Surrounded by reporters in the Oval Office Wednesday, President Trump refused to talk the recording
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Trump refuses to answer questions about secret recording with Michael Cohen
Surrounded by reporters in the Oval Office Wednesday, President Trump refused to talk the recording
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Trump refuses to answer questions about secret recording with Michael Cohen
Surrounded by reporters in the Oval Office Wednesday, President Trump refused to talk the recording
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Trump refuses to answer questions about secret recording with Michael Cohen
SANTA ANA (CBSLA) – An attorney for the family of a man found guilty in the 1979 rape and murder of a Fountain Valley mother is arguing that the suspected Golden State Killer may in fact be responsible for the killing, and that his client, who has since passed away, was wrongly convicted. A photo of accused rapist and killer Joseph James DeAngelo is displayed during a news conference on April 25, 2018, in Sacramento, California. (Getty Images) William Lee Evins died in prison of a heart attack in 2013, but his family still wishes to clear his name, attorney Annee Della Donna said. Donna believes the March 7, 1979, murder of 28-year-old Joan Virginia Anderson, a mother of three, has eerie similarities to the M.O. of the Golden State Killer, Joseph DeAngelo, who was arrested in April and is jailed in Sacramento, awaiting trial and is facing 12 murder charges in Sacramento, Santa Barbara, Orange and Ventura counties. “The facts are just unbelievably similar” to the Golden State Killer’s M.O.,” Donna said. “It’s striking how similar they are to every other murder and rape he did.” DeAngelo is also a suspect in more than 50 rapes and more than 100 burglaries across the state dating back to 1974. In Orange County, DeAngelo is charged with the 1980 killings of Keith and Patrice Harrington in Dana Point, the 1981 killing of Manuela Witthuhn in Irvine, and the 1986 killing of Janelle Cruz in Irvine. The District Attorney’s Office has agreed to review Evins’ case and check DeAngelo’s DNA to see if he is connected to Anderson’s murder, Donna said. According to the Los Angeles Times, Evins, a contractor, was working on an addition to the Anderson home at the time of Joan’s murder. He was not arrested until 17 months later, in Texas, when an acquaintance told investigators that Evins had confessed to the murder, the Times reports. “It was a perfect setup to blame one of the contractors,” Donna claims. That acquaintance, Randy Wanner, was hypnotized by police during a preliminary hearing to help him recall details, the Times reports. Evins’ attorneys appealed, and the state Supreme Court ruled in 1984 that the hypnotism was improper evidence. “He was going to be released, he had his bags packed to go home to his wife and two children and suddenly a jail informant was in his cell,” Donna said. That prolific snitch, James Dean Cochrum, proved controversial as well as he had also testified in four other cases. Cochrum testified Evins confessed to him, so Evins was ordered to stand trial. At this point, Evins had spent five years in a jail awaiting trial. However, he took a plea deal, pleading guilty to second-degree murder, and was sentenced to 15 years to life in prison. His remained in prison until his death in 2013, with every parole bid being denied. (©2018 CBS Local Media, a division of CBS Radio Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Wire services contributed to this report.)
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Family Of Man Convicted In OC Murder Believes Golden State Killer Likely Responsible
LOS ANGELES (CBSLA) – A Trader Joe’s store assistant manager was killed by gunfire from Los Angeles police officers during a chase and shootout with a suspect in Silver Lake Saturday. An undated photo of Melyda Corado. (Credit: family photo) LAPD Chief Michel Moore told reporters at a news conference Tuesday that investigators have determined that one of two officers accidentally shot 27-year-old Melyda Corado while engaging in a shootout with the suspect, 28-year-old Gene Evin Atkins. “I’m sorry to report that we’ve now determined through our forensic investigation, that one of the officers’ rounds struck Ms. Corado as she was exiting the market and was in close proximity to Atkins,” Moore said. “Ms. Corado ran back into the store and collapsed behind the manager’s desk.” According to Moore, Atkins’ car had slammed into a light pole outside the entrance of the Trader Joe’s, located in the 2700 block of Hyperion Avenue. Upon hearing the crash, Corado was one of several people who ran to the front door of the store, at the same time that an armed Akins himself ran towards the entrance. “As he did so, witness statements and physical evidence from the scene support that Atkins fired multiple rounds from a semiautomatic pistol at the officers,” Moore said. “The two Los Angeles police officers who had been pursuing Atkins returned fire in defense of their lives and to protect Atkins from harming other individuals.” The officers fired eight rounds in returning Atkins’ gunshots, Moore said. The fatal bullet first hit Corado’s arm, then entered her body. The L.A. County District Attorney’s Office has filed more than 30 counts against Atkins, including one count of murder, six counts of attempted murder, 13 counts of false imprisonment of hostages and one count of felony evading. His bail is set at more than $9 million. The slaying is attributed to Atkins even though he did not fire the fatal bullet because he is held to have caused the entire situation. He will be arraigned Tuesday. Moore also released dash-cam video leading up to the chase. Watch it below. Before Saturday’s shootout at Trader Joe’s, Atkins allegedly shot and wounded his grandmother, who remains hospitalized, and 17-year-old girlfriend. He then led police on a chase, ending at the store. The Trader Joe’s store remained closed Monday, while a memorial of signs and flowers in memory of Corado continued to grow outside the building. A GoFundMe page set up to help cover her funeral expenses had raised nearly $25,000 as of midday Monday. Although Atkins was booked on suspicion of murder, he could potentially face charges including attempted murder for the roughly 1:30 p.m. Saturday shooting of his 76-year-old grandmother — Mary Elizabeth Madison — in the home they shared in the 1600 block of East 32nd Street. Authorities said the woman was shot as many as seven times and remains hospitalized in critical condition. Atkins’ cousin, Charleo Egland, said she didn’t know exactly what prompted the shooting, but said the grandmother did not want Atkins’ girlfriend in the home, and that likely led to a fight that ended with the shooting. Police said Atkins’ girlfriend was also wounded in the shooting, and Atkins forced her into his grandmother’s car then drove away with her in the passenger seat. Using a LoJack system, police traced the 2015 Toyota Camry sedan to the Hollywood area and gave chase, leading to Silver Lake, where Atkins crashed the Toyota into a power pole around 3:30 p.m. in front of the Trader Joe’s supermarket, Moore said. Atkins got out of the car and ran into the store, firing toward officers as he ran, police said. A short time later, a woman now known to be Corado was seen being dragged away from the store’s entryway and then unsuccessfully treated by paramedics trying to revive her. LAPD Chief Michel Moore said about 40 people were in the store when Atkins entered. As Atkins ran inside, employees and customers inside scrambled for cover. Some were seen escaping through a window toward the rear of the business and crawling down a ladder to safety. Police were also seen carrying several children away from the building. Atkins’ girlfriend, who had been in the passenger seat of the Toyota when it crashed in front of the store, was taken to a hospital in fair condition. Fire officials described her as a 20-year-old woman. Police amassed outside the store, and around 5:30 p.m., at least three people who appeared to be customers came out of the store with their hands in the air — apparently hostages who were released or shoppers who had managed to elude the gunman. Atkins surrendered at about 6:30 p.m. He was taken to a hospital to be treated for a gunshot wound to his left arm. Margaret Stewart of the Los Angeles Fire Department said paramedics treated 10 people at the scene of the Trader Joe’s, including Atkins, his girlfriend and Corado. A 12-year-old boy, a 41-year-old woman, a 70-year- old woman and an 81-year-old woman were hospitalized with minor injuries and listed in fair condition, Stewart said. Three other people were evaluated, but declined to be taken to hospitals. (©2018 CBS Local Media, a division of CBS Radio Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Wire services contributed to this report.)
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Chief: Silver Lake Trader Joe’s Manager Was Killed by LAPD Gunfire
The Seneca County Sheriff's Office says Abrams, who performed with the R&B group at the casino on Saturday night, shoved a fellow band member …
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WATCH: Color Me Badd singer shoves bandmate during del Lago concert
Gregory Hill’s family filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the St. Lucie County Sheriff’s Office and the jury awarded them with $4 — a dollar toward funeral expenses and one for each of Hill’s children.
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NFL player donates $11K to family of police shooting victim awarded $4 by jury
Buccaneers wide receiver Mike Evans donated $11,000 to the family of Gregory Hill, who was shot and killed by a St. Lucie County Sheriff’s Office deputy in 2014.
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WR Evans gives $11K to aid family of slain man
MORRISTOWN – The Morris County Sheriff's Office PBA 151 will hold its inaugural fundraiser in support of the men and women who serve the county …
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Morris County Sheriff's PBA hosts inaugural fundraiser features doo-wop, R&B and jazz
Environmental Protection Agency’s Office of Inspector General says “oversight lapses” occurred at the federal, state and local levels
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Watchdog report sheds new light on Flint water crisis
NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) – A former sales executive has filed a $5 million lawsuit against sports radio station WFAN and show host Joe Benigno over accusations of sexual harassment and a culture where “anything goes” among coworkers. Lauren Lockwood, who was a sports sales executive the station for five years until her termination in 2017, named Benigno and others working at WFAN in her claims of a hostile work environment, retaliation and discrimination. Benigno has been a WFAN personality for 24 years and currently co-host a midday show with Evan Roberts. Lockwood’s complaint points out she was one of five female account executives in a sales team of 25 men who made “sexual comments, outrageous sexual solicitations, unwelcome touching, innuendoes and hostility on a near daily basis.” The complaint also describes a work environment in which managers and sales team reps kept liquor in desk drawers, shared Jameson with pickleback shots and Tequila at the office and client events, and ran up company expenses for more booze up to $2,000 or even $4,000 per event with clients. At one meeting, she describes a coworker as appearing “drunk and smelling of alcohol” bragging about strip club meetings with clients and “paying for two prostitutes (cost $1,300)” which he later allegedly filed on an expense report. Lockwood also said the coworker was allowed “to go home early to sleep off the hangover.” In terms of her dealings with Benigno, Lockwood relates scenes of the veteran broadcaster giving her backrubs, whispering “in her ear about having ‘threesomes’ with him and his wife and prostitutes” and sexual encounters with other women working at WFAN. Lockwood said when she rejected Benigno’s advances, he complained to another WFAN employee he “can’t even give her a compliment.” Benigno was removed from the programming schedule on Thursday and reportedly refuted Lockwood’s claims through his agent. “Joe categorically denies the allegations,” said Mark Lepselter according to the New York Daily News . “My father once told me on any story, always consider the source and those who live in glass houses. We’re more than prepared to handle the situation if need be.” Lockwood’s complaint also describes a “Bro’s Club” atmosphere where men were given lower sales quota’s to make their goals, given more lucrative accounts, given better perks to sports events and generally treated less strictly in the workplace. In July 2017, a argument between a current and former WFAN employee in the station’s suite at the Barclay’s Center for the Mayweather/McGregor promotional tour – apparently comparing the two boxers – escalated into a fight in which Lockwood was caught in the melee. She was fired from WFAN the next day, the only employee to face such termination after the event. Lockwood also claims WFAN employees conitnued to interfere with her attempt to get a new job after leaving the station.
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WFAN, Joe Benigno Face Ex-Sales Exec’s $5 Million Lawsuit Over Sexual Harassment
BRIDGETON, N.J. (CBSNewYork/AP) — A 9-year-old girl was shot and killed by a stray bullet as she slept in her bed early Tuesday, and authorities urged witnesses to come forward to help find the killer. More From CBS Philly The shooting happened around 12:30 a.m. about a block away from the girl’s home in Bridgeton, a city of about 25,000, roughly 40 miles (64 kilometers) south of Philadelphia. The shots struck several vehicles, and a stray bullet went through the home’s rear wall and into a bedroom where it hit the girl, identified as Jennifer Trejo. credit: CBS Philly Relatives drove her to a hospital, where she was pronounced dead a short time later, police said. “We need the public’s help in general, but when an incident such as this happens to such a young and innocent victim we could really use the assistance in bringing those responsible to justice immediately,” said Bridgeton Police Chief Mike Gaimari. He said police have interviewed dozens of people and urged witnesses to come forward with any information about the shooting. “We hope this hits the heartstrings in the community that enough is enough,” he said. Community members gathered Tuesday afternoon outside the home where the girl lived, on a street a neighbor said was a neutral zone between two feuding gangs. Deacon Arnaldo Santos, of Bridgeton’s Parish of the Holy Cross, told the newspaper that he is helping the family plan funeral services for Jennifer. “The family needs privacy at this time, and right now we’re just working through everything with them,” Santos said. “It’s a very difficult time and the family is asking the community for love. That’s what they really need.” Along with prayer, police say the family needs the community to speak up and help find Jennifer’s killer. “People may be reluctant to get involved with one criminal shooting another, one suspect shooting another,” said Bridgeton Police Chief Michael Gaimari. “In this case, it could have been anybody else’s child that was struck.” A neighbor agrees that enough is enough as gang violence riddles the community. “I’m scared, I’m really scared. They shot me last year and everything for no reason. They just keep doing this. Now a little kid lost her life for nothing,” said Jalana Walker. The Cumberland County Prosecutor’s Office is now offering a $10,000 reward for information leading to the conviction of those responsible for Jennifer’s death. Anyone with information in regard to the shooting is asked to contact Bridgeton police at 856-451-0033. (© Copyright 2018 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
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Prosecutors: Girl, 9, Killed By Stray Bullet While Sleeping Inside New Jersey Home
DOYLESTOWN, Pa. (CBSNewYork/AP) — A 30-year-old woman with an addiction to painkillers has been accused of killing her toddler son with a lethal mix of drugs in her breast milk. Samantha Whitney Jones was charged Friday with criminal homicide in the April 2 death of her 11-month-old baby. More From CBS Philly An autopsy found the baby died from a combination of methadone, amphetamine and methamphetamine, the Bucks County District Attorney’s office said in a statement. According to an affidavit, Jones told police she’d been too tired to make the baby a bottle when he awoke crying at 3 a.m. and instead breastfed him. Samantha Whitney Jones. (credit: Bucks County District Attorney’s Office) A few hours later, the baby was pale and had bloody mucus coming from his nose, she told police. Jones’s mother began CPR at the instruction of a dispatcher after they called 911, the affidavit said. Police arrived at the home in New Britain, about 35 miles north of Philadelphia, to find the baby in cardiac arrest. He was taken by ambulance to a hospital, where he died. The affidavit stated that Jones said she primarily had been breastfeeding the baby, but switched to formula a few days before the baby’s death, saying the infant wasn’t getting enough milk. Jones told police that she had been prescribed methadone because of an addiction to painkillers, that she had taken it during her pregnancy, and that she was taking it at the time of the baby’s death, the affidavit said. A message seeking comment from her lawyer, Louis Busico, wasn’t returned Monday. Other parents have faced charges over drug-laced breast milk in recent years. In 2016, two former Arizona TV news reporters were sentenced to a year of probation and suspended 30-day jail terms after cocaine was found in their baby’s system. And in 2012, a California woman whose infant son died after ingesting methamphetamine-laced breast milk was sentenced to six years in prison. Jones is being held on $3 million cash bail. A preliminary hearing is scheduled for July 23, according to CBS Philly . (© Copyright 2018 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
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Pennsylvania Mom Accused Of Killing Infant Son With Drug-Laced Breast Milk
DOYLESTOWN, Pa. (CBSNewYork/AP) — A 30-year-old woman with an addiction to painkillers has been accused of killing her toddler son with a lethal mix of drugs in her breast milk. Samantha Whitney Jones was charged Friday with criminal homicide in the April 2 death of her 11-month-old baby. More From CBS Philly An autopsy found the baby died from a combination of methadone, amphetamine and methamphetamine, the Bucks County District Attorney’s office said in a statement. According to an affidavit, Jones told police she’d been too tired to make the baby a bottle when he awoke crying at 3 a.m. and instead breastfed him. Samantha Whitney Jones. (credit: Bucks County District Attorney’s Office) A few hours later, the baby was pale and had bloody mucus coming from his nose, she told police. Jones’s mother began CPR at the instruction of a dispatcher after they called 911, the affidavit said. Police arrived at the home in New Britain, about 35 miles north of Philadelphia, to find the baby in cardiac arrest. He was taken by ambulance to a hospital, where he died. The affidavit stated that Jones said she primarily had been breastfeeding the baby, but switched to formula a few days before the baby’s death, saying the infant wasn’t getting enough milk. Jones told police that she had been prescribed methadone because of an addiction to painkillers, that she had taken it during her pregnancy, and that she was taking it at the time of the baby’s death, the affidavit said. A message seeking comment from her lawyer, Louis Busico, wasn’t returned Monday. Other parents have faced charges over drug-laced breast milk in recent years. In 2016, two former Arizona TV news reporters were sentenced to a year of probation and suspended 30-day jail terms after cocaine was found in their baby’s system. And in 2012, a California woman whose infant son died after ingesting methamphetamine-laced breast milk was sentenced to six years in prison. Jones is being held on $3 million cash bail. A preliminary hearing is scheduled for July 23, according to CBS Philly . (© Copyright 2018 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)
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Pennsylvania Mom Accused Of Killing Infant Son With Drug-Laced Breast Milk
UNION CITY, N.J. (CBSNewYork) — A fourth child has died from injuries sustained in a fire last week in Union City, New Jersey. The Hudson County Prosecutor’s Office said Monday that the fourth child was a 13-year-old boy. The Prosecutor’s Office is now confirming that a fourth child, a 13-year-old boy, has died from injuries sustained in Friday morning’s fire on 25th Street in Union City. More information to follow. — ProsecutorSuarezHCPO (@HCPOProsecutor) July 16, 2018 The three other children who died were 5-year-old Mailyn Wood, her 2-year-old cousin Jason Gonzalez and his 7-year-old brother, Christian. The fire broke out Friday morning on 25th Street. The Red Cross was helping about 30 people who were displaced in the blaze. Eight firefighters were also hurt
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Fourth Child Dies From Union City Fire
The Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office said the incident happened around 10 a.m. Sunday
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Young girl hospitalized after dog attack in Florida