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Tennessee quadruple murder victims 'trusted' suspect Austin Drummond, relative says

Tennessee quadruple murder victims 'trusted' suspect Austin Drummond, relative says

Fox Newsa day ago
Fox News' Madison Scarpino provides details on the charges facing quadruple murder suspect Austin Drummond as the manhunt continues.
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New Cross: Man arrested on suspicion of murder after fatal stabbing in southeast London
New Cross: Man arrested on suspicion of murder after fatal stabbing in southeast London

Yahoo

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  • Yahoo

New Cross: Man arrested on suspicion of murder after fatal stabbing in southeast London

A man has been arrested on suspicion of murder after a 26-year-old was stabbed to death in southeast London. Met Police officers were called to reports of a man with stab wounds at an address on Monson Road, New Cross, at 7.30pm on Saturday. The force attended the scene with the London Ambulance Service and medics from the Air Ambulance who provided emergency care. Officers said the 26-year-old man died at the scene, and specialist officers are supporting his family. Scotland Yard said another 26-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of murder a short time later. He remains in custody as of Sunday afternoon. Read more from Sky News: Detective Chief Inspector Lucie Card, who is leading the investigation, said: "Our thoughts are with the family and friends of the victim at this difficult time. "I understand this incident will be concerning and we are carrying out a fast-paced and thorough investigation to establish the circumstances. "I would encourage anyone who has not yet spoken to us."

Sandra Grimes, Who Helped Unmask a C.I.A. Traitor, Dies at 79
Sandra Grimes, Who Helped Unmask a C.I.A. Traitor, Dies at 79

New York Times

time3 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Sandra Grimes, Who Helped Unmask a C.I.A. Traitor, Dies at 79

Unmasking the deadliest traitor in Central Intelligence Agency history was not a matter of decrypting codes, staking out dead drop sites or any other piece of spy craft out of a John le Carré novel. Aldrich H. Ames, the C.I.A. mole whose betrayal led to the execution of at least eight Russian double agents who spied for the U.S., a devastating setback for American intelligence, was discovered from bookkeeping entries. He was identified by a counterintelligence analyst, Sandra Grimes, who was once in charge of C.I.A. secretaries and clerks. In 1992, merging data from two spreadsheets, Ms. Grimes noticed that Mr. Ames made bank deposits of up to $9,000 on three occasions just after lunches with a Soviet Embassy official in Washington. 'It doesn't take a rocket scientist to tell what is going on here,' she exclaimed to her colleagues. 'Rick is a goddamn Russian spy.' Mr. Ames was arrested in 1994, pleaded guilty to selling the C.I.A.'s family jewels for millions of dollars from Moscow and is serving a life term in prison. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

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