
Key moments from the fifth week of Sean 'Diddy' Combs' sex trafficking trial
NEW YORK — The fifth week of Sean 'Diddy' Combs ' sex trafficking trial featured four days of testimony from a former Combs' girlfriend who testified under the pseudonym Jane and a surprise appearance at the courthouse on the fifth day by Ye, the rapper formerly known as Kanye West.

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Yahoo
19 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Sacha Baron Cohen and Isla Fisher finalize divorce
NEW YORK — Sacha Baron Cohen and Isla Fisher have finalized their divorce, more than a year after announcing their shocking separation. The 'Borat' comedian, 53, and 49-year-old 'Wedding Crashers' star confirmed the news on Friday in a joint statement shared to their Instagram stories. 'Our divorce has now been finalized,' Cohen and Fisher begin. 'We are proud of all we've achieved together and, continuing our great respect for each other, we remain friends and committed to co-parenting our wonderful children. We ask for the media to continue to respect our children's privacy.' The actors similarly announced their split via Instagram Stories in April 2024, sharing a snap of themselves in tennis wear. 'After a long tennis match lasting over 20 years, we are finally putting our racquets down. In 2023, we jointly filed to end our marriage,' the couple confirmed, adding they'd been 'quietly working through' the split. Cohen and Fisher first met in 2001 in Sydney, Australia, and got engaged three years later. They gave birth to their first child, daughter Olive, in late 2007 and tied the knot in Paris in March 2010. They welcomed their second daughter, Elula, later that summer. They also share son Montgomery, born in early 2015. The news of their separation broke in the wake of Rebel Wilson's memoir, 'Rebel Rising,' in which the actress claimed Cohen pressured her into performing inappropriate acts on the set of the 2016 film 'The Brothers Grimsby' and even pulled his pants down in her presence. Wilson then accused Cohen — who denies the claims — of 'bullying and gaslighting' when the Daily Mail quickly published previously unreleased footage from the apparent sex scene in question. Amid a defamation lawsuit filed by producers, the 'Pitch Perfect' star she refused to 'be bullied or silenced by high-priced lawyers or PR crisis managers.'
Yahoo
20 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Minnesota shooting adds to string of political violence that has also targeted top companies
Two Minnesota lawmakers were shot on Saturday, with one dying and the other recovering, in the latest instance of political violence recently. The shooting comes nearly a year after an assassination attempt on Donald Trump in Pennsylvania and follows politically motivated violence that has also targeted top companies. The shooting of two lawmakers in Minnesota on Saturday was the latest instance of political violence that has also seen top companies being targeted. State Rep. Melissa Hortman, 55 years old, and her husband were shot and killed in their Brooklyn Park home. Elsewhere in Champlin, state Sen. John Hoffman, 60, and his wife were also shot at home and are recovering after undergoing surgery. Gov. Tim Walz described the shooting as 'an act of targeted political violence.' A manhunt is underway for the shooter, who was posing as a law enforcement officer, according to authorities. Nearly a year ago in July 2024, Donald Trump was nearly assassinated during a campaign rally in Pennsylvania. Trump was injured and a spectator was killed. The gunman was also killed. Just two months later, the Secret Service foiled another assassination attempt, this time in Florida, where Trump was playing golf. This past April, an alleged arsonist targeted Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro with a firebomb. A warrant cited 'perceived injustices to the people of Palestine.' Meanwhile, companies have also become targets. Earlier this year, Tesla vehicles and dealerships were damaged by fires as CEO Elon Musk's role in the Trump administration and his DOGE cost-cutting drive spurred a backlash. In April, a man was federally charged with arson attacks against the Republican Party headquarters in New Mexico and a Tesla dealership. In December, UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was shot and killed in New York ahead of the company's investor day. Luigi Mangione, who has pleaded not guilty to state and federal murder charges, wrote a manifesto laying out his grievances against the insurance industry while also sharing his views on the politics of 'Unabomber' Ted Kaczynski. And those are just some examples of political violence from the past year alone. In 2021, Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol as lawmakers were about the certify Joe Biden's 2020 victory. In 2017, a gunman shot members of Congress at a baseball diamond in Alexandria, Va., wounding four people, including Republican Rep. Steve Scalise. And in 2011, a gunman killed six people in Arizona and seriously wounded Democratic Rep. Gabby Giffords, who was holding an event for constituents. This story was originally featured on


Fox News
20 minutes ago
- Fox News
Ex-Vikings player blames Tim Walz for Minnesota lawmaker killings: 'Example of a weak, emasculated leader'
Former Minnesota Vikings and University of Minnesota football player Jack Brewer spoke out about the early-morning shootings that left one state lawmaker and her husband dead and a second lawmaker and his wife injured. Brewer, who played four seasons with the Golden Gophers before starting his NFL career with the Vikings in 2002, criticized Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz for allowing the state to become "the capital of chaos." "We need to start calling this what it is. These people have lost their minds. I am heartbroken to see one of the most amazing states in America completely turned around under Gov. Tim Walz. Minnesota is confused," Brewer told Fox News Digital. "I played for the Vikings. I played for the Gophers. I lived in Minnesota for years. It was not like this. People were respectful. People could disagree and still have conversations. I still have a lot of family there, and it hurts to see what they're living through. "Minnesota has become the capital of chaos in America. That's not right. It's not a reflection of the true people of Minnesota. There are a lot of good people there. But the liberal hub around Minneapolis and St. Paul has taken over, and it's dangerous. Tim Walz is the leader of that. His attorney general, Keith Ellison, is right there with him." Vance Luther Boelter, 57, is wanted in the shootings, two sources familiar with the matter told The Associated Press. Boelter reportedly earned his Ph.D. in leadership for the advancement of learning and service from Cardinal Stritch University and was appointed to the state's Workforce Development Board by two Minnesota governors, according to Fox 9. He was reportedly initially appointed by Gov. Mark Dayton in 2016 before being reappointed by Gov. Tim Walz in 2019 as a private sector representative to the council. Boelter's term expired in 2023. The Minnesota Workforce Development Board and Walz's administration did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment. Boelter allegedly posed as a police officer when he shot Sen. John Hoffman and his wife in their Champlin home early Saturday, leaving them seriously injured before moving on to former Democratic House Speaker Melissa Hortman's house, where he allegedly killed her and her husband. This morning, Walz told reporters the attack was clearly a "politically motivated assassination," but he did not reveal that the suspect was his own appointee. Brewer believes the incident is a result of Democrats and Walz's leadership and called for a "return to masculinity." "On this Father's Day, I wish Minnesota would focus on restoring fatherhood — protecting women, protecting families. Tim Walz is the example of a weak, emasculated leader. That is not what God made fathers to be. It's pathetic," Brewer said. "It's terrible. The root cause of all of this is evil. When you're willing to attack, ridicule, riot and protest anyone who believes something different — even in your own party — you've gone too far. The Democrats have gone so far left that if you're not a raging liberal, you're under attack. They are forcing everyone in the party to conform. "Whenever you give Satan power, he shows his face. That's what we're witnessing now." Follow Fox News Digital's sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.