Biden-appointed US attorney who resigned on first day of Trump’s term found dead
A former United States attorney was found dead in Virginia Saturday morning, just two months after leaving office.
Jessica D. Aber, 43, worked as the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia from 2021 to 2025. Appointed by former President Joe Biden, she served in the role until resigning Jan. 20.
In a news release Saturday, the Alexandria Police Department (APD) confirmed Aber’s death, reporting it received a call about an “unresponsive woman” at around 9:18 a.m. Saturday.
“As a matter of protocol, an investigation is underway surrounding the circumstances of her death,” the APD said in its statement. “The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner of Virginia will determine the cause and manner of death.”
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According to Aber’s Department of Justice biography, she graduated from William & Mary Law School in 2006. Her role involved “[leading] a staff of approximately 300 prosecutors, civil litigators and support personnel across four divisions located in Alexandria, Richmond, Norfolk and Newport News.”
In her resignation statement, Aber said working as a U.S. attorney was “an honor beyond measure.”
“I am deeply grateful to senators Mark Warner and Tim Kaine and to President Biden for the opportunity to lead this office and to Attorney General Garland for his steadfast leadership,” Aber said at the time. “I am proud of the work we have done with our federal, state and local law enforcement partners to enforce the law and build community trust.”
U.S. Attorney Erik S. Siebert, Aber’s successor, said he was “heartbroken beyond words” to hear of Aber’s death Saturday.
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“She was unmatched as a leader, mentor and prosecutor, and she is simply irreplaceable as a human being,” Siebert said. “We remain in awe of how much she accomplished in her all-too-brief time in this world. Her professionalism, grace and legal acumen set the standard.”
The attorney said “each of us in the Eastern District of Virginia will look to her example and endeavor to live up to that standard.”
“Jess was a proud Virginian from high school through college and throughout her career,” Siebert said. “She loved EDVA, and EDVA loved her back. We remain committed to her life’s work, a commitment to seeking justice, as she would have wanted.”
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Authorities are investigating Aber’s death.
Girl who paid ‘heartbreaking’ price for state’s trans policies is speaking out and battling back
Cassidy Carlisle was in seventh grade when she had to change in the same locker room as a transgender student, she said.
During a gym class at Presque Isle Middle School in northern Maine six years ago, she said she walked into the locker room to find a biological male who would change with her and other girls. She alleges she was told by administrators that if she tried to avoid changing with the trans student, she would risk being late to class.
“That was really my first experience in just knowing that something isn’t right, but not knowing what to do with that,” Carlisle told Fox News Digital in an exclusive interview. Fox News Digital has reached out to Presque Isle Middle School for comment.
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Gender identity was first included in the Maine Human Rights Act as part of the definition of sexual orientation in 2005. In 2021, the law was amended to add gender identity as its own protected class, joining other protected classes such as sex, sexual orientation, disability, race, color and religion. The law specifically says that denying a person equal opportunity in athletic programs is education discrimination.
The transgender student was only in the girls locker room for about a week, Carlisle claims, before mysteriously vanishing. But the memory of the experience stuck with her.
The memory especially stuck with her in her junior year of high school, when she found out she would be competing with a trans athlete on the state Nordic skiing team.
It was an athlete with whom she was familiar. She had already lost to the trans athlete in cross-country competitions in previous years.
When her father told her she would have to face the athlete again in skiing, Carlisle didn’t believe it was happening.
“I was like, ‘Oh, that’s only something I kind of hear about on the news. … It’s not going to happen to me,” Cassidy recalled.
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But it did happen to her.
“The defeat that comes with that in that moment is heartbreaking,” Carlisle said. “I’m just in shock in a way. I didn’t believe it. … I didn’t think it was happening to me.”
As a child, Carlisle quit her co-ed hockey team specifically because she felt she “couldn’t keep up” with the boys. Then, even after committing to a girls-only sport, she couldn’t escape the physical disadvantage that came with facing biological males.
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On top of the anxiety of the situation, Carlisle felt like she couldn’t speak out about it.
“I stayed silent for a while,” Carlisle said. “It’s very hard to speak up if you don’t have a platform to do it on. … Backlash is a huge thing. I’m a high school student. No high school student wants to be hurt or yelled at or said mean comments by people. And the reality of it, with the state that I live in, that could very much happen.”
What she could do was vote in the November election. As a first-time voter, she cast her ballot with the issue of trans athletes in girls sports at the forefront.
A national exit poll conducted by the Concerned Women for America legislative action committee found that 70% of moderate voters saw the issue of “Donald Trump’s opposition to transgender boys and men playing girls and women’s sports and of transgender boys and men using girls and women’s bathrooms” as important to them.
And 6% said it was the most important issue of all, while 44% said it was “very important.”
When Republican Maine state Rep. Laurel Libby spoke out earlier this year against another trans athlete who won a girls pole vault competition in February, Carlisle suddenly gained an opportunity to influence the issue.
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Libby’s social media post identifying the trans athlete thrust the entire state into an ongoing culture war. It became ground zero for a national battle over the issue waged by the Trump administration against several Democrat-controlled states like Maine after Trump signed an executive order to address the issue Feb. 5.
All of a sudden, thousands of people in Maine were speaking out against the state’s laws that enable trans inclusion in girls sports and locker rooms, all with the backing of the president.
So Carlisle joined in.
On Feb. 27, Carlisle made a trip to the White House with several other current and former female athletes who have been affected by trans inclusion, including Payton McNabb and Selina Soule. There, they met with Attorney General Pam Bondi and several other state attorneys general and shared their stories.
Carlisle couldn’t help but notice an absence at the White House that day,
“None of our AGs were there from our state,” Carlisle said.
So, when Carlisle returned to her state, she took matters into her own hands.
Last weekend, she delivered a speech in front of the Maine Capitol, speaking to hundreds of other residents there to protest Gov. Janet Mills for her continued enabling of trans athletes in girls sports.
It was the second protest against Mills outside the Capitol in a month after the March on Mills rally March 1.
The Trump administration is taking aggressive measures to get the state to adhere to the wishes of Carlisle and other residents who want females protected from trans inclusion.
On March 17, the Health and Human Services Office of Civil Rights (OCR) announced that if found the Maine Department of Education, the Maine Principals’ Association and Greely High School in violation of Title IX for continuing to enable trans inclusion in girls sports.
In the announcement, the department said Maine had 10 days to correct its policies through a signed agreement or risk referral to the U.S. Department of Justice for appropriate action.
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Trump has already shown a willingness to cut federal funding to enforce these policies. He paused $175 million in funding to the University of Pennsylvania and temporarily paused funding to the University of Maine System last week until a review had found the system was in full compliance with Trump’s orders.
The deadline for the rest of Maine to comply is coming up within the week.
“I really hope that Maine complies because our schools need the federal funding, and we can’t risk losing that,” Carlisle said. “It would really really hurt our state to lose that federal funding. So, I hope our government can get it together.”
Elon Musk’s heartbreaking post as Uber drivers become latest targets amid anti-Tesla attacks
Tesla CEO Elon Musk responded Saturday to a social media post claiming an Uber worker driving a Tesla was given a 1-star rating amid national protests against the carmaker.
A photo that appeared to show an Uber driver in the front seat of a Tesla had overlaying text saying, “Giving Tesla uber drivers 1 star ratings.”
The photo was shared March 9 by “Cherdleys” with the caption, “This is what Tesla drivers deserve.”
A screenshot of the exchange was shared Saturday on X, attracting 11.3 million views as of 6:30 p.m. ET Saturday.
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Musk took to X Saturday afternoon to respond to the viral post, writing, “That’s just plain cruel. The driver did nothing to deserve this.”
Uber Support responded to Musk’s post with, “Totally agree. Ratings should be based on the quality of the service.”
Uber declined to confirm to Fox News Digital whether the driver in the photo did, in fact, receive the poor rating.
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The post comes amid nationwide protests and a warning from the FBI Friday urging the public to “exercise vigilance” near Tesla properties due to isolated attacks on Tesla vehicles, charging stations and dealerships.
The isolated attacks, which some officials hope to soon classify as domestic terrorism, come after Musk was appointed by President Donald Trump to lead the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).
Since January 2025, Tesla electric vehicles have been targeted in at least nine states, with reported incidents that include arson, gunfire and vandalism that includes graffiti “expressing grievances against those the perpetrators perceive to be racists, fascists or political opponents,” according to the FBI.
A few minutes before sharing the post, Musk expressed his thanks to those standing by his company.
“Just wanted to say thank you to everyone supporting Tesla in the face of relentless attacks,” Musk wrote. “Super Appreciated!!”
During a meeting at the company’s Texas gigafactory Thursday, Musk urged his company’s staff to “hang onto your stock,” noting “it feels like Armageddon” after seeing news coverage of the protests and violent acts, FOX Business previously reported.
ELON MUSK REASSURES TESLA WORKERS WITH ALL-HANDS MEETING, ADMITS IT ‘FEELS LIKE ARMAGEDDON’
“I can’t walk past the TV without seeing a Tesla on fire. You’re like — what is going on?” Musk said.
However, he noted recent sales figures for the company’s Model Y and Cybertruck vehicles are encouraging.
“Some people, it’s like, ‘Listen, I understand if you don’t want to buy our product, but you don’t have to burn it down — that’s a bit unreasonable, you know. This is psycho,’” Musk said as employees laughed. “Stop being psycho, OK?”
Ticker | Security | Last | Change | Change % |
---|---|---|---|---|
TSLA | TESLA INC. | 248.71 | +12.45 | +5.27% |
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Tesla did not immediately respond to Fox Business’ request for comment.
Navy deploys another warship to crush illegal immigration, drug smuggling at border
The Navy on Saturday announced another destroyer has been sent to the southern border to aid in the ongoing maritime efforts to curb illegal immigration and drug smuggling.
Navy officials said the USS Spruance, an Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer, departed Naval Base San Diego Saturday to support southern border operations.
The goal of the mission is to restore territorial integrity at the U.S. southern border, according to a statement from the Navy.
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Spruance will enhance maritime efforts, support interagency collaboration and contribute to a coordinated and robust response to combating maritime-related terrorism, weapons proliferation, transnational crime, piracy, environmental destruction and illegal seaborne immigration, according to the statement.
“USS Spruance’s deployment as part of U.S. Northern Command’s southern border mission brings additional capability and expands the geography of unique military capabilities working with the Department of Homeland Security,” said Gen. Gregory Guillot, USNORTHCOM commander.
He added that with Spruance off the West Coast and the USS Gravely, a recently deployed destroyer in the Gulf of America, the Navy’s maritime presence “contributes to the all-domain, coordinated DOD response to the Presidential Executive Order and demonstrates our resolve to achieve operational control of the border.”
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Coast Guard officials told Fox News Digital earlier this month that hundreds of migrant boat encounters were logged near the San Diego coast in the last 90 days, prompting the allocation of additional resources.
Spruance will bring maritime capabilities to the U.S. Northern Command (USNORTHCOM) in response to executive orders signed by President Donald Trump, a national emergency declaration and clarification of the military’s role in protecting the territorial integrity of the U.S.
The combatant command “continues to fill critical capabilities gaps in support of DHS and CBP,” according to the statement.
The destroyer will be accompanied by an embedded U.S. Coast Guard Law Enforcement Detachment (LEDET) created in 1982.
Coast Guard LEDETs carry out a variety of maritime interdiction missions, including counter-piracy, military combat operations, alien migration interdiction, military force protection, counter-terrorism, homeland security and humanitarian response.
Spruance returned to Naval Base San Diego Dec. 19, 2024, after a five-month deployment to the U.S. 5th and 7th Fleet areas of operation as part of the Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group (ABECSG).
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The strike group was ordered to the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility to bolster U.S. military force posture in the Middle East, deter regional escalation, degrade Houthi capabilities, defend U.S. forces and sail alongside allies and partners to promote security, stability and prosperity, Navy officials said.
“Assigned destroyers of the ABECSG, to include Spruance, were essential to providing a layer of defense to U.S. forces and ensuring the safe passage of commercial vessels and partner nations transiting in international waterways like the Red Sea, Bab el-Mandeb Strait and the Gulf of Aden,” according to the statement.
Shocking upset sends hyped March Madness team home early
The No. 10-seeded Arkansas Razorbacks upset No. 2 St. John’s, 75-66, in the round of 32 Saturday at the Dunkin’ Donuts Center in Providence, Rhode Island.
In a clash between legendary coaches, John Calipari came out on top over Rick Pitino.
St. John’s is the first No. 2 seed to be eliminated from this year’s tournament. The Red Storm shot just 28% from the field and 2-22 from 3-point range.
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Pitino benched Big East Player of Year RJ Luis Jr. late in the second half. Luis had nine points and seven rebounds but shot just 3-17 from the field.
Zuby Ejiofor was the only player to shoot well for St. John’s, scoring 23 points on 7 of 12 shooting, while hauling in 12 rebounds. The only other player in double figures for St. John’s was Deivon Smith with 13.
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For Arkansas, three players scored in double figures in the upset win. Billy Richmond III scored 16 points and grabbed nine rebounds, while Karter Knox and Johnell Davis had 15 and 13 points, respectively.
As a team, Arkansas shot better than St. John’s but also struggled from 3-point land. The Razorbacks shot 42.9% from the field but 2-19 from 3-point range.
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Despite the shooting woes from deep, the Razorbacks are moving on to the Sweet 16 in Calipari’s first year as coach.
Arkansas will play the winner of No. 11-seeded Drake and No. 3-seeded Texas Tech, who tip off at 6:10 p.m. ET Saturday.
Trump suggests US could join British Commonwealth if offered by King Charles
President Trump said Friday he liked the idea of the United States joining the British Commonwealth after a report claimed King Charles III would make an offer.
“I love King Charles,” Trump wrote on Truth Social Friday morning while linking to an article citing a Daily Mail report that said the monarch would secretly offer the U.S. associate membership in the Commonwealth during Trump’s second state visit to Britain. “Sounds good to me!”
Trump also reposted the same report about the king’s “secret” offer of membership late Saturday morning.
Fox News Digital has reached out to the White House for comment.
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The British Commonwealth, created in 1926, is made up of 56 countries, including Australia and Canada, most of which were originally British colonies. The monarch is the head of the Commonwealth, whose maintenance was a major priority of Queen Elizabeth II.
Membership is voluntary.
The U.S. was part of the British Empire before winning independence after the Revolution.
India was the first country to decide to remain within the Commonwealth after gaining independence in 1947.
Trump had a friendly relationship with the late queen and always spoke highly of her.
“I got to know her very well, and, you know, I got to know her in her ’90s, OK, but she was great,” Trump told Fox News’ Mark Levin in 2023. “This is a woman … 75 years she reigned, and she never made a mistake.”
Trump has also praised Charles and the heir to the throne, Prince William, whom he met with in December in Paris, but he had fewer nice things to say about Prince Harry and his wife, Meghan Markle.
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The president is scheduled to meet with King Charles during a rare second state visit later this year. He met with the late queen and Charles during his first state visit in 2019.
The Daily Mail said Commonwealth membership was first floated during Trump’s first term, and this time around the hope is that it would ease tensions between the U.S. and Canada as the countries trade tariff threats.
“This is being discussed at the highest levels,” a member of the Royal Commonwealth Society told the Daily Mail. “It would be a wonderful move that would symbolize Britain’s close relationship with the U.S.
“Donald Trump loves Britain and has great respect for the royal family, so we believe he would see the benefits of this. Associate membership could, hopefully, be followed by full membership, making the Commonwealth even more important as a global organization.”
Late last month, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer presented Trump with Charles’ invitation for a second state visit while the two politicians were meeting in the Oval Office.
“I think that just symbolizes the strength of the relationship between us. This is a very special letter. I think the last state visit was a tremendous success,” Starmer said. “His majesty the king wants to make this even better than that.”
Trump responded, “The answer is yes. On behalf of our wonderful first lady Melania and myself, the answer is yes, and we look forward to being there and honoring the king and honoring, really, your country. Your country is a fantastic country.”
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Trump described Charles as “beautiful” and a “wonderful man.”
“I’ve gotten to know him very well actually, first term and, now, a second term,” he added.
Prostate cancer risk increases 45% among men who share one troubling behavior, experts say
Researchers are warning that men who regularly dodge prostate cancer screening appointments are 45% more likely to die from the disease.
Prostate cancer is the most common cancer among men and the second-leading cause of cancer deaths, according to UC San Francisco (UCSF).
But if screening programs are introduced on a national scale — particularly those that measure levels of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) in the blood — they could give men earlier access to treatment, experts say.
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They would thus have a better chance of being cured, according to reporting by news agency SWNS and others.
Screening can also prevent costly treatments associated with advanced prostate cancer.
That’s according to data from the European Randomised Study of Screening for Prostate Cancer (ERSPC).
The study collects information from seven European nations — Finland, the Netherlands, Italy, Sweden, Switzerland, Belgium and Spain. It is said to be the world’s largest prostate cancer screening study, said SWNS.
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Long-term data from this entity consistently shows that PSA screening programs can lead to a 20% reduced risk of dying from prostate cancer.
‘Stark contrast’
Now, an analysis of 20-year follow-up data from the ERSPC is the first to look at the link between the consistent decline of screening invitations and men’s risk of dying from this type of cancer.
It reveals a “stark contrast” that emphasizes the potential consequences of screening avoidance.
Of the 72,460 men invited to partake in screenings, around one in six were non-attenders and skipped every appointment.
Researchers from Erasmus MC Cancer Institute at the University Medical Centre in the Netherlands led the analysis, said SWNS.
Of the 72,460 men invited to partake in the screenings, around one in six were non-attenders and skipped every single appointment.
That group had a 45% higher risk of dying from prostate cancer compared with those who attended screening appointments, according to the findings.
When comparing outcomes with the control group – men who were never invited to have screenings – those who attended the screening appointments had a 23% lower risk of dying from prostate cancer, while non-attenders faced a 39% higher risk, SWNS reported.
Lead study author Renée Leenen, M.D., Ph.D., said the choice not to participate in screening may be driven by a complex collection of factors.
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Said Leenen, who is with the Erasmus CM Cancer Institute in the Netherlands, “It may be that men who opted not to attend a screening appointment are care avoiders — meaning they’re less likely to engage in healthy behaviors and preventative care in general.”
Experts “need to better understand who these men are, why they choose not to attend appointments and how to motivate them.”
She added, “This is the opposite behavior of people who are perhaps more health-conscious and are more likely to attend a screening appointment … Our study identifies that men who were invited for screening, but do not attend screening appointments, are at a significantly higher risk of dying from prostate cancer compared to men who were not offered screening or accepted an invitation for screening.”
Dr. Leenen said that experts “need to better understand who these men are, why they choose not to attend appointments and how to motivate them.”
Doing so, she added, “will help us design population-based prostate cancer screening programs that encourage higher rates of informed participation … Tackling attendance rates in this way could be a big factor in the long-term success of a national prostate screening program,” SWNS reported.
Urologist Tobias Nordström, M.D., Ph.D., of the Karolinska Institute in Sweden, said, “We need to better understand why these men might actively choose not to participate in screening, despite being invited to attend, and how this behavior is linked to worse outcomes when they get a diagnosis.”
The findings from the study are scheduled to be presented this weekend at the European Association of Urology (EAU) Congress in Madrid, Spain, said SWNS.
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Fox News’ senior medical analyst Dr. Marc Siegel, who was not involved in the new study on prostate cancer risks, previously called out the need for regular medical screenings.
Siegel has emphasized the need to “diagnose it early for better outcomes.”
Gisele Bündchen recently soaked up the sun with boyfriend Joaquim Valente, weeks after giving birth to the couple’s first child.
Bündchen, 44, stunned in a black bathing suit as she shared a kiss with Valente. The supermodel wore a black one-piece with a flowing cover-up tied around her waist.
The former Victoria’s Secret model wore her hair loose and accessorized with black sunglasses.
News that Valente and Bündchen had welcomed a son together broke in early February, People magazine reported.
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The Brazilian model glowed as she and Valente enjoyed their boat trip.
“Gisele’s doing well,” an insider recently told People. “She seems very happy and content. She just focused on her family and rested for the first month after the baby arrived.”
“She’s slowly taking up yoga again now. She enjoys shorter outings with her older kids and Joaquim,” the source added. “Her older kids are helpful with the baby. Gisele tears up when she sees all the kids together — she still can’t believe she has a newborn. She feels very blessed.”
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Bündchen also shares two children with her ex-husband, retired NFL champion quarterback Tom Brady. The former couple finalized their divorce in October 2022.
Valente first came into the picture as a jiu-jitsu instructor for Bündchen and her son, Benny. Bündchen’s own interest in jiu-jitsu was originally spurred on by her son. Having been referred to the Valente Brothers academy through a friend, the supermodel told Dust magazine in 2022, “I wanted to steer my almost teenage son in the right direction. I thought he might be interested in this.”
The Brazilian beauty started studying jiu-jitsu herself in December 2021. “Initially, I wasn’t even considering it for myself,” she said. “But when I brought [Benny] to the first class and started talking to Joaquim, I realized that it was much more than self-defense.”
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After spending time as friends, Bündchen and Valente’s relationship reportedly turned romantic in June 2023.
“First, their relationship was teacher/student. Then… they became friends. And eventually, way after she was already divorced and she had no commitment to Tom Brady, something else started,” a source previously told Fox News Digital of how their relationship progressed.
The source added that Valente is an extremely charismatic person with “a great sense of humor” who is “very intelligent, very loving, he’s just a good person,” noting that “he loves kids.”
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The Brazilian supermodel began dating Valente roughly seven months after finalizing her divorce with Brady.
Brady and Bündchen announced their divorce on Oct. 28, 2022, in separate Instagram posts.
“In recent days my wife and I finalized our divorce from one another after 13 years of marriage,” Brady wrote at the time. “We arrived at this decision amicably and with gratitude for the time we spent together. We are blessed with beautiful and wonderful children who will continue to be the center of our world in every way. We will continue to work together as parents to always ensure they receive the love and attention they deserve.”
Bündchen wrote, “The decision to end a marriage is never easy but we have grown apart and while it is, of course, difficult to go through something like this, I feel blessed for the time we had together and only wish the best for Tom always.”
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