
Undercover cop gets carjacked while trying to buy drugs in sting operation
On July 18th, 2025, a Hillsborough County Detective in the Special Investigations Division Gang Unit organized an undercover meet-up via social media with two individuals, Daryl Cole, 17, and Christopher Samuels, 18, in Riverside, Florida.
The meet-up began as a drug deal, but later escalated into the two suspects attempting an armed robbery of the detectives' money and vehicle.
However, in a failed attempt to get away in the detective's car, both suspects fled the scene on foot and were later identified and arrested.
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Daily Mail
24 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Married hotel CEO kissed and molested terrified female manager at Justin Timberlake concert, lawsuit alleges
A married hotel CEO in Michigan allegedly groped and kissed a female employee during a company outing to a Justin Timberlake concert. Asad Malik, the CEO of the Amerilodge Group, which owns and manages multiple hotel chains in the Midwest, has been accused of sexual harassment, assault, and battery by his former employee, Stephanie Starling. Starling alleges that while at the concert in February, Malik told her that he wanted a kiss, adding, 'bet it would be a good kiss too. Probably later tonight.' Starling nervously laughed in response to the unwanted attention, but Malik allegedly kept pursuing her. The CEO later came up to her, standing silently, and allegedly told her that he was 'just looking at her lips' and thinking of the kiss, according to the lawsuit. In reaction to the stunning comments, Starling quickly found her supervisor and general manager, pleading with them not to leave her side to avoid being alone with Malik. However, later that night, she found herself seated next to Malik after he squeezed into a booth to be next to her. Malik then 'slid his hand under her right thigh and touched her butt,' according to the lawsuit. Starling was terrified after the encounter and was 'noticeably trembling in fear' while she tried to eat. Starling escaped the situation by excusing herself to go to the bathroom. When the show began and the group went to their seats, Malik allegedly attempted to get Starling to sit next to him. When Starling's general manager sat with her instead, Malik was 'visibly angry with the situation,' the lawsuit states. While in the bathroom during the concert, she called her father in tears, begging him not to call the police. Her general manager and supervisor overheard the phone call and told her they were planning on reporting Malik's behavior. When the group returned to a nearby hotel after the show, Malik allegedly said he needed to talk to her and asked her to get in his vehicle. He then allegedly drove to a dark area and told her it was 'time for that kiss.' Starling rejected the advances, which made Malik agitated, and he pressed her about why she wouldn't kiss him. She demanded to be taken back to the hotel and threatened to walk back to the snow if he didn't drive her. When she returned to work at the Marriott in Bay City, Starling notified HR and was told that a third party would investigate her accusations. Starling met with an attorney virtually to explain what happened, but alleges that the company never followed up about her complaint. While she continued working, she noticed coworkers were gossiping about the investigation. Starling called her supervisor, crying, and soon after noticed that her company email was revoked. She was then instructed to submit an official resignation letter, despite having informed HR that she had no intention of quitting. Not even a month after the concert, she received an email that HR was 'upholding her resignation.' She was later informed that the third-party investigation couldn't substantiate her claims. Starling's attorney, Jack Shulz, told Daily Mail that he sees the comparisons between her story and the viral video of the Astronomer CEO Andrew Byron and his HR chief, Kristin Cabot. 'Although a lot of the focus is the comparison to the deplorable acts of this CEO and that of the Astronomer CEO at the Coldplay, a harder look should be given to the acts of the two human resources departments, which are present themselves as being neutral and having open doors to employees,' he said. 'Here, Starling and others immediately reported the incident, HR acted to protect the company, and she was terminated for speaking up. Both cases demonstrate that HR is in bed with the company---literally and figuratively.' Starling told the Detroit Free Press that she was offered a settlement payment, calling it 'hush money.' 'You're not going to put a price tag on me, she added. 'I do have the balls to speak up — and it's not okay.' The company stated in a filing with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission that Malik denied the claims, and no one witnessed the alleged assault.


Reuters
24 minutes ago
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Federal prosecutors in Washington will no longer seek charges for rifle, shotgun possession
Aug 20 (Reuters) - Federal prosecutors in Washington, D.C., will no longer seek charges against people who violate a local law prohibiting individuals from carrying rifles or shotguns in the nation's capital, the Washington Post reported late on Tuesday. The decision, which represents a break from the office's prior policy, comes amid what President Donald Trump has described as a crime crackdown in Washington. The president has deployed hundreds of National Guard troops and federal agents to the city's streets to combat what he says is rampant crime, in an extraordinary exercise of presidential power. In a statement provided to Reuters, the District of Columbia's U.S. attorney, Jeanine Pirro, said the new policy will not preclude prosecutors from charging people with other illegal firearms crimes, such as a convicted felon found in possession of a gun. "We will continue to seize all illegal and unlicensed firearms," she said. The D.C. code in question bars anyone from carrying a rifle or shotgun with narrow exceptions. Pirro, a close Trump ally, argued in a statement to the Post that the law violates two U.S. Supreme Court decisions expanding gun rights. In 2008, the court struck down a separate D.C. law banning handguns and ruled that individuals have the right to keep firearms in their homes for self-defense. In 2022, the court ruled that any gun-control law must be rooted in the country's historical traditions to be valid. Unlike U.S. attorneys in all 50 states, who only prosecute federal offenses, the U.S. attorney in Washington prosecutes local crimes as well. The White House has touted the number of guns that law enforcement has seized since Trump began surging federal agents into the city. In a social media post on Wednesday, U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi said the operation had taken 76 illegal guns off the streets and resulted in more than 550 arrests, an average of 42 per day. The city's Metropolitan Police Department arrested an average of 61 adults and juveniles per day in 2024, according to city statistics. The Trump administration has not specified whether the arrest totals it has cited include those made by MPD officers or only consist of those made by federal agents. D.C. crime rates have stayed mostly the same as they were a year ago, according to the police department's weekly statistics. As of Tuesday, the city's overall crime rate is down 7% year over year, the same percentage as before the crackdown. D.C. has also experienced the same declines in violent crime and property crime as it did beforehand, according to the data. Trump has defended his decision to deploy soldiers in the capital as necessary to stem a wave of violent crime. City officials have rejected that assertion, pointing to federal and city statistics that show violent crime has declined significantly since a spike in 2023. The president has said, without providing evidence, that the crime data is fraudulent. The Justice Department has opened an investigation into whether the numbers were manipulated, the Post reported on Tuesday, citing unnamed sources.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
'Perfect family' obliterated by quadruple murder-suicide at stunning New Hampshire home... with confused orphan toddler found near bodies
A toddler was the sole survivor after a family was found dead in their New Hampshire home in what police suspect to be a murder-suicide. At just after 8pm on Friday cops discovered that four members of the Long family had been fatally shot in their home in Madbury, a small town just over an hour from Boston. Ryan Long, 48, his wife Emily, 34, their son Parker, 8, and a daughter also called Ryan, 6, were found dead inside their home and pronounced dead at the scene, New Hampshire Attorney General John Formella said in a statement on Tuesday. Their three-year-old toddler was found alive with no injuries and the orphaned toddler is now in the care of family. Investigators also found a gun near the family at the scene, CBS News reported. 'It was shocking,' neighbor Bevy Ketel told CBS affiliate WBZ-TV. 'It was a perfect family as far as we knew.' '[Ryan] certainly touched a lot of lives. He was part of the fabric of the community and his family goes along with it... It's just shocking. We didn't see it coming.' The investigation into the tragedy is ongoing with autopsies scheduled to be performed on Wednesday. 'One of the biggest questions they have right is motive... I think that's probably one of the more difficult things that they are trying to grasp to understand,' NH Assistant Attorney General Ben Agati told WCAX. Just days ago on Saturday Emily Long updated her TikTok account. Her page showed a collection of videos in which she spoke to the camera about her family navigating husband Ryan's diagnosis with terminal brain cancer. Ryan suffered from glioblastoma, one of the most aggressive and common types of brain cancer. Often, those diagnosed with the cancer pass away within six months. Emily's first post about her husband's diagnosis and her own mental struggle was uploaded on April 23. On May 11, Emily uploaded a video captioned: 'Want to watch someone actually fall apart before your very eyes? I swear, this cancer will be the thing that breaks me.' In her latest update, Emily declared that she was trying to make changes to get herself out of a 'rut.' 'I put makeup on and real clothes for the first time... in god only knows how long. I'm trying to get myself out of this rut, I know I've said this before but our kids are definitely struggling.' Emily then explained how she noticed that her youngest child was struggling to sleep and crying, which she was described as 'devastating.' 'It's important for my kids to be with their friends, and I have been struggling so much and really depressed and just have really become reclusive,' she continued. 'That being said I am making a change. It is starting today... I need to become more social again. 'So hold me to it. Today I am adjusting my perspective and I'm making a point to get out of my depression and do this for my family. 'That being said: Happy Saturday. I hope everyone's having a fantastic day. I am going to have a fantastic day,' she concluded.