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Florida set to execute man convicted of raping and killing a woman outside of a bar

Florida set to execute man convicted of raping and killing a woman outside of a bar

Washington Post3 hours ago

STARKE, Fla. — A man convicted of raping and killing a woman near a central Florida bar is scheduled to be executed Tuesday.
Thomas Lee Gudinas, 51, is scheduled to receive a lethal injection at Florida State Prison near Starke, barring a last-day reprieve. He was convicted in the May 1994 killing of Michelle McGrath.

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Eight people hit in two shootings in Baltimore
Eight people hit in two shootings in Baltimore

Washington Post

time22 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Eight people hit in two shootings in Baltimore

Eight people, including two young teenagers, were wounded Monday evening in two separate quadruple shootings in Baltimore, city officials said. A 19-year-old man was in critical condition after the second of the shootings, but the other seven victims in the two attacks appeared to be in non-life-threatening condition, said Baltimore Police Commissioner Richard Worley. The 19-year-old was one of four people shot around 9:40 p.m. in the 2500 block of Edmondson Avenue, officials said. The other three shot there were all older, and one was 66. The first of the two shootings occurred shortly before 7 p.m. about a mile and a half to the south in the 1900 block of Ramsay Street, police said. Two teenagers, both 14, were wounded in that shooting. The two other victims were a man and a woman; the woman was grazed. No motive was given in either shooting, and no arrests were reported. The question was raised at a news conference whether the shootings might have been associated with Monday's extreme heat. 'When it gets warm,' Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott responded, officials in Baltimore and elsewhere 'see things pick up.' But he said the city had nevertheless cut down on crime last year even in the hot weather season. At least in part, he ascribed the shootings to the presence and availability of guns, which are used 'to resolve whatever conflicts' may exist. The first shooting, on Ramsay Street, which occurred well before dark, was heard by police assigned to the area because of recent crime there, Worley said. In that shooting, police said, at least two people emerged from a vehicle and opened fire in the direction of the four victims, who were in or near an alley, police said. Police said it was too early to determine whether the two attacks were connected. Scott called on residents of the communities involved to aid the police investigation, asking them to treat the shootings as if one of their relatives had been a victim. 'Somebody out there knows what happened,' he said.

Aussie tradies cop $126,000 in fines for 'disgusting and vile' act shared on social media
Aussie tradies cop $126,000 in fines for 'disgusting and vile' act shared on social media

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Aussie tradies cop $126,000 in fines for 'disgusting and vile' act shared on social media

WARNING — GRAPHIC CONTENT: Three tradies have been fined a collective $126,000 in animal cruelty charges over what a magistrate described as an "absolutely disgusting, vile and reprehensible" attack against a pigeon with a golf club. According to the RSPCA's Western Australia branch, the trio bragged about the disturbing incident online on social media, attracting swift criticism from both the authorities and animal rights groups alike. The WA-based men, one aged 24 and two aged 30, all pleaded guilty to animal cruelty at the Kalgoorlie Magistrates Court on Monday. They were working at the Norseman Gold Project at the time of the offence on June 17, 2023. The younger man was fined $48,000 while the older two were fined $39,000. All three had their applications for a spent conviction (a conviction for a crime that is not disclosed publicly) dismissed. In the footage uploaded to Snapchat, one of the offenders was heard speaking to the pigeon, saying "be careful, alright? Because there's some bad c**** around here". The video shows two men initially holding a white and grey pigeon, before the 24-year-old man strikes it with a golf club, sending the bird flying more than a metre through the air. The clip is captioned, "May his soul rest in peace," accompanied by a laughing emoji. After the bird lands, both men are heard laughing. The 24-year-old then proceeded to hit the pigeon four more times, with feathers visibly falling out after each blow. He then picks the injured bird up by its foot, leaving it hanging upside down. The pigeon remained alive and visibly moving throughout the assault, before the man placed it in a nearby skip bin. In sentencing, Magistrate William Yoo said the attack was "a disgusting and despicable thing to do", branding the offenders "incomprehensible" and "abominable". "[The act] was absolutely disgusting, vile and reprehensible," he said. "[The pigeon's] distress was evident, and the pigeon was an innocent and vulnerable animal." Man caught in 'disgusting' act with kangaroo on Aussie road Aussie man given 10-year BAN after 'filthy' discovery in suburban garage Pet pig suffers 'bizarre' act of cruelty, Aussie man fined $5000 Magistrate Yoo said the younger man knew what he was doing and there was a "degree of persistence" in his actions. He told each offender they "egged each other on" and "betrayed [their] own humanity". "[This is a] very serious and shocking matter which should shock the public's conscience," he said. RSPCA WA Inspector Manager Kylie Green echoed the strong sentiment. "There is never an excuse to torment or abuse an animal," she said. "The fines handed down today are profoundly significant, and it is hoped the message is loud and clear to those who think that cruelty towards animals is okay." Two of the men were also sentenced under sections 7 and 8 of the Criminal Code. It was found that they aided and encouraged the third offender to commit the offence. Do you have a story tip? Email: newsroomau@ You can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitter and YouTube.

US airstrike on nuclear facilities follows years of Iranian plots on American soil
US airstrike on nuclear facilities follows years of Iranian plots on American soil

Fox News

timean hour ago

  • Fox News

US airstrike on nuclear facilities follows years of Iranian plots on American soil

Even before a U.S. airstrike "obliterated" a trio of Iranian nuclear facilities over the weekend, the country's radical Islamist government was already leveling death threats and allegedly plotting assassinations on American soil. Federal authorities have called Iran the world's largest state sponsor of terror, and the FBI says the Iranian government has both imprisoned Americans within its territory on unsubstantiated charges and harassed and even killed dissidents in exile. "Iran's nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated," President Donald Trump said during a nationally broadcast statement from the White House Saturday after American stealth bombers blasted three facilities. "And Iran, the bully of the Middle East, must now make peace. If they do not, future attacks would be far greater and a lot easier." The bombings came amid an increasingly deadly conflict involving Iran and Israel, which is at war with the Iran-backed terror group Hamas. Last year, the Justice Department said it thwarted a plot to kill Trump after Election Day. Separately, the DOJ announced the arrest and conviction of two other Iranian assets accused of plotting to kill an American journalist, Masih Alinejad, who was critical of the theocracy. "I am shocked," she posted on X at the time. "I just learned from the @FBI that two men were arrested yesterday in a new plot to kill me at Fairfield University, where I was scheduled to give a talk. I also learned that the person assigned to assassinate @realDonaldTrump was also assigned to kill me on U.S. soil. The alleged killers also went in front of my house in Brooklyn." Another suspected Iranian agent is Asif Merchant. The Pakistani man is accused of posing as an international clothing salesman and trying to hire hit men in Brooklyn nightclubs in an alleged assassination plot targeting key U.S. figures, possibly even Trump. "For 40 years, Iran has been saying, 'Death to America, death to Israel.' They have been killing our people, blowing off their arms, blowing off their legs with roadside bombs," Trump said Saturday. "That was their specialty. We lost over a thousand people, and hundreds of thousands throughout the Middle East and around the world have died as a direct result of their hate in particular." Other threats may not have directly come from Iran but appear to have been, at least in part, inspired by the regime there. In March 2022, an Iranian-born Texas 23-year-old named Nika Nikoubin lured a man into a Las Vegas hotel for sex and stabbed him in the neck. She initially told police the stabbing came as revenge for the U.S. drone strike that killed Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani – a designated terrorist leader who the Defense Department blames for the deaths of hundreds of American troops and thousands of severe injuries overseas. Days before Trump ordered the drone strike that killed him, Soleimani had orchestrated a deadly attack on a U.S. base in Iraq. Authorities have said Iran has been seeking retaliation for his death for years. Also in 2022, federal prosecutors charged another Iranian agent with trying to have former White House national security advisor John Bolton killed for $300,000. Shahram Poursafi, also known as Mehdi Rezayi, allegedly tried to hire assassins in Washington, D.C., and Maryland, according to the Justice Department. He had a second, unnamed target he was willing to pay up to $1 million to have killed, authorities said. "Iran has a history of plotting to assassinate individuals in the U.S. it deems a threat, but the U.S. government has a longer history of holding accountable those who threaten the safety of our citizens," Larissa Knapp, executive assistant director of the FBI's National Security Branch, said at the time. "Let there be no doubt: The FBI, the U.S. government, and our partners remain vigilant in the fight against such threats here in the U.S. and overseas." Even as far back as 2013, an Iranian-born U.S. citizen named Manssor Arbabsiar was sentenced to 25 years in prison for his role in a conspiracy to kill the Saudi ambassador to the U.S. With $100,000 from Iran's Quds Force, the Iranian military division run by Soleimani, Arbabsiar tried to hire an assassin from a Mexican drug cartel who was actually a DEA informant. Iranian Big. Gen. Amir Ali Hajizadeh, head of the country's "Aerospace Force," had called for the deaths of Trump, former U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and other U.S. officials in the aftermath of Soleimani's death. He was one of several high-ranking Iranian leaders killed in Israeli airstrikes last week. Federal prosecutors have also blamed Iranian agents for cybercrimes, including attacks on presidential campaigns from both parties. On Monday, Iran fired missiles toward the U.S.-run Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar – the Pentagon's largest military installation in the Middle East. None of them reached the base, Fox News reported.

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