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Fatal crash leaves two people dead

Fatal crash leaves two people dead

Yahoo3 days ago

NEW ORLEANS (WGNO) — The New Orleans Police Department is investigating a fatal car crash on Almonaster Boulevard.
According to city officials, two people, a man and woman, were pronounced dead on the scene. Two other victims were hospitalized.
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Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Central Ohio mover claims Texas company stiffed him for work
Central Ohio mover claims Texas company stiffed him for work

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Central Ohio mover claims Texas company stiffed him for work

COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) — Some central Ohioans are raising the alarm about a Texas-based moving company, saying they didn't get paid for their work. Caddy Moving is based in Austin, Texas, but hires people all over the United States for moving jobs, including in Columbus. One man reached out to NBC4 Investigates after, he claims, the company did not pay him; NBC4 found dozens of complaints like his from central Ohio and beyond. The man who called NBC4 Investigates found a help-wanted ad on Craigslist looking to hire movers. He needed money for his kids. Multiple teenagers allegedly open fire at police officers near south Columbus park A long day of moving is hard enough, but what happened to this man, having to ask for his pay day after day, might be even harder. 'I don't think you should treat people that way,' Bruce Johnson, who did a job with Caddy Moving, said. Johnson got in touch with Caddy Moving. Texts show an understanding he was to be paid the day of the moving job, May 25, or at least within 24 hours. 'From my understanding that once the job was complete and they speak to the homeowners and then we'll be paid right after,' Johnson said. Final full moon of Spring, the 'Strawberry Moon,' glows over central Ohio Texts Johnson shared show he worked the job, moving someone into a home in Hilliard, but he did not get paid that day, like he was told. 'They keep saying we're going to pay you, and then I get a text at 1 in the morning saying, 'Hey, we sent you a pay,' then they didn't send the pay,' Johnson said. Then he got a text saying there was an issue with the payment system. 'Then I find their reviews,' Johnson said. NBC4 Investigates looked into Caddy Moving and found dozens of complaints just like Johnson's, across Google, the Better Business Bureau and Trust Pilot, a website that hosts reviews of businesses worldwide. Some read: 'Company is refusing to pay for labor,' 'This company does not pay what they're advertising on their website. After the work is complete and their customer is satisfied, they'll stop responding' and 'Promised that they'd pay me if I removed my Google review, and because I refused to remove it, they're still refusing to pay me.' Chemical leak at explosives manufacturing plant prompted evacuations in Vinton County 'I just felt bamboozled and just worried I wasn't going to get paid,' Johnson said. Caddy Moving responded to NBC4 Investigates on June 11. 'We had some issues with Venmo and PayPal recently,' Caddy Moving CEO Zach Richards said. 'We did have a couple of our systems actually get locked up on us and we worked through those with our guys. We actually launched a hotline for guys to reach out to.' Caddy Moving said that as a startup, it does not have everything figured out yet, but takes accountability for the payment issues. We asked about the reviews across the websites as well. 'As far as the Trustpilot, Yelp, we were not signed up on any of those platforms we don't monitor them so as you could imagine, those that have negative feedback to share they are going to go to those platforms, but we did not sign up on those platform,' Richards said. 'We don't have everything figured out. Of course. But no, we fully take accountability for having delays on payments.' Richards said those with complaints can reach out to him at zach@ or by calling the help line at 888-788-8542. More than 400,000 Ohioans see driver's license suspensions lifted under new law Caddy Moving is based out of Texas and NBC4 Investigates found the attorney general there has also received complaints. Johnson reached out to them and to NBC4 Investigates and finally, two and a half weeks after the job, he was paid the money he was owed, but said he knows others are still waiting. 'I just want to be done with them,' Johnson said. 'I hope they get it together and stop treating people like that.' Other reviews and those we have heard from are customers saying the company canceled last minute or movers stretched the time of the move and they had to pay more. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

"Who is funding these protestors?": Gabbard, Trump spread conspiracy theory about paid demonstrators
"Who is funding these protestors?": Gabbard, Trump spread conspiracy theory about paid demonstrators

Yahoo

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"Who is funding these protestors?": Gabbard, Trump spread conspiracy theory about paid demonstrators

Anyone who has been to a Donald Trump rally can attest that the president loves playing the hits. He's trotting out a golden oldie of MAGA conspiracists to wave away the ongoing protests in Los Angeles: the demonstrators were paid to b there. Both Trump and Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard spread the theory that Los Angeles protestors were paid actors while speaking to the press on Wednesday. Trump, attending a performance of "Les Miserables" at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., floated the fringe belief on the red carpet. "These are radical left lunatics that you're dealing with," he said. "They're tough. They're smart. They're probably paid many of them. As you know, they're professionals." Gabbard echoed that idea on Fox News, telling host Jesse Watters that Trump admin will be investigating the boogeyman that far-right pundits have made up. "This is something that the Department of Justice and the FBI are looking into. Who is funding these protestors?" she said. "We've seen the ads put up on Craigslist offering people thousands of dollars a week to go out and conduct these violent and dangerous riots." The paid protestor theory has drifted from the antisemitic fringes of the right, where it took the form of specific allegations against billionaire and Democratic Party donor George Soros. It's since become a common complaint under the GOP's big tent for nativists of all stripes. Even four years after thousands of Republican supporters stormed the Capitol on nothing more than a mistaken belief in a rigged election, GOP voters and politicians can't imagine an organic response to ICE raids in Los Angeles (which has the benefit of being something that is actually happening). That Republicans have themselves been caught paying actors to appear at GOP events has done little to stop the conspiracy-mongering. And that Craigslist ad mentioned by Gabbard? It was a prank posted by a podcaster who goes by the name "Goofcon1."

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