbaum. During a previous government effort to capture Oseguera, in 2015, cartel fighters used rocket-propelled grenades to shoot down an army helicopter, killing nine soldiers.
Last year, at a ranch near Guadalajara apparently used to train Jalisco recruits, activists discovered the remains of hundreds of missing people.
Born to farmers in Michoacán state, Oseguera immigrated illegally the United States in his teens. He was first arrested at age 19 in San Francisco for selling methamphetamine. His stature grew as he rose from small-time hoodlum to myth-shrouded kingpin of a seemingly invincible cartel that operates in most Mexican states and in countries across South America, Asia and Europe.
Recent Mexican history is riddled with the tales of once-powerful syndicates — gangs in Guadalajara, Tijuana and Ciudad Juárez, among them — that ruptured, were gobbled up by other mobs or petered out as the big guys were captured or killed. Colombia’s storied Medellin cartel was another mob that withered after Pablo Escobar met his demise in 1993.
Linthicum reported in New York, Hamilton in Guadalajara and McDonnell in Mexico City.
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Kate Linthicum, Keegan Hamilton, Patrick J. McDonnell
After weeks of deception, shifting alliances and shocking banishments inside the Scottish Highlands castle, The Traitors Season 4 narrowed down to its final five: Rob Rausch, Maura Higgins, Eric Nam, Johnny Weir and Tara Lipinski. With trust hanging by a thread and the prize pot on the line, the remaining contestants faced one last roundtable that would determine who was faithful — and who had been deceiving them all along. The Feb. 26, 2026 finale delivered a dramatic end to the season. Here’s everything to know about the Season 4 winner and the high-stakes conclusion.
How Can I Watch The Traitors Season 4 Finale?
The Traitors Season 4 finale—along with the reunion and full season—is available to stream exclusively on Peacock in the United States. New episodes of the series typically dropped on Thursdays at 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT throughout the season, with the finale airing on Feb. 26, 2026. Viewers can watch the entire season with a Peacock Premium or Premium Plus subscription.
Who Won The Traitors Season 4?
Rob won The Traitors Season 4, taking home the entire $220,800 prize pot in the Feb. 26, 2026 finale. The season came down to a dramatic final two moment between Rob and Maura after the last banishment left them alone at the firepit. With the power to end the game or banish again, the pair chose to conclude the competition—prompting the final role reveal. That’s when Rob confessed the truth. “I am and I always have been a Traitor,” he told Maura. “I am so sorry, I am a Traitor. I’m serious.”
THE TRAITORS — “Leap of Faith” Episode 411 — Pictured: (l-r) Alan Cumming, Rob Rausch — (Photo by: Euan Cherry/Peacock)
At the beginning of the season, he was secretly chosen as a Traitor alongsideCandiace Dillard Bassett and Lisa Rinna, giving him early control of the game’s direction. As eliminations unfolded, Rob carefully maintained his cover while shaping alliances and steering suspicion elsewhere. He later brought Eric Nam into the Traitors’ ranks.
How Much Money Does the Winner of The Traitors Get?
The prize money on The Traitors depends on how much the cast earns during missions throughout the season. In Season 1, Cirie Fields won the full $250,000 prize pot. Season 2 winners Chris “C.T.” Tamburello and Trishelle Cannatella split $208,100. In Season 3, Dolores Catania, Dylan Efron, Gabby Windey and Lord Ivar Mountbatten divided a $204,300 prize pot.
For Season 4, Rob claimed the entire $220,800 pot on his own.
Aliya Rahman, a disabled U.S. citizen whom immigration agents previously dragged out of a car while she was on her way to a medical appointment, was arrested while attending President Donald Trump’s Feb. 24, 2026, State of the Union as a guest of Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn.
Rating:
Context
U.S. Capitol Police said in a statement that officers arrested Rahman for “demonstrating” and refusing to sit down upon request. Rahman and her legal counsel said she was standing in silence and disputed law enforcement’s claims that she illegally disrupted the State of the Union address.
Some posts also claimed law enforcement officers injured Rahman during the arrest. A spokesperson for Rahman’s legal team said Rahman “was taken to the hospital for examination after being roughly handled by arresting Capitol Police officers” and received lidocaine for pain relief “since her shoulders were already injured from a previous assault by federal law enforcement in Minneapolis in January.” It was not possible to verify or disprove these allegations.
On Feb. 25, 2026, U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., alleged on social media that U.S. Capitol Police arrested her guest, Aliya Rahman, at President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address. Rahman is a disabled U.S. citizen who made headlines a month prior after federal immigration officers dragged her from her car in Minneapolis while she was reportedly trying to get to a doctor’s appointment.
Omar said Rahman “stood up silently in the gallery during the president’s speech for a short period of time, part of which other guests were also standing. For that, she was forcibly removed, despite warning officers about her injured shoulders and ultimately charged with ‘Unlawful Conduct.’”
“The heavy-handed response to a peaceful guest sends a chilling message about the state of our democracy,” Omar wrote in an X post. “I am calling for a full explanation of why this arrest occurred.”
My guest, Aliya Rahman, stood up silently in the gallery during the president’s speech for a short period of time, part of which other guests were also standing. For that, she was forcibly removed, despite warning officers about her injured shoulders and ultimately charged with…
Posts spreading Omar’s allegations spread on social media, including via Facebook (screenshotted), Reddit and Threads. Snopes readers searched our website for information on whether Rahman was arrested.
U.S. Capitol Police and Rahman’s legal counsel both confirmed via email that the agency’s officers arrested Rahman. As such, we have rated this claim as true.
The statement from U.S. Capitol Police said law enforcement arrested Rahman for failing to abide by the event’s rules against demonstrating:
All State of the Union tickets clearly explain that demonstrating is prohibited. At approximately 10:07 p.m., a person in the House Gallery started demonstrating during the State of the Union Address. The guest was told to sit down, but refused to obey our lawful orders. It is illegal to disrupt the Congress and demonstrate in the Congressional Buildings, so 43-year-old Aliya M. Rahman of Minneapolis, MN, was arrested for D.C. Code §10-503.16 – Unlawful Conduct, Disruption of Congress.
In an emailed statement, Rahman’s lead attorney, Alexa Van Brunt of the MacArthur Justice Center, said Rahman was “targeted.”
“There is nothing unlawful about standing in silence and this is a blatant abuse of power. She was not disruptive or disrespectful. She was not holding a sign, making gestures, or wearing protest gear,” said Van Brunt’s statement, which we received from Jasmine Razeghi, a spokesperson for the MacArthur Justice Center.
Van Brunt said Rahman was released just before 4 a.m. the day after her arrest.
U.S. Capitol Police did not immediately return an inquiry as to whether any footage exists of the arrest, and we found no evidence of such footage published by reputable news outlets. As such, we cannot confirm what, exactly, Rahman was doing at the time of her arrest. Crediblepictures of the arrest from photojournalism database Getty Images do not show her holding any signage. Other people stood at various points of Trump’s State of the Union address — and not just to clap (see the woman in red at 18:38 and 1:11:24 for examples).
Some online posts also claimed the officers injured Rahman. While Omar said Rahman was “taken to George Washington University Hospital for treatment,” Omar did not allege that Rahman experienced any injuries. Razeghi said in an email that Rahman went to the hospital “for examination after being roughly handled by arresting Capitol Police officers.”
“She received lidocaine for pain relief since her shoulders were already injured from a previous assault by federal law enforcement in Minneapolis in January,” Razeghi wrote.
Razeghi declined to share Rahman’s medical records, stating that she would like to keep them “private at this time.” This meant that we cannot independently fact-check whether Rahman was injured or the extent of any potential injuries.
Rahman identified herself as a disabled person with autism and a traumatic brain injury during her Feb. 3 testimony (transcript) to Congress about her Jan. 13 encounter with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers.
The incident in Rahman’s words
In a Feb. 25 interview with reporter Amy Goodman for progressive news program “Democracy Now!,” Rahman said that prior to her arrest, she stood up “at the moment that I heard this man say some of the most racist things I have heard come out of any leader’s mouth about the people of my city, and continue to trash talk my state of Minnesota and glorify [the Department of Homeland Security], the people who did this to me and who are being allowed to roam free on the streets.” (see 3:49).
Rahman also described the incident during her interview in detail, starting at 2:09:
I was not just removed and arrested. I was removed so physically, that twootherattendeesupstairs attemptedtointerveneinofficerspullingonmyshoulders after I told them I have a torn rotator cuff tendon and multiple cartilage tears in both of my shoulders. That is what happened in the audio you just played. That is why I cannot lift my arms normally.
Two women in the gallery — and thank you to the woman in the white shirt with the red writing who said, ‘I need you to take your hands off of her and just let her walk with her cane.’
They did not do that and only when their own sergeant intervened in a back stairwell of that building to say, ‘Stop. We need to get her medical care and a wheelchair,’ did they stop tugging on me while, again, I was saying ‘disabled.’
Amy, would you like to know why I was removed and arrested? The sergeant of arms told me it’s because I was standing up. Silently. No buttons, no facial expressions, no gestures, no signs. Not one sound. Standing up.
There are only two things you can do at the State of the Union and they are sit down and stand up. All kinds of people were standing up all night. Me too.
As Nancy Guthrie’s whereabouts remain unknown, more Ring camera video footage from the night she was seemingly abducted has been released.
Fox News Digital obtained a new video published Thursday, February 26, from neighbors who live around 2.5 miles from Savannah Guthrie’s mother’s home in Arizona.
The recordings — taken between midnight and 6 a.m. on February 1, with some activity around 2:30 a.m., when the 84-year-old’s pacemaker device reportedly last synced with her iPhone — show cars driving by.
Retired NYPD detective and national security expert Pat Brosnan told Fox that he and his team believe the vehicle seen at the 2:36 a.m. mark is a Kia Soul.
Pima County Sheriff’s Department
The Pima County Sheriff’s Office told Fox News and NBC News that they are aware of the footage, but it is not immediately clear if they are using it in the ongoing investigation. NBC reported, via an FBI source, that authorities have amassed 5,000 to 10,000 hours of footage that they are currently combing through.
Elias and Danielle Stratigouleas, who shared the latest video footage with Fox, told the news organization that police had not canvassed their neighborhood in the 25 days since Nancy was believed to be abducted.
The sheriff’s office previously requested Ring camera footage from homes within a two-mile radius, and Stratigouleas’ home is outside of that radius.
The Today anchor, 54, recently announced that her family is now offering a reward of up to $1 million for information leading to the recovery of Nancy, whom she acknowledged may be dead. (The FBI is offering $100,000 for information leading to the location of Nancy “and/or the arrest and conviction of anyone involved in her disappearance.”)
Though the ongoing search has thus far yielded zero suspects in the case, Savannah noted, “Someone out there knows something that can bring her home. Somebody knows, and we are begging you to please come forward now.”
Instagram/savannahguthrie
Nancy was reported missing on February 1 by family members. Previous video footage released by authorities show a masked and “armed individual” appearing to tamper with the camera at Nancy’s front door the morning of her disappearance. She is described as 5 feet, 5 inches tall and weighs around 150 pounds; she has brown hair and blue eyes.
People with any information regarding the case are asked to contact the FBI at 1-800-CALL-FBI (1-800-225-5324). You may also contact your local FBI office, the nearest American Embassy or Consulate, or you can submit a tip online at tips.fbi.gov.
Free apps are supposed to cost you nothing but storage space. But in this case, they may have cost millions of people control over their own internet connections.
Google says it has disrupted what it believes was the world’s largest residential proxy network, one that secretly hijacked around 9 million Android devices, along with computers and smart home gadgets. Most people had no idea their devices were being used since the apps worked normally, and nothing looked broken.
But behind the scenes, those devices were quietly routing traffic for strangers, including cybercriminals.
Sign up for my FREE CyberGuy Report Get my best tech tips, urgent security alerts and exclusive deals delivered straight to your inbox. Plus, you’ll get instant access to my Ultimate Scam Survival Guide – free when you join my CYBERGUY.COM newsletter.
Google says it disrupted a massive residential proxy network that secretly hijacked about 9 million Android and smart devices.(AaronP/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images)
How your device became part of a proxy network
According to Google’s Threat Intelligence Group, the network was tied to a company known as IPIDEA. Instead of spreading through obvious malware, it relied on hidden software development kits, or SDKs, that were embedded inside more than 600 apps. These apps ranged from simple utilities to VPN tools and other free downloads. When you installed one, the app performed its advertised function. But it also enrolled your device into a residential proxy network.
That means your phone, computer or smart device could be used as a relay point for someone else’s internet traffic. That traffic might include scraping websites, launching automated login attempts or masking the identity of someone conducting shady online activity. From the outside, it looked like that activity came from your home IP address. You wouldn’t see it happening, and in many cases, you wouldn’t notice any major performance issues.
Google says in a single seven-day period earlier this year, more than 550 separate threat groups were observed using IP addresses linked to this infrastructure. That includes cybercrime operations and state-linked actors. Residential proxy networks are attractive because they make malicious traffic look like normal consumer activity. Instead of coming from a suspicious data center, it appears to come from someone’s living room.
What Google did to shut it down
Google says it took legal action in a U.S. federal court to seize domains used to control the infected devices and route proxy traffic. It also worked with companies like Cloudflare and other security firms to disrupt the network’s command-and-control systems. Google claims it also updated Play Protect, the built-in Android security system, so that certified devices would automatically detect and remove apps known to include the malicious SDKs.
However, Google also warned that many of these apps were distributed outside the official Play Store. That matters because Play Protect can only scan and block threats tied to apps installed through Google Play. Third-party app stores, unofficial downloads and uncertified Android devices carry far greater risk.
IPIDEA has claimed its service was meant for legitimate business use, such as web research and data collection. But Google’s research suggests the network was heavily abused by criminals. Even if some users knowingly installed bandwidth-sharing apps in exchange for rewards, many did not receive clear disclosure about how their devices were being used.
Google’s investigation also found significant overlap between different proxy brands and SDK names. What looked like separate services were often tied to the same infrastructure. That makes it harder for consumers to know which apps are safe and which are quietly monetizing their connection.
Hidden software inside more than 600 apps allegedly turned phones and computers into internet relays for cybercriminals.(David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
7 ways you can protect yourself from Android proxy attacks
If millions of devices can be quietly turned into internet relay points, the big question is, how do you make sure yours isn’t one of them? These steps reduce the risk that your phone, TV box or smart device gets pulled into a proxy network without you realizing it.
1) Stick to official app stores
Only download apps from the Google Play Store or other trusted app marketplaces. Some apps hide small pieces of code that can secretly use your internet connection. These are often spread through third-party app stores or direct app files called “APKs,” which are Android app files installed manually instead of through the Play Store. When you sideload apps this way, you bypass Google’s built-in security checks. Sticking to official stores helps keep those hidden threats off your device.
2) Avoid “earn money by sharing bandwidth” apps
If an app promises rewards for sharing your unused internet bandwidth, that’s a major red flag. In many cases, that is exactly how residential proxy networks recruit devices. Even if it sounds legitimate, you are effectively renting out your IP address. That can expose you to abuse, blacklisting or deeper network vulnerabilities.
3) Review app permissions carefully
Before installing any app, check what permissions it requests. A simple wallpaper app should not need full network control or background execution privileges. After installation, go into your phone’s settings and audit which apps have constant internet access, background activity rights or special device permissions.
4) Install strong antivirus software
Today’s mobile security tools can detect suspicious app behavior, unusual internet activity and hidden background services. Strong antivirus software adds an extra layer of protection beyond what’s built into your device, especially if you’ve installed apps in the past that you’re unsure about. Get my picks for the best 2026 antivirus protection winners for your Windows, Mac, Android and iOS devices at Cyberguy.com.
5) Keep your devices updated
Android security updates patch vulnerabilities that proxy operators may exploit. If you’re using an older phone, tablet or Android TV box that no longer receives updates, it may be time to upgrade. Unpatched devices are easier targets for hidden SDK abuse and botnet enrollment.
6) Use a strong password manager
If your device ever becomes part of a proxy network or is otherwise compromised, attackers often try to pivot into your accounts next. That’s why you should never reuse passwords. A password manager generates long, unique passwords for every account and stores them securely, so one breach does not unlock your email, banking or social media. Many password managers also include breach monitoring tools that alert you if your credentials appear in leaked databases, giving you a chance to act before real damage is done. Check out the best expert-reviewed password managers of 2026 at Cyberguy.com.
7) Remove apps you don’t fully trust
Go through your installed apps and delete or uninstall anything you don’t recognize or haven’t used in months. The fewer apps running on your device, the fewer opportunities there are for hidden SDKs to operate. If you suspect your device has been compromised, consider a full reset and reinstall only essential apps from trusted sources.
Threat groups and state-linked actors allegedly used compromised devices to mask online activity and automate attacks.(Photo Illustration by Serene Lee/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
Kurt’s key takeaway
Residential proxy networks operate in a gray area that sounds harmless on paper but can quickly become a shield for cybercrime. In this case, millions of everyday devices were quietly enrolled into a system that attackers used to hide their tracks. Google’s takedown is a major move, but the broader market for residential proxies is still growing. That means you need to be cautious about what you install and what permissions you grant. Free apps are rarely truly free. Sometimes, the product being sold is you and your internet connection.
Have you ever installed an app that promised rewards for sharing bandwidth, or used a free VPN without thinking twice about it? Let us know your thoughts by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.
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Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson is an award-winning tech journalist who has a deep love of technology, gear and gadgets that make life better with his contributions for Fox News & FOX Business beginning mornings on “FOX & Friends.” Got a tech question? Get Kurt’s free CyberGuy Newsletter, share your voice, a story idea or comment at CyberGuy.com.