Miami Beach braces for new spring break chaos

Florida’s Miami Beach is still reeling from two shocking execution-style murders on crowded streets during spring break last weekend and business owners told The Post they expect the lawlessness and carnage to continue over the next three days.

Local business people and councilmembers have warned that far from attracting the college crowd, those descending on the city are partying on the streets and engaging in shocking illegal behaviors.

“These people have zero respect for any property, for anybody. Drugs, prostitution, you name it we’ve seen it.

“You walk on the street on a daily basis and you’ve got guys coming up to you, [asking] if you want coke, if you want marijuana,” said Sebastian Labno, who co-owns a number of restaurants in the area.


Partygoers shown during Miami Beach spring break 2023
Romain Maurice/MEGA

Partygoers shown along Ocean Drive during Miami Beach spring break 2023
Partygoers hit the streets during Miami Beach spring break 2023
MEGA for NY Post

“The people that come to Miami Beach in the last couple of years are no spring breakers,” Labno said. “They’re adults. They’re troublemakers.”

Labno, 50, added he’d seen people being attacked after card games, others openly engaging in prostitution and a group recently began mixing what appeared to be cocaine on the front patio of one of his poke restaurant along Collins Avenue. 

He told The Post he’s concerned for the safety of his patrons, employees and himself.  Labno has frequently reported such incidents to police, but said the lawlessness is affecting his businesses, which include high end sushi restaurant Nossa Omakase and Koa Poke – which closed early last Friday and Saturday.

“This week we had nothing but cancellations. People say, ‘We’re too afraid to come,’” he said, adding Nossa has been closed all week following the killings.


Sebastian Labno, 50, a co-owner of Koa Poke and Nossa Omakase

Last Friday shots rang out last Friday around 10:40 p.m. near Seventh Street and Ocean Drive, in the city, according to police. Two people were rushed to a local hospital, where one, a 21-year-old college student from Georgia named Jordan Idahosa, succumbed to his injuries. The other victim was critically hurt.  


Jordan Idahosa
Idahosa Family

Days later, a man was shot at point-blank range in a caught-on-camera execution

His accused killer, 24-year-old Dontavious Polk, allegedly used a stolen semiautomatic gun to unleash at least 11 bullets into the busy sidewalk along Ocean Drive near 11th Street. He was later arrested and charged for the targeted attack, police said. The victim, who has not been identified, could not be saved. 

“I could never go on Ocean Drive at night, personally,” Labno added. “During the spring break, especially, it has turned into literally the wild, wild west. Last year, people were shooting each other. This year, people are shooting each other. And it’s just a matter of time that one of the employees is going to get caught in the cross-lines.”

Miami Beach City Commission’s opted not to institute a curfew for the weekend, when thousands of out-of-towners are flooding into Miami Beach for the Ultra Music Festival. 


Screengrab shows Sunday morning’s fatal shooting along 11th street and Ocean Drive in Miami Beach.

The commission voted against the curfew during a Monday afternoon emergency meeting, after the weekend of violence.

City Commissioner Ricky Arriola argued curfews are not “a long-term solution,” and pointed to the fact many people descending on the area weren’t partying in bars. 

“We’re taking it out on law-abiding businesses,” he argued. “What we have to do is police our streets, make our public safe and work with our business community … Because the crowd that’s coming don’t go to our bars, don’t go to our nightclubs. They party in the streets.”


Partygoers hit the streets during Miami Beach spring break 2023
AP

Instead, city officials prohibited the sale of alcohol after 6 p.m., despite protests from Miami Beach Police Chief Richard Clements.

“I’m not going to say that it makes us any safer,” Clements said, although he conceded crowds are known to congregate around liquor stores.

Mayor Dan Gelber told the commission the city has “a real problem with the number of people that are coming, and the guns that are coming.”


Partygoers shown along Ocean Drive during Miami Beach spring break 2023
MEGA for NY Post

“It feels as though we’re balancing business interests with the public safety. I understand that’s a balancing that happens. I just don’t think after this weekend that’s a balancing we can do,” Gelber said. 

He added: “We can’t balance that interest when we’ve had two people killed over the last weekend in as many days, and our police are telling us in no uncertain terms that it is a continued dangerous situation.”


Police gathered on the streets during Miami Beach spring break 2023
MEGA for NY Post

Ian Hendry, a property manager at The Netherland — a rental building located on 13th Street and Ocean Drive which houses popular sports bar Finnegan’s Way — said the crowd which makes its way to Miami Beach to wreak havoc is not the horde of college kids people might expect for spring break, but that it remains confined to certain parts of the city.

“It’s always reported as a spring break problem, he said, adding that instead, the people visiting the city are coming “during the spring break time and are going to cause trouble no matter what.” 

He added her hasn’t seen much trouble this year, but “I do not go south of 11th during spring break, that’s for sure.”

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‘Woke’ DOD official Kelisa Wing reassigned after GOP highlights anti-white tweets

WASHINGTON – Self-described “woke” Defense Department schools official Kelisa Wing, whose anti-white social media comments garnered national attention last fall, has been reassigned to an unrelated role, The Post has learned.

The Defense Dept. in October launched a 30-day review of Wing – the now-former Education Activity chief diversity equity and inclusion officer – after her Twitter posts with disparaging comments about white people resurfaced.

“I’m so exhausted at these white folx in these [professional development] sessions this lady actually had the CAUdacity to say black people can be racist too,” she wrote in one post from June 2020, using a portmanteau for “Caucasian audacity.”

While Wing’s job change came after the DoD completed its review, Undersecretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness Gilbert Cisneros Jr. said it took place not as a “disciplinary action,” but instead “as part of a headquarters restructuring.”

But at a House Military Personnel Subcommittee hearing on the impacts of “diversity, equity, and inclusion” in the DoD and military, Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-NY) said she was skeptical that the job change was made purely for reorganizational reasons.


Kelisa Wing, whose anti-white social media comments garnered national attention last fall, has been reassigned to an unrelated role.
DODEA

“I have a feeling that has to do with the fact that we [Republicans] have shined light on this,” she said.

While she and other lawmakers had requested updates on Wing’s review months earlier, Stefanik said she received a letter just three hours before the hearing where the matter would be discussed.

“I wrote a letter to the department in September of last year and did not receive a response. It was only when I wrote a follow-up letter in November of last year [that] we did finally get a response in December stating the department was conducting an inquiry into this matter,” she said.


Rep. Elise Stefanik said she was skeptical that the change was made purely for reorganizational reasons.
Getty Images

“Today – six months after that initial inquiry – you responded three hours prior to this hearing, which is a trend for Biden administration officials at the last minute scrambling before these hearings,” she added.

The Pentagon also repeatedly ignored The Post’s requests for updates on the review since early this year.

A congressional source close to the matter called the delayed reply “an attempt to subvert full Congressional oversight of DoDEA’s politicized activities that inhibit the ability of service member parents to participate in their children’s education.”

It’s a matter close to Stefanik’s heart as she continues her push for a “service member parents bill of rights” bill that would ensure guardians of children attending DoD schools “have the right to be involved in their children’s education, while increasing transparency and accountability in DoDEA schools,” according to her office.

The update also comes about two weeks after The Post reported that DoDEA schools saw a 1250% increase in the number of Wing’s left-leaning children’s books in their school libraries since her scandal broke six months ago.

In the six months since her racially charged tweets drew GOP criticism, the number of her far-left children’s books lining the shelves of the DOD elementary, middle and high schools under her authority increased tenfold.

In October, about 45 copies of books Wing coauthored – including titles such as “What is White Privilege?” and “What Does it Mean to Defund the Police?” – were available in 11 DOD school libraries, according to a Substack report by OpenTheBooks, a right-leaning nonprofit that tracks government spending.

As of this month, that number had grown to more than 600 books in 49 DOD schools from Quantico, Va., to Yokosuka, Japan, according to online library databases and the report.

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Russia hits apartments and dorm, killing civilians

KYIV, Ukraine — Russia stepped up its missile and drone attacks against Ukraine on Wednesday, killing students and other civilians, in a violent follow-up to dueling high-level diplomatic missions aimed at bringing peace after 13 months of war.

“Russia is shelling the city with bestial savagery,” President Volodymyr Zelensky wrote in a Telegram post accompanying video showing what he said was a Russian missile striking a nine-story apartment building on a busy road in the southeastern city of Zaporizhzhia. “Residential areas where ordinary people and children live are being fired at.”

At least one person was killed in the attack shown in the Zaporizhzhia video, apparently recorded by closed circuit TV cameras.

Elsewhere, Moscow’s forces launched exploding drones before dawn, killing at least eight people in or near a student dormitory near Kyiv.

Ukrainian media showed several angles of the missile raining down on an apartment building across the street from a shopping mall in Zaporizhzhia, producing a huge plume of gray and black smoke, with bits of concrete flying into the air as cars whizzed by.


A residential multi-story building is seen damaged after a Russian missile hit it in southeastern city of Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine, on March 22, 2023.
AP

Videos showed the violent outcome of the attack: charred apartments, flames and smoke billowing out of several floors of the buildings, and piles of broken concrete and shards of glass on the ground.

Two children were among the wounded, said Zaporizhzhia City Council Secretary Anatolii Kurtiev, adding that 25 people needed hospital treatment, with three in critical condition.

Zaporizhzhia city is about 60 miles from the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, Europe’s largest which has come under threat during the war and has been shut down for months.


Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky and Ukrainian soldiers hold the flag of a military unit at a position near Bakhmut, Donetsk region, Ukraine on March 22, 2023.
AP

The U.N.’s International Atomic Energy Agency reported the plant had suffered another loss of a backup external power source.

Its six reactors still need power to cool nuclear fuel, and were relying on only a primary source Wednesday, the IAEA said.

Russia has denied targeting residential areas even though artillery and rocket strikes hit apartment buildings and civilian infrastructure daily.


Emergency personnel work at the scene following a drone attack in the town of Rzhyshchiv, Kyiv region, Ukraine on March 22, 2023.
AP

Russian officials have blamed Ukrainian air defenses for some of the deadliest strikes on apartments, saying the deployment of air defense systems in residential areas puts civilians at risk.

Russia sometimes also claims Ukraine is hiding military equipment and personnel in civilian buildings.

The war, which Russia started Feb. 24, 2022, has evolved in two main directions: a front line mainly in eastern Ukraine, centered around the city of Bakhmut, and periodic Russian missile and drone strikes nationwide.


Emergency personnel work at the scene following a drone attack in the town of Rzhyshchiv, Kyiv region, Ukraine on March 22, 2023.
AP

In addition, periodic — although unconfirmed — Ukrainian sabotage attacks have been launched across the border into Russia.

The front-line fighting largely stalemated over the winter, with expectations of major offensives by both sides expected in more favorable spring weather.

Earlier Wednesday, a drone attack damaged a high school and two dormitories in the city of Rzhyshchiv, south of the Ukrainian capital, officials said.

It wasn’t clear how many people were in the dormitories at the time.


A residential multi-story building hit by a missile is on fire in the southeastern city of Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine on March 22, 2023.
AP

The body of a 40-year-old man was among those pulled from the rubble on one floor, according to regional police chief Andrii Nebytov, adding that more than 20 people were hospitalized.

Video showed what appeared to be a bloodied sneaker and a green ball on the ground near a damaged building, whose top floor was ripped off at a corner.

The attacks occurred as dueling diplomatic missions were winding down.

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida left Kyiv after meeting Zelensky to support Ukraine.


An injured Ukrainian soldier lies on a bed inside a special medical bus during an evacuation by volunteers from the Hospitallers paramedic organization in the Donetsk region of Ukraine on March 22, 2023.
AP

Chinese leader Xi Jinping left Moscow after meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin about Beijing’s peace proposal, which the West has rejected as a non-starter.

No progress toward peace was reported.

U.S. National Security Council spokesperson Adrienne Watson noted the violent turn of events.

“Just one day after Russia called for peace, Russia is attacking Ukrainian homes as part of its brutal war,” she said in Washington. “What Russia is doing is horrific -– and we are committed to continuing to help Ukraine defend itself against this Russian aggression.”


A police officer gestures to prevent photographing at the scene of a drone attack in the town of Rzhyshchiv, Kyiv region, Ukraine on March 22, 2023.
AP

The drone barrage and other Russian attacks on civilian infrastructure also drew a scathing response from Zelensky.

“Over 20 Iranian murderous drones, plus missiles, numerous shelling occasions, and that’s just in one last night of Russian terror,” he tweeted in English. “Every time someone tries to hear the word ‘peace’ in Moscow, another order is given there for such criminal strikes.”

Zaporizhzhia’s regional administration said two missiles struck the apartment block, saying Russia’s goal is “to scare the civilian population of the city of thousands.”

“It’s hell in Zaporizhzhia,” Ukrainian lawmaker Oleksiy Goncharenko wrote on Telegram, adding: “There aren’t any military facilities nearby.”


Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, right, greet each other during their meeting in Kyiv, Ukraine on March 21, 2023.
AP

Vladimir Rogov, an official with the Moscow-appointed regional administration for the Russian-occupied part of the Zaporizhzhia region, claimed, without offering evidence, that a Ukrainian air defense missile launched to intercept a Russian missile had hit the apartment complex.

In other attacks, Ukrainian air defenses downed 16 of the 21 drones that Russia launched, the Ukraine General Staff said.

Eight were shot down near the capital, according to the city’s military administration.

Other drones struck west-central Khmelnytskyi province.


Chinese President Xi Jinping, right, and Russian President Vladimir Putin talk to each other prior to Chinese President Xi Jinping leaving after their dinner in Kremlin, Russia.
AP

Also Wednesday, Zelensky made another in a series of battlefield visits, meeting with soldiers and officers in the eastern Donetsk region, stopping by a hospital to see wounded troops and giving state awards to the defenders of Bakhmut, a devastated city that has become a symbol of Ukraine’s dogged resistance under a threat of Russian encirclement and for months has been the scene of the war’s bloodiest fighting and longest battle.

Zelensky’s last known visit to the Bakhmut area was in December. On Wednesday, the Ukrainian president also visited Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city, which his forces recaptured from the Russians last September.


Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky and a soldier pose for a photo after an awarding ceremony at a position near the Donetsk region of Ukraine on March 22, 2023.
AP

In other developments:

— The Russian military fended off a drone attack on the main harbor in the Black Sea fleet headquarters city of Sevastopol early Wednesday, the city’s Moscow-appointed head, Mikhail Razvozhayev, reported.

He said the navy destroyed three aquatic drones, that Russian warships weren’t damaged and that several civilian facilities were damaged when the drones were hit and exploded.

The blasts shattered windows in several buildings near the harbor.

No injuries were reported. Ukrainian officials didn’t claim responsibility for the attack.

—Three people were wounded in a Russian missile attack on a monastery in the southern Ukrainian port city of Odesa on Tuesday night.

According to Ukrainian Presidential Office head Andrii Yermak, two of four missiles were shot down.

— Dmitry Medvedev, deputy head of Russia’s Security Council that Putin chairs, responded when asked on his messaging app channel whether the threat of a nuclear conflict has eased: “No, it hasn’t decreased, it has grown. Every day when they provide Ukraine with foreign weapons brings the nuclear apocalypse closer.”

— Ukraine’s Finance Ministry agreed with the International Monetary Fund on a $15.6 billion loan package aimed at shoring up the country’s economy, which the invasion has crippled.

Ukrainian officials hope the IMF deal will encourage their allies to provide financial support, too.

— U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told a House of Representatives committee in Washington that her agency has implemented more 2,500 Russia-related sanctions and “degraded the Kremlin’s ability to replace more than 9,000 pieces of heavy military equipment that it has lost on the battlefield.”

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Ron DeSantis says which Trump nickname he prefers

Donald Trump’s likely sparing partner in the race for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination said the former prez can call him whatever he wants, including “winner.”

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis was asked by Piers Morgan if he preferred to be called “Ron DeSanctimonious” or “Meatball Ron” by his mentor-turned-rival, in an interview set to air Thursday on TalkTV’s “Piers Morgan Uncensored.”

The Republican told Morgan he didn’t know “how to spell the sanctimonious one.”

“I don’t really know what it means, but I kind of like it. It’s long, it’s got a lot of vowels. We’ll go with that. That’s fine,” he quipped.

DeSantis then added: “You can call me whatever you want, just as long as you also call me a winner.”


Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis sat down with Piers Morgan for an interview that will be airing on Thursday.

While DeSantis, 44, has not publicly said that he will run for the White House in 2024, he had been laying the groundwork for his likely candidacy for months and has told allies in private conversations that he will throw his hat in the ring.

Trump, who has a penchant for branding his political rivals and enemies with schoolyard nicknames, said last month he wouldn’t use the “Meatball” moniker for the Italian-American because it was “inappropriate.” He had shortened “DeSanctimonious” to “DeSanctus” for brevity in recent stump speeches.

Trump has also called his former protégé “Shutdown Ron,” a reference to the COVID-19 restrictions the Republican enacted in Florida in the early months of the 2020 pandemic.

DeSantis — who trails Trump by an average of 15% in recent polls averaged by RealClearPolitics — told Morgan to “stay tuned” for an upcoming announcement regarding his bid for the White House, Morgan wrote in an editorial featured on the front page of The Post Wednesday.


Piers Morgan detailed the upcoming interview in an op-ed published by The Post on Wednesday.
rfaraino

In the op-ed, Morgan details his upcoming conversation with DeSantis at length.

The Sunshine State guv, who was re-elected in a landslide last November, told Morgan that Trump’s constant attempts to provoke him are just “background noise.”

“It’s not important for me to be fighting with people on social media. It’s not accomplishing anything for the people I represent,” he said.

“So, we really just focus on knocking out victories, day after day, and if I got involved in all the under tow I would not be able to be an effective Governor.

“So, I don’t think it’s something that makes sense for me.”


Piers Morgan told the Florida governor he made a “fatal error” in his relationship with Trump by becoming “too popular.”
Getty Images

DeSantis also seemed to shade the former president’s leadership style, telling Morgan he runs the government with “no daily drama.”

He also spoke of how his relationship with Trump soured, with Morgan telling him he made a “fatal error” by becoming “too popular.”


Piers Morgan compared DeSantis and Trump’s relationship to Frankenstein and his monster.
Getty Images

Morgan then alludes to Mary Shelley’s 1818 novel Frankenstein, telling DeSantis, “Dr. Frankenstein creates a monster then loses control of the monster and then the monster ends up killing him. You know the parallel I’m making…”

DeSantis responded, “Let’s put the country first rather than worry about any personalities or any type of individual,” adding that it isn’t about him, but the people he represents.


The interview between Morgan and DeSantis will be airing Thursday on Fox.
Piers Morgan Uncensored

“That’s true,” Morgan said in his piece. “But you’re up against somebody who definitely cares who gets the credit, and who’s desperate to want to win back the White House.”

DeSantis then replied: “Well, I’m not up against anybody quite yet.”



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Original Source

Footage shows Irvo Otieno pinned down in leadup to death

Sheriff officials and mental hospital workers in Virginia forcefully pinned down patient Irvo Otieno until he stopped moving and his body went limp, according to footage of the deadly encounter released Tuesday.

The video, released by prosecutors who charged seven sheriff deputies and three hospital staffers with murder in Otieno’s death, shows the 28-year-old struggling under the body weight of multiple officials inside Central State Hospital on March 6.

At one point it appeared at least ten people were pushing down on Otieno while he was restrained and on the floor, according to the footage that has no audio.

Around 4 p.m., he arrived at the hospital before a different camera showed him being led into a room with tables and chairs around 4:20 p.m., according to timestamps on the video.

He’s brought to a seat before slumping to the floor.


Virginia sheriff deputies can be seen wrestling with Irvo Otieno at the mental hospital.
via REUTERS

At first, he’s seated but then lies flat.

And then it appears he starts to move around, leading to a growing number of workers pressing him down, the footage shows.

By close to 4:40 p.m., someone took his pulse as he laid unresponsive and moments later he was injected twice. Shortly after that, CPR began on his seemingly lifeless body as other life-saving efforts continued without much hope for about an hour.


Footage showed Irvo Otieno, the 28-year-old Black man, arrive at the hospital around 4 p.m.
Ben Crump Law/AFP via Getty Images

By 5:48 p.m., a white sheet covered his body.

Dinwiddie Commonwealth’s Attorney Ann Cabell Baskervill asserted in court Tuesday workers held him down “from his braids down to his toes.”

“He certainly did not deserve to be smothered to death, which is what happened,” Baskervill said.


Irvo Otieno was given CPR to his seemingly lifeless body before a white sheet covered his body.
via REUTERS

Baskervill has said multiple times he died from asphyxiation, though a final autopsy report has not been issued.

Defense attorneys have claimed the injections helped lead to his death, but Baskervill argued he was dead by the time the shots were administered.

Seven deputies and three hospital workers have been charged with second-degree murder.

A grand jury signed off on the charges Tuesday.


Medical staff aid Irvo Otieno, as the 28-year-old is positioned on his back in one of the hospital rooms.
via REUTERS

Lawyers representing many of the defendants have said they plan to strongly fight against the charges.

Some attorneys tried to minimize their clients’ roles in the incident either in court or speaking to the Associated Press Tuesday.

Baskervill’s filing that included the release of the footage also disclosed audio from 911 calls tied to the case.


Caroline Ouko (center left), mother of Irvo Otieno, speaks of her son with attorney Mark Krudys (left), her older son, Leon Ochieng (center right), and attorney Ben Crump (right) at First Baptist Church of South Richmond on March 21, 2023.
AP

One caller from the hospital said Otieno had been “very aggressive,” but stopped breathing during attempts to restrain him.

Other calls complain about the slow response from EMS to help Otieno.

“Those 10 monsters, those 10 criminals, I was happy to hear that they were indicted,” Otieno’s mother, Caroline Ouko, said during a Tuesday news conference. “And that is just the beginning step.”

A probe into the events before Otieno’s death – both at Henrico County hospital where he was taken and the jail where his family said he was allegedly mistreated – is ongoing, prosecutors with Henrico County said. 

With Post wires

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Original Source

Billy Porter Calls out Attacks on “People Who Are Othered” on ‘The View’: “We’re Already in a Civil War”

Billy Porter delivered an impassioned speech on today’s episode of The View, decrying the ongoing attacks against the transgender community as he boldly bashed the “civil war of the mind” that’s overtaking our country.

Porter — an actor, singer and writer who is openly gay and known for his dogged LGBTQ+ activism — was last on the show in July 2022, when he discussed Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis‘ complaint that a Miami restaurant was putting on drag shows not fit for children.

“What do you make of the fact that we’re still talking about this and that it’s happening in other states, too, not just Florida?” Joy Behar asked her guest, before noting, “there’s this war against trans people.”

Porter added, “And LGBTQ+ people, and people who are othered and cabaret people.”

Behar asked, “Why are they doing it?” and Porter immediately replied, “For power. Everything is about power, and you can always trace it back to the money … it’s very hypocritical. The leading cause of death in children are guns!”

Raising his voice, Porter repeated, “They’re guns!” before adding, “I know it’s the morning and I’m not supposed to be screaming, but they’re guns, not drag queens. Leave us alone!”

He continued, “It’s a distraction. It’s a distraction on purpose. We don’t know what to pay attention to. Our justice system is convoluted, it’s hard to understand on purpose. Let’s be clear about that.”

Porter later added, “What are we talking about and what are we doing? And everybody’s so scared because, ‘Oh, if we do that then we might have a civil war.’ We’re already in a civil war, y’all. It’s a civil war of the mind.

“They’re messing with our minds. We’re already in it,” he continued, before pausing to cool off for a moment. Reaching for the arms of co-hosts Behar and Sunny Hostin, who were seated beside him, Porter said, “I’m sorry, y’all get me so riled up! I’m sorry, I’m sorry.”

Hostin brushed off his apology, telling the Pose star, “But you’re making the right points.”

Behar agreed, adding, “A civil war of the mind is a very good point,” while Porter gestured to his own forehead and insisted, “It’s already here!”

The View airs weekdays at 11/10c on ABC.



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Original Source

63-year-old kidnap victim escapes trunk after car crashes into Seattle home

A kidnapping victim who was beaten, bound, and then forced into the trunk of his own car narrowly escaped after the suspected kidnappers crashed the vehicle into a residential home.

The Seattle Police Department received multiple calls early Thursday morning that a car had crashed into a home in the Ravenna, Seattle, neighborhood and caught fire.

“I heard a screeching noise and then just the most sickening crunch,” neighbor Cheng Yu told KING 5.

When officers arrived on the scene just after 5 a.m., witnesses reported a man claiming he had been kidnapped crawled out of the trunk of the fiery vehicle.

Before emergency personnel arrived on the scene, startled residents noticed the car had begun to catch fire and starting to spread to the corner of the home.


Neighbors reported hearing screams from within the car as it was on fire before the victim appeared from the trunk.
Seattle Police Department

Homeowner Brooks Mierow told the outlet he quickly got his family out of the home, grabbing a fire extinguisher to put out the flames before firefighters arrived. 

As Mierow fought the fire, Yu was on the phone with 911 dispatchers when they heard muffled screams from inside the vehicle.

“We heard a screaming of, ‘Ahh, ahh.’ I think he was trying to scream for help,” Yu told KING 5.

Witnesses were in shock as the victim, a 63-year-old unidentified male, frantically crawled out from the vehicle’s trunk.


Luckily because of the homeowner’s efforts to extinguish the fire before emergency personnel arrived, the home wasn’t severely burnt from the crash.
Youtube/KING 5 Seattle

Still bound and panicking, the victim was seen screaming that he had been “kidnapped” and needed help by the trunk of his car when neighbor Raegan McKibbon arrived to assist the man.

McKibbon — who told the outlet she saw two men fleeing from the scene after the crash — took the victim across the street and gave him socks and a coat as they waited for police and the fire department to arrive.

“He was beat up pretty bad. They had cut his face with a knife and had beat him up pretty badly,” McKibbon said.

The Seattle Fire Department was able to extinguish the fire before it spread further to Mierow’s home, while also treating the victim for non-life-threatening injuries.


The suspected kidnappers have yet to be apprehended by law enforcement.
Youtube/KING 5 Seattle

Part of the vehicle’s bumper was lying in the home’s yard. Police continue their investigations into the kidnapping, which lead to the car wreck.
Youtube/KING 5 Seattle

The victim was then taken to Harborview Medical Center, The Seattle Police Department reported.

Yu, who was glad the victim was in care and that no one else was hurt, was in disbelief at the incident.

“You can’t make this stuff up. It’s just so absurd,” Yu told KING 5.

A spokesperson for the department, Officer Judinna Gulpan, told the outlet that the kidnapping did not appear to be targeted.

The victim reported to investigators that several individuals had assaulted him before he was tied up and stuffed into the trunk of his car.

No arrests have been made.  

Detectives did detain one 18-year-old male for questioning, who matched the description of a possible suspect, but he was later released.

Police are asking anyone with information involving the kidnapping attempt to call the SPD Violent Crimes Tip Line at (206) 233-5000.

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Original Source

3 found guilty of murder

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Three men were found guilty Monday of the 2018 killing of star rapper XXXTentacion, who was shot outside a South Florida motorcycle shop while being robbed of $50,000.

Michael Boatwright, 28, Dedrick Williams, 26, and Trayvon Newsome, 24, were all found guilty of first-degree murder and armed robbery by a jury that deliberated a little more than seven days. They will receive mandatory life sentences at a later date.

The defendants showed little emotion as each stood and was handcuffed by a bailiff.

During the monthlong trial, prosecutors linked the men to the June 18, 2018, shooting outside Riva Motorsports in suburban Fort Lauderdale through extensive surveillance video taken inside and outside the store, plus cellphone videos they took that showed them flashing fistfuls of $100 bills hours after the slaying.

Prosecutors also had the testimony of a fourth man, Robert Allen, a former friend of the defendants who said he participated in the robbery. He pleaded guilty last year to second-degree murder. He has not been sentenced pending the conclusion of this trial. He could get anywhere between time served, meaning he could soon be released, and life, depending partly on how prosecutors perceive his assistance.

Defense attorneys accused Allen of being a liar motivated by avoiding a life sentence. They also said prosecutors and detectives did a poor investigation that didn’t look at other possible suspects, including the Canadian rap star Drake; he and XXXTentacion had an online feud.

Twice this week, the jury asked to review text messages from Boatwright, whom prosecutors identified as the shooter, from the day of the shooting. A printout from prosecutors shows that from the time he woke up about 10:30 a.m. until 3 p.m., about an hour before the shooting, he sent 17 to various people, including one about getting a car. Prosecutors say the SUV used in the shooting was rented from a woman through a phone app. He then stopped texting for about two hours.

About an hour after the shooting, he sent a text saying, “Tell my brother I got the money for the new phone.” Minutes after that, he sent someone a screenshot of a news story saying XXXTentacion had been shot.

XXXTentacion, whose real name was Jahseh Onfroy, had just left Riva Motorsports with a friend when his BMW was blocked by an SUV that swerved in front.

Surveillance video showed two masked gunmen emerging and confronting the 20-year-old singer at the driver’s window, and one shot him repeatedly. They then grabbed a Louis Vuitton bag containing cash XXXTentacion had just withdrawn from the bank, got back into the SUV and sped away. The friend was not harmed.

Newsome was accused of being the other gunman. Williams was accused of being the driver of the SUV, with Allen also inside.

Allen testified that the men set out that day to commit robberies and went to the motorcycle shop to buy Williams a mask. There they spotted the rapper and decided to make him their target. Allen and Williams went inside the shop to confirm it was him. They then went back to the SUV they had rented, waited for XXXTentacion to emerge and ambushed him, according to testimony.

The rapper, who pronounced his name “Ex ex ex ten-ta-see-YAWN,” was a platinum-selling rising star who tackled issues including prejudice and depression in his songs. He also drew criticism over bad behavior and multiple arrests, including charges that he severely beat and abused his girlfriend.

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China’s leader Xi in Moscow for meeting with Putin

MOSCOW — Chinese leader Xi Jinping arrived in Moscow on Monday on a three-day visit that offers a strong political boost for Russian President Vladimir Putin as fighting in Ukraine grinds on.

China and Russia have described Xi’s trip as part of efforts to further deepen their “no-limits friendship.”

The Kremlin has welcomed China’s peace plan for Ukraine and said it would be discussed talks between Putin and Xi that will begin over dinner on Monday.


Chinese President Xi Jinping arrived in Moscow to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin to offers a strong political boost for the ongoing war.
AP

Beijing has called for a cease-fire, but Washington strongly rejected the idea as the effective ratification of the Kremlin’s battlefield gains.

Xi’s trip to Russia comes after the International Criminal Court on Friday issued a warrant for Putin’s arrest on war crimes charges.

The Kremlin, which doesn’t recognize the authority of the ICC, has rejected its move as “legally null and void.”


The Kremlin has welcomed China’s peace plan for Ukraine, as China looks to Russia as a source of oil and gas for its energy-hungry economy.
AP

China’s foreign ministry on Monday called on the ICC to “respect the jurisdictional immunity” of a head of state and “avoid politicization and double standards.”

China looks to Russia as a source of oil and gas for its energy-hungry economy and as a partner in opposing what both see as American domination of global affairs.

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Massachusetts man unknowingly hires undercover fed to kill wife

A Massachusetts man who attempted to hire a contract killer to murder his wife had unknowingly asked an undercover federal agent to carry out the hit, authorities say.

Massimo Marenghi, 56, now faces up to a decade behind bars after pleading guilty Thursday to the murder-for-hire, the US Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts said in a release.

The Malden man “complained about his wife seeking a restraining order against him” during a January 2021 meeting with an undercover FBI agent posing as a contract killer, officials said.

Marenghi later met with the undercover agent and asked him to help “eliminate” his problem as the pair “discussed a price of $10,000,” the feds said.

The hubby provided the agent with a photograph of his wife’s home and detailed how to evade surveillance cameras while carrying out the crime, they said.


Marenghi “complained about his wife seeking a restraining order against him” during a meeting.
Facebook/Massimo Marenghi

During a second meeting, Marenghi gave the federal agent a $1,500 cash deposit for the murder and urged him to carry out the killing soon, authorities said.

Marenghi told the agent that the sooner the “demolition job” occurs, the quicker the hired gun would be able to pay the rest of what he owed, officials said.

While attempting to set up the murder, Marenghi gave the undercover agent various details about his soon-to-be ex-wife, authorities said.

He provided a photograph of his wife, the color, model, and license plate number on her car and the hours of operation of her work, the feds said.


Marenghi gave the federal agent a $1,500 cash deposit for the murder.
Facebook/Massimo Marenghi

Marenghi also provided a schedule that indicated when he would have custody of their children, which he said would be the “best time for the construction work to start,” authorities said.

In addition to a sentence of up to 10 years, the charge of murder-for-hire includes three years of supervised release and a fine of up to $250,000.

Marenghi is scheduled to be sentenced June 8. 

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