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  • Newsfeed ha condiviso un link
    2025-05-23 04:59:08 ·
    WWW.FOXNEWS.COM
    Memorial Day: Wild mustangs help veterans heal through Wyoming ranch program
    While Memorial Day is a time for remembrance, it can also be a difficult period for many veterans, particularly those struggling with mental health.A program in Wyoming is helping to address those challenges by pairing veterans with wild mustangs in a unique approach to healing.VETERANS DAY: DENNIS QUAID, TRACE ADKINS AMONG HOLLYWOOD STARS HONORING OUR MILITARYAccording to data from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs from 2001 to 2022, veterans are more likely to be diagnosed with PTSD, depression and anxiety than civilians. Each year, approximately 6,000 veterans die by suicide.At some point in their lives, 7 out of every 100 veterans (or 7%) will experience PTSD, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.In the small town of Jay Em, Wyoming, a nonprofit called Operation Remount Corporation is offering a form of equine therapy that serves not only veterans and first responders, but also the mustangsmany of which come from traumatic backgrounds.Karen Alexander, co-founder of Operation Remount, says some mustangs also experience trauma and anxiety, making the program a form of reciprocal healing."These are mustangs that went through three adoptions and were not accepted or not adopted," Alexander said. "When the mustangs first come, they are very afraid of humans. Its really neat to see when that animal finally says, I can trust you."TRUMP SUPRISES 104-YEAR-OLD WWII VETERAN WITH BIRTHDAY MESSAGE AFTER VIRAL TIKTOK INVITEVeteran Sean Walker is one of this year's participants at Operation Remount. He says joining the program and meeting his horse, nicknamed Spirit, was needed after serving in the military.Walker, who completed two tours in Iraq and one in Bosnia with the Kansas National Guard, says just a few weeks with his horse, Spirit, has already made a significant impact."We call him Enduring Spirit Wind," Walker said. "He's taught me probably more than I could have possibly taught him."After retiring from the military, Walker said reintegrating into civilian life was difficult. Like many other veterans, he experienced mental health challenges.The program recently added a new red cabin to house participants during the six-week course. It was built in honor of Marine Corps Sgt. B.J. Shepperson, who served two deployments and struggled with the transition back to civilian life in Wyoming.Shepperson said his brother B.J. loved horses and would have really appreciated what this program is doing to help other veterans."After two deployments and coming back to Wyoming, he had a hard time re-adjusting," said his brother, Baxter Shepperson.VETERAN ON MISSION TO COMBAT SUICIDE IN MILITARY COMMUNITYProgram leaders say theyre working to construct more cabins, allowing additional veterans and first responders to stay overnight during the program as they experience the therapeutic bond with a horse."Its like when you found a connection that youve lost," Walker said. "It allows you to have that reconnection and Spirit has been that."Operation Remount allows the veterans and first responders to keep the wild horse after completing the six-week course. The nonprofit holds sessions in both spring and fall.CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APPThe team at Operation Remount is now working toward building an indoor facility so they can offer the program throughout the year, even during Wyomings harsh winter months.
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    2025-05-23 04:59:08 ·
    WWW.FOXNEWS.COM
    Louisiana police arrest third accomplice in Orleans Parish jailbreak
    A third alleged accomplice has been arrested in connection with the escape of one of ten inmates from the Orleans Parish Correctional Facility, according to Louisiana State Police.Connie Weeden, 59, is believed to have assisted the fugitives and was taken into custody following an investigation that revealed she was in contact via phone with escapee Jermaine Donald both before and after the escape. Donald remains at large.Authorities say Weeden gave cash to Donald via a "cell phone app." She has been charged with one felony count of accessory after the fact and booked into the St. Tammany Parish Correctional Center.TWO MORE ARRESTED FOR ALLEGEDLY AIDING NEW ORLEANS JAILBREAK FUGITIVES"According to Louisiana law, those convicted of accessory after the fact shall be fined not more than five hundred dollars, or imprisoned, with or without hard labor, for not more than five years, or both," a statement from the LA state police said. "Law enforcement personnel from multiple local, state, and federal agencies will continue to pursue every lead until the remaining fugitives are located. Those who choose to assist or conceal these individuals are violating the law and will be held accountable. Harboring fugitives threatens the safety of our communities and will not be tolerated."AUNT URGES CONVICTED MURDERER TO SURRENDER AS ORLEANS PARISH JAIL MANHUNT CONTINUESWeeden is the third person charged for aiding the escapees since the jailbreak. Cortnie Harris and Corvanntay Baptiste were previously accused of providing support and transportation to other escapees.The following fugitives are still at large:Authorities have reminded the public that these individuals are considered armed and dangerous.
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    2025-05-23 04:59:08 ·
    WWW.FOXNEWS.COM
    Memorial Day: Wild mustangs help veterans heal through Wyoming ranch program
    While Memorial Day is a time for remembrance, it can also be a difficult period for many veterans, particularly those struggling with mental health.A program in Wyoming is helping to address those challenges by pairing veterans with wild mustangs in a unique approach to healing.VETERANS DAY: DENNIS QUAID, TRACE ADKINS AMONG HOLLYWOOD STARS HONORING OUR MILITARYAccording to data from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs from 2001 to 2022, veterans are more likely to be diagnosed with PTSD, depression and anxiety than civilians. Each year, approximately 6,000 veterans die by suicide.At some point in their lives, 7 out of every 100 veterans (or 7%) will experience PTSD, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.In the small town of Jay Em, Wyoming, a nonprofit called Operation Remount Corporation is offering a form of equine therapy that serves not only veterans and first responders, but also the mustangsmany of which come from traumatic backgrounds.Karen Alexander, co-founder of Operation Remount, says some mustangs also experience trauma and anxiety, making the program a form of reciprocal healing."These are mustangs that went through three adoptions and were not accepted or not adopted," Alexander said. "When the mustangs first come, they are very afraid of humans. Its really neat to see when that animal finally says, I can trust you."TRUMP SUPRISES 104-YEAR-OLD WWII VETERAN WITH BIRTHDAY MESSAGE AFTER VIRAL TIKTOK INVITEVeteran Sean Walker is one of this year's participants at Operation Remount. He says joining the program and meeting his horse, nicknamed Spirit, was needed after serving in the military.Walker, who completed two tours in Iraq and one in Bosnia with the Kansas National Guard, says just a few weeks with his horse, Spirit, has already made a significant impact."We call him Enduring Spirit Wind," Walker said. "He's taught me probably more than I could have possibly taught him."After retiring from the military, Walker said reintegrating into civilian life was difficult. Like many other veterans, he experienced mental health challenges.The program recently added a new red cabin to house participants during the six-week course. It was built in honor of Marine Corps Sgt. B.J. Shepperson, who served two deployments and struggled with the transition back to civilian life in Wyoming.Shepperson said his brother B.J. loved horses and would have really appreciated what this program is doing to help other veterans."After two deployments and coming back to Wyoming, he had a hard time re-adjusting," said his brother, Baxter Shepperson.VETERAN ON MISSION TO COMBAT SUICIDE IN MILITARY COMMUNITYProgram leaders say theyre working to construct more cabins, allowing additional veterans and first responders to stay overnight during the program as they experience the therapeutic bond with a horse."Its like when you found a connection that youve lost," Walker said. "It allows you to have that reconnection and Spirit has been that."Operation Remount allows the veterans and first responders to keep the wild horse after completing the six-week course. The nonprofit holds sessions in both spring and fall.CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APPThe team at Operation Remount is now working toward building an indoor facility so they can offer the program throughout the year, even during Wyomings harsh winter months.
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    2025-05-23 04:59:08 ·
    WWW.FOXNEWS.COM
    Memorial Day: Wild mustangs help veterans heal through Wyoming ranch program
    While Memorial Day is a time for remembrance, it can also be a difficult period for many veterans, particularly those struggling with mental health.A program in Wyoming is helping to address those challenges by pairing veterans with wild mustangs in a unique approach to healing.VETERANS DAY: DENNIS QUAID, TRACE ADKINS AMONG HOLLYWOOD STARS HONORING OUR MILITARYAccording to data from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs from 2001 to 2022, veterans are more likely to be diagnosed with PTSD, depression and anxiety than civilians. Each year, approximately 6,000 veterans die by suicide.At some point in their lives, 7 out of every 100 veterans (or 7%) will experience PTSD, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.In the small town of Jay Em, Wyoming, a nonprofit called Operation Remount Corporation is offering a form of equine therapy that serves not only veterans and first responders, but also the mustangsmany of which come from traumatic backgrounds.Karen Alexander, co-founder of Operation Remount, says some mustangs also experience trauma and anxiety, making the program a form of reciprocal healing."These are mustangs that went through three adoptions and were not accepted or not adopted," Alexander said. "When the mustangs first come, they are very afraid of humans. Its really neat to see when that animal finally says, I can trust you."TRUMP SUPRISES 104-YEAR-OLD WWII VETERAN WITH BIRTHDAY MESSAGE AFTER VIRAL TIKTOK INVITEVeteran Sean Walker is one of this year's participants at Operation Remount. He says joining the program and meeting his horse, nicknamed Spirit, was needed after serving in the military.Walker, who completed two tours in Iraq and one in Bosnia with the Kansas National Guard, says just a few weeks with his horse, Spirit, has already made a significant impact."We call him Enduring Spirit Wind," Walker said. "He's taught me probably more than I could have possibly taught him."After retiring from the military, Walker said reintegrating into civilian life was difficult. Like many other veterans, he experienced mental health challenges.The program recently added a new red cabin to house participants during the six-week course. It was built in honor of Marine Corps Sgt. B.J. Shepperson, who served two deployments and struggled with the transition back to civilian life in Wyoming.Shepperson said his brother B.J. loved horses and would have really appreciated what this program is doing to help other veterans."After two deployments and coming back to Wyoming, he had a hard time re-adjusting," said his brother, Baxter Shepperson.VETERAN ON MISSION TO COMBAT SUICIDE IN MILITARY COMMUNITYProgram leaders say theyre working to construct more cabins, allowing additional veterans and first responders to stay overnight during the program as they experience the therapeutic bond with a horse."Its like when you found a connection that youve lost," Walker said. "It allows you to have that reconnection and Spirit has been that."Operation Remount allows the veterans and first responders to keep the wild horse after completing the six-week course. The nonprofit holds sessions in both spring and fall.CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APPThe team at Operation Remount is now working toward building an indoor facility so they can offer the program throughout the year, even during Wyomings harsh winter months.
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    2025-05-23 04:59:08 ·
    WWW.FOXNEWS.COM
    Memorial Day: Wild mustangs help veterans heal through Wyoming ranch program
    While Memorial Day is a time for remembrance, it can also be a difficult period for many veterans, particularly those struggling with mental health.A program in Wyoming is helping to address those challenges by pairing veterans with wild mustangs in a unique approach to healing.VETERANS DAY: DENNIS QUAID, TRACE ADKINS AMONG HOLLYWOOD STARS HONORING OUR MILITARYAccording to data from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs from 2001 to 2022, veterans are more likely to be diagnosed with PTSD, depression and anxiety than civilians. Each year, approximately 6,000 veterans die by suicide.At some point in their lives, 7 out of every 100 veterans (or 7%) will experience PTSD, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.In the small town of Jay Em, Wyoming, a nonprofit called Operation Remount Corporation is offering a form of equine therapy that serves not only veterans and first responders, but also the mustangsmany of which come from traumatic backgrounds.Karen Alexander, co-founder of Operation Remount, says some mustangs also experience trauma and anxiety, making the program a form of reciprocal healing."These are mustangs that went through three adoptions and were not accepted or not adopted," Alexander said. "When the mustangs first come, they are very afraid of humans. Its really neat to see when that animal finally says, I can trust you."TRUMP SUPRISES 104-YEAR-OLD WWII VETERAN WITH BIRTHDAY MESSAGE AFTER VIRAL TIKTOK INVITEVeteran Sean Walker is one of this year's participants at Operation Remount. He says joining the program and meeting his horse, nicknamed Spirit, was needed after serving in the military.Walker, who completed two tours in Iraq and one in Bosnia with the Kansas National Guard, says just a few weeks with his horse, Spirit, has already made a significant impact."We call him Enduring Spirit Wind," Walker said. "He's taught me probably more than I could have possibly taught him."After retiring from the military, Walker said reintegrating into civilian life was difficult. Like many other veterans, he experienced mental health challenges.The program recently added a new red cabin to house participants during the six-week course. It was built in honor of Marine Corps Sgt. B.J. Shepperson, who served two deployments and struggled with the transition back to civilian life in Wyoming.Shepperson said his brother B.J. loved horses and would have really appreciated what this program is doing to help other veterans."After two deployments and coming back to Wyoming, he had a hard time re-adjusting," said his brother, Baxter Shepperson.VETERAN ON MISSION TO COMBAT SUICIDE IN MILITARY COMMUNITYProgram leaders say theyre working to construct more cabins, allowing additional veterans and first responders to stay overnight during the program as they experience the therapeutic bond with a horse."Its like when you found a connection that youve lost," Walker said. "It allows you to have that reconnection and Spirit has been that."Operation Remount allows the veterans and first responders to keep the wild horse after completing the six-week course. The nonprofit holds sessions in both spring and fall.CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APPThe team at Operation Remount is now working toward building an indoor facility so they can offer the program throughout the year, even during Wyomings harsh winter months.
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    2025-05-23 06:59:05 ·
    WWW.FOXNEWS.COM
    Florida woman charged after allegedly attacking 72-year-old Trump supporter wearing MAGA hat
    A Florida woman is facing multiple charges stemming from her alleged attack on a 72-year-old man who was wearing a "Make America Great Again" hat earlier this week.Laura Garrett, 33, was arrested by the Largo Police Department on Tuesday for battery on a person older than 65, battery on a police officer and obstructing or resisting an officer without violence, according to Pinellas County Jail records.Garrett admitted she approached the man who has not been publicly identified at Northeast Park and Paw Place to ask him about President Donald Trump and why he supports him, according to an arrest affidavit obtained by FOX 13 Tampa Bay.SUBWAY RIDER'S TUMBLE CAUGHT ON CAMERA AFTER FAILED ATTEMPT TO SNATCH MAGA HAT OFF MAN'S HEAD: 'INSTANT KARMA'The two got into an argument at some point during the confrontation before Garrett poured a can she was holding on the victim's head and hit him on the back of his head and shoulder area with it, the arrest report said, though Garrett denied that she hit him with the can.Police said she jumped a fence and walked away after the attack on the man.She was later located by police officers, whom she allegedly fought with while they were attempting to arrest her.POWERBALL JACKPOT WINNER ARRESTED AFTER KICKING DEPUTY IN FACE: AUTHORITIESThe arrest report states that Garrett intentionally dropped to the ground when officers put her in handcuffs and that when an officer tried to escort her to the front of the park, she wrapped both of her legs around him and caused him to fall.The officer's knee was bruised during the incident, which is what prompted the second battery charge.Police said she continued to kick and pull away from arresting officers.Garrett was booked into the Pinellas County Jail Tuesday evening, but was released Wednesday night, jail records show.
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    2025-05-23 06:59:05 ·
    WWW.FOXNEWS.COM
    'Frasier' star Kelsey Grammer voices growing alarm over AI manipulation
    While artificial intelligence (AI) is playing a bigger role than ever in Hollywood, award-winning actor Kelsey Grammer is warning it may be "dangerous."The "Karen: A Brother Remembers" author opened up about his growing concern over AI deepfakes and the potential blurred lines between reality and manipulation."What Im a little sad about is our prevalence these days to come up with so many, as they try to say deepfakes," he told Fox News Digital. "You know, the ones who say it usually are the ones who are actually doing it. Its a very, very strange game out there."KELSEY GRAMMER 'CURSED GOD' AFTER SISTER'S MURDER UNTIL LOVE RESTORED HIS FAITHAI-generated images, known as "deepfakes," often involve editing videos or photos of people to make them look like someone else by using artificial intelligence.While the "Frasier" star has acknowledged AI to be beneficial in some capacity, including in the medical field, Grammer shared his reservations about how the system can potentially fabricate someones identity in seconds.WATCH: KELSEY GRAMMER WARNS AI WILL 'NEVER REFLECT THE SAME SPONTANEITY' AS HUMANS"I recognize the validity and the potential in AI," Grammer said. "Especially in medicine and a number of other things."Grammer warned, "But AI still is... I mean, I know theyre working on AGI now, which is probably a different animal, the one that maybe we should be more alarmed about."AGI stands for artificial general intelligence - a hypothetical stage in the development of machine learning in which an AI system can match or exceed the cognitive abilities of human beings across any task, according to IBM.WATCH: KELSEY GRAMMER CURSED GOD' AFTER SISTER KAREN'S MURDERMeanwhile, the "Cheers" star continued to voice his concern about AI and the integrity behind it."AI is never any better than the people who programmed it," he added. "But of course, now, its self-teaching, and maybe it will actually find a way to enhance its abilities beyond what the human inputs been."CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSLETTERAs the Hollywood actor has spent most of his illustrious career delivering scripted lines with human depth, Grammer told Fox News Digital he does not believe AI can replicate that genuineness."Im still fairly confident that it will never reflect the same spontaneity that is the human being. And so watching a human being the real human being will always be more interesting," Grammer said."We have to return to a sense of integrity and basically good manners."Grammer recently released the memoir, "Karen: A Brother Remembers." The book is available everywhere books are sold.
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    2025-05-23 08:59:03 ·
    WWW.FOXNEWS.COM
    Trump admin alleges Columbia violated civil rights law with 'deliberate indifference' to campus protests
    The Trump administration on Thursday accused Columbia University of having violated federal law through its "deliberate indifference" toward anti-Israel protests that have been taking over the campus since Oct. 7, 2023.Investigative findings from the Department of Health and Human Services' Office for Civil Rights (OCR) allege that Columbia's handling of "student-on-student harassment of Jewish students" over the past 19 months violated Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.HHS said Title VI "prohibits a recipient of Federal financial assistance from discriminating in its programs and activities on the basis of race, color, or national origin, which includes discrimination against individuals that is based on their actual or perceived Israeli or Jewish identity or ancestry."ANTI-ISRAEL PROTESTERS TORCH DIPLOMAS OUTSIDE COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY ON GRADUATION DAYHHS alleged that Columbia "continually failed to protect Jewish students" by allowing the "hostile environment created by some of its students" to continue.The Ivy League's campus has been a major hotspot for anti-Israel and pro-Hamas protests and gatherings since the terrorist group launched its attack on Israel in October 2023. In the months since, campus buildings have been taken over or damaged by large groups of people chanting antisemitic phrases and demanding that the university divest from Israel.The OCR's Notice of Violation alleged that Columbia "failed" to combat antisemitism in various ways, including by not properly abiding by its own policies and procedures when responding to complaints from the Jewish student population or when governing student misconduct towards Jewish students.MOOD FLIPS AT COLUMBIA U AFTER QUASHING OF LATEST PROTEST, TRUMP PRESSURE TAKES HOLDHHS said it took the university until summer 2024 to "establish effective reporting and remediation mechanisms for antisemitism." Even then, the university is accused of not investigating or punishing vandalism such as swastikas and other hate images in classrooms.The office also said the university did not enforce its own time, place and manner restrictions for on-campus protests, especially in academic buildings, residence halls and libraries."The findings carefully document the hostile environment Jewish students at Columbia University have had to endure for over 19 months, disrupting their education, safety, and well-being," said Anthony Archeval, Acting Director of the OCR at HHS. "We encourage Columbia University to work with us to come to an agreement that reflects meaningful changes that will truly protect Jewish students."CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APPThursday's announcement comes one day after a few Columbia graduates set their diplomas on fire in protest of former student Mahmoud Khalil's detention. Khalil was arrested by immigration agents in March and is at risk of being deported by the Trump administration after he was accused of leading the anti-Israel movement at Columbia.Columbia is also down $400 million in federal funding after the Trump administration slashed budgets at universities accused of mishandling antisemitism on campus.Fox News Digital has reached out to Columbia University for a response to the OCR's findings. The school told The New York Times in response to the findings that it plans to work with the Trump administration to combat antisemtism on campus."We understand this finding is part of our ongoing discussions with the government," a spokesman told the paper.
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    2025-05-23 08:59:03 ·
    WWW.FOXNEWS.COM
    Bryan Kohberger defense suggests 'alternate perpetrators' in Idaho murders, joining infamous legal strategy
    Bryan Kohberger's defense team brought up the possibility that there were "alternate perpetrators" involved in the quadruple murders during a hearing in early May, but Kohberger is hardly the first person to point the blame at other individuals.During a May 15 pretrial hearing, Judge Steven Hippler revealed that Kohberger's defense team made a filing that suggested an alternate suspect. Kohberger is charged with first-degree murder in the Nov. 13, 2022, deaths of University of Idaho students Xana Kernodle, 20, Kaylee Goncalves, 21, Madison Mogen, 21, and Ethan Chapin, 20.While Hippler did not rule on whether he was going to allow Kohberger's defense team to present the "alternate perpetrators" theory during trial, he did ask for more evidence supporting their claim.Former federal prosecutor James Trusty told Fox News Digital the strategy isn't necessarily a "full-throated defense" but rather a strategy used to create reasonable doubt within the jury.BRYAN KOHBERGER DEFENSE CLAIMS 'ALTERNATE PERPETRATORS' IN IDAHO STUDENT MURDERS"The problem is, a lot of times, it's really designed to be not a full-throated defense to say Mr. Smith was the one that committed the murder, but just to create reasonable doubt. It's keeping in mind that the standard is tilted in favor of the defendant appropriately. And so the idea is to not always go full-throated and say he absolutely did it, but to make a run at it, to play it out in front of the jury, let them kind of come to their own conclusion that there's at least some doubt as to who did it," Trusty said.Here's a look at other criminal cases in which the suspects invoked an alternate perpetrator.O.J. Simpson was accused of killing his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, along with her friend, Ronald Goldman, on June 12, 1994.Simpson's defense team attempted to bring in the alternate perpetrators' theory when they suggested in 1995 that the murders were done by Colombian drug lords, according to the New York Times.Simpson's lawyer, Johnnie L. Cochran Jr., said in court that Brown Simpson and Goldman weren't the intended targets of the murder, but he suggested that one of her friends, Faye Resnick, was the person that Colombian drug lords had planned to kill.SIGN UP TO GET THE TRUE CRIME NEWSLETTERCochran said the drug dealers wanted to kill Resnick over money she allegedly owed.Simpson was ultimately acquitted but said after the trial that he would keep working to find the person who killed his ex-wife and Goldman."My first obligation is to my young children, who will be raised the way that Nicole and I had always planned. But when things have settled a bit, I will pursue as my primary goal in life the killer or killers who slaughtered Nicole and Mr. Goldman. They are out there somewhere. Whatever it takes to identify them and bring them in, I will provide somehow," Simpson said.OJ SIMPSON MURDER TRIAL: SUPPRESSED WITNESS TESTIMONY CASTS SHADOW OVER VERDICTScott Peterson was found guilty in 2004 of killing his wife, Laci, and their unborn son, Conner. Laci Peterson disappeared from the couple's Modesto, California, home on Christmas Eve in late 2002. A pedestrian found her unborn son's body, decomposed at the time, in San Francisco Bay in April 2003.During Peterson's 2004 trial, his attorney, Mark Geragos, claimed a burglary near the couple's home at the time of her disappearance might have been connected to her death, according to the New York Post.Peterson was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.FOLLOW THE FOX TRUE CRIME TEAM ON XIn April, the Los Angeles Innocence Project filed a petition that claimed 17 eyewitnesses who lived or worked in the Petersons' neighborhood "reported seeing a woman fitting Lacis description walking a dog in the neighborhood and nearby park" on the morning of Dec. 24, 2002, after Scott left for the day.Casey Anthony was accused of killing her 2-year-old daughter, Caylee, in 2008.Prosecutors alleged that Casey Anthony used duct tape as the murder weapon, claiming the mother covered her mouth and nose with it, which resulted in the child's death. Her body was found in a wooded area in Orange County, Florida.Anthony's defense lawyers claimed Caylee Anthony accidentally drowned while swimming in her grandparents' pool.'MOST HATED MOM' CASEY ANTHONY RETURNS TO NATIONAL SPOTLIGHT AFTER ACQUITTAL IN DAUGHTER'S MURDERDuring the trial, Anthony's defense attorney, Jose Baez, argued that Caylee Anthony's father, George, covered up the drowning and sexually abused his daughter. George Anthony vehemently denied those accusations.Casey Anthony was acquitted on charges of first-degree murder, aggravated manslaughter of a child and aggravated child abuse, butshe was found guilty of four misdemeanor counts of providing false information to law enforcement.Dr. Sam Sheppard was accused of killing his wife, Marilyn Sheppard, on July 4, 1954.According to Cleveland Historical, the family hosted a Fourth of July party. After the party, Sam Sheppard decided to go on a walk alone along a Lake Erie beach in Bay Village, Ohio.GET REAL-TIME UPDATES DIRECTLY ON THE TRUE CRIME HUBWhen he returned, Sam Sheppard discovered his wife's body "chopped up" on their bed.Bay Village police arrested him on a murder charge on July 30, 1954. He was found guilty at trial but maintained that a bushy-haired man was the individual who killed his wife. Sam Sheppard said he chased the man while he was fleeing their home.His conviction was overturned in 1966.Jeffrey MacDonald was accused of murdering his pregnant wife and two daughters on Feb. 17, 1970, according to the News & Observer.Colette Stevenson MacDonald, 26, along with the couple's two daughters, Kimberley, 6, and Kristin, 2, were stabbed and beaten to death at their home located on the Fort Bragg Army base in North Carolina. Jeffrey MacDonald had several stab wounds.MacDonald allegedly told Army investigators at the time that his family was killed by a group of hippies, which included a woman in a floppy hat. The woman, according to MacDonald, chanted, "Acid is groovy, kill the pigs."MacDonald was indicted on three counts of murder by a federal grand jury in January 1975, but the trial didn't start until 1979. He was found guilty of first-degree murder for his wife's death and two second-degree murders for the deaths of his daughters. He was sentenced to three terms of life in prison.The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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    2025-05-23 08:59:03 ·
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    Orleans Parish sheriff boasted about jail security days before 10 inmates escaped
    Orleans Parish Sheriff Susan Hutson sent a campaign fundraising email highlighting security at the Orleans Justice Center three days before 10 inmates escaped from the facility, prompting criticism from a lawmaker who wants her to resign.State and federal law enforcement officials have captured five of the 10 inmates who escaped from the Orleans Justice Center on May 16. Hutson took accountability for the jailbreak during a New Orleans City Council meeting on Tuesday."It is deeply troubling to me as your sheriff, and I know it is equally troubling to you and the public that we are sworn to protect. As your sheriff, I take full accountability for this failure, and it is my responsibility to make sure it is addressed with urgency and transparency," she told the council.Three days before 10 inmates escaped from the Orleans Justice Center, Hutson sent a campaign fundraising email that boasted about security improvements at the jail.DEMOCRATIC LAWMAKERS DEMAND LOUISIANA SHERIFF RESIGN AFTER 10 INMATES ESCAPE JAIL"Since I became Sheriff, weve worked hard to make the Orleans Justice Center safer for everyone," Hutson wrote. "Preventative maintenance is a priority, from taking out things that could be used as weapons to making sure the air conditioning and bathrooms work as they should."In a separate YouTube video included in the email, Hutson said there have been improvements to the Orleans Justice Center since she took over as sheriff."As we have had a population that is 50% greater than when I got into office, it has taxed all of our systems from air conditioning to plumbing to electric. And we've got to maintain that. And it was not maintained before I got here. So we now have regular preventative maintenance, which you know is much cheaper than actually having to replace a whole system such as an air conditioning system," Hutson said."We are trying to be a well-run organization as well, put our plans in place, we assessed, put our plan in place, and now we're carrying that forward," Hutson said.Democrat Louisiana House Rep. Aimee Adatto Freeman, who represents a portion of New Orleans, told Fox News Digital she thinks the campaign email was ironic given it was sent just before 10 inmates escaped.LOUISIANA ATTORNEY GENERAL EXPECTS MORE ARRESTS IN NEW ORLEANS JAIL ESCAPE INVESTIGATION"My reaction was how ironic that you would send this out, and you seem to be asking for help, but yet you aren't presenting any I didn't see any solutions being presented. And that is another reason why I don't think she should be sheriff," Freeman said. "But you are the sheriff, the buck stops with you. I mean, I appreciate the sheriff apologized yesterday and took accountability at the City Council meeting, but it took her five, four or five days to actually come to that conclusion. That's unacceptable."Freeman said she called on Hutson to resign because of her alleged leadership failures."She is a failure of leadership, and her inadequacy in keeping the inmates locked up in prison is a failure at multiple levels. Her one job is to keep those inmates safely in custody and away from the general public and the citizens of our city and our state."Hutson, who's up for re-election in the fall, temporarily suspended her campaign on Tuesday night but didn't drop out.PAUL MAURO: NEW ORLEANS JAILBREAK EXPOSES FLAT OUT FAILURES OF FEDERAL OVERSIGHTFreeman's colleague, Rep. Jason Hughes, also called on Hutson to resign.Since 2013, the Orleans Justice Center has operated under a federal consent decree. Every six months, federal jail monitors question deputies at the jail, according to FOX 8.Every time, they wrote reports finding jailers "incapable of describing what an acceptable security check would be like."Kendell Myles, Robert Moody, Gary Price, Dkenan Dennis and Corey Boyd have been recaptured by law enforcement, leaving five inmates at large.Boyd, the most recent inmate to be recaptured, was in jail on charges of second-degree murder, attempted second-degree murder, aggravated battery and threatening a public official.The following inmates are still at large:Fox News Digital reached out to Hutson for comment.
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