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The rising threat of synthetic opioids

The rising threat of synthetic opioids

The family of a woman who died in a drug overdose hopes her death will be a warning to others about the dangers of synthetic opioids.
Nitazenes are many times more powerful than fentanyl and are often laced into recreational drugs with deadly results. Norman Hermant reports.
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Scott Wolf breaks silence on divorce, slams estranged wife ‘disturbing, false' abuse claims
Scott Wolf breaks silence on divorce, slams estranged wife ‘disturbing, false' abuse claims

News.com.au

time35 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

Scott Wolf breaks silence on divorce, slams estranged wife ‘disturbing, false' abuse claims

Scott Wolf is accusing his estranged wife, Kelley Wolf, of conspiring to make 'disturbing, false' claims about him amid their messy divorce battle. The Party of Five star broke his silence on his split from the former Real World star, saying his ex conspired a plan to accuse him of 'psychological abuse, child abuse, child endangerment, stealing with passports.' While he previously chose to keep this 'difficult' time in his family's lives 'private,' he told People in a statement published on Saturday that he's now speaking up to protect 'the well being of (his) children.' 'I am now choosing to come forward and share that she has described to me her plans to 'make claims' about me, although she also admitted, 'I do not believe they're true,' in order to gain an advantage in what she sees as a 'battle' in court, and in the court of public opinion,' Wolf said. 'In order to protect my kids, I am providing the text messages she sent to me where she describes this plan, so there are no questions about her intentions, or the malicious intent behind her false allegations made and/or planned for the future.' The outlet went on to report that Kelley, 48, alleged in the messages that she 'was advised to make claims that are possible, even though I do not believe they're true nor would I ever say them to anyone'. 'When you accused me of all the things you put in the restraining order, you made me into a villain. The only way I can fight back is to produce claims that are either the same as yours or greater,' she continued. She also detailed that her aim was to 'create more urgency to get the kids back. Or at least get back joint custody'. Kelley ultimately shared her allegations against Wolf on a phone call with police on June 26, according to the outlet. 'Although her claims are completely baseless and incredibly dangerous, the worst part is that they are traumatic for our children,' the 57-year-old continued in his message. 'I hope that anyone who might speak publicly or report on such things, will consider this before spreading any further information from a clearly unreliable and completely compromised source.' He closed, asking for 'privacy and respect for our family' and thanked 'all those who have shown their love and support'. A representative for Kelley did not immediately respond to Page Six's request for comment. As some may recall, Kelley was shockingly detained and hospitalised after police were called to the Wolf family's Park City, Utah, home in June after a reported 'family fight'. An audio recording of the 911 call showed an unidentified woman claiming she was 'terrified' and 'needed help' after getting into an altercation with her brother-in-law and 16-year-old son. At the time, someone at the scene also mentioned an alleged 'past-occurred assault' choking incident that purportedly took place at their home in March. The scene transpired shortly after Scott filed for divorce on June 10. After his filing, Kelley later made another bombshell claim on social media that she was 'held against her will' by her former friends while she was 'trying to file for divorce.' Later that month, Scott was granted sole custody of their three children — Jackson, 16, Miller, 12, and Lucy, 11 — and a temporary restraining order against his estranged wife which he later dropped after they reached a new temporary agreement detailing custody, finances and communication.

Bryan Kohberger's disturbing porn searches ahead of gruesome student murders revealed
Bryan Kohberger's disturbing porn searches ahead of gruesome student murders revealed

News.com.au

time11 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Bryan Kohberger's disturbing porn searches ahead of gruesome student murders revealed

Twisted murderer Bryan Kohberger made disturbing internet searches for women being raped and sexually assaulted while asleep, according to digital forensics experts who were due to testify at his trial. Kohberger's search history included terms like 'raped,' 'forced,' 'sleeping,' 'passed out' and 'voyeur,' according to Heather and Jared Barnhart, who were hired in 2023 to help investigate the psychopath who broke into an off-campus university house in the middle of the night and slaughtered four students, the New York Post reports. 'The easiest way to say it is that all of his terms were consistently around nonconsensual sex acts,' Jared Barnhart told The Daily Mail. Although Kohberger did not sexually assault any of the victims, the father of one of those killed, Kayla Goncalves, believes the killings were motivated by Kohberger's 'weird sexual fetishes.' Others have speculated that his sick plans were forced to change when he was unexpectedly confronted. Kohberger cowardly refused to reveal his plans or motives when he unexpectedly admitted the slayings. The Barnharts' forensics company, Cellebrite, was tasked with going through Kohberger's phone and laptop for any evidence connecting him to the murder of the four roommates knifed in their beds at their off-campus home in 2022. Kohberger had tried to wipe the search history from his devices — even running a data-erasing software on his laptop three days after the killings — but he was not thorough enough, the experts said. While there was no record of the search history, the terms were still found his autofill data on his search engines, Heather said. 'He did his best to leave zero digital footprint. He did not want a digital forensic trail available at all,' she told the Mail. The Cellebrite team also discovered a PDF file about another serial killer and rapist, Danny Rolling — also known as the 'Gainesville Ripper' — whose horrific murders targeting University of Florida students decades ago is eerily similar to Kohberger's heinous crimes. Rolling, who was the inspiration for the slasher classic 'Scream,' murdered five UF students — four women and one man — after breaking into their homes during a four-day spree in 1990. He raped all his female victims, and killed two of them with a Ka-Bar knife — the same weapon Kohberger used, prosecutors said. Rolling was executed in 2006. Kohberger's cell phone additionally contained creepy selfies of the killer posing shirtless and flexing his muscles, the experts said. He also snapped the chilling selfie of himself giving the thumbs-up just hours after he murdered the four University of Idaho students. Heather, Senior Director of Forensic Research at Cellebrite, and Jared Barnhart, Head of CX Strategy and Advocacy at the company, were prepared to testify as expert witnesses at Kohberger's trial before he pleaded guilty last month. Kohberger was sentenced to four life sentences for killing roommates Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin.

Eerie leaked videos of Bryan Kohberger with red hands inside cell being probed by maximum security prison
Eerie leaked videos of Bryan Kohberger with red hands inside cell being probed by maximum security prison

News.com.au

time16 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Eerie leaked videos of Bryan Kohberger with red hands inside cell being probed by maximum security prison

Chilling new leaked footage appears to show convicted University of Idaho killer Bryan Kohberger with red hands pacing his concrete cell – prompting the maximum security prison where he's locked up to probe the video's source. The eerie 10-second video, which mysteriously surfaced on social media on Thursday, captured the murderer in his convict garb walking toward a wire rack in his cell, carefully placing an item down, then staring at his crimson hands before awkwardly lingering in place for several seconds. Kohberger, 30, is rumoured to wash his hands dozens of times a day, likely leaving them red and irritated, the New York Post reports. In another short clip, the murderer, who was hit with four life sentences in the slayings of four University of Idaho students, is seen standing ominously in the middle of his lockup, slowly cleaning his shoes. While it remains unclear when the videos were taken, it appears that someone used their phone to record the surveillance footage on a TV screen inside the Idaho Maximum Security Institution in Kuna. 'We are aware of the videos circulating online and are investigating the matter,' the Idaho Department of Correction said in a statement Friday. 'While we cannot yet confirm the veracity of the videos, if verified, they are a clear violation of IDOC policy and the parties responsible will be held accountable, up to and including termination. We caution that some videos may be fake or AI-enhanced.' Officials said the prison issued multiple emails last month reminding staff of their expected professional conduct and proper policies, which prohibit the sharing of any security footage. 'Videotaping and publicly sharing security footage is prohibited conduct and we will be reviewing all legal options, including criminal prosecution,' correction officials said. 'The safety and security of our staff and incarcerated population remains our top priority.' Kohberger last month took a surprise plea deal just weeks before his highly anticipated trial was set to kick off. The deal saw him skirt the possibility of the death penalty, enraging some of the families of his victims and leaving loved ones with no explanation for why he committed the heinous murders. He copped to killing Xana Kernodle, Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen, and Ethan Chapin on Nov. 13, 2022, in their off-campus house in Moscow.

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