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A loving father of two and a dining coordinator dedicated to service were killed in the Florida State University shooting

A loving father of two and a dining coordinator dedicated to service were killed in the Florida State University shooting

CNN18-04-2025

As reports of a mass shooting at Florida State University Thursday emerged, Ricardo Morales chronicled his journey to find answers about his brother's whereabouts.
'My Brother works on campus at FSU. Waiting on a call back,' Ricardo Morales wrote Thursday on X, followed by a series of posts about his brother.
Nearly nine hours later, Morales learned his beloved brother, Robert Morales – a Florida State University employee – was one of two men killed in Thursday's shooting at the university in Tallahassee.
'Today we lost my younger Brother,' Ricardo Morales wrote in a post accompanied by family photos. 'He loved his job at FSU and his beautiful Wife and Daughter. I'm glad you were in my Life.'
Tiru Chabba, a 45-year-old father of two, was identified as the other victim by attorneys representing his family. Chabba, a resident of Greenville, South Carolina, was an employee at Aramark, a Philadelphia-based food service and facilities management company, the attorneys said.
'Tiru Chabba's family is going through the unimaginable now,' attorney Bakari Sellers said in a statement.
Here's what we know about the two victims who lost their lives and how they will be remembered by loved ones and their communities:
Robert Morales, a Florida State graduate, was a dining coordinator at the university for almost a decade, according to his LinkedIn profile.
Kyle Clark, the university's senior vice president, said Morales was a dedicated employee who would often surprise administrators and staff with homemade Cuban meals and pastries, 'reminding us that food is a love language, and food unites us all.'
'He didn't just do the job. He lived the job. He was dedicated to the mission of service and care for the Florida State University community,' Clark said at a vigil honoring the victims Friday. 'He made our dining experience feel like home for every student, especially those from South Florida.'
Clark highlighted Morales' caring nature, including one instance where Morales worked directly worked with chefs to ensure a student with severe allergies was provided safe and nourishing meals.
He previously served as an assistant football coach at Leon High School, just a mile down the road from the Florida State campus.
'His commitment to the game and to shaping the lives of his players extended far beyond the field,' the high school's athletic department wrote in a statement. 'He was a trusted coach, a respected colleague, and a cherished friend to many.'
Chabba's wife and two children are grieving his immense loss, though it was supposed to be a celebratory time for the family as Easter approaches.
'Instead of hiding Easter eggs and visiting with friends and family, they're living a nightmare where this loving father and devoted husband was stolen from them in an act of senseless and preventable violence,' Sellers said.
Aramark said it is 'heartbroken' Chabba was killed in a 'senseless act of violence.'
'We are absolutely shaken by the news and our deepest sympathies are with the family and our entire Aramark community,' the company said in a statement.
On Friday, Chabba's attorneys said they would work to 'ensure that all those who bear responsibility for this senseless act of violence are held to account.'
'We ask you to keep his family in your thoughts and prayers as we fight to ensure they see justice that honors the memories of Mr. Chabba and all the victims of Thursday's shooting,' Sellers said.
CNN's Devon Sayers, David Williams, Julianna Bragg, Alaa Elassar, Christina Zdanowicz and Sarah Dewberry contributed to this report.

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Saudi Arabia executes a journalist after 7 years behind bars. Activists say it was over his tweets.
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Saudi Arabia executes a journalist after 7 years behind bars. Activists say it was over his tweets.

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Saudi Arabia executes a journalist after 7 years behind bars

time8 hours ago

Saudi Arabia executes a journalist after 7 years behind bars

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21 Extremely Dark Hometown True Crime Stories
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21 Extremely Dark Hometown True Crime Stories

Do you love all things weird, dark, and creepy? Subscribe to the That Got Dark newsletter to get your weekly dopamine fix of the macabre! It's a scary good time you won't want to miss. We recently asked members of the BuzzFeed Community to tell us about the wildest true crime story from their hometown. Here are their shocking responses: "My dad's from Midwest City, Oklahoma. He went to school one day a couple blocks away from the Oklahoma City bombing. Said he felt the ground shake and watched a mushroom cloud rise up. Scary." —lovelybubble855What happened: The Oklahoma City bombing, one of the deadliest acts of domestic terrorism in U.S. history, occurred on April 19, 1995. The perpetrator, Timothy McVeigh, detonated a truck bomb outside the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building, killing 168 people, including 19 children who were in a daycare center in the building, and injuring hundreds more. McVeigh died by lethal injection on June 11, 2001. "The murder of Craig Rideout near Rochester, New York. He lived in one of our upper-class suburbs. His ex-wife, Laura, was behind it over custody disputes. She had been planning to leave the state with her boyfriend and children. She even got their eldest to play a hand in it; they had dumped evidence just a few miles from my house in a place called Devil's Bathtub. The whole thing was wild and was featured on a few true crime shows. There is still a huge debate about if the ex-best friend was involved, even though he was found not guilty." —shilderbrandt96What happened: Craig Rideout, who was from Penfield, New York, was murdered in 2016. His body was found with his face severely disfigured from acid and wrapped in a tarp in the woods of Yates County. The case drew significant media attention due to the involvement of his estranged wife, Laura Rideout, and their two sons, Colin and Alex Rideout. 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Bar-Jonah was also considered a chief suspect in the 1996 disappearance of 10-year-old Great Falls resident Zachary Ramsay. However, after Zachary's mother was convinced by Bar-Jonah's defense team to say she believed her son was alive, murder and kidnapping charges against him were dropped. Bar-Jonah died in prison from a blood clot in 2008. "We lived in Gilmer, Texas (a small town in Northeast Texas), and the unsolved mystery there was about a 17-year-old girl named Kelly Dae Wilson. She worked at a movie store downtown and disappeared after work one night. Nobody's heard from her or seen her since! There were rumors she was buried in the concrete that had been poured for the new Pizza Hut but I believe that got debunked — not sure." —sassylegend40What happened: Kelly Dae Wilson vanished on January 5, 1992, after leaving her workplace to make a bank deposit. Her car was found at the store with a flat tire, and personal belongings inside, but her keys were missing. Despite numerous leads and rumors — including allegations of cult involvement — the case remains unsolved more than three decades later. "I went to high school in Orinda, California. The Lifetime movie Death of a Cheerleader is based on a girl who killed a cheerleader due to jealousy at our school. Our town has almost zero crime, so this was a huge incident. It also captures perfectly the pressure our community puts on the kids to be perfect. Like 4.0+ GPA, extra activities, and sports stars. All while looking like Barbie and Ken and having rich parents." —grouchyvolcano1485What happened: Kirsten Costas was a 15-year-old high school cheerleader from Orinda, California, who was fatally stabbed by her classmate Bernadette Protti on June 23, 1984. Protti, apparently motivated by jealousy and a desire to be popular, lured Costas with a fake invitation to a school event, then stabbed her with a butcher knife. Costas managed to seek help before succumbing to her injuries. 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They knew he was a man of a certain age, so they caught him by DNA testing all the men that fit that description, but he got a friend to do the test for him. Later, he was caught and DNA matched, the first case in the world where that happened. It was a small village so everyone knew someone who knew either Pitchfork himself or one of the victims. All my mate's dads were tested (my dad wasn't because he could prove he was away working at the time), and 4 or 5 years later, we used to walk to school past where the 2nd victim was found, which was down a country lane through wood and fields. There was still a painted cross on a tree where the police marked the location." —Anonymous, 42, LondonWhat happened: Colin Pitchfork was the first person to be convicted of rape and murder using DNA profiling. He killed two 15-year-old girls in Leicestershire in the 1980s. In 1988, he was sentenced to life in prison, but he was released on parole in 2021. 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She was a white, pretty, young mom of five kids who went missing in a wealthy Connecticut town where 'nothing bad ever happens.' Her ex-husband (in the middle of a divorce) was quickly found to be the main suspect after her car was found abandoned and blood was found in her kitchen and garage. He was arrested, along with his girlfriend, as they continued to build the case against him. On his day to appear in court, he was found dead in his car having died by suicide. Jennifer's body was never found. I still think about all the FBI agents I saw and the helicopters flying over our local park during the search for her. Our town has never seen anything like it. It's a very sad story." —Anonymous, 27, New Canaan CTWhat happened: Jennifer Dulos, a mother of five, disappeared on May 24, 2019, amid a contentious divorce and custody battle with her estranged husband, Fotis Dulos. Authorities believe Fotis ambushed Jennifer at her home, fatally attacked her, and disposed of her body with the assistance of his girlfriend, Michelle Troconis. Despite extensive investigations, Jennifer's body was never found. Fotis was charged with murder but died by suicide in January 2020 before standing trial. In March 2024, Michelle Troconis was convicted of all charges, including conspiracy to commit murder and evidence tampering, and was sentenced to 14.5 years in prison. In October 2023, a judge declared Jennifer legally dead. "Not in my town, but the next town over in Crookston, Minnesota. I remember the Dru Sjodin case when she first went missing. It was on the news for the longest time, and a lot of people were looking for her. I remember seeing the news when they found her body. The subsequent arrest and trial of the man who did it was big news for a long time, as was his being sentenced to death. I think it was nearly twelve or thirteen years ago that his death sentence was overturned, and a few years ago, he was sentenced to life without parole." —Anonymous, 30, Northern MinnesotaWhat happened: Dru Sjodin, a 22-year-old University of North Dakota student, was abducted on November 22, 2003, from a Grand Forks mall parking lot by convicted sex offender Alfonso Rodriguez Jr. Rodriguez, who had been released from prison earlier that year. He took Sjodin across state lines to Minnesota, where he murdered her and disposed of her body near Crookston. Her remains were discovered in April 2004. Rodriguez was convicted in 2006 and initially sentenced to death. However, in 2021, his death sentence was overturned, and in 2023, federal prosecutors announced they would no longer seek the death penalty. Rodriguez was subsequently sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole. "I'm from Mason City, Iowa, and in '95, when I was 7, one of our news anchors, Jodi Huisentruit, went missing in the early morning and had never been found." —AnonymousWhat happened: Huisentruit was a news anchor in Mason City, Iowa, who disappeared on June 27, 1995, on the way to work. Apparently, there were signs of a struggle outside of her apartment, so it was presumed she was abducted. Thousands of tips and interviews were conducted. However, Huisentruit was never found and was declared legally dead in 2001. "I'm from Atlanta, Texas, which is a tiny town of about 5 to 6,000 people. In 1992 Gerri Butts and her two daughters, Jessica (11) and MacKenzie (3) were found brutally murdered in their mobile home. Gerri's boyfriend, Kevin Hailey, was immediately suspected, and all evidence pointed to him, but being the son of a deputy sheriff, the DA didn't bring charges. This TOTALLY divided the town as ppl took sides with multiple incidents happening among ppl. It was an absolute mess for years. Both families were on the Maury Povich show. Hailey eventually pleaded guilty to killing Gerri in 2009 but wasn't required to admit responsibility for Jessica and MacKenzie's deaths in the plea while he was already serving 87 years for an unrelated murder. " —Anonymous, 42 Atlanta, TXWhat happened: In 1992, investigators found Gerri and Jessica strangled — Jessica also having been sexually assaulted — and Mackenzie drowned in the bathtub. The case had gone unsolved for 15 years when DA Clint Allen reactivated it shortly after he took office. Using forensic technology not available at the time of the murders, Allen got indictments and DNA evidence linked Hailey to the crime. Hailey is currently serving an 87-year prison sentence for attempted murder for stabbing a man in 2004. "I'm from South Salem, New York where Robert Durst lived with his first wife. She disappeared and was almost certainly murdered by him. This happened several years before I was born, but people talked about it whenever he appeared in the news. His house was a short walk from mine. I remember one time seeing police divers in Truesdale Lake. My mom asked them what they were looking for, and they said something about looking for stolen goods stashed in the lake. The news later reported the divers were actually looking for the missing wife's remains." —AnonymousWhat happened: Robert Durst was a real estate heir, convicted murderer, and subject of the HBO docuseries The Jinx. Before the series, Durst had been a suspect in the disappearance of his wife Kathleen McCormack, the murder of his friend Susan Berman, and the killing of his neighbor Morris Black. All this is covered in the docuseries and came to a head when Durst, unaware he was still wearing a mic, famously "confessed" to the murders. He was later convicted of Berman's murder and died in prison in 2022 while serving a life sentence. "In Fairview, Alberta, Canada, Dr. Douglas Snider, a family physician, was killed by his colleague, Dr. Abraham Cooper, in 1999. Cooper was convicted of manslaughter in 2000. Snider's body was never found. The two doctors had been involved in a long-standing conflict. The town still talks about it today! Some believe he buried his body under the concrete of a new build in the area at the time." —Anonymous, 35 Grande Prairie, AlbertaWhat happened: In 1999, before Dr. Douglas Snider's disappearance, he and Dr. Abraham Cooper were involved in a long-standing professional dispute. Apparently, Cooper believed that Snider was part of a conspiracy to undermine his medical practice. Dr. Snider went missing for several days before police found his blood on Cooper's running shoes, in the trunk of his car, and in his office. In 2000, Cooper was convicted of manslaughter in connection with Snider's death. After serving an 88-month sentence, he was released from prison in February 2008. To this day, Snider's body has never been found. "Probably the most well-known one from my hometown: John Wayne Gacy…unbelievable." —Anonymous, 35 ChicagoWhat happened: John Wayne Gacy, known as the Killer Clown — a moniker given because of his public appearances as a clown before the discovery of his crimes — was a serial killer active in the Chicago area in the 1970s, with at least 33 victims. He would rape and torture his victims — young men and boys — before killing them either by asphyxiation or strangulation. Gacy was executed by lethal injection in May 1994. Finally, "There are five unsolved murders in Bardstown, Kentucky. All of them are connected somehow except for two. A cop was assassinated on his way home, then a woman disappeared out of thin air, and her father was assassinated while searching for her! The last two murders were a mother-daughter duo who were tortured and killed in their own home. Yeah it's all really messed up." —Anonymous, 20 Bardstown, KYWhat happened: Since 2013, there have been a series of mysterious and tragic deaths that have haunted the small town of Bardstown. The cases, some believed to be potentially connected, have drawn significant media attention and public speculation due to their violent nature and lack of are the key cases:Officer Jason Ellis (Killed May 25, 2013). Ellis was ambushed and shot multiple times with a shotgun while clearing debris from an off-ramp on the Bluegrass Parkway after his shift. The attack appeared premeditated. Kathy and Samantha Netherland (Killed April 21, 2014) — The two were found brutally murdered in their home. Kathy had been shot, and Samantha had been beaten and stabbed. There was no clear motive, and the killings shocked the Rogers (Disappeared July 3, 2015) — Crystal was last seen by her boyfriend, Brooks Houck, the father of one of her children. Her car was later found on the Bluegrass Parkway with a flat tire and her keys, phone, and purse inside. In 2023, Houck was indicted for her murder. Investigators believe Crystal is dead, although her body has never been Ballard (Killed November 19, 2016) — He was the father of Crystal Rogers and he was shot and killed while preparing for a hunting trip with his grandson. He had been actively investigating his daughter's disappearance. Do you have a wild/dark/horrifying true crime story from your hometown? Tell us about in the comments or via the anonymous form below: Love all things weird, dark, and creepy? Subscribe to the That Got Dark newsletter to get your weekly dopamine fix of the macabre! It's a scary good time you won't want to miss.

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