Virginia Dem who wanted ‘two bullets’ in rival’s head faces heat over reckless driving
Democratic Party candidate for Virginia attorney general Jay Jones was pressed on accountability and asked why voters should trust his judgment following revelations of politically violent rhetoric he made in 2022 about wanting to kill his GOP rival and a reckless driving conviction that he has been accused of trying to skirt his community service requirements for.
His GOP opponent, incumbent Attorney General Jason Miyares, accused Jones of going 116 miles per hour on Interstate 64 in Virginia in his opening remarks of a debate Thursday night at the University of Richmond.
Miyares claimed that the day Jones went to court after getting caught for reckless driving, there were four people, including Jones, who had all been caught driving roughly the same speed. But, Miyares claimed, Jones was the only person not to receive a jail or suspended jail sentence. Miyares also claimed Jones sought to undermine his 1,000-hour community service requirement that was part of his conviction, alleging he completed the service for a political action committee he controlled.
JOE SCARBOROUGH TELLS DEM CANDIDATE JAY JONES TO LEAVE RACE OVER VIOLENT COMMENTS AGAINST GOP LAWMAKER
“I was held accountable. And, several years ago, I made very grave mistakes, but I was held accountable not just by the people in my party, but the Virginia State Police,” Jones said when asked why Virginia voters should trust his judgment.
The reckless driving criticism coincides with criticism about text messages Jones sent to someone about his Republican political rival in 2022. Jones fantasized in the text exchange about putting “two bullets” in the head of then-GOP Virginia House Speaker Todd Gilbert. Jones also fantasized about violence against Gilbert’s children in the text exchange, which has earned him a lot of heat amid the campaign for attorney general.
“I’ve taken accountability for my mistakes, and I know that people in Virginia right now demand and deserve leaders who accept when they make mistakes and can acknowledge that and ever been held accountable. This job right now demands someone who will hold Donald Trump accountable,” Jones said when pressed by the debate moderator for a clear answer on why voters should trust his judgment.
“For the last nine months, Jason’s had 50 chances to sue the administration, to protect us, to protect our workers, to protect our health care, to protect our K-12 funding, funding for law enforcement. And his office hasn’t done a thing because he’s too weak and too scared to stand up to the president.”
WATCH: KAINE DEFENDS JONES AMID AG CANDIDATE’S TEXTS ENVISIONING MURDER OF GOP LEADER: ‘STILL A SUPPORTER’
Miyares pushed back, however. He argued he has “sued both administrations,” meaning the Biden and Trump administrations. Miyares touted his record supporting veterans and their GI benefits in the courts and circled back to comments about how he has been tough on crime to “protect all Virginians.”
“Every day I work to make Virginians more safe, more prosperous. That’s been our mission,” Miyares said. “This office is an executive office. If Jay Jones wants to fight the fights in Washington, then he should run for Congress.”
Miyares frequently called Jones a “politician” and not a prosecutor throughout the debate. Miyares added that Jones was hurting Virginiains with his soft-on-crime stances, such as voting in favor of an early-release program for felons.
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While lambasting Jones over his policies Thursday night, Miyares noted how one of Jones’ public safety agenda items is to protect children. He used it as an opportunity to drill down on the “two bullets” scandal that has gotten national attention.
“How can anybody who’s ever worked in any of the crimes against children — all of the areas of federal and state local law department — how can they ever take you seriously, be the top prosecutor knowing that you view the children should die to advance a political agenda?” Miyares asked.
“How can you ever say you want to represent people to think differently than you politically? Now that we know that you want to see violence against those because they have the wrong ideas.”
Mamdani delivers major flip-flop on debate stage when asked about Hamas
Socialist New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani appeared to backtrack on his position about Hamas laying down arms in Thursday night’s mayoral debate.
“Of course, I believe that they should lay down their arms,” Mamdani said on the debate stage in New York City alongside former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Republican Curtis Sliwa.
Mamdani was responding to a question from a moderator who said his previous answer, made to Fox News anchor Martha MacCallum, was “confusing,” after he dodged questions when she asked if he believes Hamas should lay down weapons and leave leadership in Gaza, according to the ceasefire agreement it entered into.
“I don’t really have opinions about the future of Hamas and Israel beyond the question of justice and safety,” Mamdani said, reiterating that both Hamas and the Israeli military should abide by international law.
‘ABSOLUTELY A COMMUNIST’: MAMDANI DODGES LABEL, BUT HIS RECORD AND EXPERT SAY OTHERWISE
“I’m proud to be one of the first elected officials in the state who called for a ceasefire and calling for a ceasefire means ceasefire,” Mamdani said on the debate stage on Thursday.
“That means all parties have to cease fire and put down their weapons. And the reason that we call for that is not only for the end of the genocide, but also an unimpeded access of humanitarian aid. I, like many New Yorkers, and I’m hopeful that this ceasefire will hold.”
Mamdani said he hopes President Trump’s negotiated ceasefire is “durable” and “just.”
MAMDANI BREAKS SILENCE ON FREED ISRAELI HOSTAGES IN STATEMENT THAT DOESN’T MENTION TRUMP
Shortly after Mamdani’s response, social media accounts labeled his comments as a “new answer.”
In Mamdani’s Fox News interview on Wednesday, he said it was too early to give credit to Trump for the peace agreement.
Republican Curtis Sliwa, the only candidate to mention Trump by name in his response to news of the Israeli hostages being released, took issue with that stance on the debate stage.
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“The president of the United States should have been applauded by you, Zohran Mamdani, and you, Andrew Cuomo,” Sliwa said.
Mamdani has been widely criticized in recent months for his positions on Israel, including his hesitancy to definitively condemn the phrase “globalize the intifada.”
“I want to be very clear,” Mamdani said on the debate stage. “The occupation is a reference to international law and the violation of it, which Mr. Cuomo has no regard for since he signed up to be Benjamin Netanyahu’s legal defense team during the course of this genocide.”
John Bolton indicted on classified materials retention charges after FBI raid on home
Former White House National Security Advisor John Bolton was indicted Thursday on 18 counts related to the improper handling of classified materials, Fox News Digital has learned.
According to the indictment, Bolton was indicted on eight counts of transmission of National Defense Information and ten counts of retention of National Defense information.
“From on or about April 9, 2018, through at least on or about August 22, 2025, BOLTON abused his position as National Security Advisor by sharing more than a thousand pages of information about his day-to-day activities as the National Security Advisor—including information relating to the national defense which was classified up to the TOP SECRET/SCI level—with two unauthorized individuals, namely Individuals 1 and 2,” the indictment reads. “BOLTON also unlawfully retained documents, writings, and notes relating to the national defense, including information classified up to the TOP SECRET/SCI level, in his home in Montgomery County, Maryland.”
JOHN BOLTON’S HOME AND OFFICE RAIDED BY FEDERAL AGENTS
The documents Bolton transmitted were sent to two individuals unauthorized to view classified documents.
Those documents, according to the indictment, revealed intelligence about future attacks by an adversarial group in another country; a liaison partner sharing sensitive information with the U.S. intelligence community; intelligence that a foreign adversary was planning a missile launch in the future; a covert action in a foreign country that was related to sensitive intergovernmental actions; sensitive sources and methods used to collect human intelligence; intelligence about an adversary’s knowledge of planned U.S. actions; intelligence about adversary’s plans for attack conducted against U.S. Forces in another country; human intelligence using sensitive sources and methods; a covert action program; intelligence collected on the leader of an adversary nation’s military group; intelligence on an adversary’s leaders; intelligence concerning a foreign country’s interactions with an adversary; a direct statement collected via intelligence sources and methods on a foreign country; a foreign country’s intelligence describing an adversary’s planned attack on a facility; sensitive sources and methods used to collect intelligence on a foreign country; a covert action and sources and methods used; intelligence on covert action planned by the U.S. Government; intelligence confirming a foreign adversary was responsible for an attack; and intelligence on covert action conducted by the U.S. Government, a liaison partner country, and specific information about the action.
The documents were all classified as “TOP SECRET.”
As for the documents he allegedly retained, one document revealed intelligence about a future attack by an adversarial group in another country; another revealed liaison partners sharing sensitive information with the U.S. intelligence community; another revealed intelligence that a foreign adversary was planning a missile launch in the future; a covert action in a foreign country related to sensitive inter-governmental actions and sensitive sources and methods used to collect human intelligence.
Other documents revealed intelligence about an adversary’s knowledge of planned U.S. actions; intelligence about adversary’s plans for attack conducted against U.S. Forces in another country; human intelligence using sensitive sources and methods; and intelligence collected on the leader of an adversary nation’s military group.
Others revealed intelligence concerning a foreign country’s interactions with an adversary; a foreign country’s intelligence describing an adversary’s planned attack on a facility; intelligence confirming a foreign adversary was responsible for an attack; intelligence that a foreign country was considering specific force against another country; and more.
The documents range in classification from “SECRET” to “TOP SECRET.”
“The FBI’s investigation revealed that John Bolton allegedly transmitted top secret information using personal online accounts and retained said documents in his house in direct violation of federal law,” said FBI Director Kash Patel. “The case was based on meticulous work from dedicated career professionals at the FBI who followed the facts without fear or favor. Weaponization of justice will not be tolerated, and this FBI will stop at nothing to bring to justice anyone who threatens our national security.”
Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a statement, “There is one tier of justice for all Americans.
“Anyone who abuses a position of power and jeopardizes our national security will be held accountable,” she said. “No one is above the law.”
Bolton’s Maryland home had been raided by FBI agents in August. That search was focused on classified documents agents believed Bolton possessed.
The list of more than a dozen items seized from the Bethesda, Maryland, home of President Donald Trump’s former national security advisor was included in search warrant documents filed with the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland.
LIST REVEALS ITEMS FBI SEIZED FROM JOHN BOLTON’S HOME DURING RAID
Among the technology seized from Bolton’s home were two iPhones — a red one with two camera lenses and a black one in a black case — and three computers, including a silver Dell XPS laptop with cables; a Dell Precision Tower computer model 3620; and a Dell Inspiron 2330 computer, according to the search warrant documents.
One Seagate hard drive and two Sandisk 64 gigabyte USB drives were also seized.
The list shows the FBI also took a white binder labeled, “Statements and Reflections to Allied Strikes…” and typed documents in folders labeled “Trump I-IV.”
Four boxes containing what federal officials called “printed daily activities” also were hauled from Bolton’s home, according to the documents.
The Aug. 22 FBI raid was linked to a probe of mishandling classified documents.
Bolton served as Trump’s White House national security advisor during his first administration, from 2018 to 2019.
A source familiar with the early stages of the investigation told Fox News Digital that CIA Director John Ratcliffe provided Patel with limited access to U.S. intelligence that served as the basis for the search warrant. The source told Fox News Digital that the evidence justified the raid on Bolton’s home.
“I can’t give you any more details than that, but let’s just say that John Bolton really had some nerve to attack Trump over his handling of classified information,” the source told Fox News Digital after the August raid.
The probe into Bolton’s alleged retention of classified documents was first launched years ago but later shut down by the Biden administration “for political reasons,” according to a senior U.S. official.
DEMOCRATS OPPOSED JOHN BOLTON FOR YEARS — UNTIL THEY SOUGHT HIM AS AN ALLY AGAINST TRUMP
The Justice Department under Trump’s first administration argued that Bolton’s 2020 memoir, “The Room Where It Happened,” contained classified material and sought to block its publication. A federal judge ultimately allowed the book to be published.
Justice Department lawyers argued the book contained classified national security information covering areas like U.S. intelligence sources and methods, foreign policy deliberations and conversations with foreign leaders.
In June 2021, the Biden Justice Department abandoned both a criminal inquiry and civil lawsuit against Bolton over the memoir, ending the legal battle at that time.
Bolton’s attorney said at the time that a senior career official in charge of the National Security Council’s pre-publication review process conducted a four-month review of the book and, after requiring a number of revisions, concluded that it contained no classified information.
The book contained a damning account of the Trump White House, alleging that Trump once “pleaded” with Chinese President Xi Jinping to aid his re-election campaign, among other missteps.
Trump ousted Bolton from his first administration in 2019 because the pair “disagreed strongly” on policy.
Bolton has both praised and criticized Trump since leaving his first administration.
He criticized Trump’s handling of classified documents, which led to an FBI raid on the former president’s Mar-a-Lago home in 2022 and a subsequent federal indictment, but insisted that “the legal process play out.”
BOLTON MAY BE IN HOT WATER AS FBI INVESTIGATION EXPANDS BEYOND CONTROVERSIAL BOOK
Trump initially was indicted on 37 felony counts, later expanded to 40, but the case was ultimately dismissed in July 2024.
In 2022, Bolton said Trump lacked the competence and character to be president.
However, Bolton strongly backed Trump’s military strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities in June, calling it “a decisive action,” “the right thing to do,” and praising its potential to generate “huge change in the Middle East.”
Trump, meanwhile, often has criticized Bolton for pushing U.S. involvement in wars in the Middle East. Bolton served as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations under President George W. Bush from August 2005 to December 2006.
Trump revoked Bolton’s Secret Service detail Jan. 21, the day after Trump’s inauguration as the 47th president, and Bolton said the move showed that Trump was coming after him.
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“I think it is a retribution presidency,” Bolton told ABC earlier in 2025, responding to Trump’s move to revoke his security clearance.
Bolton has faced threats from Iran going back years, including an alleged plot to assassinate him in 2021 and the Department of Justice subsequently charging a member of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps for the plot in 2022.
The Iranian threats against Bolton were likely sparked by the January 2020 U.S. strike that killed Qassem Soleimani, the head of Iran’s Quds Force, the Department of Justice reported in 2022.
Bolton did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.
Department of Homeland Security announces $1,000 immigration parole fee
The Department of Homeland Security announced on Thursday that migrants paroled in the U.S. would face a new $1,000 immigration fee “to institute accountability and prevent rampant fraud of the parole system.”
The fee seeks to “strengthen oversight of the immigration parole system and deter its misuse,” the agency said in a news release.
“The Biden Administration abused America’s immigration system and turned parole into a de facto amnesty program, thereby allowing millions of unvetted illegal aliens into the U.S., no questions asked, to the detriment of all Americans,” DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement.
TRUMP ADMINISTRATION OFFERS TEEN MIGRANTS $2,500 TO LEAVE US VOLUNTARILY: REPORTS
“Through the implementation of this new fee, President Trump and Secretary Noem are guaranteeing that foreign nationals, who wish to stay here, have skin in the game and do not exploit the system,” she continued. “This immigration parole fee notice is another tool to stop the degradation of our immigration system and restore law and order to our country.”
The fees are triggered once the grant is effective, not when a parole request is filed or a travel document is received.
The $1,000 parole fee may be adjusted annually based on the Consumer Price Index. DHS said it will publish an annual notice in the Federal Register to announce any adjusted fees.
The money will be collected by Customs and Border Protection, Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Citizenship and Immigration Services.
FOREIGN TRAVELERS SOON TO PAY ‘VISA INTEGRITY FEE’ TO VISIT THE U.S. COSTING $250
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The move comes as the Trump administration continues its efforts to mass deport illegal migrants and reduce pathways for legal immigration, including the president’s attempt to raise the fee for H-1B visa applications to $100,000 to prioritize American workers, which prompted a lawsuit from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
Manhunt underway after video shows gunman ambush prominent businessman
Authorities in Macomb County, Michigan, are searching for a suspect in the attempted murder of a prominent businessman who narrowly survived a daytime ambush outside his home Tuesday morning.
According to the Macomb County Sheriff’s Office (MCSO), the shooting occurred at approximately 10:18 a.m. on Oct. 14, as Eddie Jawad was leaving his gated residence on 24 Mile Road near Wellington Valley Drive in Macomb Township.
Investigators believe the gunman had been watching the property for more than an hour before opening fire.
“Somebody was lying in wait for him,” Macomb County Prosecutor Peter Lucido told Fox News Digital. “They got in there and waited for him, then started shooting at his car on the way out of his driveway. This was broad daylight in a community where families are. He’s lucky he’s alive.”
FAMILY SAYS OFF-DUTY MILWAUKEE OFFICER ACTED APPROPRIATELY IN FATAL SHOOTING CAUGHT ON DASHCAM VIDEO
Surveillance video shows the suspect near 24 Mile and Wellington Valley at 8:22 a.m., then entering the property around 9:30 a.m. Lucido said Jawad was grazed by a bullet during the attack but survived.
The suspect fled east on 24 Mile Road in a black Ford Escape (model year 2020–2022) with a stolen license plate, authorities said. He is described as a thin Black male, approximately 5 feet 6 inches to 5 feet 8 inches tall.
Anyone with information is urged to contact the MCSO Detective Bureau at 586-307-9358.
Lucido, who described Jawad as a close friend, said the businessman’s response after the shooting showed his resilience.
NORTH CAROLINA BAR PATRON’S VIDEO MAY HAVE FOILED GUNMAN NIGHT BEFORE DEADLY WATERFRONT MASSACRE: REPORT
“Eddie went home that night, had dinner with his family, and was back at work the next morning,” Lucido said. “That’s not in his DNA to hide. The good Lord spared him, and he’s going to continue to do his work.”
Jawad is the owner of Pit Stop gas stations and convenience stores, a Michigan-based chain with more than two dozen locations. He is also involved in restaurants, property development, rentals and refining businesses.
Lucido praised Jawad as a self-made entrepreneur and an example of a local success story.
“He’s a man of the community,” Lucido said. “He actually worked in a gas station when he was younger — and look what he owns today. Probably somewhere north of 25 to 30, maybe even 40 gas stations. He’s rags to riches — bold, no-nonsense and does everything to the tens, not the nines.”
He added that Jawad “has a heart of gold” and “makes no bones about what he believes in,” describing him as a businessman who speaks his mind and gives back to his community.
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Lucido said the ambush was especially shocking given the quiet, upscale neighborhood where Jawad lives.
“This isn’t the deep dark night of an alley,” Lucido said. “This is a quiet, beautiful area where families live. You buy your homes where your schools, churches and stores are — where your families are safe. You expect to live in peace and harmony, not have gunfire on your front lawn.”
He said investigators are combing through neighborhood doorbell and surveillance video and are confident the person responsible will be caught.
WATCH: Officials release surveillance video showing suspect sought in attempted murder of businessman
“There’s no room, no excuse, no reason to resort to violence in Macomb County,” Lucido said. “If you have differences, take them to court. But attempting to kill a man? Unacceptable. Whoever did this will be held to the fullest extent of the law.”
Lucido also underscored his office’s zero-tolerance approach to violent crime.
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“You’re going to abide by the law and you’re going to keep order — or you’re going to come and see me,” he said.
Lucido called Jawad’s survival “nothing short of a miracle.”
“When you see that video — how he avoided being killed — you can’t help but ask how,” he said. “He literally dodged the bullets. He’s a walking miracle.”
The Macomb County Sheriff’s Office is investigating. Lucido said he is confident the shooter will be brought to justice.
“Eddie’s lucky to be alive,” he said. “This kind of violence doesn’t belong in Macomb County — or anywhere.”
‘F— Trump’: Singer unleashes expletive-filled rant during Portland concert
Actress and singer Reneé Rapp delivered a scathing critique of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and President Donald Trump in an expletive-laden rant during her concert in Portland, Oregon, Monday.
While performing at Portland’s Moda Center, the “Sex Lives of College Girls” star denounced the recent ICE raids in the city. The moment was shared on TikTok by former CNN journalist Don Lemon’s account.
“So let’s just f—— make it abundantly f—— clear — F— ICE. F— this administration. F— Trump,” Rapp said from the stage to raucous applause.
‘UNTETHERED FROM REALITY’: LAWYERS FOR TRUMP, OREGON, SPAR OVER NATIONAL GUARD DEPLOYMENT IN COURT CLASH
Rapp appealed to anti-ICE sentiment in the city, telling the audience, “We are very, very, very excited to be here with you. You’re a wonderful. And it just happens that we’re here at the same time some people who shouldn’t f—— be here are.”
Portland has witnessed weeks of violent clashes between anti-ICE protesters and police outside a local ICE facility. Camila Wamsley, the director of ICE’s Portland office, said earlier this month the facility has endured more than 100 consecutive nights of disorder from protesters with Portland police largely absent, allegedly under orders from the mayor and the city council.
Wamsley said nightly demonstrations have escalated beyond chants and signs, with protesters allegedly launching bottle rockets and rocks at the building, using lasers to target officers’ eyes and erecting barricades to block vehicles.
The Trump administration moved to deploy National Guard troops to quell the unrest. However, U.S. District Judge Karin Immergut temporarily blocked the order, calling it “untethered from reality.” She said the move would risk “blurring the line between civil and military federal power — to the detriment of this nation.”
PORTLAND ANTI-ICE RIOT CRUSHED BY FEDERAL AGENTS
Local leaders also criticized Trump’s deployment plan, calling his portrayal of Portland “hyperbolic” and arguing that federal policing was unnecessary.
Rapp isn’t the only musician to denounce ICE. Country artist Zach Bryan stirred controversy when a snippet of his song “Bad News” went viral earlier this month for its anti-ICE lyrics.
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The controversy caught the attention of Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kristi Noem, who publicly criticized the singer.
“I hope he understands how completely disrespectful that song is, not just to law enforcement but to this country,” she said in an interview with conservative commentator Benny Johnson.
Fellow country artist Bryan Andrews went viral on TikTok with a video rant calling out the condemnation ICE raids and the Christians that support them.
“Bulls—. You don’t get to call yourself a Christian and advocate and f—— laugh when families are torn apart outside of courthouses of people trying to come here the right ways,” he said.
DHS did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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Newlywed couple’s cause of death revealed after cops found them inside car
Officials in Illinois have released a cause of death for a newlywed couple found inside their car days before they were supposed to celebrate their wedding anniversary.
Police in Harvard, Illinois, said the couple was found when an officer on Oct. 6 noticed a parked car with its hazard lights activated. When the officer looked in the car, he found both individuals dead.
The people inside the car were later identified as Rachel Dumovich, 29, and Brandon Dumovich, 30, from Sharon, Wisconsin, a spokesman for the McHenry County Coroner’s Office told Fox News Digital.
PARENTS OF 7-MONTH-OLD BOY MISSING FOR NEARLY 2 WEEKS ARE CHARGED WITH MURDER
The spokesman for the coroner’s office told Fox News Digital that preliminary findings show both Rachel and Brandon had died from gunshot wounds to the head. Harvard Police Chief Tyson Bauman previously told Fox News Digital that an investigation is ongoing, adding: “While a murder-suicide is a potential scenario, no final determination has been made.”
Full results from an autopsy conducted by the coroner’s office haven’t yet been released.
Police initially said both people had gunshot wounds, adding a gun was found inside the car. The McHenry County Major Investigative Assistance Team was activated for the incident.
While police told nearby residents to shelter in place after finding the dead couple, it was “later determined there was no ongoing threat to the community.”
NEWLYWEDS FOUND DEAD DAYS BEFORE CELEBRATING THEIR FIRST ANNIVERSARY: POLICE
A wedding page on The Knot made by Rachel described the couple as “middle school sweethearts.”
Rachel described that she met Brandon in middle school when she was 12 years old and caught his attention by “stealing cologne from his locker and running away with it.”
The two stayed in “touch through many life stages and 15 years of friendship,” Rachel wrote, sharing that they began dating in 2022.
CALIFORNIA PARENTS ARRESTED, CHARGED WITH MURDER OF MISSING 7-MONTH-OLD SON AFTER MOTHER’S STORY FALLS APART
Brandon proposed in the summer of 2023 at Big Cedar Lake near Slinger, Wisconsin, where the pair got married on Oct. 12, 2024.
“We can’t wait to share the next chapter of our love story surrounded by our friends and family!” Rachel wrote in announcing the wedding.
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Hours before her death, Rachel posted on Facebook: “Forever chasing sunsets. Wishing we were back in Greece.” The post appeared to reference the couple’s honeymoon.
People with any information are asked to contact the Harvard Police Department at (815) 943-4431 or provide information anonymously through the Crime Stoppers hotline at (815) 943-4343 or email crimestoppers@cityofharvard.org.
NFL star calls it quits after tragedy changes life and career outlook
For the past decade, much of Charles Leno Jr.’s focus has been on the NFL. As the offensive lineman moves into the next chapter of his life, he is now turning his attention to his loved ones.
On Tuesday, the former Washington Commanders offensive lineman cited wife Jennifer Leno’s miscarriage in his retirement announcement. Tuesday also marked two years since the Leno family lost their daughter Paitynn.
“On October 14, 2023, my wife Jennifer and I experienced the most unimaginable heartbreak. We lost our precious daughter, Paitynn — our fourth baby girl,” the 34-year-old wrote in a statement posted to Instagram.
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“That day changed everything for me. It changed the way I see life, the way I carry myself, and most of all, it changed what matters most to me.”
BROWNS WIDE RECEIVER DAVID BELL, 24, RETIRES AFTER BEING ‘BLINDSIDED’ BY OFF-FIELD INJURY
Leno added that he came to the realization that his heart could no longer be fully committed to the game he once loved.
“I knew then that I was done with football,” he continued. “Not physically, but mentally and emotionally. My priority, my passion, my purpose had changed. My heart now belongs fully to my family. And I knew one day, when the time was right, I’d make it official.”
The retiring NFL offensive lineman described being a father as “the greatest role of my life.” Leno shares three daughters with his wife.
“Your laughter, your love, and your strength have given me purpose far beyond football,” Leno wrote in a message to his daughters. “I want to be there for every moment, every milestone, and every memory still to come.”
Leno also thanked his wife in his announcement, describing her as his “rock.”
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The Chicago Bears drafted Leno in the seventh round of the 2014 NFL Draft. He spent seven seasons with the Bears before joining Washington.
Former KISS guitarist Ace Frehley dead at 74 after reportedly being on life support
Kiss founding member Ace Frehley has died after suffering injuries from a fall last month. He was 74.
Frehley’s family confirmed his death to Fox News Digital.
“We are completely devastated and heartbroken. In his last moments, we were fortunate enough to have been able to surround him with loving, caring, peaceful words, thoughts, prayers and intentions as he left this earth,” the statement from his family said.
“We cherish all of his finest memories, his laughter, and celebrate his strengths and kindness that he bestowed upon others. The magnitude of his passing is of epic proportions, and beyond comprehension. Reflecting on all of his incredible life achievements, Ace’s memory will continue to live on forever!”
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Frehley passed away peacefully surrounded by family in Morristown, New Jersey, following a recent fall at his home.
TMZ reported earlier on Thursday that Frehley was on life support after suffering from a brain bleed from the fall a few weeks ago. He had to cancel his tour dates and the outlet reported that his condition had not improved.
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Frehley was a founding member of Kiss, alongside Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley and Peter Criss. Frehley was a member of the group from 1973 until he left in 1982. He then embarked on a solo career.
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His band, Frehley’s Comet, played for four years from 1984 until 1988. He rejoined the group in 1996 and was a member until 2002.
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