2018年3月31日星期六

Shark attacks paddleboarder off Hawaii's Big Island

A 25-year-old paddleboarder was hospitalized in critical condition with multiple wounds after getting bitten by a shark Saturday morning.

It happened around 9:30 a.m. local time at Kukio Beach in Kona, on the island of Hawaii (Big Island), KHON-TV reported.

Fire officials said the unidentified man was stand-up paddleboarding about 100-150 yards offshore, the station reported.

The victim was flown to North Hawaii Community Hospital with multiple injuries to a hand and a leg. A hospital spokeswoman said the man was undergoing surgery, KHON reported.

The beach had no county lifeguards on duty, but a private safety team was present, KHON reported.

"Apparently they had heard a scream from the ocean and they took a four-man canoe out to find a male individual who had been bumped off his paddle board about 100-150 yards offshore," Fire Capt. Michael Grace told the station. "They recovered him from the ocean. He had injuries to his right side extremities."

People on the beach were able to apply multiple tourniquets to his right arm and leg before paramedics arrived, the Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported.

The beach in the area was closed after the attack, KHON reported.

Details about the shark were not immediately available.

Dan Dennison with the state Department of Land and Natural Resources said that, per standard procedure, beach closure signs warning visitors about the presence of sharks are displayed for a mile on either side of the attack for the rest of the day whenever such an incident occurs.

A decision will be made Sunday morning on whether to reopen the beach, he said.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

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Anti-India protests erupt in Kashmir as troops kill 8 rebels

Officials say at least eight rebels have been killed in fighting with Indian troops in disputed Kashmir, triggering a new round of anti-India protests and clashes.

Police say the gunbattles in southern Kashmir began after government forces raided two villages in Shopian and Anantnag districts following a tip that rebels were hiding there and came under fire. The fighting is still raging in Shopian area on Sunday.

The news of the killings led to intense anti-Indian protests and clashes in several parts of the southern Kashmir.

India and Pakistan each administer part of Kashmir, but both claim it in its entirety.

Rebel groups demand that Kashmir be united either under Pakistani rule or as an independent country.

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Death plunge vehicle's speedometer 'pinned' at 90 mph, authorities say

The speedometer of a Washington state family's SUV was "pinned" at 90 mph when the vehicle was found Monday afternoon, crushed along the rocks of a Northern California shoreline, court documents say.

Authorities included the information in an affidavit for a search warrant for the home of Jennifer and Sarah Hart, adoptive parents of six children -- all of whom are believed to have perished when the vehicle plunged off the Pacific Coast Highway, Fox 12 Oregon reported.

The two women and three of the children were found dead at the crash site Monday, but it was unclear how much time had elapsed between the accident and the discovery.

Three other children are missing and may have been carried out to sea, authorities have said.

The family had been living in Oregon until last year when they moved to Woodland, Wash.

Meanwhile, law enforcement officers believe "a felony has been committed" in the case, the court documents say.

This photo provided by the California Highway Patrol shows a helicopter hovering over steep coastal cliffs Tuesday, March 27, 2018, near Mendocino, Calif., where a vehicle, visible at lower right, plunged about 100 feet off a cliff along Highway 1, killing all five passengers. The California Highway Patrol identified the victims Tuesday as two women from West Linn, Ore., and three children. (California Highway Patrol via AP)

A helicopter hovers over the Northern California site where the Hart family's SUV was discovered Monday afternoon.

The exact nature of the suspected felony was not known, but according to the documents, "Based upon the California Highway Patrol investigation, it is their belief 'a felony has been committed,'" Fox 12 Oregon reported.

However, authorities maintain there's no evidence to suggest the crash was intentional, the Oregonian reported.

The court documents indicate that CHP investigators found no "acceleration marks, tire friction marks or braking furrow marks" at the scene, and there was no evidence the car collided with the embankment as it "traversed towards the tidal zone below," Fox 12 reported.

According to the Oregonian, friends' depictions and social media posts of the Hart family are at odds with police records.

According to accounts of the family's neighbors in Washington state, one child had shown up at a neighbor's doorstep alleging abuse while another had asked neighbors for food because it was supposedly being withheld as punishment.

Another child reportedly told police that Sarah Hart had hit her repeatedly with a closed fist and put her in a cold bath. According to the Oregonian, Hart pleaded guilty to the abuse in April 2011 and was sentenced to a year of probation. In another July 2013 incident, authorities responded to a call at the family's residence.

Days before the fatal crash, the Washington State Department of Social and Health Services opened a case into the family because the children had been identified as "potential victims of alleged abuse or neglect," the Oregonian reported. The agency had attempted to contact the family but they had reportedly left home that day.

Bradford Betz is an editor for Fox News. Follow him on Twitter @bradford_betz.

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Costa Ricans split over gay marriage vote for next president

Costa Ricans vote Sunday in a presidential runoff between the ruling party's candidate and an evangelical pastor who has capitalized on the backlash against talk of legalizing same-sex marriage in the Central American country.

Carlos Alvarado of the incumbent Citizen Action Party has garnered the support of Costa Ricans who see rival Fabricio Alvarado's discourse as homophobic. The latter went from also-ran to leading candidate after he came out strongly against same-sex marriage in the face of international pressure for Costa Rica to allow gays to wed.

Recent polling showed the candidates — who are not related despite sharing the same last name — in a statistical tie heading into the vote. They were the top vote-getters in a first round election in early February.

The gay marriage question became the race's focal point after the Inter-American Court of Human Rights said in January that Costa Rica should allow same-sex marriage.

Political scientist and analyst Francisco Barahona said Fabricio Alvarado's message of restoration - he heads the National Restoration party - uses a loaded term that suggests he wants to put Costa Rica's institutions in line with his brand of religious fundamentalism.

"You can't interpret that 'restore' in a neutral way but rather as a way to make the state over in the image of what the religious sectors that support the candidate want," Barahona said.

Both candidates have opted for economic advisers who take a conservative approach, maintaining the free market and reducing the size of government.

Rodrigo Lopez, 45, said Fabricio Alvarado would be his choice because Costa Rica should maintain its traditional values and he's tired of the ruling party's corruption.

Maria Rodriguez, 32, said she supports Carlos Alvarado because she rejects his rival's homophobic discourse and does not believe he is qualified to be president.

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Pope Francis in Easter Vigil baptizes 8, including beggar turned hero

In an Easter Vigil homily Saturday, Pope Francis urged Roman Catholics to not remain paralyzed in the face of injustices. He also baptized eight adults, including a Nigerian man who was initially a beggar but became a hero in Italy.

John Ogah reportedly disarmed a thief with his bare hands when he witnessed a supermarket robbery on Sept. 26.

Ogah had been begging for spare change outside the Carrefour market in a Roman neighborhood when a masked thief, armed with a meat cleaver, tried to make off with 400 euros ($493) stolen from cashiers, according to Italian news reports.

Security cameras showed him confronting the thief, wresting the cleaver away and holding him by the collar until police arrived.

Ogah then disappeared, fearing he would be deported because he didn't have his papers in order. But Rome police sought to reward his courage and gave him a coveted Italian residency permit that had been denied him when his asylum bid failed.

He now reportedly has a job with the Italian Red Cross and a place to call home.

Ogah told La Repubblica newspaper that his dream was to be a legal resident in Italy and have a job so he wouldn't have to beg to support his child back home in Nigeria. He had left Nigeria and, after a stay in Libya, set off for Italy on a migrant smuggler's boat in May 2014.

"If Pope Francis or the president of the republic could do something for me I would be the happiest man in the world," he reportedly said. "I don't want to be a hero. I just want to be legal, work and have a dignified life in Italy."

In Ogah's baptism, he chose as his baptismal name to be "Francesco."

Previously, in a Holy Thursday ritual, Pope Francis washed the feet of 12 prisoners of the Regina Coeli prison in Rome.

The pope, 81, urged the inmates to never let their hopes be clouded like cataracts cloud the eyes, revealing that he suffers from the condition and has to have surgery next year.

He said the same thing happens with life, when disillusionment, errors and fatigue cloud the soul. Francis urged the inmates to do a daily cleansing of their view on life — a "cataract surgery for the soul" — so they can see and spread hope.

During the ceremony, Francis knelt down and one by one, poured water over the feet of the 12 inmates, wiped them dry and kissed them.

Francis said in the homily that the ritual is meant to show his willingness to serve others "like a slave," as Jesus did.

"Your chief must be your servant," he said. "So often I think ... how many wars would have been avoided if all those kings, emperors and heads of state had understood this teaching of Jesus rather than command and be cruel and kill people."

The 12 inmates included Catholics, Muslims, an Orthodox Christian and a Buddhist, the Vatican said. They hailed from Italy, the Philippines, Morocco, Moldova, Colombia, Nigeria and Sierra Leone.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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Villanova, Michigan advance to NCAA men's title game

Despite an NCAA Tournament filled with upsets, Monday night's men's championship game in San Antonio will match a No. 1 seed against a No. 3 seed.

In Saturday's semifinal contests, Villanova made a Final-Four-record 18 three-pointers to defeat Kansas, 95-79, and Michigan used strong defense to end the Cinderella run of Loyola-Chicago, 69-57.

Villanova's Wildcats (35-4) will be making their second trip to the title game in three seasons.

Michigan's Moritz Wagner (13) reacts after scoring a 3-point shot against Loyola-Chicago during the second half in the semifinals of the Final Four NCAA college basketball tournament, Saturday, March 31, 2018, in San Antonio. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Michigan's Moritz Wagner (13) reacts after scoring a 3-point shot against Loyola-Chicago on Saturday in San Antonio.  (Associated Press)

The Wildcats were one of the most proficient 3-point shooting teams during the regular season and upped the 3 ante in the NCAA Tournament, knocking down a record 65 and counting.

Villanova literally shot the lights out by the second half, when some scoreboards and upper-level lights went out for a few minutes and darkened the upper decks.

Villanova guard Jalen Brunson (1) drives past Kansas guard Malik Newman during the second half in the semifinals of the Final Four NCAA college basketball tournament, Saturday, March 31, 2018, in San Antonio. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

Villanova guard Jalen Brunson (1) drives past Kansas guard Malik Newman during Saturday's NCAA semifinal in San Antonio.  (Associated Press)

Michigan may have a better answer than Kansas had.

The Wolverines have fixed the one thing holding them back in past seasons, developing a lockdown defense so they no longer have to simply outscore opponents.

Michigan had the nation's No. 3 defense efficiency-wise and put Loyola on lockdown in the second half, holding the Ramblers to 1-of-7 shooting from 3 to send 98-year-old team chaplain Sister Jean Delores Schmidt and company to the exits early.

Loyola-Chicago's Carson Shanks (32) cries in the locker room after the semifinal game against Michigan in the Final Four NCAA college basketball tournament, Saturday, March 31, 2018, in San Antonio. Michigan won 69-57. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

Loyola-Chicago's Carson Shanks (32) cries in the locker room after the semifinal game against Michigan.  (Associated Press)

The Wolverines are seeking their first national title since Glen Rice and Rumeal Robinson rumbled through the bracket in 1989.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

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Shark attacks paddleboarder off Hawaii's Big Island

A 25-year-old paddleboarder was hospitalized with multiple wounds after getting bitten by a shark Saturday morning.

It happened around 9:30 a.m. local time at Kukio Beach in Kona, on the island of Hawaii (Big Island), KHON-TV reported.

Fire officials said the unidentified man was stand-up paddleboarding about 100-150 yards offshore, the station reported.

The victim was flown to North Hawaii Community Hospital with multiple injuries to a hand and a leg. A hospital spokeswoman said the man was undergoing surgery, KHON reported.

Information about the severity of the wounds and the victim's overall medical condition was not immediately available.

It wasn't immediately clear how the paddleboarder arrived back on shore, the Honolulu Star-Advertiser reported. But people on the beach were able to apply multiple tourniquets to his right arm and leg before paramedics arrived, the newspaper said.

The beach in the area was closed after the attack, KHON reported.

Details about the shark were not immediately available.

Dan Dennison with the state Department of Land and Natural Resources said that, per standard procedure, beach closure signs warning visitors about the presence of sharks are displayed for a mile on either side of the attack for the rest of the day whenever such an incident occurs.

A decision will be made Sunday morning on whether to reopen the beach, he said.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

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Man wounded after police say he fired at Kentucky officer

A man was shot and wounded after police say he fired a revolver at an officer during an early-morning incident in Louisville, Kentucky.

Louisville police said 20-year-old Elijah Eubanks was in stable condition Saturday at University of Louisville Hospital. Neither officer was injured.

It happened around 1 a.m. Saturday at an apartment complex. Louisville Metro Police body camera footage, released Saturday, shows the officers talking to several people in a car. As the officers repeatedly ask a passenger to exit, he asks why he's being harassed.

As an officer opened the car door, police say the man fired a shot at him. Police say both officers fired back. Multiple shots are heard on the video.

Police Maj. Frank Hardison, commander of the department's special investigations division, said a revolver was recovered from the scene

At a Saturday afternoon news conference, Hardison said the officers were responding to a report of an "occupied, suspicious" vehicle that was called in by a "courtesy officer" — a city police officer who lives in the complex and provides security there.

In the body camera footage, an officer identified as Ian Stuart tells the car's driver to exit, while the other officer, Eric Goldschmidt, approaches the passenger side where Eubanks is seated.

The officers repeatedly ask Eubanks to exit, but he doesn't.

"Why are you harassing me, sir?" Eubanks asks Goldschmidt.

"We had a call of suspicious individuals, nobody recognized in this car," Goldschmidt replies

"This is her house," Eubanks responds, gesturing to an unidentified person in the backseat. "This is his mom's car."

After more back-and-forth, Goldschmidt goes to the passenger door. As it opens, footage shows Eubanks bringing up one hand and pointing it in the officer's direction. Although his hand is in shadows, he appears to be holding something dark.

Goldschmidt immediately shouts, "Gun! Gun, gun, gun!" as multiple shots ring out.

Police Chief Steve Conrad said the video was released quickly because it's imperative for the department to be "a model of transparency."

The shooting came two days after an off-duty police officer in Hopkinsville, Kentucky, was shot and killed. The suspect in that case was found and killed Friday by law enforcement officials in Tennessee.

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5 police officials suspected in Venezuela jail fire detained

Venezuela's chief prosecutor says five police officials are suspected of being responsible for a fire that killed 68 people.

Tarek William Saab wrote on Twitter Saturday the officials have been detained but provided no further details.

The detained officials include the sub-director of the police station where the fire took place.

A fire tore through the cells of a police station jail in the city of Valencia on Wednesday in one of the nation's most devastating jail fires.

Relatives and human rights advocates have been pressing the government to provide a full account of what happened.

Some family members of those killed have said their loved ones called before the fire and said their jailers were pouring gas in the cellblock.

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Blast that killed US, UK troops shook alley in Syrian town

Residents of the small alley where an explosion killed two members of the U.S.-led coalition this week were fixing their windows and the fronts of their homes on Saturday. Shards of glass still littered the dirt road and metal shutters were twisted out of shape.

The explosion Thursday was the first to hit the U.S.-led coalition deployed here months after the town was liberated from Islamic State militants in 2016. An American and a Briton were killed, and a number of local security members were injured. The improvised explosive device went off during an operation against a member of the Islamic State group in this mixed Arab and Kurdish town, the U.S.-led Coalition said Saturday.

"Coalition forces, in an advise, assist and accompany capacity with our partners, were conducting a mission to kill or capture a known (IS) member when they were struck by an improvised explosive device," the coalition said in a statement to The Associated Press.

Residents described a large blast. A local security member on the scene, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the press, said there was gunfire before the explosion went off. Locals speculated the explosion was caused by a suicide bomber, judging by the extent of the damage to the alley and the bodies.

"Half an hour after the explosion, the choppers were in the air," resident Mohammed Eid said, adding the explosion just before midnight woke him up.

His family, which lives in the building opposite where the explosion happened, was fixing windows in the first floor Saturday.

Local authorities said a joint investigation was ongoing. It follows what appeared to be rare joint raid in Manbij against suspected IS cells.

The town has served as a model of stabilization in post-IS areas in northern Syria.

But in recent weeks, Manbij has seen an assassination attempt against a senior Kurdish official on the highway outside the town and a number of small explosions. Authorities imposed a curfew after 11 p.m., and in recent days barred motorcycles from moving around the town after sunset.

It is not clear who was behind the attacks. Officials express concern about IS attempting to re-emerge and accused Turkey and the Syrian government of seeking to destabilize the town.

Turkey has threatened to move on Manbij to expel the U.S-backed Kurdish militia in control.

U.S. troops have increased their visibility in Manbij and around the front line that separates the town from Turkey-backed fighters.

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Services held for deceased Iowa family of four found in Mexico

A memorial service was held Saturday in honor of the Iowa family of four who died after inhaling toxic fumes in a Mexican condominium they were renting in March.

A crowd of people gathered for the service held for married couple Kevin and Amy Sharp, ages 41 and 38 respectively, and their children Sterling, 12, and Adrianna, 7. The event took place at the Southwestern Community College in Creston. A burial was also held for the family, but it was not open to the public.

The Sharps were known to be sports fans for the college where the service took place, the Des Moines Register reported.

Beth and Rodger Fry, center, leave the funeral for their daughter Amy Sharp and her family, husband Kevin Sharp, and their children, Sterling and Adrianna on Saturday, March 31, 2018, in Creston, Iowa. The family were found dead while on vacation in Mexico. A Mexican prosecutor says a gas leak in a water heater is suspected of killing them inside their rented condominium in Tulum. Their bodies were found Friday. (Brian Powers/The Des Moines Register via AP)

Beth and Rodger Fry, center, are seen leaving the service held for their daughter Amy Sharp and her family on Saturday in Creston, Iowa.  (Brian Powers/The Des Moines Register via AP)

IOWA FAMILY FOUND DEAD IN MEXICO LIKELY KILLED BY WATER HEATER GAS LEAK, OFFICIAL SAYS

Authorities previously revealed that a leak from a water heater in the condo in Tulum was likely the source of the deadly gas that led to the family's deaths. Autopsy reports indicated that "the cause of death was asphyxiation from inhaling toxic gases," according to the prosecutor's office in Quintana Roo.

Photos released by the office showed investigators in anti-contamination suits and firefighters with air tanks examining gas connections to a stove in the rental.

In this undated photo provided by the Quintana Roo Prosecutors Office, a firefighter examines a gas stove in the rented condo where an Iowa couple and their two children died in Tulum, Mexico. Mexican authorities said on Saturday, March 24, 2018 that autopsies indicate the Iowa couple and their two children died from inhaling toxic gas at the rented condo on Mexico's Caribbean coast, but there was no sign of foul play or suicide. (Quintana Roo Prosecutor's Office via AP)

A firefighter is seen examining a gas stove in the rented condo where an Iowa couple and their two children died in Tulum, Mexico.  (Quintana Roo Prosecutor's Office via AP)

IOWA FAMILY FOUND DEAD IN MEXICO INHALED TOXIC GAS, AUTOPSIES REVEAL

About a week after the family departed for their trip, relatives reported them missing. Creston police contacted the U.S. State Department, and the bodies were found on March 23 during a welfare check at the condo they were staying at on the Yucatan Peninsula. The Sharps had been dead for between 36 and 48 hours by the time they were located, authorities said.

Fox News' Dom Calicchio and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Two dead after home-built plane crashes in California

Two people have died after a home-built plane crashed into a shed just outside the Southern California city of Santa Paula.

The two-seat aircraft went down Saturday afternoon despite clear weather, Ventura County Fire Capt. Stan Ziegler said.

Two people were aboard the plane when it went down, just under a mile from Santa Paula Airport. The deceased were two unidentified males, according to the TV station KABC.

Ziegler said that both individuals were pronounced dead when firefighters arrived. No one on the ground was hurt, officials said.

The Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board are investigating the crash.

Ian Gregor, spokesman for the FAA, said that the plane caught fire after it crashed into the shed. He confirmed that the craft, a Van's RV-6A aircraft, was home-built.

Santa Paula is roughly 65 miles northwest of Los Angeles.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Pippa Middleton's father-in-law arrested and charged with raping a minor in 1990s

The father-in-law of Pippa Middleton, Catherine, the Duchess of Cambridge's sister, was arrested Tuesday in France and charged with raping a minor in the late 1990s.

David Matthews, 74, the father of Middleton's husband, James Matthews, was arrested at the Orly Airport in Paris, The Telegraph reported.

Matthews was charged with "rape of a minor by a person with authority over his victim" Thursday by a French magistrate. The incident allegedly occurred sometime between 1998 and 1999 while the family was vacationing in the country. Matthews' "niece" reportedly filed a complaint to police in 2017 regarding the alleged incidents, the Daily Beast reported. She reportedly told authorities that she was "not quite of legal age" when the alleged abuse occurred in Paris and St. Barts.

MARTHA STEWART'S 'SMOKING HOT' THROWBACK SETS INSTAGRAM ABUZZ

Investigators will study the allegations for six months to determine if the case needs to be brought to trial.

A spokesperson for Matthews told the Daily Mail that he "categorically denies the allegation and unequivocally contests the untrue and scandalous accusation."

wedding

Pippa Middleton married James Matthews, a hedge fund manager, in May 2017. Matthews father, David (right) was charged with raping a minor.  (Reuters)

Matthews, a multimillionaire and father of James and Spencer, a reality television star, was a race car driver but retired in 1973 following a brutal crash. He is a successful hotelier and owns the Eden Rock hotel in St. Barts, where celebrity guests have included Elton John and Leonard DiCaprio.

JIM CARREY 'SUBMITS' SEMI-NUDE TRUMP PAINTING TO NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY, SPARKS REACTIONS

James Matthews, 42, a hedge fund manager, married Pippa, 34, in May 2017. Middleton's sister, Catherine, her brother-in-law, Prince William, and their two children, George and Charlotte, attended the ceremony. Prince Harry was at the high-profile event, and his now-fiancé, Meghan Markle, joined the reception.

Matthews' youngest son, Michael, died in 1999 while descending Mt. Everest. His body was never found.

James and pippa

Pippa Middleton and James Matthews married in May 2017.  (Reuters)

The Kensington Palace did not immediately comment on the report.

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4 wounded in 'running gun battle' on North Carolina highway

Authorities in North Carolina say four men suffered gunshot wounds in a "running gun battle" while driving on a highway.

The Cleveland County Sheriff's Office said in a news release it appears shots were fired between the occupants of two vehicles around 2:15 a.m. Saturday on U.S. 74 near Kings Mountain.

One vehicle carrying three wounded men ended up stopped in the eastbound lane, and the other left the scene. The four men who got shot were treated at hospitals for wounds that did not appear to be life-threatening. All are in their mid-to-late 20s.

Sheriff Alan Norman called it an "incredibly stupid incident with so much potential danger to innocent people." The participants were not cooperating with investigators.

Cleveland County is on the North Carolina-South Carolina line.

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Baby surprise: Woman mistakes 37-week pregnancy for bad Chinese food

A woman who thought she had bad Chinese food had the surprise of her life when she discovered that her excruciating pain wasn't the result of too much MSG or a two-day-old egg roll.

She was actually pregnant.

Very pregnant. 

Crystal Gail Amerson thought she was suffering from food poisoning early Sunday when she awoke to stomach pains that had her running to the bathroom, according to the Pensacola News Journal.

The 29-year-old told the Journal, "I had Chinese food the night before and I kind of figured maybe I had food poisoning or something like that." It turns out, the Pensacola woman was 37 weeks pregnant and about to give birth to her second son.

WOMAN USES FLIGHT CREW, CAPTAIN TO HELP TELL HUSBAND SHE'S PREGNANT

"The stomach pains were just excruciating and I could hardly move," Amerson said. "I think it was about 6:30 [a.m.] when [the ambulance] got there. ... It escalated so quickly that I was having contractions and we figured out kind of what was going on because at first we really didn't know what was going on." 

During her first pregnancy, Crystal told the Pensacola News Journal she never felt a lot of pregnancy symptoms.

"I gained a little bit of weight, but I think with my first baby I didn't notice either," Amerson said. "I never gained that pregnancy shape, really. And then I wear scrubs to work because I work at a retirement home for Alzheimer's and dementia patients. So I guess the way they fit me as well, it was hard to notice anything or tell anything."

Dr. Julie DeCesare, an obstetrician-gynecologist with Sacred Heart Hospital, told the Journal it is possible for a woman to learn of her pregnancy just hours before going into labor, but not common. 

"Sometimes a woman doesn't have a normal menstrual cycle so they don't notice when they don't have a period," DeCesare said. "Or they use a method of contraceptive so they think they can't get pregnant, but then that method fails. Or some I've seen are just flat out in denial." 

SURPRISE BABY: WOMAN WHO THOUGHT SHE HAD KIDNEY INFECTION WAS IN LABOR

Dr. DeCesare said Amerson was a rare exception, and when it comes to warning signs, "usually by 20 weeks you can feel the baby kicking."  

Little Oliver James was born in the back of an ambulance at 6:59 a.m. on Sunday, weighing 5.27 pounds and measured 18.9 inches long. 

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Gun rights activists hand out high-capacity magazines at Vermont rally

Gun rights activists were handing out high-capacity magazines at a rally outside the Vermont State House on Saturday to protest new legislation that would ban them and increase gun control in the state.

Hundreds of protesters gathered to urge Republican Gov. Phil Scott not to sign a new bill that would ban high-capacity magazines and bump stocks, expand background checks for private gun sales and raise the legal age for gun purchases.

The measure was approved by the State House earlier this week and then again by the Senate on Friday in a 17-13 vote.

Protesters were handed nearly 1,200 high-capacity magazines, which hold 30 rounds of ammunition. A standard-capacity magazine holds around 10 rounds, according to Congressionalsportsmen.org, though this can vary.

OUTCRY FROM GUN ADVOCATES AFTER YOUTUBE BLOCKS VIDEOS ON FIREARMS ASSEMBLY, SALE

If the bill is signed by Scott, those who already own high-capacity magazines will be allowed to keep them.

Scott has indicated that he intends to sign the bill, and though he understands the disappointment of some in Vermont, he has faith that they will "get accustomed to the new normal."

"I think at the end of the day," he said, "they'll soon learn that what we have proposed, what's being passed at this time, doesn't intrude upon the Second Amendment. It doesn't take away guns, and I believe that we will get accustomed to the new normal, which is trying to address this underlying violence that we are seeing across the nation."

The extensive gun legislation package came after the Parkland, Fla., school shooting on Feb. 14, in which 17 people were killed by a young gunman.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Prosecutor says officer was justified in fatal bar shooting

A prosecutor in Virginia has ruled that a police officer was justified in fatally shooting an armed man who took several people hostage inside a bar last year.

The Daily Press reports Newport News Commonwealth's Attorney Howard Gwynn issued a report after investigating the April 2017 shooting of Caleb "C.J." Jackson Jr.

It says Jackson began acting erratically at the bar after hours, at one point taking out a pistol and waving it around. Then he fired several rounds, striking an employee.

Officers broke down the locked front door and barged in.

The report says, Sgt. Perry A. Bartels saw Jackson face him and raise a gun to his waist. Bartels fired three shots, striking and killing Jackson.

Jackson died at the scene. The employee who was shot survived.

___

Information from: Daily Press, https://ift.tt/10hmpb0

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Girlfriend accused of obstruction in deaths of Utah teens

The girlfriend of a Utah man accused of killing two teenagers and dropping their bodies down a mine shaft has been arrested on suspicion of obstruction of justice.

Utah County authorities say 34-year-old Morgan Reannon Henderson, of Mammoth, was booked into the county jail Friday after she previously was held in Sanpete County on unrelated criminal allegations involving drugs and weapons.

Her boyfriend, 41-year-old Jerrod William Baum, has been arrested on suspicion of aggravated murder and other charges in the December stabbing deaths of 18-year-old Riley Powell and 17-year-old Brelynne "Breezy" Otteson.

Authorities say the Eureka teens were stabbed to death because they visited Henderson whom Baum had warned not to have male visitors.

Police say Henderson led authorities to the mine after previously denying knowing the teens' whereabouts.

It's not clear whether Henderson has an attorney who could comment on the allegations.

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Illinois man arrested after more than 420 pounds of weed, worth about $3M, is found in his home, police said

A man in Illinois was arrested Thursday evening after authorities recovered more than 420 pounds of weed, worth millions, in his home, police said.

David S. Gutierrez, 31, was taken into custody by Chicago police after tactical officers with the 20th District searched his home in Skokie and located some 423 pounds of marijuana, valued at about $3 million on the street, a police news release said.

'VIOLENT DEPORTEE' WHO ESCAPED CUSTODY AT JFK AIRPORT CAUGHT, AUTHORITIES SAY

skokie marijuana

An estimated 423 pounds of marijuana was recovered, police said.  (Chicago Police Department 20th District)

Authorities also reportedly recovered a number of weapons, including a shotgun and several handguns, and money.

Gutierrez was arrested around 6:30 p.m., police said, and he was charged with one felony count of the manufacturing and delivery of cannabis, five misdemeanor counts for unlawful use of a weapon for possession of a firearm, as well as one misdemeanor count for drug paraphernalia possession.

He was set to appear in court on Saturday, Fox 29 reported.

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Swedish agency nixes booklet for immigrants on child marriage

A Swedish government agency has withdrawn a booklet for immigrants who are married to children after it was blasted by Swedish lawmakers for its allegedly soft approach to child marriage.

The booklet, "Information for those who are married to a child" was retracted Thursday by Sweden's National Board of Health and Welfare, which said the material was developed within the framework of a government project to provide information to those in such marriages about current laws and practices in Sweden -- including the ban on such marriages, child rights and social services.

The Local reports that the brochure has fired up controversy particularly over the soft language used when it said: "Since children under the age of 15 have an absolute right to protection from sexual acts it is improper for you to live together if the child is under 15."

"The material has raised strong reactions and many views. We withdraw the material and will look over it," a statement from the agency said.

Sweden has been one of a number of European countries that has welcomed in a large number of refugees from some Middle Eastern and African countries where child marriage is more common.

But critics say that the booklet, while perhaps well intentioned, took an approach to child marriage that was too soft for a modern liberal country.

Sweden's Minister for Children, Lena Hallengren, slammed the document.

"There must never be any doubts about the laws and values that apply in Sweden. It is not allowed to enter into child marriage," she tweeted. "This should not be compromised and the information must be crystal clear."

"It is justified to provide information, but what tone and signals you send is at least as important," she told national broadcaster SVT.

"Facepalm. Unacceptably indulgent," Liberal Party leader Jan Björklund said. "The brochure has to be withdrawn without delay. Child marriage should be completely forbidden."

"Sweden does not allow anyone under the age of 18 to be married in this country. However, according to current legislation, the main rule is that a marriage valid under the law of the country in which it is concluded is to be recognized civil law in Sweden," Pär Ödman, Chief Legal Officer of the National Board of Health said in the statement from the board. "New legislation is currently being prepared by the government."

Proposals are being considered that such marriages would not be recognized if one of the spouses was under 18 when they arrived in Sweden is proposed to go into effect in 2019, the board said.

Adam Shaw is a Politics Reporter and occasional Opinion writer for FoxNews.com. He can be reached here or on Twitter: @AdamShawNY.

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New York killer who massacred 10 in 1984 freed from prison

A man who killed 10 people in 1984 in one of New York City's most notorious massacres has been released from prison.

The New York Times reports that Christopher Thomas was released in January from Shawangunk Correctional Facility in Wallkill, New York.

Thomas killed eight children and two women in a crime known as the Palm Sunday Massacre. The sole survivor was a 13-month-old girl named Christina Rivera.

One of the first police officers to arrive at the massacre scene in Brooklyn, Joanne Jaffe, cared for the toddler that night and later helped raise her.

Jaffe rose to become the highest-ranking female police chief in the New York Police Department before retiring this year.

She told the Times she hopes Thomas is rehabilitated "and doesn't hurt anyone else."

Retired Lt. Herbert Hohmann, who led the investigation, told the New York Post that Thomas "doesn't deserve to be out on the street."

The now 68-year-old Thomas was convicted of manslaughter in 1985. Some jurors said at the time that they had convicted him of manslaughter, not murder, because Thomas' heavy cocaine use was a factor in the crimes.

State law capped Thomas' sentence at 50 years. Prison officials said that with time off for good behavior, he was eligible for release after serving two-thirds of that time.

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EPA chief Scott Pruitt's rental of condo from energy lobbyist's wife under scrutiny

Environmental Protection Agency chief Scott Pruitt is facing questions about his housing arrangement after he reportedly rented a residence partially owned by the wife of an energy lobbyist.

ABC News first reported that Pruitt, who has already been the subject of a controversy relating to his travel expenses, lived in the condo in Washington D.C., for six months in 2017 when he first arrived in the capital. On Friday ABC reported that his adult daughter used a second room in the condo.

Bloomberg News reported that Pruitt paid $6,100 over six months -- $50 a night for the nights he slept there -- in what a source told the outlet was consistent with an Airbnb-style arrangement. 

The condo is co-owned by Vicki Hart, whose husband, J. Steven Hart, is chairman of a firm that lobbies for environmental and energy clients. The Associated Press reported that his firm's clients include Exxon Mobil and Cheniere Energy.

While ethics rules normally prohibit employees in the executive branch from receiving gifts, the EPA denied that it was, in fact, an example of a gift.

"As EPA career ethics officials stated in a memo, Administrator Pruitt's housing arrangement for both himself and family was not a gift and the lease was consistent with federal ethics regulations," an EPA spokesman told Fox News.

Hart told The AP that Pruitt is a casual friend, and that they have had no contact with himt for months, except for a brief exchange at the National Prayer Breakfast last month.

"Pruitt signed a market-based, short-term lease for a condo owned partially by my wife," Hart said, according to a statement. "Pruitt paid all rent owed as agreed to in the lease. My wife does not, and has not ever, lobbied the EPA on any matters."

Pruitt has been a strong proponent of rolling back a number of EPA regulations and has slashed some regulations opposed by  industry, angering environmentalist groups.

"Scott Pruitt, who is supposed to protect our families from pollution, literally lived in a fossil fuel lobbyist's house," Michael Brune, the executive director of the Sierra Club, told The AP. "The administrator of the EPA should stand up to corporate polluters, not live in their homes while pushing their agenda at every turn."

"Scott Pruitt, who is supposed to protect our families from pollution, literally lived in a fossil fuel lobbyist's house."

- Michael Brune, the executive director of the Sierra Club

The controversy is the latest to hit Pruitt, who is under scrutiny over his travel practices. The House Oversight Committee is investigating, with The Wall Street Journal reporting that his international trips and a number of chartered and military flights mean his travel costs have exceeded $150,000.

Pruitt has said he needed to occupy first-class seating due to security concerns.

The controversies could place Pruitt under more scrutiny from President Donald Trump, who this week replaced Veterans Affairs Secretary David Shulkin.

Shulkin had been under fire over a trip to Europe. According to an internal watchdog, he improperly accepted tennis tickets, and his then-chief of staff doctored emails to justify his wife traveling to Europe with him at taxpayer expense.

Fox News' Jennifer Bowman, Matt Richardson and The Associated Press contributed to this report

 

Adam Shaw is a Politics Reporter and occasional Opinion writer for FoxNews.com. He can be reached here or on Twitter: @AdamShawNY.

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Illegal immigrant nabbed after going on the lam in 1995 for impregnating 12-year-old daughter

A fugitive illegal immigrant has been nabbed in Texas after going on the lam 23 years ago to avoid being arrested for impregnating his daughter, then just 12 years old.

Heraclio Gamez-Nava, 64, was taken into custody in Porter Thursday after showing authorities a copy of a 1995 Nevada warrant charging him with continuous sexual assault of a minor under the age of 14. He took off after being served with the warrant.

"At that time, they fled Nevada and have been on the run since," according to a Montgomery County Precinct 4 Constable's Office.

Deputies said Gamez-Nava was a Mexican national living in the country illegally.

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Mug shots for Haraclio Gamez-Nava, 64, and his wife Alicia Vazquez-Carrizales, 55.  (Montgomery County Precinct 4 Constable's Office)

He was arrested after deputies stopped vehicle driving the wrong way.

When officials spoke to the two occupants they were able to eventually identify them as Gamez-Nava and his wife, Alicia Vazquez-Carrizales, KPRC-TV reported.

The constable's office said that Vazquez-Carrizales, 55, who was driving the vehicle. was deported to Mexico in 2003 and 2014 and will likely be deported again.

She was charged with hindering the apprehension of a felon, a misdemeanor.

They were jailed after their arrests.

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Soldier killed in Syria identified as 36-year-old from Texas

The American service member killed this week by a roadside bomb in northern Syria was a 36-year-old Army soldier from Texas.

The Defense Department identified him Saturday as Master Sgt. Johnathan J. Dunbar of Austin.

He died Friday as a result of injuries suffered when an improvised explosive device detonated near his patrol in Syria, not far from the border with Turkey.

A Briton also was killed and five other people were wounded in Thursday's bombing.

Dunbar was assigned to the headquarters of the U.S. Army Special Operations Command in Fort Bragg, North Carolina.

He is the fourth American service member to die in Syria since the U.S. began attacking Islamic State group militants there in September 2014.

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Department of Defense identifies soldier killed in Syria

The Department of Defense (DOD) on Saturday released the identity of an American soldier killed in Syria on Friday.

The soldier was identified as Master Sgt. Johnathan J. Dunbar of Austin, Texas. The 36-year-old was seriously injured after a improvised explosive device (IED) detonated in Manbij, Syria, which is located in the northern part of the war-torn country. He later died of his injuries.

Dunbar was assigned to U.S. Army Special Operations Command headquarters at Fort Bragg in North Carolina, according to the DOD. He is the first U.S. soldier to die in action in Syria this year.

A British soldier was also killed in the attack. Five others were wounded. 

The 36-year-old was first entered the Army in 2005 an an infantryman. He was later assigned to the 1st Battalion, 325th Airborne Infantry Regiment, at Fort Bragg. He was deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan, and, in 2009, transitioned to Fort Hood in Texas. He served as a Squad Leader for four years will at Fort Bragg.

Dunbar was decorated -- some of his awards include the bronze Star Medal, the Army Commendation Medal, the Army Achievement Medal and  the Good Conduct Medal, among other awards.

Fox News' Lucas Tomlinson and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Madeline Farber is a Reporter for Fox News. You can follow her on Twitter @MaddieFarberUDK.

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Teens begin Mississippi-to-Memphis march in honor of King

A group of teenagers has launched a 50-mile (80-kilometer) walk from Mississippi to Memphis, Tennessee, as a tribute to slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. on the 50th anniversary of his assassination.

Six middle school, high school and college students, and their two adult mentors, began their march to Memphis on Saturday in Dundee, Mississippi. They plan to meet with friends and family at the Mississippi-Tennessee state line Tuesday and will attend events commemorating King's death Wednesday.

King was fatally shot at a Memphis hotel on April 4, 1968.

The teens say they're taking part in the journey to learn about civil rights and racial justice.

The group wore aqua T-shirts and hydration backpacks as they started the first leg of their march along Highway 61 in the Mississippi Delta.

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Pope in Easter Vigil to baptize Nigerian migrant-hero

Pope Francis is celebrating the solemn Easter Vigil service in St. Peter's Basilica, during which he will baptize eight adults into the Catholic faith, including a Nigerian migrant-turned-hero.

Francis processed in silence down the darkened central aisle of the basilica, led only by a single candle and blue floor lights that gave the scene a mystical air.

The late-night service is the most solemn in the liturgical calendar, leading up to the joyful Easter Sunday Mass when Christians mark the resurrection of Christ.

During the service, Francis will welcome into the faith eight adults, including a Nigerian migrant hailed as a hero for helping stop a thief until police arrived. In preparing for his baptism, he reportedly asked the Rome police captain who handled his case to be his godfather.

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Authoritarian Turkmen leader's son rises in Foreign Ministry

The son of Turkmenistan's president has been appointed a deputy foreign minister, deepening speculation that the president aims to form a dynastic system of power in the Central Asian nation.

The appointment of Serdar Berdymukhamedov was reported Saturday in the country's official newspaper. The announcement came a week after a parliamentary election that included candidates from three parties and independents, all of them loyal to President Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov.

Results of the election have not been made public, but the newspaper said the president's son won a seat with 91 percent of the vote.

Since coming to power in 2006, Berdymukhamedov has established a personality cult that reaches all levels of society in the former Soviet republic, styling him as the country's Akradag (protector).

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Man whose estate got $1.5M settlement faced federal scrutiny

A man whose family was paid $1.5 million by the city of Chicago after he died in police custody was under federal investigation at the time.

The Chicago Sun-Times reports that Justin Cook was a member of the Four Corner Hustlers street gang. Records show he was one of three unindicted co-conspirators named in a racketeering indictment.

That case allegedly ties 11 gang members to six slayings, along with several robberies, batteries and drug-related offenses. It's set for trial next year.

The 29-year-old Cook died in 2014 after police allegedly refused to give him his inhaler as he suffered an asthma attack after being arrested. His estate sued the city and three officers. City officials authorized the settlement in 2016.

A spokesman says the Chicago Law Department determined there was "a significant chance" police would be found liable.

___

Information from: Chicago Sun-Times, https://ift.tt/1oVpLS2

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Teen battling cancer crowned honorary prom queen by South Carolina high school

Jenna Bodiford, a 14-year-old girl from Barnwell, South Carolina, had no idea she was in for a royal surprise earlier this week.  

The teen, who has been battling cancer since September of last year, was crowned honorary prom queen by her high school peers on Thursday night.

"When they announced her name, everyone screamed and applauded -- she had tears in her eyes," Brett Bodiford, Jenna's father, told Fox News on Saturday. "It was really amazing for her because she had no idea that it was going to happen."

One of Jenna's brothers escorted her to the prom, her father said, and she was crowned with a tiara.

"She said, 'I don't usually cry much over this stuff.' She's the type that if you're doing something for her, she thinks you're already doing too much" Brett, 49, said.

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From left to right: Brett, Jenna and Becky, Jenna's mother, pose for a photo on prom night.  (Brett Bodiford)

Due to her illness, Jenna hasn't been able to attend high school on the regular. But that didn't stop the 14-year-old from attending prom, Brett said, adding that the high school called the Bodiford family to invite Jenna to the big night personally. A group of Jenna's friends even came over ahead of time to help her with her makeup, Brett said.

Jenna was diagnosed with stage 4 rhabdomyosarcoma last fall. The cancer typically forms in a person's soft tissue, such as muscles.

The teen's grave diagnosis was unexpected, to say the least, Brett said. One minute Jenna was complaining of unrelenting leg pain -- initially thinking that she had pulled her hamstring while exercising. The next minute, after numerous doctor's appointments and hospital visits, she was informed that she had something much more severe than a strained muscle.

After she first got the news, doctors wanted to attack the cancer as aggressively as they could. But the cost of that aggression was almost too much, her father said, as the chemotherapy treatments, in particular, made Jenna very sick.

"It was so bad in the beginning. The doctors were so aggressive at the first that I told them we needed to slow down or we were the ones who were going to kill her," Brett said.

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One of Jenna's brothers escorted her to the prom.  (Brett Bodiford)

The first eight weeks after the diagnosis was the most intense, Brett said. After that, Jenna's family spent nearly half of their time in and out of hospitals. It became so much that Brett's wife, Becky, quit her job in December to care for Jenna, and Brett's employer has allowed him to work from home more and more.

Receiving a cancer diagnosis is "not what anyone expects to wake up to," Brett said, adding that "time is of no account to me because taking care of a cancer patient is 24/7."

Recently, doctors informed Jenna that the cancer has spread to her brain and is terminal. She stopped her chemotherapy treatments about four weeks ago so she can live out the rest of her life feeling her best.

"When we were at prom, Jenna was talking to a friend and said she's living minute by minute," Brett said. He added that the family had adopted the same mantra -- he even wrote about it in the blog he's been keeping that chronicles Jenna's cancer journey.

What has brought peace to Brett, his wife, and their two sons, who are 23 and 25, respectively, is Jenna's poise, attitude, and faith.

"Different times throughout this experience she has shown a faith that I've only tried to reach," Brett said. "[Her prognosis] is tragic and heartbreaking and not easy -- we are emotional beings, so it hurts. But she has hope in what's going to be."

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Brett (left) said his daughter's faith has helped the family through her cancer diagnosis.  (Brett Bodiford)

Brett said his family had been comforted and humbled by the outpouring of support they have received from the Barnwell community and beyond. The stories Brett referenced -- from free food and gas to gift baskets to group prayer sessions and strangers opening their homes to the Bodiford family when Jenna was traveling to receive cancer treatment -- are seemingly endless. Jenna's high school even gave her a cap and gown and honorary diploma so the teen could say she graduated.

Brett also recalled a time when a man in Atlanta significantly dropped the price of the handicap van the family needed to buy for Jenna. Jenna's story so moved him that the man told Brett it was the least he could do. 

"She is the community's daughter. We just get the special honor of getting to take care of her every minute," Brett said.

Brett's had conversations that he never imagined he'd have to discuss with a 14-year-old -- topics that have ranged from what heaven will be like to Jenna's hopes for her funeral. But the teen has also enjoyed many of life's small pleasures as well -- such as riding around in a golf cart that was given to her by the Make-A-Wish Foundation, reading, watching TV and spending quality time with her family. Both of Jenna's brothers are getting married in the coming months, Brett said, adding that he and his wife are also celebrating their 30th wedding anniversary on April 2. These are all celebrations they hope Jenna will be able to attend.

"There's something about Jenna -- she's not a talker, she's always been shy -- but people are inspired by her," Brett said. "You can go through bad things, but it doesn't have to destroy you. And she is the picture of that."

Madeline Farber is a Reporter for Fox News. You can follow her on Twitter @MaddieFarberUDK.

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Alabama man directs girlfriend to rape his 11-year-old autistic son he believed was gay

An Alabama father had his girlfriend rape and sodomize his 11-year-old autistic son because he feared the boy was gay.

Sean Cole, 29, and his girlfriend Khadeijah Moore, 21, of Huntsville, Ala., were convicted Tuesday of "rape, sodomy and the sexual abuse of a child under the age of 12," AL.com reported. They both face up to life in prison and are slated to be sentenced on May 24.

Moore is considered a fugitive after she failed to attend the trial and a warrant for his arrest was issued by the trial judge, FOX13 Memphis reported. Cole has been behind bars since his arrest in January.

The sexual abuse occurred during Thanksgiving 2016 when the then-11-year-old boy, who lives in Georgia with his mother, visited his father for the holiday. Cole allegedly discovered the boy in a "compromising position with another boy" and became furious, prosecutors said.

AL SHARPTON'S HALF BROTHER CHARGED WITH CAPITAL MURDER IN ALABAMA SHOOTING

Cole instructed Moore to have sex with the victim. Moore raped and sodomized the victim and forced the child to perform sexual acts on her, AL.com reported.

"It was solely that he was worried that his son was gay, or might become gay," Tim Douthit, a prosecutor, said. "There was no evidence he had a sexual attraction to his son or children."

"He just thought he could, for lack of better words, 'straighten him out,'" he continued.

The crimes were reported by the victim's mother after the boy returned home from his visit. She became concerned after her son started asking her sex-related questions. The boy opened up and told her what happened, and she immediately went to police to report the crime.

Moore and Cole were arrested in January 2017.

SPRING BREAKER, 17, VANISHES IN GULF OF MEXICO

Reta McKannan, Moore' defense attorney, said her client "did everything at Sean Cole's direction."

"That doesn't make it OK. That doesn't make it right," McKannan said. 

Cole has previously been arrested for domestic violence, court records showed.

Douthit said the boy told an interviewer he was confused at the time of the sexual assault and asked, "Why is my dad doing this to me?"

"Dad said to tell no one. I failed him. I just told you," the victim told the interviewer.

The prosecutor said the boy, who is now 13, is "doing well."

"The most terrible part of this is the little boy still doesn't understand it's not his fault," Douthit said. "He still thinks he's the bad guy. It's heartbreaking."

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Students at Florida high school stage walkout in support of Second Amendment

A group of students at a Central Florida high school walked out of class Friday as part of a protest in support of the Second Amendment.

Some of the students who participated in the walkout at Rockledge High School told WFTV that when the movement to honor the victims and survivors of the shooting in Parkland became political, they felt silenced.

"I'm pro-Second Amendment," Rockledge junior and protest organizer Anna Delaney told the station. "I wouldn't mind deeper background checks, of course, but the Second Amendment will not be infringed upon."

Many Rockledge students walked out of class March 14 as part of the National School Walkout that was held in support of the Parkland school shooting victims and to protest gun violence and call for new gun control measures. They stood on the football field and formed a huge heart.

About 75 students participated in Friday's walkout at Rockledge, Florida Today reported. The protest lasted 20 minutes.

They walked onto the schools track carrying the American flag and signs that said "guns don't kill people, people kill people" and "I support the right to bear arms," the paper reported. Some wore Trump "Make America Great Again" hats and camouflage clothing.

"We were built on certain rights and that was one of the original rights, that we should have the right to bear arms," sophomore Chloe Deaton told the group. She helped Delaney organize the walkout.

Zachary Schneider, a junior, was quoted by the paper as saying, "It's all over the news right now that all students hate guns. I wanted to show that not all students feel that way."

Rockledge principal Vickie Hickey said the school treated the Second Amendment walkout exactly like it treated the walkout that took place two weeks ago, the paper reported.

She said both events were completely student-driven.

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Trump calls Amazon's deal with Postal Service a 'scam' costing 'billions'

President Trump reignited his feud with Amazon on Saturday arguing that the online retailer's "scam" shipping deal with the U.S. Postal Service is costing the agency "billions of dollars."

"It is reported that the U.S. Post Office will lose $1.50 on average for each package it delivers for Amazon. That amounts to Billions of Dollars," Trump said over two tweets. "If the P.O. 'increases its parcel rates, Amazon's shipping costs would rise by $2.6 Billion.' This Post Office scam must stop. Amazon must pay real costs (and taxes) now!"

The tweets suggest Trump got his information from The New York Times and attack the "Fake Washington Post," which continues to be critical of Trump's administration and is owned by Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon.

The president's tweets on Saturday also suggest Amazon is not paying its fair share of sales tax and that the Post's "lobbying staff" has "ballooned" in efforts to keep favorable tax laws and the Postal Service deal.

However, federal regulators have found the contract with Amazon to be profitable.

"I have stated my concerns with Amazon long before the Election," Trump tweeted Thursday. "Unlike others, they pay little or no taxes to state & local governments, use our Postal System as their Delivery Boy (causing tremendous loss to the U.S.), and are putting many thousands of retailers out of business!"

The Post and Bezos have responded to Trump's lobbyist claims in the past by declaring that Bezos is not involved in any journalistic decisions at the paper.

Amazon.com, Inc., and the newspaper declined to comment Saturday.

Amazon lives and dies by shipping, and an increase in the rates it pays could certainly do some damage. Amazon sends packages via the post office, FedEx, UPS and other services.

But while the U.S. Postal Service has lost money for 11 years, package delivery -- which has been a bright spot for the service -- is not the reason.

Boosted by e-commerce, the Postal Service has experienced double-digit increases in revenue from delivering packages, but that hasn't been enough to offset pension and health care costs as well as declines in first-class letters and marketing mail.

Together, letters and marketing mail make up more than two-thirds of postal revenue.

In arguing that the Postal Service is losing money on delivering packages for Amazon, Trump appears to be citing some Wall Street analysis that argue the Postal Service's formula for calculating its costs is outdated. A 2017 analysis by Citigroup did conclude that the Postal Service was charging below market rates as a whole on parcels.

Still, federal regulators have reviewed the Amazon contract with the Postal Service each year and determined it to be profitable.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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1 man killed in French fairground ride accident

French authorities say one man has been killed and another person has been seriously wounded in a fairground ride accident in a small town north of Lyon.

The Rhone prefecture said three other people were slightly injured after the ride collapsed Saturday afternoon in Neuville-sur-Saone. The prefecture wouldn't provide details on the identities or the ages of the victims.

The ride was composed of three rotating axis with baskets carrying people in pairs. Laurent Buffard, deputy mayor of Neuville-sur-Saone, told BFM television that one of the axis somehow hit the ground.

An investigation has been launched to determine the cause of the accident.

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UK's left-wing Labour Party engulfed by anti-Semitism crisis

The British Labour Party, led by far-left leader Jeremy Corbyn, is engulfed in a raging anti-Semitism scandal dominating the headlines in the U.K. and threatening Corbyn's hopes of being the country's next prime minister. 

Thirty-nine MPs and peers have signed a letter to Corbyn criticizing him for his response to a party official's defense of a candidate who posted a Holocaust denial article.

Christine Shawcroft, who sits on the party's national executive committee (NEC), had defended a council candidate who was suspended for posting an article on social media calling the Holocaust a hoax, according to the Times of London. The article image had replaced the words "Arbeit Macht Frei" above the Auschwitz concentration camp with "Muh Holocaust." 

Shawcroft stepped down as chairwoman of internal disputes, but not from the NEC as a whole. John McDonnell, the shadow chancellor and a Corbyn ally, has backed her to remain on the NEC. The letter from MPs urged Corbyn to suspend her from the party.

"It is utterly wrong that somebody who defends a Labour candidate who has been suspended for Holocaust denial should be a member of Labour's governing body," the letter says, according to Sky News.

While on its own the Shawcroft controversy may be dismissed as a relatively minor party matter, it comes in the wake of a relentless series of controversies related to anti-Semitism as the party has lurched to the left since Corbyn's ascension to the leadership in 2015, where activists and politicians with hardline views, including on Israel and Palestine, have gained power. 

"Whether he likes it or not, Jeremy Corbyn has a lot to answer for," Lord Winston, a scientist and Labour peer told the Times. "He has encouraged anti-Semites and he's endorsed them. In the modern world using social media, their conspiracy theories about Jews and statements about hate, spread like a disease and this virus is infecting the Labour Party."

FILE PHOTO: Britain's opposition Labour Party leader, Jeremy Corbyn, listens to Jonathan Ashworth, Shadow Health Secretary, speak at a rally in central London, Britain January 25, 2018. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls/File Photo - RC15F4331790

Jeremy Corbyn hopes to be the UK's next prime minister.  (Reuters)

On Monday, protesters demonstrated in front of Parliament against the anti-Semitism in the party, brandishing placards saying "#EnoughisEnough" and "No to Holocaust denial."

Corbyn has himself been accused of being at best indifferent to anti-Semitism within his own party. Last week he was dogged by a controversy over a 2012 Facebook comment he made to a post by an artist who was complaining an anti-Semitic mural he made was removed. In the post he questioned why the London mural, featuring stereotypically Jewish bankers playing Monopoly on a table made from people, was being removed.

Corbyn had in the past faced controversy over a meeting where he expressed support for members of Hamas and Hezbollah, which he called them "friends." He has since said he was using "inclusive language" as he sought to bring about a peace process, and that he does not support or agree with them.

Top Corbyn ally and former London Mayor Ken Livingstone -- who is often referred to as "Red Ken" for his hard-left views -- was suspended by the party in 2016 for saying that Adolf Hitler was a Zionist before he "went mad and ended up killing six million Jews."

His comments came after MP Naz Shah was suspended for sharing an image on Facebook showing Israel as part of the U.S. -- apparently suggesting the country be relocated there

Corbyn made things somewhat worse for himself when, in a 2016 speech intended for him to condemn anti-Semitism and distance himself from some of the controversies, he appeared to compare Israel to the Islamic State.

"Our Jewish friends are no more responsible for the actions of Israel or the Netanyahu government than our Muslim friends are for those of various self-styled Islamic states or organizations," he said.

Corbyn has repeatedly and explicitly condemned anti-Semitism, and last week wrote to Jewish groups, apologizing for not having "studied the content of the mural more closely before wrongly questioning its removal."

In the lengthy letter, he concludes by promising that "I will never be anything other than a militant opponent of anti-Semitism." 

"In this fight, I am your ally and always will be," he said. 

The latest crisis for Corbyn and the Labour Party has drawn increasing attention, particularly after he came close to winning the 2017 general election, despite having been widely viewed as unelectable for his far-left views.

Prime Minister Theresa May's Conservative Party was widely expected to emerge with an enormous majority, but instead was only able to form a government by forming a coalition with the Northern Irish Democratic Unionist Party.

While polls show May's lead widening again, Corbyn is now being taken seriously as a future prime minister.

The controversy has echoes in other countries, including the United States. A number of Democratic politicians have sparked controversy with their ties to Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, particularly in the wake of anti-Semitic tweets he sent this month.

"The FBI has been the worst enemy of Black advancement," Farrakhan wrote this month. "The Jews have control over those agencies of government."

The dangers of tolerating anti-Semitism in Europe were on display recently in France, where anti-Semitic violence on the rise in recent years, exacerbated in part by a surge in radical Islamism in the country. According to France 24, violent anti-Semitic crimes have risen 25 percent since 2016. 

Last week an 85-year-old Holocaust survivor was stabbed 11 times and burnt to death. France's right-wing National Front leader Marine Le Pen, who was accused of anti-Semitism herself when she claimed last year that France was not responsible for the rounding up on Jews in Nazi-occupied France in 1942, has blamed the attack on "Islamic fundamentalism" -- referring to reports that the killer yelled "Allahu Akbar."

In a speech earlier this month, President Emmanuel Macron recognized that Jews are fleeing the country and pledged to do more to protect Jewish sites, as well as fighting racism and anti-Semitism online.

"We have understood, with horror, that anti-Semitism is still alive. And on this issue our response must be unforgiving. France would not be itself if Jewish citizens had to leave because they were afraid," he said.

Adam Shaw is a Politics Reporter and occasional Opinion writer for FoxNews.com. He can be reached here or on Twitter: @AdamShawNY.

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