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Maxwell Anderson trial, Sade Robinson killed: Monday, June 2

Maxwell Anderson trial, Sade Robinson killed: Monday, June 2

Yahoo02-06-2025
The Brief
Testimony in the trial of Maxwell Anderson resumes on Monday, June 2.
Anderson is accused of killing and dismembering 19-year-old Sade Robinson.
WARNING: During testimony, some content may not be suitable for all viewers.
MILWAUKEE - Testimony in the trial of Maxwell Anderson, the Milwaukee man accused of killing and dismembering Sade Robinson, resumed on Monday, June 2.
What we know
On Monday, June 2, the state began its case with Pete Worbington (not pictured) taking the stand. Worbington has known Anderson for years – and rented a lower unit from Anderson a few years back.
After a mid-morning recess, Dr. Lauren Decker of the Milwaukee County Medical Examiner's Office took the stand for the state. She was there to talk about forensics tied to the case – and how the medical examiner's office handles autopsies.
The backstory
Anderson is charged with first-degree intentional homicide, mutilating a corpse, hiding a corpse and arson of property other than a building. He is accused of killing Robinson after a date, dismembering her and dumping her body parts across Milwaukee County. One of her arms was later found on an Illinois beach.
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Prosecutors said Anderson and Robinson showed up at a Menomonee Valley bar on April 1, 2024 – the night she was last seen or heard from. The next day, Robinson's burned-out car was found near 30th and Lisbon in Milwaukee. Surveillance photos show a man investigators believe is Anderson walking away from the area, and who was later seen on a bus heading back towards his home on the city's south side.
Anderson had planned to kill Robinson weeks before her death, according to a statement from a "confidential informant" noted in court filings FOX6 News obtained. A search warrant also revealed prosecutors believe Anderson tried to cover up Robinson's death with a text message.
Dig deeper
FOX6 News is streaming the entire Anderson trial each day on FOX LOCAL. The app is free to download on your phone, tablet or smart TV.
Open Record: Maxwell Anderson trial
Day 4: Video from Milwaukee, discovery of Sade Robinson's remains
Day 3: Testimony resumes; law enforcement, friends of Sade Robinson take stand
Day 2: Opening statements, testimony begins
Day 1: Jury selected in single day
Sade Robinson homicide: Timeline of events leading to criminal charges
Sade Robinson homicide: Parents navigate grief ahead of trial
Sade Robinson homicide: The psychology behind the murder
Sade Robinson homicide: Lasting legacy, from tragedy to advocacy
Open Record: A Date With Death
The Source
FOX6 News was in court for the Anderson trial. Information in this report is from the Milwaukee County District Attorney's Office, Wisconsin Circuit Court, and prior FOX6 coverage of the case.
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US Army Paratroopers to See Major Pay Change
US Army Paratroopers to See Major Pay Change

Newsweek

timea day ago

  • Newsweek

US Army Paratroopers to See Major Pay Change

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The U.S. Army is restructuring its airborne forces, leading to pay changes for thousands of parachutist positions. According to a report from the American military newspaper Stars and Stripes, an administrative message delivered to service members on July 30 announced that more than 22,000 paratroopers will no longer receive their monthly $150 "jump pay." This is due to reclassifications of paid parachutist positions which will take effect in the upcoming fiscal year. The reduced number which will remain eligible for the payments will comprise those deemed more likely to deploy these capabilities in combat operations in the foreseeable future, Newsweek understands. 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AFP via Getty Images/Petras Malukas Anderson added that limited aircraft had led to a broad "decline in collective airborne proficiency," and that devoting resources to over 50,000 airborne positions had reduced the readiness of assault forces. "We're trying to prop up a very big structure of 56,000 with dwindling resources, we're spreading those resources out, and we're undermining our own readiness goals," Anderson said during a podcast appearance in April. He added that many of those currently receiving jump pay are not currently meeting their "proficiency requirements." Major Shaw told Newsweek that removing 22,000 from paid active jump status "will refocus training and resources on critical forces to strengthen operational effectiveness." Soldiers who remain eligible will see an increase in this extra monthly allowance, as announced by Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth in May, with jump pay is set to increase from $150 per month to $200 for paratroopers. 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Mayors across US react to Trump's warnings of federal intervention
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CNN

time13-08-2025

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Mayors across US react to Trump's warnings of federal intervention

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Federal cuts hitting D.C. suburbs hardest, data says
Federal cuts hitting D.C. suburbs hardest, data says

Business Journals

time12-08-2025

  • Business Journals

Federal cuts hitting D.C. suburbs hardest, data says

Story Highlights Trump administration's federal cuts severely impact Greater Washington's economy. Suburbs hit hardest, with steep drops in employment and contracts. CBRE's REVIVE index shows second-worst economic start since 2009. The Trump administration's efforts to slash federal spending through mass firings and buyouts of federal workers and cancellation of scores of federal contracts are finally starting to take their toll on Greater Washington's economy. New data from the real estate firm CBRE showed that the first of half of 2025 was the second-worst start to the year for Greater Washington's economy going back to 2009, eclipsed only by the first year of the pandemic. GET TO KNOW YOUR CITY Find Local Events Near You Connect with a community of local professionals. Explore All Events Notably, the suburbs have been it the hardest, said Ian Anderson, CBRE's senior director of research and analysis. Northern Virginia has seen the steepest drop in federal employment while federal government contracts and grants procured in suburban Maryland fell more than twice as fast in the first six months of 2025 than other parts of the region, according to CBRE's REVIVE Regional Vibrancy Index, a monthly index tracking the health of the local economy. At the end of June, the index stood at 72.4 out of 100, down 1.1% from the prior month and 5% since the start of the year. Only in the first half of 2020 did it show a bigger drop in the region's economic vitality. CBRE (NYSE: CBRE) and the Washington Business Journal began partnering to produce the monthly index in early 2024, tracking changes to the region's economy following the pandemic. The index lags by more than a month and tracks thousands of data points on dozens of industries and condenses those into major areas: labor, innovation, commercial real estate, residential real estate, mobility and visitation, the federal government and investor sentiment. Revised job numbers and additional monthly data have begun to filter in and make clear that the local economy took a turn for the worse in the first two quarters, Anderson said. In previous months, the impact of federal cuts on the economy looked to be more modest and didn't meaningfully drag down the REVIVE index, which had been buoyed strong investor sentiment and rising mobility and visitation scores Now, however, 'that negativity we know about is starting to become clearer in the data,' Anderson said. The region shed roughly 20,000 federal government jobs in Greater Washington so far this year while federal government contracts and grants procured by companies in the region fell by $1.7 billion or 13% since the start of the year, according to CBRE's research. A rise in the region's unemployment rate to 4% in June from 3.3% a year earlier led REVIVE's labor sub-index to fall 2.4% year-over-year in the most recent report. This month, the D.C. real estate firm has added a new index tied specifically to the District. Indices for Northern Virginia and suburban Maryland are forthcoming, as CBRE aims to make its research 'more applicable to stakeholders and players in each of those geographies,' Anderson said. And there are variances between the sub-areas. For example, federal government employment fell by 6.1% in Northern Virginia, 4.1% in suburban Maryland but just 2.4% in D.C. between December and May. Anderson speculated that cuts were more severe in the suburbs because that's where much of the federal job growth has been in recent decades. The Maryland suburbs saw a whopping 31.4% drop in federal government contracts and grants procured from December to June, compared to a 13% drop in Northern Virginia and 12% drop in D.C., the index found. Cuts to the Department of Health and Human Services have disproportionately affected suburban Maryland, which is home to some of HHS' biggest agencies, including the Food and Administration and the National Institutes of Health. NIH has been hit particularly hard by cuts in federal grants. A bright spot in the data was the mobility and visitation sub-index, which was up 43% year-over-year in June. Average daily tapped entries on Metro were 22% higher in June compared to the same month last year, according to data from the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority. The sub-index also tracks anonymized cell phone data, which also showed more people moving around the region than during the same time last year. The D.C. index's street activation metric also takes into account a 12-month rolling average of crime in D.C., which was down 18% through June, Anderson said. Such numbers run counter to President Trump's claims that crime is up in D.C., allegations he this week in announcing that the federal government would be temporarily taking control of D.C.'s police force and deploying the National Guard in D.C. Another bright spot is the apartment rental market. The second quarter of 2025 was the 'ninth-best quarter over the last ten years' in the apartment rental market in Greater Washington, Anderson said, based on median rental rates. The median asking rent in Greater Washington was $2,125 in June, according to data from Zillow, an increase of 1.5% from June of last year. 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