"(Lori) pointed out behaviors such as sitting still and watching TV, claiming JJ said he loved Satan, and an increased vocabulary as evidence that JJ was now a zombie," the investigator said.
Ball said Gibb overheard Vallow call Tylee a "zombie" on the phone in the spring of 2019.
"Not me, mom," Tylee alleged said, according to Gibb.
Never count out the power of little dogs
Damn that anchor's got a serious case of Schiff face.
Nascar Investigates Discovery of Noose in Garage of Driver Who Called for Confederate Flag Ban
The incident at Talladega Motor Speedway comes after Bubba Wallace, the circuit’s only full-time black driver, prompted Nascar to change its policy
A man was arrested in a Texas bar shooting where police said the shooter claimed be a UFC fighter from California.
Jenelius Crew, 37, was charged with opening fire outside REBAR nightclub in San Antonio June 12 after he and four friends were denied entry for being drunk, police said. One of the shooting victims was seriously injured.
Mugshot for Jenlius Crew, 37
Crew was accused of telling the bouncer at the door, “Don’t you know who I am? I’m a UFC fighter from California.” He then walked across the street to his car and returned with a rifle, police said.
Crew does not appear to be linked to Ultimate Fighting Championship, according to reports.
Police said he was hiding out at a hotel in Miami. But U.S. marshals were waiting for him Thursday morning when he left, police said.
Fox 29 San Antonio reported featuring Crew in in its “Marshals Most Wanted” segment in 2017.
He was being sought at the time for breaking into a woman's house and violently attacking her while he was on supervised release for multiple convictions, the station reported.
Minnesota corrections officers allege only white guards are allowed contact with Derek Chauvin
When Derek Chauvin, former Minneapolis police officer and accused murderer of George Floyd, arrived at Ramsey County’s jail, all minority corrections officers were ordered to avoid him, according to racial discrimination charges filed with the state’s Department of Human Rights.
In the filing, acquired by the Star Tribune, eight minority officers at the jail say that they were forced to a separate floor after Chauvin was booked, with a supervisor telling them that their race made them a potential “liability” around the ex-cop.
“I understood that the decision to segregate us had been made because we could not be trusted to carry out our work responsibilities professionally around the high-profile inmate — solely because of the color of our skin,” wrote a black acting sergeant. “I am not aware of a similar situation where white officers were segregated from an inmate.”
Chauvin was arrested and charged with third-degree murder and manslaughter on May 29, following widespread outrage regarding a video in which he placed his knee on a handcuffed George Floyd’s neck for almost nine minutes while Floyd repeatedly said “I can’t breathe.” Floyd’s death in police custody has sparked ongoing large-scale protests against racist police brutality across the country.
According to the Star-Tribune, jail Superintendent Steve Lydon told internal investigators that he only had 10 minutes’ notice that Chauvin was arriving at the jail, and he defended his actions as a move to “to protect and support” his employees. Lydon has since been demoted.
“Out of care and concern, and without the comfort of time, I made a decision to limit exposure to employees of color to a murder suspect who could potentially aggravate those feelings,” he said.
(CNN)Two people were killed and seven others were injured during a shooting in Charlotte overnight, according to CNN affiliates WBTV and WSOC in posts from their reporters on Twitter, citing the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department.
In addition to the nine people who were shot, both affiliates report five people were hurt when they were hit by cars leaving the Beatties Ford Rd. scene.
This story is developing. CNN is working to get additional details.
2 dead, 7 wounded in shooting at North Carolina block party
By Associated Press AP
PUBLISHED 5:12 AM ET Jun. 22, 2020 UPDATED 6:25 AM ET Jun. 22, 2020
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Two people were killed and seven others were wounded in an early Monday shooting in North Carolina's largest city, police said, while five others were hit by vehicles.
The shooting happened at an “impromptu block party" that was a continuation of Juneteenth celebrations, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Deputy Chief Johnny Jennings told reporters.
Police responding to a call about a pedestrian hit by a car found hundreds of people in the streets around 12:30 a.m., a police statement said. As officers arrived, they heard several shots nearby.
“Several shooters discharged dozens of shots into the crowd,” a police release said preliminary information indicated. No one was in custody as of Monday morning.
A female victim who was shot was pronounced dead at the scene, the release said. Her age and identity weren't released. Another victim was pronounced dead at a hospital; no further information about the second fatality was released.
The conditions of the seven people wounded in the shooting weren't immediately clear.
Jennings initially said the five people were hit by vehicles while running away, but the police statement later said that the first person hit by a car was believed to be the call officers were initially responding to, while the other four were struck by vehicles fleeing the gunfire. All five are believed to have suffered non-life-threatening injuries.
The shooting took place on Beatties Ford Road in northern Charlotte, police said.
Juneteenth, for which celebrations started Friday, commemorates when the last enslaved African Americans learned they were free 155 years ago.