
BREAKING NEWS American B-2 stealth bombers with terrifying capabilities 'are on the move' as Iran tensions heat up
Deadly bombers, which only the US has in their arsenal, are allegedly on the move to a US Air Force base in Guam amid growing tensions with Iran.
Six B-2 stealth bombers, docked in Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri, appeared to be on the move on Saturday morning, according to Fox News.
The bombers are said to have refueled after launching from Missouri, which means they could have launched without full tanks due to the extraordinarily heavy bunker-buster bombs.
This is a breaking news story.

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Daily Mail
33 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Versace robe-wearing pimp who bragged about his sordid acts online is jailed for human trafficking
A Versace-wearing Washington man has been convicted of trafficking and beating his girlfriend after he bragged about the illegal act and flaunted his wealth online. Cedric Dorsey II, 32, of Bellevue, who goes by CCC Cash Chasen Ced online, was found guilty of human trafficking, promoting prostitution, and unlawful possession of a firearm this week. Dorsey will spend 35 years in prison for forcing his girlfriend to perform sex work to make money for himself. His crimes were discovered after police were called to his home in 2024 for a domestic violence call in April 2024 and officers discovered signs of human trafficking, KOMO News reported. 'They listened to what that victim was saying, and things weren't adding up, and she was in a very dangerous situation,' Bellevue Police Major Ellen Inman told the outlet. The victim told police Dorsey had 'purchased a hotel room for her and her "ads" posted, and then she began seeing sex buyers,' a police report said. Dorsey would book the rooms for his girlfriend, who was not identified, so he could 'control everything,' the report said. 'For a large percentage of prostitution dates, Dorsey required [the victim] to obtain a deposit from a sex buyer to verify they were not law enforcement.' His crimes were discovered after police were called to his home in 2024 for a domestic violence call in April 2024 and officers discovered signs of human trafficking. They later discovered he was bragging about pimping his girlfriend online He prostituted the young woman in several cities, including Seattle, Bellevue, and Las Vegas, among others. He also stomped on the woman's face and beat her several times, causing hospitalization. Dorsey also promoted his illegal acts online in several videos. 'I'm so pimpish,' he said in one. In other videos, he's seen holding stacks of one hundred bills, showing off his metal grill, and flashy jewelry. 'I really take care of my b**ches, you know,' he said in another. 'I went to sleep and told my thang to go get me some money, you know what I'm saying. So she was DMing for like six hours, you hear what I'm saying. 'And yeah, she came back with a thousand,' he proudly said. 'Oh yeah, pimping, yeah. That's how it goes.' Prosecutors said his flashy lifestyle was built off the trafficking he put his girlfriend through. Police also found $12,000 in cash inside his home when they executed a search warrant, as well as, three firearms, including an AK-47. In May 2024, a SWAT team surrounded his apartment. He declined to come outside until his mother was involved in the process, Law and Crime reported. Dorsey had prior felony convictions for theft, burglary, attempting to elude police, retail theft, and more. 'It's really important that traffickers are held accountable because if they aren't they will constantly seek other women to exploit,' Braelah McGinnis, of the King County Prosecuting Attorney's Office, told KOMO. 'This is very important for the community, this is happening in our backyards. These are our women and young men.'


Daily Mail
38 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Speed boat driver is arrested after glamorous Miami woman, 28, was killed after he crashed
A speedboat driver was arrested months after a glamorous woman was ejected from his boat and died in Florida. Reinaldo Aquit, 48, of Miami Beach, was arrested on Friday for the death of Stephanie Rodriguez, 28, of Hialeah, who died in November after being ejected from his 39-foot boat following a sharp turn. Aquit was operating the boat recklessly and took a sharp turn, causing the boat to roll over, ejecting six of the passengers on his voyage between Miami and Key West. Rodriguez was the only passenger to die in the incident. The others were collected by a Good Samaritan who stopped to help. They were taken to the hospital. 'The tragic death of this young woman was completely avoidable,' Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) Major Alberto Maza told NBC Miami in a statement. 'We continue to think of Ms. Rodriguez's friends and family as they grieve her loss.' Aquit was booked into the Monroe County Sheriff's Office jail and was charged with felony vessel homicide, and eight misdemeanors. He is being held on a $500,000 bond. Rodriguez was the youngest of four and had three older brothers. Her brothers remember her as being a giving person, who loved to travel and was full of life. 'She lit up any room she went into,' her brother, Ricky Rodriguez, emotionally told NBC Miami. 'My sister was special, she was special.' Her relative Jorge Perez said she often 'gave me a lot of advice,' despite being 'a lot younger than me,' he told the outlet. 'We're just relying on God to get us through this,' he said in November. The family started a GoFundMe for her funeral and other expenses. It has garnered more than $40,000. Rodriguez was the youngest of four and had three older brothers. Her brothers remember her as being a giving person, who loved to travel and was full of life 'Stephanie was a kind, loving, and playful person whose warmth touched everyone she met. To know her was to love her,' the fundraiser said. 'Her sudden departure has left her family and friends heartbroken and struggling to comprehend this immense loss.'


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Suspect in Minnesota lawmaker's killing was ‘prepper' preparing ‘for war'
The man charged in connection with the recent shootings of two Minnesota lawmakers and their spouses was a doomsday 'prepper' who instructed his family to 'prepare for war' as he tried to evade capture, according to new court filings. Vance Boelter, 57, faces multiple federal and state murder charges after allegedly shooting dead the Democratic Minnesota state house speaker emerita Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark, in the early hours of 14 June. Boelter is also accused of shooting and seriously wounding the Democratic state senator John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette, about 90 minutes earlier. In a newly unsealed affidavit first reported by the local news station WCCO and seen by the Guardian, law enforcement pulled over Boelter's wife and four children hours after the shootings near Lake Mille Lacs, about 75 miles (120km) north of the Twin Cities, apparently en route to Wisconsin. Boelter's wife consented to a search of her vehicle, where law enforcement located a revolver in the glove box and a semi-automatic pistol in a cooler. Police also found a safe, Boelter's and the children's passports, and at least $10,000 in cash, according to the affidavit by FBI agent Terry Getsch. Boelter's wife told investigators that her husband had recently sent a message to a group text thread with their children, which 'stated something to the effect of they should prepare for war, they needed to get out of the house and people with guns may be showing up to the house', wrote Getsch. According to the affidavit dated 14 June, Boelter and his wife were preppers – a term which refers to people who stockpile materials such as weapons, food and gasoline. Preppers' purpose for doing that is to survive a future major disaster or catastrophe such as war or economic or political collapse. At some point earlier, Boelter had given his wife a 'bailout plan' – instructions of what to do and where to go in case of 'exigent circumstances'. The plan specified that the family go to her mother's residence in Spring Brook, Wisconsin. She also told investigators that her husband 'has a business partner from Worthington' who lives in the state of Washington. The two were 'partners … in Red Lion, a security company and fishing outfit in Congo, Africa', the affidavit states. The deadly shootings took place as millions of people prepared to take to the streets to protest against the Trump administration and its assault on free speech, peaceful assembly and due process rights embedded in the US constitution. Getsch wrote the affidavit during what became the largest ever manhunt in Minnesota state history, when he believed the gunman may have fled state lines. Boelter was eventually captured two days later while trying to evade arrest by fleeing into a wooded area close to his home. The affidavit does not imply that Boelter's wife knew about her husband's alleged plans to attack the lawmakers. She has not been charged with any crime. Boelter was disguised as a police officer and drove a black SUV with a license plate that said 'police'. He allegedly ambushed the lawmakers at home in the middle of the night, banging on their front doors armed with a 9mm handgun, and wearing a black tactical vest and silicone mask. He exchanged fire with police at about 3.30am on Saturday outside the Hortmans' home but managed to flee the scene, according to a federal criminal complaint. According to separate court documents obtained by WCCO on Friday, law enforcement found a storage locker rented by Boelter in Minneapolis on 10 June. He had last 'used his access code' for the locker the day before the shootings. Investigators later found empty rifle cases, gun-cleaning supplies and a bike inside the locker. Law enforcement found a 'hit list' of individuals inside what they believe was Boelter's vehicle. It included Hortman, Hoffman and several other Democratic lawmakers, as well as reproductive rights advocates. In a statement released on Thursday, the Hoffman family recounted the terrifying attack. The statement said: 'We are grappling with the reality that we live in a world where public service carries such risks as being targeted because someone disagrees with you or doesn't like what you stand for.'