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One Woman is Suing Two High Profile Disgraced Stars

One Woman is Suing Two High Profile Disgraced Stars

Fox News2 days ago

One woman is suing two high profile disgraced stars, one of Diddy's lawyer is pregnant, a social media star is speaking out.
#Crime #Legal #Sports
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Palm Beach Police: 'SIM swap' scam tried to steal more than $200,000 from Palm Beacher
Palm Beach Police: 'SIM swap' scam tried to steal more than $200,000 from Palm Beacher

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Palm Beach Police: 'SIM swap' scam tried to steal more than $200,000 from Palm Beacher

Two Westlake residents have been arrested by Palm Beach Police, who say the pair executed an elaborate financial fraud known as "SIM swapping" that attempted to steal more than $200,000 from a Palm Beach resident. And the scheme could extend far beyond the island, police said. The pair were taken into custody May 28, Palm Beach Police spokesman Capt. Will Rothrock said. A 29-year-old woman faces charges of organized fraud and fraudulent use of personal information of a person age 60 or older, and a 31-year-old man was arrested on a charge of fraudulent use of personal information, according to arrest reports. Both remained at the Palm Beach County Jail on May 29. The woman was held without bond, and a Palm Beach County judge ordered that she have no contact with the Palm Beach resident or the man arrested in the case, according to court records. She also cannot have any devices that can access the internet, and she is not allowed to use the phone except to contact her attorney, court records show. The man's bond amount was set at $350,000, and he also cannot use or have any devices that connect to the internet, court records show. He was directed not to contact the Palm Beach resident or the woman, and while in jail, he cannot use the phone except to contact an attorney, according to court records. If he makes bond, he will be on in-home arrest with a GPS monitor, records show. On April 10, a Palm Beach resident called police to say someone had fraudulently accessed his AT&T and bank accounts, and had tried to transfer money and login to several websites, according to an arrest report. The Palm Beach resident said he received a call on April 8 from someone who said they were with AT&T, and that he needed to validate his phone numbers using a code sent to him via text message, an arrest report said. About 20 minutes after that phone call, phone numbers connected to the resident's AT&T account stopped working, police said. The scam is known as "SIM swapping" or "SIM hijacking," according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Internet Crime Complaint Center, also called the IC3. Fraudsters will gain control of a person's phone number and then use it to access their banking and other financial and personal accounts, the agency said. The resident provided the code that he received to the person, but later discovered that the code was used to forward his phone number to a different provider, Verizon, police said. By giving that code to the person who said they were from AT&T, he allowed them to complete the final step to move all three of the phone numbers on his account to the other carrier, police wrote in the arrest report. In 2024, there were 982 complaints of SIM swapping with a total reported loss of $25,983,946, the IC3 said in its annual report. The previous year, 1,075 SIM swapping complaints were made with a reported loss of $48,798,103, according to the IC3. Once the phone numbers were transferred, someone tried to withdraw money and make a wire transfer from the Palm Beach resident's bank account, police said. Someone also successfully took over one of the man's email accounts. Transactions made through the resident's accounts included $2,300 sent via Zelle to a St. Petersburg resident, $77.97 spent at a Circle K in The Acreage, $1,500 in ATM withdrawals, and a $215 Venmo payment, an arrest report said. There was also a $4,006.08 payment made to designer clothing retailer Farfetch U.K., along with Airbnb charges of $2,341.79 and $660, an arrest report said. Because the resident was concerned that his Apple account had been compromised, he used the "Find My" feature on his iPhone, which can be used to locate devices connected to an Apple account, police said. The resident saw an unknown iPhone on Liberty Lane in Westlake and told police that he has never been to that address and has no connections there. A Palm Beach Police detective later drove by that address several times and saw two vehicles, a 2022 black Cadillac Escalade and 2024 gray BMW SUV, parked there. Both vehicles were registered to the 31-year-old man, whose driver's license lists an address in North Lauderdale but who police learned was staying at the house in Westlake with the 29-year-old woman, who shares registration on the BMW SUV. Palm Beach Police detectives discovered that the ATM withdrawals from the resident's account were made at a bank in The Acreage, about 2 miles from the house in Westlake, an arrest report said. On April 9, the Palm Beach resident received a request to wire transfer $138,237, which was unsuccessful, police said. That same day, there was another request for a wire transfer for $82,469. The banker in that case confirmed the wire with who he believed to be the account holder, and the transfer was initiated, police said. However, once the resident received an email to confirm the transfer, he called the bank's fraud team and was able to secure the money, but it could take up to three months to get that money back, the arrest report said. Both wire transfer requests were made to a Pompano Beach resident, police said. The resident hired a private investigator who recovered photos taken by the Liberty Lane-located iPhone after someone took over the resident's Apple account, police said. Data for seven photos show all were taken at that home in Westlake, according to the arrest report. On May 7, a Palm Beach Police detective talked with a person in Las Vegas, Nevada, who had been the victim of a similar scheme and had reported the crime to the FBI. That person gave police about 50 images someone took after gaining control of his Apple account, and officers found data that connected the photos back to the Westlake address. The images provided by the person in Nevada also included photos of driver's licenses, passports, bank account numbers, emails and more, an arrest report said. When Palm Beach Police and the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office searched the Westlake home on a warrant on May 5, they found the 29-year-old woman and 31-year-old man, along with a Louis Vuitton backpack, three iPhones, two pairs of sunglasses and a yellow notebook with "Work $" written on it, the arrest report said. Inside the notebook, officers said they found bank account details, Social Security numbers, addresses, names and more personal details about more than 50 people in Florida and across the United States. Officers also said they found electronic devices and a ledger that contained the Palm Beach resident's personal information. They also took $15,243 in cash from the woman's bedroom, the arrest report said. Detectives determined that once the couple gained access to a person's phone line, they could "circumvent two-factor authentication and gain access to victims' financial accounts, resulting in substantial unauthorized wire transfers and fraudulent transactions," the arrest report said. Palm Beach has cautioned residents to be wary of potential scams. "Most of these cases nationally go unsolved," Rothrock said. "The work and tenacity that our detectives put into this to follow the leads to the end and bring a successful conclusion are noteworthy." He added that the department is grateful for PBSO's help in the investigation, including to serve the search warrant. "Finding local perpetrators was a rarity and did make the investigation coordination smoother," Rothrock said. Those who believe they may have been victims of the scam should call the Palm Beach Police Department's non-emergency number at 561-838-5454, he said. This story was updated to add new information. Kristina Webb is a reporter for Palm Beach Daily News, part of the USA TODAY Florida Network. You can reach her at kwebb@ Subscribe today to support our journalism. This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: Palm Beach 'SIM swap' scam could extend across U.S., police say

Livvy Dunne Reports Airport Stalking And Harassment
Livvy Dunne Reports Airport Stalking And Harassment

Forbes

timean hour ago

  • Forbes

Livvy Dunne Reports Airport Stalking And Harassment

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 12: Livvy Dunne takes a photograph as she attends a game between the New ... More York Mets and the Pittsburgh Pirates at Citi Field on May 12, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by) Former NCAA gymnast and social media sensation Olivia 'Livvy' Dunne has been on the move since her retirement from gymnastics. Whether cheering for her boyfriend, Pittsburgh Pirates ace Paul Skenes, or walking the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit runway in Miami, the 22-year-old influencer rarely stays put. With over 8 million followers on TikTok and 5.3 million on Instagram, Dunne was once the most followed and highest-earning female athlete in the NCAA, considered a pioneer in the Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) era of college athletics. While her social media content garners extensive reach, Dunne has recently dealt with concerning behavior. Dunne alleges that she has endured harassment during potential 'stalking' incidents at U.S. airports. Unfortunately, she is not alone. The former LSU Tiger took to TikTok in late May, sharing her concerns and recent experiences with her extensive fanbase. 'I fear that I'm being stalked and I don't know what to do,' Dunne said. Dunne reports that 'every' airport visit has been met with harassment from 'a group of at least 10 middle-aged men" seeking her autograph. She reports that the men often carry stacks of photos of Dunne, and will 'run [her] The influencer shares that their presence is almost unavoidable, with the men appearing before and after personal flights, even family vacations or connection flights through obscure or low-traffic airports. 'It needs to stop,' she pleads. Unfortunately, Dunne is among a handful of female celebrities or athletes who have reported similar behavior from unidentified men at airports across the U.S. In January 2025, U.S. Track and Field Olympic gold medalist Gabby Thomas expressed similar concerns to Dunne's in a TikTok video. PARIS, FRANCE - AUGUST 07: Gold medalist Gabrielle Thomas of Team United States celebrates on the ... More podium during the Women's 200m medal ceremony on day twelve of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Stade de France on August 07, 2024 in Paris, France. (Photo by) Thomas reported an eerily identical circumstance, including 'three to six' middle-aged men stalking her throughout multiple airports, wielding photos and vehemently demanding autographs. 'They have my flight information," Thomas said, adding that the men always know exactly where to find her, whether at the airport concourse or at her gate. Thomas also fears for her safety when confronted while traveling alone, reporting that the men often become 'aggressive and hostile' when she refuses. Thomas' video garnered over 750,000 views on TikTok, with multiple prominent female athletes and celebrities expressing their shared concerns – including Dunne. Olympic Champion gymnasts Simone Biles and Sunisa 'Suni' Lee both commented, expressing that they have also dealt with similar harassment in U.S. airports. 'No same, I'm horrified of them…happens too often,' Biles shared, adding that she photographs the men 'just in case.' Women's tennis star Coco Gauff also reported a similar experience in the comment section. 'I don't know how it happens,' Gauff said. 'My theory is maybe someone at the airport tips them off.' While Thomas managed to capture video of one of her more recent stalking incidents, Dunne's recent post suggests that the harassment remains prevalent months later.

Boulder attack: eight injured in Colorado after man allegedly targets rally for Israeli hostages
Boulder attack: eight injured in Colorado after man allegedly targets rally for Israeli hostages

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Boulder attack: eight injured in Colorado after man allegedly targets rally for Israeli hostages

Eight people were injured in an attack in Boulder, Colorado after a man is alleged to have thrown an incendiary device into a crowd and yelled 'Free Palestine', in what the FBI is treating as an 'act of terrorism'. The 45-year-old man, identified as Mohamed Sabry Soliman, is alleged to have thrown the device into a group of people who had assembled in a pedestrianised zone for a peaceful protest for Israeli hostages still held in Gaza. 'It is clear that this is a targeted act of violence and the FBI is investigating this as an act of terrorism,' Mark Michalek, an FBI special agent, told a press conference, citing witnesses. Boulder police chief Stephen Redfearn had earlier refused to call the incident an act of terrorism, saying it was too early to speculate on the alleged attacker's motivations. He said the department received calls at about 1.26pm local time of a man with a weapon near a downtown courthouse and that people were being set on fire. When police responded, they found people with injuries consistent with burns. A suspect was pointed out to officers and a man was taken into custody and then to the hospital with minor injuries. Redfearn said the police were investigating 'a vehicle of interest' on the scene, and several blocks had been closed off. Police and bomb squads are still 'clearing the area for devices', he said. Michalek said there was no evidence that the man was connected to a wider group. The six people injured were between the ages of 67 and 88, police said, and their injuries ranged from minor to 'very serious'. Four were taken to a local hospital, while two had to be airlifted to a hospital in Aurora. Brooke Coffman, a university student at the scene of the attack, said she saw four women on the ground with burns on their legs, Reuters reported. One of them appeared to have been badly burned on most of her body and had been wrapped in a flag by someone, she said. The attack comes amid heightened tensions in the United States over Israel's war in Gaza, which has spurred both an increase in antisemitic hate crimes as well as efforts by conservative supporters of Israel to brand pro-Palestinian protests as antisemitic. Donald Trump's administration has detained protesters of the war without charge and cut off funding to elite US universities that have permitted such demonstrations. The Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, said in a statement that the victims were attacked 'simply because they were Jews' and that he trusted US authorities would prosecute 'the cold blood perpetrator to the fullest extent of the law'. Colorado governor Jared Polis said that he is 'closely monitoring' the situation, adding: 'My thoughts go out to the people who have been injured and impacted by this heinous act of terror. Hate-filled acts of any kind are unacceptable.' The Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer, a prominent Jewish Democrat, described the attack as 'horrifying'. 'We must stand up to antisemitism,' he said. The attack follows the fatal shooting of two Israeli embassy employees in Washington DC who had attended an event hosted by the American Jewish Committee, an advocacy group that fights antisemitism and supports Israel. The crowd targeted in Boulder had gathered for an event called Run for Their Lives, a walk to show support for the Israeli hostages being held by Hamas in Gaza, according to a statement by the Boulder Jewish Community Centre. The group meets every Sunday to call for the hostages' release. 'Our hearts go out to those who witnessed this horrible attack, and prayers for a speedy recovery to those who were injured,' the statement reads.'When events like this enter our own community, we are shaken. Our hope is that we come together for one another.' With Reuters

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