logo
Hulk Hogan dead at 71 after ‘suffering cardiac arrest at Florida home'

Hulk Hogan dead at 71 after ‘suffering cardiac arrest at Florida home'

The Sun24-07-2025
WWE legend Hulk Hogan has died at age 71, according to reports.
Hogan, born Terry Gene Bollea, was found dead in his Clearwater, Florida, home on Thursday morning.
1
First responders responded to the home after receiving a call about a "cardiac arrest," according to TMZ.
Paramedics and police patrol were reportedly parked outside of Hogan's home on Thursday morning.
Hogan was wheeled out of his home on a stretcher and into an ambulance, TMZ reported.
The U.S. Sun has reached out to Clearwater Police for comment.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tesla ordered to pay $243m over Autopilot deaths
Tesla ordered to pay $243m over Autopilot deaths

Telegraph

time2 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Tesla ordered to pay $243m over Autopilot deaths

Tesla has been ordered to pay $243m (£183m) in compensation after a jury ruled that its Autopilot technology was partly to blame for a fatal crash involving one of its cars. A Miami jury on Friday held that Elon Musk's company bore significant responsibility for the death of a young woman and serious injuries to her boyfriend because its technology had failed. They assigned blame even though a reckless driver of a Tesla Model S admitted he was distracted after dropping his mobile phone. He rammed into the couple, Naibel Benavides Leon and Dillon Angulo, who were standing next to their parked Chevrolet. 22-year-old Ms Benavides Leon died following the crash. Tesla has now been ordered to pay $43m in compensatory damages and $200m in punitive damages to Mr Angulo and the family of Ms Benavides Leon. The verdict is the latest setback for Mr Musk, who is under mounting pressure as a result of falling sales and share price at Tesla. The billionaire's ill-fated alliance with Donald Trump has done significant damage to the electric car company's brand image and critics say Mr Musk has lost his focus. Autopilot is a driver-assistance system that Tesla says is intended to reduce a driver's 'overall workload'. However, it has faced repeated investigations in the US over its safety record and has not been cleared for use on British roads. Dan O'Dowd, a road safety campaigner who has long questioned Tesla's technology, said: 'Today's ruling is a heavy blow to Elon Musk and Tesla.' The Miami decision ends a four-year long case that was remarkable not just in its outcome but in the fact it even made it to trial. Many similar cases against Tesla have been dismissed or settled by the company to avoid the spotlight of a trial. The trial itself was contentious. Lawyers acting for the victims claimed Tesla either hid or lost key evidence, including data and video recorded seconds before the accident. The plaintiffs hired a forensic data expert who dug it up key evidence. Presented with the findings, Tesla said it made a mistake and claimed the failure to present the evidence was an honest mistake. A Tesla spokesman said: 'Today's verdict is wrong and only works to set back automotive safety and jeopardize Tesla's and the entire industry's efforts to develop and implement life-saving technology. 'We plan to appeal given the substantial errors of law and irregularities at trial.'

Our messages to every parent putting their child on a plane after we lost our family in the DC crash
Our messages to every parent putting their child on a plane after we lost our family in the DC crash

Daily Mail​

time2 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Our messages to every parent putting their child on a plane after we lost our family in the DC crash

The loved ones of the deadly Washington, DC, plane crash victims - who plummeted when a US Black Hawk collided with a commercial jet mid-air killing all 67 people and three soldiers - revealed glaring 'systemic failures' during this week's National Transportation Safety Board investigative hearings. Peter Livingston and his wife Donna, both 48, and their two young daughters Everly, 14, and Alydia, 11, were aboard American Airlines Flight 5342. The Livingston family, along with 28 members from the US Figure Skating community, were returning to DC after attending a national skating development camp in Wichita, Kansas. The military chopper was on a training mission. Around 8:47pm on January 29, disaster struck over the Potomac River as the plane approached the runway at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. There were no survivors. The fatal crash has become the deadliest US air disaster in more than two decades. Friday marks the third day of investigative hearings by the the National Transportation Safety Board. The NTSB questioned witnesses from the Federal Aviation Administration and Army officials about the actions of the air traffic controllers. NTSB Chairwoman Jennifer Homendy told the victims' families - many of whom were present - that they 'are working diligently to make sure we know what occurred, how it occurred, and to prevent it from ever happening again,' CBS News reported. At one point, Homendy became visibly upset when she said, 'Every sign was there that there was a safety risk' in the airspace. Amy Hunter and Rachel Feres - both cousins of the Livingstons - decided to watch the hearings from their homes in California and Colorado, respectively, as they wanted to be near their families during this agonizing time. 'As cousins who lost an entire branch of our family on January 29, we knew this week's NTSB hearing would be painful. 'But nothing could have prepared us for the depth of systemic failure it revealed, from oversight gaps to operational breakdowns that remain unaddressed,' Hunter and Feres told the Daily Mail on Thursday. 'Each hour of testimony made clear that this crash was not a mystery, it was a preventable tragedy. Peter, Donna, Everly and Alydia should still be with us - so should the other 60 people aboard Flight 5342 and the three soldiers on the Black Hawk.' Feres and Hunter have traveled to Washington several times over the last six months to advocate for safer skies. 'The hearing shined a necessary light on agencies that failed to meet their responsibilities: an FAA that didn't safeguard its own airspace, and an Army that sent soldiers into the nation's busiest flight corridor underprepared for night operations,' they said. 'This isn't just about our family. It's about every traveler, every service member, every parent putting their child on a plane. We all deserve better than this.' Erin Applebaum, aviation accident attorney and partner at Kreindler & Kreindler, which represents the families of 31 victims on Flight 5342, issued a statement to Daily Mail. 'What's been revealed so far is both troubling and heartbreaking,' the statement reads. 'It's become abundantly clear that this crash was the inevitable result of years of unheeded warnings about outdated equipment, unacceptable risk-taking, and a systemic complacency so egregious that it bordered on negligence. 'In that environment, a tragedy of this magnitude was a foregone conclusion. We've learned just how fragile the margin of safety had become at DCA and how many people, including the airlines, knew about the risk while doing nothing to mitigate it. It's truly shocking.' In the American Airlines cockpit, the pilots used expletives when they saw the impending crash and attempted to pull the plane up just seconds before An audio excerpt of communication between air traffic controllers was also played at the hearing. It showed how they requested the jet to move to a different runway Both cousins are part of a group of 115 other people who have lost loved ones on Flight 5342- each with a different goal in mind. Hunter said some folks are there primarily for support and understanding while others are focused on a memorial or got involved to become an advocate for change. 'Everybody's in a different phase of this journey, and everybody has different emotional capabilities,' she said. 'Some of us step in and others step out, but there's a lot of different paths that we're all going through.' Feres spoke about growing up with her cousin Peter in Northern Virginia. A lifelong hockey fan, he was the person, along with his sister and aunt, who taught her how to ice skate. 'He'd take my hands and he'd skate backwards, which I thought was just the most amazing talent anyone could possess, and he'd bring me around the ring,' she recalled. Peter was a successful and prominent realtor, and his wife was a beloved Comcast executive. The pair met in 2006 and married in 2009 before starting their family. Feres recalled that when she became a mom herself, Peter gave her a piece of parenting advice she will always cherish: bring them into the things that you love. After all, that's what he did with his own children. The doting dad built an outdoor ice-skating rink in his backyard where he taught his daughters how to skate. Both children fell in love with figure skating and were on their way to becoming professionals. The family had been coming home from the 2025 national championships and a national development skating camp in Kansas when the tragic crash occurred. Eleven skaters between the ages of 11 and 16 were on the flight, including parents and skating coaches, two of whom were 1994 world championship skaters and spouses (Vadim Naumoy and Eugenia Shishkova), USA Today reported. Hunter shared that Everly was a single skater while Alydia was a doubles skater. 'The week before they died was a big week for the family - both girls were able to participate in Kansas City in the development camp,' Hunter said. 'It was a culmination of dreams for them, and both parents were there... they can never be replaced. We miss them terribly.' For now, both women are honoring their cousins' legacies by advocating for them, knowing that Peter would have done the same. 'For me, this is what I do so that I am not angry,' Feres said. 'I don't want to be angry. I don't want to be bitter. I want people to get on an airplane and feel safe and I want to know that I have honored the legacy of Peter and his family by making things better for everyone.' 'I think it is the systems that put them there that failed. What do you do with this emotion when four members of your family are gone?' Feres said. 'Just a bad decision here, a bad decision there, and it culminated in a horrible moment.' She continued, saying that everyone should be able to trust that when their loved ones board a plane, they will reach their destination safely. But, they learned, that's not currently the case. 'The people who are operating our air system, our aviation system to keep us safe - what is revealed is that isn't what's happening,' she added. 'We heard very quickly after this that aviation regulation is written in blood. In other words, somebody has to die for us to make the system a little bit safer, and that is a horrible way to make decisions - a horrible way to approach this - because life is so precious.' Hunter has described the last six months as a 'rollercoaster'. She and Feres commended the support they have received from the NTSB and expressed confidence that they would be doing a thorough investigation. 'What we do know is that it was an environment of unacceptable risk and it involved a lot of different systems that failed, and it wasn't just a one time thing.' The day before the hearings, Hunter told Daily Mail she was 'very nervous' about 'what they were going to hear and what they were going to see'. 'There's just a lot of emotions and trauma tied up in these next three days,' she said. Both women hoped to get more transparency and clarity on a range of topics including the safety management systems that are in play at the FAA and its child agencies, the technology and equipment used, the Army's risk assessment practices, and the data the FAA has in its possession. Feres calls the FAA 'professional' and 'compassionate', adding that 'they've been willing to walk us through what is a very technically dense investigation and the steps they're taking'. When she spoke with the Daily Mail, she was preparing for their first communication with the US Army since the first week after the crash. 'We're interested in understanding what interim steps the Army has taken to improve aviation safety outside of what the FAA has mandated in the DCA airspace, with respect to those helicopter routes that were were so dangerously designed and ADS-B (an advanced surveillance technology) being off.' She also wanted to learn more about their coordination with the FAA. 'We've seen some other reports of near misses between commercial aircraft and military aircraft since the collision, which kind of boggles the mind.' Feres questioned if the FAA analyzes their data and pointed out other near-misses that took place after January 29. 'We heard there had been 15,214 close proximity events in a very short amount of time - 85 for which were extremely close. We are looking forward to learning more about the safety management systems that are in play at the FAA.' Hunter shares the same curiosities. 'What did the carriers know? Were the pilots that went for both the Army and the carriers - were they sufficiently prepared to be flying in this complicated airspace? 'Did they sufficiently have enough information to make educated and safe decisions with our family members lives?'

Parents fury after police 'blunder' led to them losing the chance to locate their missing daughter, 12
Parents fury after police 'blunder' led to them losing the chance to locate their missing daughter, 12

Daily Mail​

time2 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Parents fury after police 'blunder' led to them losing the chance to locate their missing daughter, 12

The parents of a 12-year-old Ohio girl who went missing slammed police for failing to recognize her during a traffic stop days after she was reported missing. Khloe Dunbar went missing on July 16 near Columbus, leaving her mother Megan Dunn terrified for her safety and desperately launching an effort to find her. But in the week before Khloe was found safely, a bystander filmed a suspicious traffic stop in which police found the child but allowed her to stay with a group of adults. Dunn said that discovering the cops had come face-to-face with her missing daughter but let her go left her 'disgusted.' 'I'm sick to my stomach,' she told 11Alive. 'I have video footage of these officers, and they let that little 12-year-old that was reported missing go. It's not OK. None of this is OK.' Police admitted that not only did they allow Khloe to leave the traffic stop as a missing person, but they were not even aware she was in the footage until it was sent to them by the outlet. 'It wasn't until you sent us that cell phone video that we even knew about the traffic stop,' conceded Sgt. Joe Albert with Columbus police. 'We wish we had handled the traffic stop differently. We wish she had been returned to her parents.' In bodycam footage of the traffic stop, police were seen pulling three people from a Chevy Malibu, sitting a male driver and two women by the side of the road. They then asked Khloe her name and she gave a fake alias and claimed she was 15, but the cops instantly questioned this and she eventually gave her real name. But they did not recognize the name despite a missing persons alert being issued days before, and allowed her to leave with one of the adult women after arresting the male driver. Khloe was eventually found the next day thanks to the cell phone footage, which was circulated online after witness Daeja Rutland said she realized the girl was in the clip. Rutland said she filmed the traffic stop after police pulled over two women and a man from a black SUV. When she got home and went on social media, she said she saw a missing poster of Dunbar and her heart sank. 'I looked at that video one time and I knew it was her... I got on Facebook and the first thing I saw was that little girl's face. My heart stopped,' she said. Dunn said her daughter's safe return was not satisfying given the way the police handled the case, saying that she wants an apology from officials Dunn said she was infuriated by how close police were to her daughter, who she claimed had been 'close to a fentanyl overdose' at the time. '(She was) this close to being trafficked,' she said. 'And the police had her, no regard for any of it. It's negligence.' Khloe was eventually found the next day, six days after the initial missing person report was made. But Dunn said her daughter's safe return was not satisfying given the way the police handled the case, saying that she wants an apology from officials. 'I want to hear, "We failed you and your family,"' Dunn said. 'There was only a 24-hour window before she was found again but that doesn't matter. What matters is that it happened.' Columbus Police told 11Alive that they have launched an internal investigation into the incident. It is unclear if any arrests were made after Khloe was found, and Daily Mail has contacted Columbus Police for more information.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store