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White Male Karen Chases and Slaps Black Woman, Black Girl Trafficked For Skin and Eyes Still Missing, Smokey Robinson Accused of Sexual Assault, Marc Lamont Hill Blasts Piers Morgan and Other News From the Week

White Male Karen Chases and Slaps Black Woman, Black Girl Trafficked For Skin and Eyes Still Missing, Smokey Robinson Accused of Sexual Assault, Marc Lamont Hill Blasts Piers Morgan and Other News From the Week

Yahoo10-05-2025

Rodney Hinton Jr. appeared in court this week for a hearing on charges he faces in connection to the killing of a Cincinnati sheriff's deputy. Walking past a wall of over 50 scowling deputies who posted up in support of their fallen colleague, Hinton stuck his chin up, eyeing down every single officer. - Kalyn Womack Read More
In the latest incident of a white person appearing to attack a Black person minding their Black business, a Black woman says she was ambushed on her way to work by an old, male Karen. However, this wasn't the typical tantrum...the video shows a horrendous scene. - Kalyn Womack Read More
Authorities have spent over a year looking for a 6-year-old Black girl who went missing in South Africa. However, authorities recently identified the person who was behind her disappearance which turned this missing person's case into a straight up human trafficking investigation. The suspect in question is an even bigger plot twist to this story. - Kalyn Womack Read More
Adding to the list of powerful Black men who have been accused of sexual assault, news of a new lawsuit against music legend Smokey Robinson is shaking up everyone's Tuesday afternoon. In a new lawsuit, four women have accused the icon of a series of heinous acts. - Phenix S Halley Read More
Three of the five former Memphis police officers charged in the fatal beating Tyre Nichols faced trial this week on second-degree murder charges. After watching the horrifying footage we all did, of Nichols being beaten bloodied and mocked, the mostly white jury finally came back with a verdict... - Kalyn Womack Read More
The conversation around Shiloh Hendrix, the playground Karen who was filmed calling a 5-year-old Black child the N-word is getting louder, as Hendrix is going viral and raising money to protect herself from ongoing threats. But the conversation became too much for activist and author Marc Lamont Hill during a recent appearance on 'Piers Morgan Uncensored.' - Angela Johnson Read More
As the world continues to celebrate Pope Leo XIV as the new leader of the Catholic Church, there's one important thing folks should know about him. On Thursday (May 8), Leo was named the first American-born pope in history. But his lineage has deeper ties to the intricate fabric of the Black American South. - Phenix S Halley Read More
A 23-year-old British nursing student was just days away from graduation when her life was brutally taken. Police suspect her roommate is behind her killing. The motive? A typical roommate disagreement that went way way left. - Kalyn Womack Read More
About ten New York state correctional officers implicated in the death of Robert Brooks, a Black inmate who was savagely beaten in custody, were charged with murder after the incident. One officer, however, faced the court to give his decision on whether he wanted to fight to prove his innocence or not. The plea he entered was NOT what we expected. - Kalyn Womack Read More
A Cincinnati courtroom was flooded with members of the county sheriff's office as they all faced the man who is accused of killing one of their colleagues. However, authorities claim there's a connection the suspect has with the fallen officer that makes the killing seem more like a revenge plot. - Kalyn Womack Read More
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Grant Hardin, Arkansas escapee known as "Devil in the Ozarks," recaptured near prison after 2-week manhunt
Grant Hardin, Arkansas escapee known as "Devil in the Ozarks," recaptured near prison after 2-week manhunt

CBS News

time26 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Grant Hardin, Arkansas escapee known as "Devil in the Ozarks," recaptured near prison after 2-week manhunt

Escaped former police chief known as the "Devil in the Ozarks" caught "Devil in the Ozarks" caught after jailbreak "Devil in the Ozarks" caught after jailbreak A former police chief known as the "Devil in the Ozarks" was recaptured Friday, nearly two weeks after his escape from an Arkansas prison, where he was serving decadeslong sentences for murder and rape, the Izard County Sheriff's Office said. Grant Hardin escaped on May 25 from the Calico Rock prison by donning an outfit designed to look like a law enforcement uniform, officials have said. In a statement Friday, Sheriff Brandon Long said Hardin was apprehended at about 3:45 p.m. "just a short distance" from the prison. Arkansas law enforcement officers and the U.S. Border Patrol located Hardin near Moccasin Creek in Izard County, roughly a mile and a half west of the prison's North Central Unit, the Arkansas Department of Corrections said. Tracking dogs were able to pick up a scent in the area. Grant Hardin, a former police chief known as the "Devil in the Ozarks," was recaptured Friday, June 6, 2025. Arkansas Department of Corrections "While many details will remain under investigation, there is no longer an active threat to public safety," Long said. Law enforcement officials said they confirmed his identity by fingerprint analysis before notifying the public. Grant Hardin is pictured after his capture on Friday, June 6. 2025. Arkansas Department of Corrections Hardin had been held at the prison since 2017 after pleading guilty to first-degree murder for fatally shooting 59-year-old James Appleton — a man he allegedly had multiple disputes with, according to the HBO documentary "Devil in the Ozarks." The fatal shooting happened following Hardin's brief time as the police chief of the small town of Gateway, Arkansas. He was sentenced to 30 years in prison for the murder. Hardin's DNA was then matched to the 1997 rape of a teacher at an elementary school in northwestern Arkansas. He pleaded guilty to two counts of rape and was sentenced to 25 years in prison for each count, for a total sentence of 50 years.

Mother sensed 'strong danger' from son-in-law weeks before daughter's murder during camping trip
Mother sensed 'strong danger' from son-in-law weeks before daughter's murder during camping trip

Fox News

time40 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Mother sensed 'strong danger' from son-in-law weeks before daughter's murder during camping trip

Joseph Ferlazzo had abruptly returned without his wife from what was supposed to be a Vermont camping trip to mark their first wedding anniversary. The 41-year-old told his in-laws that he had gotten into an argument with his spouse, Emily Schwarz Ferlazzo, 22, and that she had headed back home to New Hampshire. Emily's mother and stepfather weren't buying it. "When he handed me her license, that was very strange," her mother, Adrienne Bass, told Fox News Digital. "I interpreted his shivering and shaking as if he'd been cold because he was riding his motorcycle from Vermont to New Hampshire. It was a three-hour drive in the middle of October. But thinking back on it now, I think he was probably having anxiety lying to our faces. . . . And when he left, his whole demeanor was threatening and cold. The feeling I got was, 'Don't question him.'" The case is being explored on Investigation Discovery's (ID) true crime series, "Fatal Destination," which is executive-produced and narrated by Jessica Biel. It profiles stories where "idyllic getaways unravel into haunting mysteries." It features interviews with friends, family, locals and law enforcement, among others. In the episode titled "Where's Emily?" Bass said "We were all afraid of him," referring to Ferlazzo. She told Fox News Digital that the family suspected Ferlazzo had been abusing his wife behind closed doors. "Emily would come to us asking for help, and then she'd go back to him, and it would backfire and cause more problems," said Bass. ". . . The weekend before they left, I had feelings, senses that there was something wrong with him. I didn't like their relationship, or how it was going. I felt, as a mom, my daughter was not safe." "The weekend before they went away, we were sitting at a restaurant having lunch with them to celebrate their anniversary," Bass added. "I can't describe his behaviors or his mannerisms, but I froze. There was a very strong, overwhelming feeling that my life was in danger from him. I tried to figure out how to talk to her about it before they left. But I wasn't ever able to come up with a way that I could talk to my daughter, who's loyal to her husband, and say, 'Hey, I think he's dangerous.'" "I wasn't correct that it was my life that was in danger – it was my daughter's," Bass said. "But I could sense a strong danger from him." Ferlazzo, a tattoo artist, married Emily, a nurse, during the pandemic. Bass admitted that she had been perplexed that the couple had said, "I do." "Part of the reason we were surprised that they got married was because they seemed to be going back and forth… She had difficulty talking to him about when they were going to get married," Bass said. "And then on New Year's Eve, they had a physical altercation," Bass said. "She reached out to me asking for support. He would accuse her of cheating, and she would feel exasperated and confused about how to help him believe her." The family said that after the couple married, they witnessed bruising and "physical injuries" on Emily's body. According to the episode, Emily blamed her injuries on "rough sex." "It put us in an awkward situation," David Bass, Emily's stepfather, told Fox News Digital. "If we tried to talk to her about getting help or getting out, she would immediately tell him everything that was said. . . . We had to sort of not talk to her about things out of fear of making things worse. We had to be careful about what we said [with] very coded language." "She didn't want to talk about the bruising," Adrienne Bass reflected. "I think [months before their trip], Emily filled out paperwork for a divorce. He ended up doing it at the same time. . . . I don't know all the details, but there were moments where things happened that I feel she wasn't even really sure what happened." Things looked hopeful on Oct. 15, 2021. That day, the couple drove on a converted bus that was also their home, where they lived on the parents' property, Rolling Stone reported. According to the outlet, they traveled a little more than two hours to Bolton, Vermont, a rural town in the picturesque western foothills of the Green Mountains, 30 miles east of Burlington and the shores of Lake Champlain. Nearby, Ferlazzo's sister and her boyfriend had rented an Airbnb. Emily sent videos of what appeared to be a scenic drive to her family. But on Oct. 18, Ferlazzo had returned home without Emily. According to Ferlazzo, he restrained her when she tried to leave during their argument, but she kicked him in the groin. He went on to tell Emily's parents that after the fight, he had left to go to the store. That's when Emily vanished, he insisted. Adrienne and David Bass reported Emily missing. They told police there was a history of domestic violence and Emily had been seen with scratches and bruises. GET REAL-TIME UPDATES DIRECTLY ON THE TRUE CRIME HUB Adrienne Bass was hopeful that her daughter had managed to finally escape her tumultuous marriage without telling anyone. That hope quickly faded. "As soon as he left, I realized there were only three things that could have happened," said Bass. "One, she'd been abducted. Another, she lost her memory for some bizarre reason. Or, she's no longer alive." "I finally let it out," she said. "I cried and just let the moment hit me." Prosecutor Sarah George later said that because Gabby Petito's investigation had just happened, police were quicker to investigate Ferlazzo, reported. Like Emily, Petito's case started as a search for a missing person after her fiancé, Brian Laundrie, returned from a road trip in a converted van without her. A police video showing Petito crying after a physical altercation with Laundrie raised questions about domestic violence. Petito, 22, was found strangled to death near a Wyoming campground site weeks later. Laundrie was a person of interest. After he went missing for over a month, his remains were found in a Florida park that October. With the police closing in, Ferlazzo confessed. Ferlazzo told investigators he and his wife had been arguing inside their camper, and it turned into a physical altercation. A few minutes later, he took out a handgun and shot her twice in the head, according to the affidavit. The following morning, Ferlazzo said he took the camper from Bolton to a friend's house in St. Albans. About 12 to 15 hours after the shooting, he dismembered Emily and placed her remains in garbage bags, which stayed in the camper and were found by police. The weapons believed to have been used in the killing were also retrieved by investigators. Fighting back tears, Adrienne Bass said it was "excruciating and nauseating" listening to the horrifying details in court. A jury convicted Ferlazzo of first-degree murder in December, reported. In April, a judge sentenced him to 42.5 years to life in prison. Emily's family has been trying to heal. They take comfort in listening to recordings of Emily singing. Music was her true love. "Emily would want to be known as a singer," said David Bass. "She loved singing. She loved performing. Her voice is the most important thing. She would be incredibly upset at what had happened to her and Gabby Petito." Today, Adrienne Bass hopes that in sharing her daughter's story, victims will be compelled to seek help before it's too late. "Try to listen to your gut," she said. "If they don't feel it's safe to get out, wait until they find the time to try to find someone that they can trust to confide in. It doesn't matter how old you are. . . . Anyone could be a victim of domestic violence. It doesn't mean something is wrong with them as a person." "If you're being abused in your relationship, call a crisis center, make a plan, talk to an expert," urged David Bass. "Help is out there. You're not alone."

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