
90 Day Fiance star Eric Rosenbrook 'arrested after slapping his wife when she was holding their baby'
The alleged incident took place on the 4th of July in Adams, Wisconsin, reported TMZ on Friday.
The victim - Leida is not named in the document and the victim has gone under LNM but the site believes it's her - reportedly told authorities that Eric had been drinking when he went to pick up food, but did not return in a timely matter.
The 35-year-old then noticed that Eric was 'passed out' in his car outside the apartment, which she allegedly videotaped, the site claimed.
When she woke him, he came in the house and slapped her when she was holding their baby girl, it has been claimed.
Eric has confirmed the accusations to the site.
Rosenbrook was arrested and booked at around 2am on July 5 and has been charged with misdemeanor battery and disorderly conduct.
The victim went into detail about the incident.
She had said that when she woke Rosenbrook up in the car, she had their baby with her in her arms and he woke the child up, the site claimed.
He reportedly then wanted to hold the baby but the victim said no because he was too drunk.
That is when the reality TV star allegedly slapped the victim. The victim said she had been abused since they wed in 2018, the site reported.
Eric went back to his car and fell asleep again, police told the site. The authorities said he admitted to hitting the alleged victim, the site added.
TMZ spoke with Eric who admitted he did hit her when she was holding their daughter. But he said that he did not the child. However, he then decided to leave the apartment.
And he shared that the fight has led to their split.
Rosenbrook married Leida after meeting on 90 Day Fiancé during season six of the show. She filed for divorce last year, but her petition was withdrawn, it has been claimed.
In 2019 he was linked to another ugly situation when he was accused of hitting Leida.
He explained his side of the altercation during an Instagram Live video for fans but denied he struck her.
She claimed her husband pulled her hair and scratched her scalp during their fight.
In the text messages, Leida claimed that Eric 'pulled my hairs really hard and grab it until I can stand up and grabbed my wrist both of them and put me on the corner.'
In his video response, Eric disputed some of the details, but his account hued fairly close to Leida's original allegations.
He admitted: 'Leida and I had an altercation.
'She was threatening self-harm, I wrestled a knife from her. But my training took over, it triggered my training...and I went too far. Nothing serious was caused, other than emotional trauma, which is severe. I may have scratched her scalp, I did not realize I did that. After I wrestled the knife from her, my training took over and the only thing I could think of was to restrain her.
'It went too far. I attempted to stand her up on her feet so I could look her in her face and restrain her wrists, but I pulled her up by her hair. She did not resist, had she resisted it may have snapped me back to reality and I would not have done it. I like to believe that I would not have continued to do it that way.
'I do not excuse how it happened, I know I should've handled that differently.'
'After I stood her up I had to restrain her wrists, I was afraid of her hitting herself or myself. We argued and fought a little bit, not physically after that.
'I kept her against the wall in the kitchen, the corner as she says, it's not really a corner, it's just the end of the kitchen. And I kept her there because she would've had to pass the sink again and the knife, and knives, so I kept her there, I did not let her pass.'
Eric went on to say that he had called the police at Leida's request, and that she had been taken to a hospital for an evaluation.
He said he had offered to stay at a hotel to give her space, though it wasn't clear what their current living situation is.
Neither Eric nor his wife seem to be disputing the most explosive part of the allegations, that Leida had a knife and was threatening to kill or harm herself.
Leida's Instagram account posted an Instagram story referencing the fight.
It read: 'A domestic incident did take place between Eric and Leida on 1/20/19. The couple asked that you please respect their desire to keep things private at this time. #privacy #respect.'
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Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Blackout blinds and midnight grocery runs: Inside the reclusive lives of Trump shooter Thomas Matthew Crooks' parents
Behind the blackout blinds lining every window and cameras covering all angles of the modest brick home in Bethel Park, Pa. live the couple who may hold the answer to why Thomas Matthew Crooks, opened fire at President Trump at the Butler campaign rally, striking his ear and killing Corey Comperatore on July 13, 2024. But his parents, Matthew and Mary Crooks, have remained stubbornly silent and hunkered down since the shooting one year ago, and still refusing to speak about their son and his horrific act when Daily Mail knocked on their door this week. Since Crooks assassination attempt, his family are barely seen by neighbors with many assuming they had moved from the leafy area. His sister Katherine, 24, a janitor, has been spotted leaving her apartment less than a mile from her parents' home. But her parents have essentially become recluses, the only sign that the home is still lived in is the vehicle on the driveway moving, though neighbors can't recall the last time this happened. Crooks father even resorted to buying groceries at 3am in a bid to avoid prying eyes, not keeping to a regular routine. Both he and his wife, who is visually impaired, had previously worked as social workers since 2002. But Daily Mail can reveal that their son's high profile assassination attempt has resulted in neither renewing their licenses, which expired in February of this year. One neighbor told Daily Mail they assumed the family had moved, adding: 'We haven't seen anyone coming or going for quite a while. 'Most of us thought they had moved on or are still keeping to themselves.' His family's silence is just one of the puzzle pieces surrounding the attack, with the FBI still unable to point to a solid motive for the seemingly mild-mannered student to shoot Trump. Federal profilers have speculated that Crooks may simply have wanted to commit a mass shooting and found a convenient target for his dark fantasy in the timing and geographical proximity of Trump's rally which was held just 40 miles from where he lived with his parents. In April, Crooks searched websites for information on major depressive disorder and depressive crisis treatment. He left no manifesto or explanation for the shooting. According to CNN, Crooks' parents had attempted to reach their son when they could not find him earlier that day, but he did not respond. They then called law enforcement to tell them that their son was missing. It is not known whether they were aware that he was armed. Since the attack investigators have focused on Crooks' online activity in the months and days leading up to it in a bid to gain some sense of his state of mind. Intriguingly it has emerged that he searched online for information on Michigan mass-shooter Ethan Crumbley and his parents. Crooks left home on the day of the rally armed with an AR-15 style rifle that was bought legally by his father in 2013 and transferred to him in 2023. He was an enthusiastic member of Clairton Sportsmen's Club which he visited the day before the incident to practice on the rifle range which offers high powered rifle benches with targets up to 187 yards - roughly the distance crooks was from Trump when he shot him. Immediately after the attack the FBI removed 14 firearms from the small family home as well as explosives, a second cellphone, a laptop and a hard drive. In addition to the arsenal recovered from his home investigators recovered rudimentary explosive devices from Crooks' car, a bulletproof vest, additional magazines – bought both online and the previous day from Allegheny Arms & Gun Works – and a drone. Another mystery is why the FBI allowed his body to be released so swiftly after the shooting. While Crooks body was cremated just 10 days after the shooting, it is unclear exactly what the family have done with his remains. There is no plaque or obvious burial spot at the family's plot of land in Mount Royal Cemetery, Glenshaw, which is home to three generations of Crooks. His great grandfather, great grandmother, grandparents and uncle are all buried in the same area, along with other members of the family dating back to 1929. Crooks was 'neutralized' by a Secret Service sniper 26 seconds after he first shot. By then he had already fired eight bullets. He hit Trump, 78, in a grazing shot to his right ear, struck retired fire chief Comperatore, 50, in the head, killing him. He grievously wounded audience members James Copenhaver, 74, and David Dutch, 57, who suffered 'life altering' injuries as a result of the attack. It comes as the Secret Service suspended six agents over failures during the attack, nearly a year later. Myosoty Perez was one of six agents suspended for between 10 and 42 days following the July 13, 2024 attack in Butler. She was sent to the location of the rally ahead of time and was specifically tasked with helping to secure the surrounds, the New York Post revealed. Another agent who helped to coordinate security for the rally was also reportedly suspended, along with four people from the Pittsburgh field office. The final suspension was reportedly an agent on the counter-sniper team. A US Secret Service report released just days before the 2024 election confirmed that 'multiple operational and communications gaps preceded the July 13 attempted assassination.' The Secret Service also described some of the gaps as 'deficiency of established command and control, lapses in communication, and a lack of diligence by agency personnel,' while also noting that 'the accountability process [was] underway.' Dan Bongino - who now serves as Deputy Director of the FBI and formerly spent 11 years as a Secret Service agent - said last year that Butler was a 'apocalyptic security failure' and called for a full house-cleaning of the upper leadership ranks in the Secret Services D.C. headquarters. But in the aftermath, the agency was hounded with questions about security failures and Director Kimberly Cheatle was forced to resign. Now it has emerged that six agents have since been suspended for their actions that day, ABC News confirmed. Those who were suspended ranged from supervisors to line agents, and they all had the right to appeal their suspensions, which ranged from 10 to 42 days without pay or benefits, according to CBS News. 'We are laser focused on fixing the root cause of the problem,' Matt Quinn, the Secret Service deputy director told CBS. All of the agents have now been suspended according to federally-mandated procedures, Quinn said. He also noted that the Secret Service has introduced a new fleet of military-grade drones and set up new mobile command posts that allow agents to communicate over radio directly with local law enforcement - which was widely seen as one of the major issues with the Secret Service's response to the shooting. Witnesses have explained that having multiple command stations during the July event led to confusion and a scattered response. Dan Bongino (pictured with Trump) - who now serves as Deputy Director of the FBI and formerly spent 11 years as a Secret Service agent - said last year that Butler was a 'apocalyptic security failure' A damning 180-page report released by a House of Representatives task force in December even concluded that the shooting was 'preventable and should not have happened.' It noted that Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe testified that the agency had been operating under the assumption that local law enforcement was going to secure the AGR complex, from where Crooks fired off eight shots. The report also included a firsthand account from a Butler cop who spotted Crooks and yelled out that he has a gun - though there is no evidence to suggest the message reached the Secret Service security detail surrounding Trump before Crooks began firing. It concluded that federal, state and local law enforcement officers 'could have engaged Thomas Matthew Crooks at several pivotal moments' as his behavior became increasingly suspicious.'


The Independent
3 hours ago
- The Independent
‘Chains around my waist and feet': Inside a Trump ICE detention centre
What was shaping up to be a mundane Saturday morning in Boston for painter and decorator Luis Martínez* – running errands, picking up some medication for a sick girlfriend back home and accompanying his dad to collect his car – quickly dissolved into a terrifying ordeal. Before the day was out, Luis and his father would find themselves detained by ICE, stripped of their belongings, and imprisoned in a cell and the most recent victims of Donald Trump's immigration crackdown. But Luis's story, marked by 19 days of detention in ICE facilities in Massachusetts last month, encapsulates a broader struggle for due process rights for immigrants across the United States, a struggle that has seen federal judges in the state consistently push back against aggressive deportation tactics. Last week, a new proposal was launched to tackle the heavy-handed tactics of masked and heavily armed immigration agents who have been snatching people off the streets and taking them away in unmarked cars, in scenes that have shocked many Americans. Currently, ICE agents are not required to wear body cameras and can cover their faces and don't have to provide badge numbers or identify themselves. They can arrive in unmarked cars and don't even need a warrant from a judge to detain someone. The new proposal by the Democrats is looking to change all of that and rein in some of the most extreme enforcement tactics. While it has been described as a 'long-shot' bill, it is nevertheless gaining support among some conservatives as many grow alarmed at reports of over-policing and even ICE impersonators harassing people. Luis's story is typical of many. His journey to the United States began almost a decade ago, born out of desperation and hope. In 2015, when he was 16 years old, he arrived alone at the Texas border. Facing escalating gang violence in his native El Salvador, he had made the perilous 2,000-mile journey to find a father he barely knew who had been living in the US for two decades. Since then, Luis has built a life for himself; he was an honours student in high school; he has a girlfriend who is a US citizen and works for his father's house-painting business. Then, on 24 May, everything changed. 'I was driving my father's car and he was sitting next to me,' Luis, who is now 26, says. 'We'd only been driving two minutes and had driven about four blocks when an unmarked black car behind me turned on its blue lights and I pulled over immediately. 'Three more cars surrounded me. When I rolled down my window, I saw around eight officers. Most wore masks, dark sunglasses, and black baseball caps. I knew for sure they weren't police. I wasn't sure who they were. Bounty hunters? Federal agents?' Luis said the man at his window asked for his driver's license as well as his ID from El Salvador. He told the officer he had a work permit and social security number, and that he had paperwork to prove he was in the process of applying for a green card. 'He said they were looking for someone, and if we weren't who they were looking for, then we were free to go.' The officer asked Luis's father for his ID too. Luis said his father was undocumented and didn't have any legal status in the US. Then the officer began making phone calls. Luis and his father were both put in handcuffs. Again, they were told that they'd be processed and that he would be free in a couple of days. His father's future was looking bleaker. 'I asked — if I'm not the guy they're looking for and I was going to be free in a couple of days, why was he arresting me? He said 'we're just going to take you in because we need numbers'.' At an ICE staging post near a cemetery in Lynn, Massachusetts, 10 miles northeast of Boston, Luis saw other cars and vans full of people he assumed ICE had also arrested that morning. 'They took all my stuff, my phone, my jewellery, wallet, ID, my shoes. They put chains around my waist and feet. It was crazy.' Luis and his father were driven 40 minutes to Burlington, to what he later learned was an ICE field office. The conditions there have been described by lawyers as 'abysmal' and 'unsanitary', lacking basic amenities like showers or sinks. They entered through a huge gate at the rear, and once they were inside, they found themselves in a windowless, concrete building and were led to a detention centre. Luis and his dad were placed in a 15 x 15ft cell with 50 other men, ranging in age from 18 to 67. 'We were standing in the middle for hours because there was nowhere to sit,' Luis says. 'If you needed to go to the bathroom, you just went in front of everyone.' The only food he was given for the day was a sandwich and a water bottle at 7pm, despite arriving at noon. Father and son spent that first night on a cold, concrete floor under a tin foil blanket. 'Every hour or two throughout the night an agent would open the door, then slam it shut, waking us up,' he says. On Sunday evening, Luis was among the last group transferred to Plymouth County Correctional Facility. Before leaving, Luis said an officer told them they could fight all they wanted, but they would still all be deported. Luis's girlfriend found out he'd been arrested via social media. Concerned about her as well as himself, he feared for what might come next. 'I was nervous and confused because of what was happening, but I knew I'd never committed a crime. At some point, though, I realised that with the new Trump administration, I could be deported. I don't have kids yet, but I do have my girlfriend. I have a life that I've built over 10 years and there I was in a cell with people hitting their heads against the wall. Almost everyone was crying because they were scared of leaving their families behind.' Chained once more, Luis and nine others were transported to Plymouth. His father, meanwhile, was transferred to a detention facility in Texas. Luis was confined to a cell with just a metal bed and toilet. A structured, if grim, routine began: 4.30am breakfast, 15-minute meal breaks, and limited recreational time. While phone calls were permitted, Luis said there was a bank of nine phones for up to 60 people. Luis spent 17 days locked up in the Plymouth detention facility awaiting his bond hearing. Meanwhile, a powerful legal pushback was underway in federal courts across Massachusetts. In case after case, 14 federal judges, including three appointed by Republican presidents, began issuing almost verbatim rulings affirming the due process rights of immigrants. They pointed to a landmark 1982 Supreme Court ruling, which declared, 'Even aliens whose presence in this country is unlawful, have long been recognised as 'persons' guaranteed due process of law by the fifth and 14th amendments.' These rulings came as critical relief, often preventing immediate out-of-state transfers or deportations without hearings. Immigration lawyers credit these interventions for providing a crucial 'pause' button and have accused ICE of deliberately moving immigrants across the country to disrupt legal challenges and place them under the jurisdiction of more conservative federal courts. Like many immigrants' journeys, Luis's life has been a long one to get legally recognised despite having paid taxes and built a life where he contributes to the US economy and his local community. America has been built on the shoulders and hard work of such immigrants. They start businesses at a higher rate than native-born Americans, and undocumented immigrants paid $96.7bn in federal, state, and local taxes in 2022. When he arrived in the US a decade ago, Luis voluntarily approached a border patrol officer, beginning a process that would lead him through an ICE facility, a camp for minors, and eventually, reunion with the father he hadn't seen since he was four. Paul Hannaford, an immigration attorney in Boston, who also happens to be my cousin, was the first one who told me about Luis's story. 'Back in 2017, we got him the I-360 – which is to apply for special immigrant juvenile status, which you can get if you've been abandoned, abused, or neglected by a family member. Once you have that, you can file for a green card.' In the intervening years, the case has bounced from judge to judge, court to court. Luis's fingerprints that were taken years ago were apparently unusable and had to be taken again. A judge retired. By any account, it's been a slog. But by 23 May this year, Luis Martínez was well on his way to being bestowed with the legal right to live and work permanently in his adopted country. He had no criminal record and had never been detained or pulled over before. But then Trump became president. 'They've officially changed the policy,' Paul explains. 'As of 6 June 2025, US Citizenship and Immigration Services rescinded its policy of automatically granting deferred action to special immigrant juveniles with approved I-360 petitions.' Which meant Luis and others in similar situations were vulnerable to arrest and deportation. After 19 days in ICE custody, Luis was finally released and was forced to wear an ankle monitor until this week. 'My girlfriend was waiting for me when I was released,' Luis tells me. 'I was very overwhelmed, lots of emotions and thoughts going through my head.' Luis knows that his ordeal is far from over. Paul successfully filed a motion to terminate his court case, which meant no more ankle monitor or threat of deportation – for now. But Luis is 'back to where he was before they picked him up'. The fear of being taken by ICE again looms large. 'Now, I only go out if I really need to,' he says. 'I leave for work early in the morning – around 5.30am when there aren't many people on the streets. And I always try to get back by 7pm, and I take different routes back. I know a guy who just got arrested for the second time and it could happen to me. I don't even get to go out with my girlfriend much any more. I'm scared to go out.' As for his father, he is still being detained in an ICE facility in Texas. He calls Luis at 9am each morning to check in. Neither knows what will happen to him or whether they will ever be able to secure a future in the only country they see as home.


Sky News
4 hours ago
- Sky News
Farmer dies after falling from greenhouse roof during ICE raid in California
A farmer who fell from a greenhouse roof during an anti-immigrant raid at a licensed cannabis facility in California this week has died of his injuries. Jaime Alanis, 57, is the first person to die as a result of Donald Trump's ICE raids. His niece, Yesenia Duran, posted on the fundraising site GoFundMe to say her uncle was his family's only provider and he had been sending his earnings back to his wife and daughter in Mexico. The United Food Workers said Mr Alanis had worked on the farm for 10 years. "These violent and cruel federal actions terrorise American communities, disrupt the American food supply chain, threaten lives and separate families," the union said in a recent statement on X. 4:28 The Department of Homeland Security said it executed criminal search warrants at Glass House Farms facilities on Thursday. Mr Alanis called family to say he was hiding and possibly fleeing agents before he fell around 30ft (9m) from the roof and broke his neck, according to information from family, hospital and government sources. Agents arrested 200 people suspected of being in the country illegally and identified at least 10 immigrant children on the sites, the DHS said in a statement. Mr Alanis was not among them, the agency said. "This man was not in and has not been in CBP or ICE custody," DHS assistant secretary for public affairs Tricia McLaughlin said. "Although he was not being pursued by law enforcement, this individual climbed up to the roof of a greenhouse and fell 30ft. CBP immediately called a medivac to the scene to get him care as quickly as possible." Four US citizens were arrested during the incident for allegedly "assaulting or resisting officers", the DHS said, and authorities were offering a $50,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of a person suspected of firing a gun at federal agents. In a statement, Glass House, a licensed Cannabis grower, said immigration agents had valid warrants. It said workers were detained and it is helping provide them with legal representation. "Glass House has never knowingly violated applicable hiring practices and does not and has never employed minors," it added.