
Today in History: B-25 bomber crashes into Empire State Building
Today in history:
On July 28, 1945, A U.S. Army B-25 bomber crashed into the 79th floor of New York's Empire State Building, the world's tallest structure at the time, killing 14 people.
Also on this date:
In 1794, Maximilien Robespierre and Louis Antoine de Saint-Just were executed by guillotine during the French Revolution.
In 1914, World War I began as Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia.
In 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson announced he was increasing the number of American troops in South Vietnam from 75,000 to 125,000.
In 1976, an earthquake devastated northern China, killing at least 242,000 people, according to an official estimate.
In 1984, the Los Angeles Summer Olympics officially opened; 14 Eastern Bloc countries, led by the Soviet Union, boycotted the Games.
In 1995, a jury in Union, South Carolina, rejected the death penalty for Susan Smith, sentencing her to life in prison for drowning her two young sons (Smith will be eligible for parole in November 2024).
In 1996, 8,000 year-old human skeletal remains (later referred to as Kennewick Man) were discovered in a bank of the Columbia River in Kennewick, Washington.
In 2004, the Irish Republican Army formally announced an end to its armed campaign against British rule in Northern Ireland.
In 2015, it was announced that Jonathan Pollard, the former U.S. Naval intelligence analyst who had spent nearly three decades in prison for spying for Israel, had been granted parole.
In 2018, Pope Francis accepted the resignation of U.S. Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, the emeritus archbishop of Washington, D.C., following allegations of sexual abuse, including one involving an 11-year-old boy. Both died in April of 2025.
In 2019, a gunman opened fire at a popular garlic festival in Gilroy, California, killing three people, including a six-year-old boy and a 13-year-old girl, and wounding 17 others before taking his own life.
Today's Birthdays: Music conductor Riccardo Muti is 84. Former Senator and NBA Hall of Famer Bill Bradley is 82. 'Garfield' creator Jim Davis is 80. TV producer Dick Ebersol is 78. Actor Sally Struthers is 78. Architect Santiago Calatrava is 74. CBS TV journalist Scott Pelley is 68. Actor Lori Loughlin is 61. Jazz musician-producer Delfeayo Marsalis is 60. UFC president Dana White is 56. Actor Elizabeth Berkley is 53. Basketball Hall of Famer Manu Ginobili is 48. Actor John David Washington is 41. Actor Dustin Milligan is 40. Rapper Soulja Boy is 35. England soccer star Harry Kane is 32. Pop/rock singer Cher Lloyd is 32. Golfer Nelly Korda is 27.
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New York Post
7 minutes ago
- New York Post
Miss United States Lindsey Langston accuses Rep. Cory Mills of threatening to publish her nude pics, sex videos
WASHINGTON — The reigning Miss United States is accusing Rep. Cory Mills (R-Fla.) of threatening to make public sex videos and nude pictures of her — and 'harm any men' she went out with in the future — after she ended their relationship earlier this year upon finding out he was seeing another woman. Lindsey Langston, who was crowned in October, reported the shocking sextortion attempt by Mills, 45, to the Columbia (Fla.) County Sheriff's Office July 14, according to a document obtained by The Post. 'Since February 20th of 2025, Cory has contacted Lindsey numerous times on numerous different accounts threatening to release nude images and videos of her, to include recorded videos of her and Cory engaging in sexual acts,' the report stated. 4 Miss United States pageant winner Lindsey Langston alleged the shocking sextortion attempt by Mills, 45, to the Columbia County Sheriff's Office in Florida on July 14. Lindsey Langston / X 'The threats were made when Cory believed Lindsey to have other romantic partners in her life after the breakup.' Langston, 25, provided screenshots of text and Instagram messages from Mills that were later entered into evidence and 'forwarded to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement for further review,' according to a spokesman for the sheriff's office. Anthony Sabatini, an attorney who represented Langston briefly and challenged Mills in a 2022 GOP primary, published at least three of the purported messages on X Wednesday, saying they were 'a criminal violation of Florida's sexual extortion statute 836.05—a 2nd degree felony.' 4 'The threats were made when Cory believed Lindsey to have other romantic partners in her life after the breakup,' the police report stated. Columbia County SO 'I can send him a few videos of you as well,' Mills allegedly taunted his ex in one exchange. 'Oh, I still have them.' Mills and Langston, a GOP state committeewoman, had been dating since November 2021 and sharing a house in New Smyrna Beach, Fla., since May 2024 after the congressman claimed he finalized his divorce from estranged wife Rana Al Saadi. But in February 2025, Sarah Raviani, an Iranian-American Republican activist, revealed her 'significant other for over a year' had 'grabbed her, shoved her, and pushed her out of the door' at the same location as Mills' Washington, DC, penthouse apartment, according to a police incident report reviewed by NBC Washington. Raviani — who was left with 'bruises on her arm which appeared fresh,' according to the report filed with the Metropolitan Police Department — declined to press charges and later issued a statement calling the incident 'a personal matter' and added that she was 'severely jet-lagged,' 'had been drinking' and the bruising was 'the result of medical conditions like eczema and activities from my recent trip to Dubai.' 'While the personal matter in question was emotionally charged, there was no physical altercation,' Raviani said. The incident report seen by NBC showed Raviani allowed cops to listen to a recorded phone call in which Mills 'instruct[ed] her to lie about the origin of her bruises' and that he had himself 'admitted [to officers] that the situation escalated from verbal to physical.' 4 Mills and Langston, a GOP state committeewoman, had been dating since November 2021 and sharing a house in New Smyrna Beach, Fla., since May 2024 after the congressman claimed he finalized divorce from his estranged wife. Getty Images Langston confronted Mills after seeing news reports about the dispute with Raviani, but the congressman stressed he 'was not in a romantic relationship' with another woman and argued that 'the press fabricated the story,' according to the sheriff's office report filed last month. 'Lindsey then found a social media account for the other woman and saw photos of her with Cory,' the latest police report noted. Raviani still has a picture of her and Mills posing together from mid-March posted on her Instagram account. Mills was dinged by his landlord last month at the luxury Washington, DC, apartment where the alleged February assault occurred for evading $85,000 in rent — but claimed it was the result of a faulty web payment portal. 4 The Florida Department of Law Enforcement, which didn't immediately respond to requests for further records of the incident, is now taking over the investigation into Mills' threatening texts to Langston. Lindsey Langston / X The pad, which enjoys a scenic view of the Potomac River and sits just a short walk from the National Mall, has a hefty $20,833 per month price tag, The Post was unable to locate any divorce filings for Mills or Al Saadi, who cofounded a weapons company in the 2010s that is still based in northern Virginia. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement didn't immediately respond to requests for further records of the incident or investigation. Reps for Mills' office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.


New York Post
37 minutes ago
- New York Post
‘Debanking' is an obscene abuse of government power
'Debanking' seems like something out of paranoid dystopian fiction, but this horrific abuse of government power is already all too real. We're almost glad the Biden crew deployed it against then-former-President Donald Trump in 2021: That not only ensures he's aware of this outrage; it points to how even the powerful are vulnerable. It's as simple as it is scary: Government regulators give a quiet nod to financial institutions that certain people or industries are to be 'unpersoned,' and pretty soon they get the same treatment as North Korean tyrants, terrorists or drug kingpins: locked out of the financial system, which means social death. The victim gets turned away at other banks, all with no way to appeal what's blandly painted as a 'business decision.' Just try life without any ready way to cash checks or pay bills, not even a debit card — nor, if you run a business, a line of credit to pay suppliers and meet payroll. The abuse apparently began under President Barack Obama, deployed against disfavored businesses such as gun manufacturers on the laughable ground that they posed a 'reputational risk'; it expanded under President Joe Biden to hit crypto and tech startups, as well as individuals whose opinions or political activity got labeled 'dangerous.' Venture capitalist Marc Andreessen calls it a 'privatized sanctions regime'; American victims apparently number in the thousands. In the wake of the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, Trump was first personally dropped by Chase, then refused service by Bank of America. And First Lady Melania Trump reports that she and her son Barron were dropped by their bank. The good news is that Donald Trump is signing executive orders to crack down on the abuse and will surely sign legislation to prevent it. Banks have a duty to watch out for criminal abuse of their services, but forcing them to secretly enforce political insiders' ideological agenda is frighteningly totalitarian.


The Hill
2 hours ago
- The Hill
Two men indicted in shooting of off-duty Border Patrol agent
The Department of Justice (DOJ) indicted two men on Wednesday following their alleged role in the shooting of an off-duty Border Patrol agent last month. Miguel Mora, 21, and Christian Aybar, 22 are accused of shooting the agent on July 19 in Fort Washington Park in New York, according to court documents. The DOJ accuses Mora of shooting the agent and striking him twice, once in the face and once on the hand and wrist. It says the two men previously were involved in the robbery of a 39-year-old woman in the area. 'Even while off-duty on a summer night, this officer quickly leapt into action in an act of bravery,' District Attorney Alvin Bragg said in the Wednesday release. 'We are committed to the safety of law enforcement officers in Manhattan, as demonstrated by this in-depth investigation and today's serious charges,' he added. Mora is charged with attempted murder in the first and second degree in the New York State Supreme Court while he and Aybar both face charges for robbery and criminal possession of a weapon. The two allegedly planned the robbery spree in advance of the incident, according to authorities. 'Miguel Mora and Cristhian Aybar juggled with fate, and lost, when they set out on their alleged robbery spree last month. Throughout much of their time in the U.S., and as culminated with the events of July 19, they disrespected the sanctity of life and the American rule of law,' HSI New York Special Agent in Charge Ricky J. Patel said. 'In the process, they changed the course of their own lives, and tragically, that of an innocent, unsuspecting off-duty CBP officer,' he added. Authorities said Mora illegally immigrated from the Dominican Republic and could face up to 15 years in prison while Aybar, who is also an illegal immigrant, could face 7.5 years behind bars.