Woman stabbed 15-year-old sister after the teen woke up to find her looking through her phone

Lynn My Le, 26, was sentenced to 180 days in jail followed by seven years of probation in connection with an attack on her teenage sister.
As Law&Crime previously reported, Le was charged with attempted murder after she stabbed her then-15-year-old sister on Oct. 26, 2025.
Le and her sister were in their family home in Cutler Bay, Florida, when the teenager was taking a nap on the living room couch.
When the teen woke up, she saw Le going through her phone. The teen confronted her older sister, who got a knife and stabbed her 10 times.
The teen ran to the front door to escape, but Le caught up with her and stabbed her multiple times in the back. The teenager collapsed to the floor.
When she “pleaded for her life,” Le finally stopped her attack and left the teen bleeding on the floor…
‘I told him to go home’: State trooper at end of his shift gets ambushed by suspect who shoots him 3 times and then stands over his body and hits him

A Mingo County jury found Timothy Kennedy, 32, guilty of murder in the death of 37-year-old West Virginia State Police Sgt. Cory Maynard, the West Virginia Troopers Association announced on Monday.
In addition to being found guilty of first-degree murder, Kennedy was also convicted of two counts of attempted murder in the first degree, disarming a law enforcement officer, and first-degree robbery, according to courtroom footage from regional ABC and Fox affiliate WCHS.
On June 2, 2023, Maynard and multiple other troopers were called about a shooting. They responded to the 4200 block of Beech Creek Drive in Mingo County, a rural area in the southwestern part of West Virginia.
It was apparently the end of the sergeant’s shift, and his colleague encouraged him not to go.
“I tried to tell Sgt. Maynard not to come,” West Virginia State Trooper Jonathan Ziegler testified during the trial, per area CBS affiliate WOWK. “I told him to go home. It was time for him to go home; I said, ‘Go home,’ and he said ‘No, I’m coming.’ … I said, ‘I’m dropping over at Beech Creek. I love you.’ He said, ‘I love you, too.'”
As Law&Crime previously reported, a then-39-year-old Benjamin Adam Baldwin had been shot.
Though he was taken to a hospital and listed as in stable condition, the danger had not ended for the law enforcement officers.
Ziegler recounted Kennedy showing “absolutely no mercy” for Maynard, shooting him “not once, but three times. He showed no mercy when he stood overtop of Cory and struck Cory with a gun. As if shooting Cory wasn’t enough, he had to stand overtop of him and strike him.”…
Vance highlights ‘progress’ in Iran negotiations, floats additional fighting

Vice President JD Vance said the U.S. and Iran have “made a lot of progress” on negotiations to end the conflict between the two nations.
He left open the possibility of restarting a military campaign in Iran if the country did not agree to never obtain a nuclear weapon.
“We think the Iranians want to make a deal,” Vance said to reporters on Tuesday. “We have an opportunity here to reset the relationship that has existed between Iran and the United States for 47 years.”
Vance suggested negotiators in Iran could be unclear on their objectives .
“It’s not sometimes totally clear what the negotiating position of the team is, and I don’t know if that’s sometimes bad communication, if that’s bad faith,” Vance said. “It’s sometimes hard to figure out exactly what it is that the Iranians want to accomplish out of the negotiation.”
Vance also said he is uncertain of whether Iran will come to a deal. He said he knows Iranian leaders understand they cannot have a nuclear weapon.
“The Iranians recognize that a nuclear weapon is the red line for the United States of America, that they’ve internalized that, but we’re not going to know until we’re actually putting pen to paper on signing a deal,” Vance said. “It’s ultimately up to the Iranians whether they are willing to meet us.”
Vance denounced reports that the U.S. would allow Russia to purchase enriched uranium from Iran as part of a peace deal.
“This is going to go in one of two directions: we’re going to restart the war, which is not the preference of the President of the United States, or we’re going to strike a deal,” Vance said.
Vance said rising gas prices due to the conflict in Iran affecting oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz is “temporary.”….
18-year-old accused of stabbing his elderly grandmother to death; cops find knives protruding from victim’s body

Louis Brown of Jackson Township on Monday was charged with murder, possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose, and unlawful possession of a weapon, all in connection with the death of his grandmother, 69-year-old Darlene Brown also of Jackson Township, the Ocean County Prosecutor’s Office said.
Jackson Township Police Department officers around 7 a.m. Monday responded to a residence on Justin Way in reference to a 911 call stating that someone had been murdered, officials said.
Officers found Louis Brown standing at the front doorway of the residence, officials said, adding that Brown exited the residence with his hands up and was immediately taken into custody while officers conducted their investigation.
Officers entered the home and found the body of a deceased female — later identified as Darlene Brown — in an upstairs bedroom with apparent stab wounds to her face and neck, officials said, adding that officers observed two knives protruding from the victim.
My Response To The Lazy Morons Attacking My Civil Rights Show | Ep. 1782
I told the real story of Rosa Parks and the Civil Rights Movement on my show last week, and the internet melted down.
The U.S. Navy’s Secret Dolphin Program
During the Cold War, the U.S. Navy began researching whether marine mammals could be trained for military purposes. In the 1960s this effort evolved into the U.S. Navy Marine Mammal Program based in San Diego.
Dolphins and sea lions were trained to use their natural sonar abilities to detect underwater mines, locate lost equipment, and identify enemy divers. Bottlenose dolphins proved particularly effective because of their powerful echolocation.
They could scan large underwater areas far faster than human divers and mark suspicious objects for recovery teams. Sea lions were trained to attach recovery lines to equipment or mark divers so they could be intercepted by Navy personnel.
The animals became part of specialized naval units supporting harbor defense and mine countermeasures.
Pirro puts parents on NOTICE over teen takeovers: ‘COMING FOR YOU’
U.S. Attorney for D.C. Jeanine Pirro joins ‘Fox & Friends’ to discuss plans to prosecute parents whose children take part in violent teen takeovers, citing a recent incident at a Chipotle in the nation’s capital
Trump gives diplomacy another chance vs Iran; IDF intercepts Pro-Hamas flotilla TV7 Israel – 19 May
1) Israeli Naval Commandos intercept a flotilla of radical left and Islamist activities who were overtly keen on breaking the naval blockade on the Gaza Strip. 2) President Donald Trump announces that he has decided to postpone the attack on Iran. 3) Germany announces that it will deploy surface to air batteries in defense of NATO-ally Turkey.
San Diego mosque where mass shooting left 3 dead has controversial history — including ties to 9/11 hijackers

The San Diego mosque that was targeted in a horrific mass shooting Monday made headlines for being “best known as the home to two 9/11 hijackers,” while its current imam has justified the Oct. 7 terror attacks in Israel.
Previously, the Islamic Center of San Diego made headlines for its connection to Sept. 11, 2001, hijackers Nawaf al-Hazmi and Khalid al-Mihdhar.
Both hijackers reportedly prayed at the mosque and found an apartment nearby through advertisements at the mosque while taking flight lessons in the city.
More recently, Imam Taha Hassane has come under fire for his comments on the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks.
“This did not start last week or on October 7. This is the result of brutal Zionist occupation and genocide,” Hassane said in a video posted to social media days after the savage Hamas attack.
“Resistance is justified when people are under occupation and don’t let them change that narrative.”
Hassane’s wife and daughter have also been under fire for inflammatory rhetoric.
Selma Hassane has “promoted incitement, spread hatred of Israel, engaged in anti-Israel activism and is a supporter of the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement,” according to watchdog group, Canary Mission.
His wife, Lallia Allali, allegedly posted graphic images of a “Jewish star murdering babies with ‘the devil is killing’” scrawl in the wake of the Oct. 7 attacks, according to watchdog group StopAntisemitism….
This Convicted Felon Gets $1 Million a Year to Sell Obsolete Internet Service. You Pay for It.

At the beginning of his three-year federal prison sentence for felony tax evasion, Roger Shoffstall lost his telephone privileges when a guard caught him running his small Alaska phone company from behind bars.
He’s lost a lot of privileges over the years. Shoffstall, 75, can’t serve on a federal jury.
Unlike most Alaskans, he doesn’t receive an annual Permanent Fund dividend check. And he is not allowed to own a gun.
One thing never changes, however: Each year, the federal government sends his company, Summit Telephone, more than $1 million.
The money comes from a special government subsidy program that Congress created to bring fast, affordable phone and internet service to hard-to-reach places. You help pay for it.
Pull up your latest phone bill and look for a line labeled “Universal Service Fund.” Some phone companies list it as a “Universal Connectivity Charge” or fold it into a “Regulatory Programs & Telco Recovery Fee.”
It’s all the same thing: a surcharge added to the monthly bill of phone customers throughout the United States.
The federal government and phone companies don’t call it a tax — but it acts like one.
Carriers must currently contribute 37 cents of every dollar of their interstate and international phone revenues to the fund.
In Alaska, where many communities can only be reached by plane or boat, the Federal Communications Commission has given telecommunications companies $4.6 billion in these subsidies since 2016.
That’s more than $600 per Alaskan per year. More per resident than in any other state.
Yet after all that spending, Alaska still ranks near the bottom for access to the very land-based, high-speed internet service the money was meant to deliver.
Some communities have yet to be wired at all.
In others, fiber-optic cables or microwave towers offer internet with speeds that were recently clocked, statewide, as the slowest in the country.
Even with the subsidies, the service comes at a steep price to customers: often hundreds of dollars a month for internet one-tenth what the FCC considers broadband quality…
President Trump Takes Questions From The Press Live From The Construction Site Of The New White House Ballroom
ICE Arrests 33 Migrants After Raids on Orlando Construction Sites

ICE turned out at new home construction sites in The Villages near Orlando in Sumter County on May 14 along with members of Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Tampa, according to Fox News.
Officials report that up to 30 individuals fled the scene as ICE agents fanned out, but 33 were arrested for immigration violations.
Those arrested included several Mexican nationals, as well as migrants from Honduras and Guatemala.
Four now face felony charges for repeated re-entry after deportation.
ICE interviewed more than 350 individuals during the operation.
Officials also said they took down information about companies that employed the illegal migrants and warned that there would be follow ups on those employers, who broke federal and state laws in hiring illegal migrants who were not eligible to work in Florida.
HSI Tampa warned over the practice of continuing to hire illegals and urged employers to participate in the IMAGE program.
The ICE Mutual Agreement Between Government and Employers is designed to help employers verify the legal status of workers before hiring them.
Midterm primaries in several states feature Trump endorsements

Candidates endorsed by President Donald Trump are vying for seats in several states on Tuesday in midterm primary elections.
The president has endorsed three dozen candidates in Tuesday’s primary elections, including governors and members of Congress.
Among the races Trump has spoken at most length about is the Republican primary in Kentucky’s 4th Congressional District. Rep. Thomas Massie is being challenged by Trump-endorsed candidate, Ed Gallrein.
Trump backed Gallrein after Massie challenged the Trump administration on the release of the Jeffrey Epstein files.
He is among several Republicans who have drawn criticism from Trump over the Epstein files.
Rep. Barry Moore has Trump’s endorsement in the race to succeed Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., as Tuberville seeks the state’s governorship.
Trump has also endorsed all the Republican incumbents in the House who have races on Tuesday, aside from Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick, R-Pa. Fitzpatrick is running unopposed in Pennsylvania District 1…
Russia holds nuclear war games in preparation to fend off ‘aggression’

Russia embarked on two days of large-scale air, sea, and terrestrial military exercises with Belarus on Tuesday to practice preparing to deploy nuclear forces in the event of an “aggression threat,” Moscow said.
The drills involving 64,000 troops, 7,800 armament pieces, 200 missile launchers, more than 140 aircraft, 73 ships and 13 submarines, including eight strategic nuclear deterrent submarines, will see test-firings of ballistic and cruise missiles across Russia, the state-run TASS news agency said.
The exercise combines the Strategic Missile Force, the Northern and Pacific Fleets, the long-range aviation military command and some military districts with the goal of refining skills and command and control preparedness to implement deterrence, “prevent aggression” and test the ability of forces and logistics to work together to deliver specific goals, said TASS.
“The drills are set to practice readying some of nuclear forces’ units and formations for accomplishing assigned objectives and rendering them comprehensive logistical support, and also carrying out test-launches of ballistic and cruise missiles at practice range,” the report said.
The operation will also practice working with Belarus on preparation and deployment of Russian nuclear weapons stationed in Belarus.
The Belarus Defense Ministry confirmed drills for the “combat use of nuclear weapons and nuclear weapons logistical support” involving missile troops and the air force had got underway on Monday but stressed the exercises with Russian forces were a “scheduled, planned,” event not targeted at any country and that posed no threat to regional security.
Ukraine, which has a long border with Belarus used by Russia to launch its initial offensive when it invaded in February 2022, condemned the exercises and basing of nuclear weapons in Belarus as “an unprecedented challenge to the architecture of global security.”…
Trump’s Texas Senate Endorsement SHOCKS Political World | This Just Changed EVERYTHING…
Insider reveals everything…
Jeremiah Johnston gets into what happens when power stops looking political and starts looking spiritual, because once governments, global institutions, and corporations begin operating beyond public accountability, the real question becomes not just who’s in charge, but what belief system is actually driving the world around us.
GOP bill targets blue state for billions in COVID-era unemployment debt dumped on businesses

A House Republican is moving to rein in California’s ballooning unemployment insurance debt, arguing employers are being stuck with the bill as the state fails to repay what it owes.
Rep. Vince Fong, R-Calif., will introduce legislation on Tuesday that would require California to pay its outstanding $21 billion loan to the federal government before spending federal money on other programs.
Under Fong’s bill, California would have to direct eligible federal funds toward repayment within five business days of the money becoming available.
If it violates that provision, the state would have to pay the full amount of misused funds to the federal government.
California is the only state that has not paid back its loans for a COVID-19-era program that helped states finance a surge in claims for unemployment benefits with federal money.
Instead, the state’s federal unemployment debt continues to climb and is projected to top $23 billion by the end of the year, according to CalMatters.
Fong argues the failure to pay off the massive debt has been detrimental to the state’s employers, who have been forced to help repay the loans through automatic tax hikes.
Businesses were forced to pay an extra $42 per employee on their federal payroll taxes this year to help service the unpaid debt, KCRA reported.
The California Republican has sharply criticized Gov. Gavin Newsom, D-Calif., for not prioritizing repayment of the debt despite a near $100 billion budget surplus in 2022.
Instead, California Democrats continued funding infrastructure projects, homelessness initiatives and other priorities, including subsidized health insurance for illegal immigrants.
Newsom has since signed a budget scaling back taxpayer-funded healthcare for illegal immigrants amid the state’s growing fiscal challenges.
Fong’s bill comes as California’s unemployment benefits system faces federal scrutiny over allegedly weak fraud safeguards.
In February, then-Department of Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer unveiled a “strike team” to probe fraud and abuse in California’s unemployment insurance program.
Thousands of California inmates, including those on death row, participated in an unemployment benefits fraud scheme that cost the state up to $1 billion, CNN reported in 2020.
Prosecutors at the time dubbed it “the largest ever taxpayer fraud to occur in this state’s history.”
In recent months, California has also been rocked by allegations of widespread fraud in the state’s social services programs, expanding scrutiny beyond the unemployment system. …
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