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Man arrested in connection with fatal New Orleans hit-and-run

Man arrested in connection with fatal New Orleans hit-and-run

Yahoo6 days ago
NEW ORLEANS (WGNO) — A man was arrested on Wednesday, July 30, in connection with a fatal hit and run investigation in New Orleans.
According to the New Orleans Police Department, 20-year-old Dyllan Parr of Slidell turned himself in to the NOPD with his attorney. He was booked into the Orleans Justice Center.
Boater found stuck in St. Tammany Parish marsh by deputies rescued
Parr accused of being involved in a two-vehicle crash on July 27 near the Read Boulevard exit on I-10 Eastbound that left the driver of a Mazda 626 dead.
NOPD said investigators believe the driver of the Mazda, a 53-year-old woman, was possibly stopped in the roadway or experiencing trouble when the driver of a Mercedes Benz allegedly rear-ended the Mazda and crashed into a concrete guardrail. The driver is accused of then fleeing on foot.
Parr faces a charge of hit-and-run with serious injury or death.Latest Posts
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Analysis: An Epstein cover-up? Victims and allies suggest it's happening now, under Trump
Analysis: An Epstein cover-up? Victims and allies suggest it's happening now, under Trump

CNN

time11 minutes ago

  • CNN

Analysis: An Epstein cover-up? Victims and allies suggest it's happening now, under Trump

For years, Republicans and MAGA influencers have been keen to rip the lid off a supposed government conspiracy to cover up information related to Jeffrey Epstein's crimes and alleged associates. Many key figures who now serve in the Trump administration pledged to do exactly that. The administration's failures to live up to those promises and its bizarre handling of the situation now have it scrambling. On Wednesday night, that will take the form of top officials strategizing at Vice President JD Vance's residence, CNN is now reporting. But their task is only getting harder. And that's in large part because a growing chorus of Epstein's victims and their allies now suggest there could indeed be a cover-up afoot. One forged by the same MAGA administration that built itself up as the antidote. To be clear, President Donald Trump has not been accused of any crimes in relation to Epstein. But repeatedly in recent days and weeks, those victims and allies have stepped forward to raise serious questions about the Trump administration's handling of the matter. They've complained about favorable treatment of convicted Epstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell. They've objected to the lack of disclosure. They've complained about the administration's treatment of them. They've invoked the phrase 'cover-up' on at least three occasions. Others have more subtly pointed in that direction. Victims have raised concerns about the government's handling of the matter for years – in particular focusing on a favorable non-prosecution agreement Epstein landed in 2007 and the years before he was later charged – but their complaints are now directed squarely at the Trump administration. All of which makes it much more difficult for the administration to just move on, as the president would clearly prefer. Last week, family members of one of Epstein's and Maxwell's most prominent accusers, Virginia Giuffre, cited Trump's recent admission that he had been aware that Epstein recruited Giuffre from Mar-a-Lago. They cited other evidence that Trump was aware of Epstein's affinity for young girls and women and said, 'It makes us ask if he was aware of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell's criminal actions.' (Giuffre died by suicide earlier this year.) In another letter, Giuffre family members and other accusers also cited the still-unexplained prison transfer of Maxwell to a lower-security prison camp that sex offenders like her don't appear eligible for, without a waiver. That news came shortly after Maxwell, who's serving a 20-year sentence, was interviewed by Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche. And it comes as Trump has dangled the possibility of pardoning Maxwell, who's appealing her conviction. 'This move smacks of a cover up,' they wrote. 'The victims deserve better.' They're not the only ones to raise concerns about the prison transfer. Two attorneys who have represented Epstein accusers, Brad Edwards and Paul Cassell, said in a letter Tuesday that they were given no notice of Maxwell's transfer or any chance to object. They said the victims view the transfer 'as extraordinarily insensitive and suggestive of ulterior purposes.' That letter was one of several entered into the record as part of proceedings over whether to unseal grand jury testimony from the investigations into Maxwell and Epstein. And some of those letters have also raised concerns about a cover-up. One unnamed victim in her letter appeared to cite a Bloomberg report that the FBI has redacted the names of Trump and other prominent public figures in the Epstein files – a report that CNN hasn't confirmed. The unnamed victim said, 'I feel like the DOJ's and FBI's priority is protecting the 'third-party', the wealthy men by focusing on scrubbing their names off the files,' adding: 'That is their focus? Wow!' Another victim, Annie Farmer, offered similar thoughts. Her lawyer cited the Justice Department's statement last month that it would not release 'information related to third parties who neither have been charged or alleged to be involved' in Epstein's and Maxwell's crimes. 'Any effort to redact third party names smacks of a cover up,' Farmer's lawyer said. Farmer previously told The New York Times that she urged law enforcement and the FBI two decades ago to look more broadly into Epstein's associates, including Trump, who was friendly with Epstein but has said they had a falling out. Farmer also described a troubling encounter with Trump and Epstein in Epstein's office in the mid-1990s. There is no evidence of Trump's involvement in Epstein's crimes, and Farmer said she had no evidence of criminal wrongdoing by Trump. The White House has denied the alleged encounter by saying, 'The president was never in [Epstein's] office.' But Farmer's account reinforces how Trump's name could appear in the Epstein files and how it might reflect poorly on him, even if there's no accusation of wrongdoing. Also suggesting a cover-up last month was Alicia Arden, who alleged that Epstein assaulted her in 1997. Arden told NBC News that she supported Trump but believed 'there's a cover-up of some kind going on.' She cited Attorney General Pam Bondi's comments in February indicating she had Epstein's client list on her desk – comments Bondi and the White House now claim referred to other Epstein-related documents. The DOJ now says there is no client list. 'She doesn't want something to come out, and I don't understand why,' Arden said. 'Maybe the list is more horrifying than we think.' Another anonymous Epstein accuser told NBC: 'I am not surprised Trump is now saying we should stop talking about Epstein,' adding, 'These people are trying to protect themselves.' And David Boies, a prominent attorney who represented Giuffre, told NBC: 'I think they ought to release the material after promising, and if they don't, people will believe they are hiding something, and that cannot be tolerated.' Boies points to something important. While Epstein-related conspiracy theories have been mostly pushed by Republicans and right-wing influencers, polls suggest large swaths of Americans buy into them, at least to some degree. A CBS News-YouGov poll last month found Americans agreed 92-8% that the Epstein files 'probably include damaging information about powerful or wealthy people.' A Reuters-Ipsos poll showed Americans agreed 69-6% that the federal government was 'hiding information' about Epstein's clients and 60-12% that it was covering up details of his death (with many doubting he died by suicide, as the administration affirmed he did). The comments of Epstein's victims and their allies would seem to bolster that pre-existing belief. And that makes it a lot harder to claim there's nothing to see here – whether for Trump or the many people who have built followings by pushing these theories.

GOP Rep. Cory Mills accused by ex-girlfriend of threatening to release sexually explicit images, videos of her
GOP Rep. Cory Mills accused by ex-girlfriend of threatening to release sexually explicit images, videos of her

CNN

time11 minutes ago

  • CNN

GOP Rep. Cory Mills accused by ex-girlfriend of threatening to release sexually explicit images, videos of her

An ex-girlfriend of GOP Rep. Cory Mills is accusing the Florida congressman of having threatened to release sexually explicit images and videos of her after their relationship ended, according to a police report obtained by CNN. Lindsey Langston, a Florida Republican Party committee member and 2024 winner of the Miss United States beauty pageant, filed a police report on July 14 with the Columbia County Sheriff's Office in Florida. In screenshots of messages Langston said she exchanged with Mills, an account under Mills' name is repeatedly shown saying he would share with an unidentified man videos he had of her. Similar comments are made in text conversations, with a number Langston said belonged to Mills. Langston shared the exchanges with investigators, and CNN reviewed copies of the screenshots, which don't include the entire conversations. 'Let him put his actions behind his mouth. I can send him a videos of you as well. Oh, I still have them,' Mills allegedly wrote to Langston in a string of messages. In response to one exchange in which Mills allegedly said, 'Thanks again for the videos,' Langston replied: 'Haven't you hurt me enough?' and in a separate conversation, Langston wrote, 'Please leave me alone.' Mills has not been charged in connection with the allegations. In a statement shared with CNN, the congressman denied any wrongdoing. 'These claims are false and misrepresent the nature of my interactions. I have always conducted myself with integrity, both personally and in service to Florida's 7th District,' Mills said in a statement. 'Out of respect for the legal process, I won't comment further at this time. My team and I will fully cooperate to ensure the truth is made clear. I remain focused on serving my constituents and advancing America First policies.' Mills' communications director, Julie Singleton, told CNN, 'We have not been made aware of any report or allegations from law enforcement or the alleged complainant.' The public information officer for the Columbia County Sheriff's Office, Steven Khachigan, told CNN that after the department's initial involvement, the matter was referred to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. Langston began a relationship with Mills in November 2021, and the two lived together at his Florida home, according to the police report. The congressman was separated from his wife at the time, and told Langston his divorce was finalized in 2024, the report claims. Their relationship ended when, in late February, Langston confronted Mills about reports that he was under investigation by the Metropolitan Police Department of the District Columbia for an alleged assault against another woman, the report states. Mills was not charged in the incident, and he and the woman denied there had been any violence when previously reached by CNN. Langston claimed that Mills has contacted her numerous times since February, 'threatening to release nude images and videos of her, to include recorded videos of her and Cory engaging in sexual acts,' the report states. Langston's attorney, Anthony Sabatini, told CNN that her petition for a restraining order against Mills is pending before a judge and declined any comment. Sabatini had run against Mills in the 2022 GOP primary for Florida's 7th Congressional District. The allegations against Mills were first reported by Drop Site News. The publishing of sexually explicit photos or videos of a person online without their consent, known as sexual cyberharassment or revenge porn, is illegal under Florida law. This year, President Donald Trump also signed into law the Take It Down Act, which makes it illegal to share online nonconsensual, explicit images.

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