Month: April 2025

The Vamps’ Tristan Evans reveals he’s become a dad as he shares adorable name and first pics

THE Vamps star Tristan Evans has revealed that he’s become a dad as he shared the adorable name and first pictures of his son.

He opened up on his happy news on social media as he welcomed his first child with US actress, Nikki Banner.

A father cradles his newborn son.

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Tristan Evans has given fans a first look at his newborn son on social mediaCredit: Instagram @tristanevans
The Vamps band members at Free Radio Hits Live.

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He has achieved significant success over five studio albums with the bandCredit: Getty

Tristan, 30, is best known as one of the members of the hit boyband, The Vamps.

Along with Bradley Simpson, James Brittain-McVey, and Connor Ball, he achieved major success over five studio albums.

Now, he took to Instagram to reveal the news that his wife has given birth to their first child.

He posted an adorable image of himself lovingly holding his newborn son close to his face.

READ MORE ON THE VAMPS STARS

As he smiled, the tot was wrapped in a blue blanket that was emblazoned with his name, Ryder Evans.

Tristan captioned the pic: “I never thought I’d be lucky enough to meet you! Love of my life!

“I will always protect you! Welcome to the family Ryder Prince Evans 7/04/25.”

Both his bandmates and the rest of the followers flocked to the comments section to give their well wishes.

I’m A Celeb’s James McVey gushed: “Love you so much,” with a red heart emoji.

This was as Bradley Simpson posted four love heart emojis, while fellow musicians Mimi Webb and Hrvy also left gushing tributes.

The Vamps draw a wild card as they get up and personal with the local meerkats

He later shared an additional video of himself bonding with his child, captioning the post: “The best feeling in the world!”

In December, the duo previously revealed that they were expecting their first child together.

They delighted fans as they shared snaps of their baby scan on social media.

Nikki penned: “Growing our love story, one tiny heartbeat at a time. Baby Evans coming April 2025.”

I never thought i’d be lucky enough to meet you! Love of my life! I will always protect you!

Tristan EvansInstagram

The pair first went public with their relationship in May 2024, and they have delighted the fans ever since.

Prior to meeting Nikki, drummer Tristan had a short fling with OnlyFans and Celebs Go Dating star Lottie Moss.

Their relationship lasted only four months before they dramatically split up.

Tristan and Nikki later revealed their engagement at the start of February this year, just weeks after announcing her pregnancy.

They posted a slew of photos on social media which captured the moment Tristan popped the question on a romantic getaway.

They later tied the knot earlier in February this year at a ceremony that was attended by his bandmates.

Newborn sleeping on father's chest.

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Tristan gushed about his first moments of fatherhoodCredit: Instagram
The Vamps at the Virgin Atlantic Attitude Awards.

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His fellow band-mates were quick to send well wishes to the starCredit: Getty

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Barcelona vs Celta Vigo – LaLiga preview: Team news, how to follow, stream | Football News

Who: Barcelona vs Celta Vigo
What: Spanish LaLiga
Where: Estadi Olimpic Lluis Companys, Barcelona, Spain
When: Saturday at 4:15pm (14:15 GMT)

Follow Al Jazeera Sport‘s live text and photo commentary stream.

Barcelona will attempt to extend their lead at the top of LaLiga to seven points when they entertain Celta Vigo on Saturday.

Defending champions, Real Madrid, are second in the table but not in action until Sunday when they face Athletic Club.

The league leaders are far from happy, however, with the scheduling of their matches in the Spanish top flight as they chase a quadruple this season.

What are Barcelona upset about?

Barcelona coach Hansi Flick has demanded to meet with LaLiga officials over what he called a “joke” schedule, saying Spanish football was failing to take care of players.

The Catalan giants’ LaLiga game at Real Valladolid on Saturday, May 3, will kick off at 9:00pm (19:00 GMT) after being moved from an afternoon start on Sunday, May 4.

That rescheduling still gives them less than three days to prepare for the pivotal Champions League semifinal return leg at Inter Milan on May 6.

“I want to see this guy who’s responsible for that. For me, it’s a joke,” Flick told a news conference on Friday.

“It’s unbelievable and we have no time to rest … the guys who are responsible for that, I want to discuss with them, because they have no idea how it is.”

What can Barcelona still win this season?

The Champions League is one of three tournaments Barcelona are still competing in, exacerbating challenges relating to fixture congestion that Flick is familiar with after a trophy-laden spell at Bayern Munich.

But the German manager said the situation facing his team before a huge European match left him “speechless”.

“I never had this before. Every league protects their clubs when they play in the Champions League, especially in the semifinal,” he said.

“Bundesliga, Premier League, take care about the clubs. But here not. It’s just let them play.”

Barcelona already claimed the Spanish Super Cup earlier this season by defeating fierce rivals Real 5-2 in Saudi Arabia.

What is the form book like for Barcelona?

Barcelona are looking to bounce back after a 3-1 loss at Borussia Dortmund in the Champions League quarterfinals on Tuesday handed them their first defeat of 2025, although the Catalans progressed to the semi-finals 5-3 on aggregate.

How are Celta Vigo fairing in LaLiga?

Celta Vigo are seventh in the standings, chasing European football, and Flick praised their 37-year-old coach Claudio Giraldez, who came in this season and lifted a club that finished the last three campaigns in the bottom half.

“I have the highest respect for his work, he’s coached a great team … it has nothing to do with his age,” Flick said.

“Celta have a clear idea of how they want to play, they’re very brave in their build-up.

“For us, it’s important we show our strengths, maybe what we missed in Dortmund. We spoke about the situations we had in Dortmund, and we have to do better tomorrow … We have to play at our highest level. Also, they like their away matches.”

Head-to-head

This is the 58th meeting between the clubs, with Barcelona winning on 28 occasions and Celta winning on 13.

Barca are unbeaten in the last three encounters and have only lost one of the last six clashes between the sides.

When did Barcelona and Celta Vigo last meet?

Barca looked to have claimed victory at Celta in their LaLiga meeting in November as they held a 2-0 lead with only six minutes of normal time to play.

Raphinha and Robert Lewandowski scored Barca’s goals but after Marc Casado was sent off in the 82nd minute, Celta claimed a 2-2 draw thanks to goals from Alfon Gonzalez and Hugo Alvarez.

Barcelona team news

Alejandro Balde, Marc Casado, Marc Bernal and Marc-Andre ter Stegen are all absent for Barca due to injuries.

Celta Vigo team news

Hugo Alvarez and Carl Starfelt are Celta’s only two absentees. Both are ruled out by thigh injuries.



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Haley Joel Osment apologizes for using Jewish slur amid arrest

Haley Joel Osment says he has “no excuse” for calling a law enforcement official a slur for Jewish people after his recent arrest at a popular California ski resort.

The former “The Sixth Sense” child star and brother of actor Emily Osment apologized for “using this disgusting word” in a statement shared with multiple outlets. The 37-year-old “Blink Twice” actor shared his statement hours after police body cam footage of his interaction with a law officer surfaced Thursday evening.

“I’m absolutely horrified by my behavior. Had I known I used this disgraceful language in the throes of a blackout, I would have spoken up sooner,” Osment said in a statement shared with People and TMZ. “The past few months of loss and displacement have broken me down to a very low emotional place.”

Osment can be heard in the police footage chiding an officer from the back of a patrol car. “I’ve been kidnapped by a f— Nazi,” he said, before telling the officer, “You’ll wish you treated me nicer.” Osment later hurls the antisemetic slur — which was bleeped out in the video — at the officer and begins laughing.

“You’re gonna regret this,” Osment later says in the video as the officer parks the patrol car.

But it was the actor who later expressed regret for the incident.

From the bottom of my heart, I apologize to absolutely everyone that this hurts. What came out of my mouth was nonsensical garbage — I’ve let the Jewish community down and it devastates me,” he added. “I don’t ask for anyone’s forgiveness, but I promise to atone for my terrible mistake.”

Osment’s statement seemed to focus mainly on his use of the antisemitic slur and did not directly address the actor’s arrest earlier this month. A representative for Osment did not immediately respond to The Times’ request for comment on Friday.

The incident was his latest run-in with law enforcement.

Osment first faced legal troubles in 2006 when he was charged with misdemeanor drunk driving after crashing his car in La Cañada Flintridge. More than a decade later, Osment sparked a police response in 2018 for allegedly making verbal threats to American Airlines staff in the Las Vegas airport after missing his flight.

Los Angeles native Osment is among the thousands of people who lost their homes in the devastating wildfires in January.

In the latest incident, the “Spoils of Babylon” actor was arrested April 8 on suspicion of public intoxication and possession of an unidentified controlled substance at the popular Mammoth Mountain ski resort. The Mono County district attorney’s office on Thursday confirmed to The Times it had charged Osment with two misdemeanors: one for disorderly conduct involving alcohol and the second for possession of cocaine.

Osment is set to be arraigned in July at the Mammoth Lakes branch of the Mono County Superior Court, the district attorney’s office said.

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‘How do I live like this?’ asks Gaza boy who lost arms in Israeli attack | Gaza News

An image of Mahmoud Ajjour, 9, who was severely wounded in an Israeli strike, won the 2025 World Press Photo of the Year award.

A Palestinian child who was severely wounded in an Israeli drone attack on Gaza last year, and who was pictured in an image that won the 2025 World Press Photo of the Year award, says he has been struggling to adapt to life since losing both his arms in the explosion.

Speaking to Al Jazeera from Doha, Qatar, where he has been receiving treatment, nine-year-old Mahmoud Ajjour recalled the moment the bomb exploded, targeting his home in March 2024.

At first, Ajjour, who hails from Gaza City’s old town, said he did not realise he was wounded.

“I thought I had simply fallen. But I found myself on the ground, exhausted, and wondering what had happened,” he told Al Jazeera.

In reality, one arm “flew off, and one flew and fell right beside me”, he added.

Still unaware that he had sustained serious wounds – wounds that mutilated his entire body – Ajjour said he looked around and saw his arms. Although they looked familiar, his brain still could not comprehend that they had been blown off.

“My mother then told me that I lost my arms,” Ajjour recalled. “I started crying. I was very sad, and my mental state was very bad.”

His mental health deteriorated further when he, like many others in Gaza, had to undergo surgery without anaesthetics due to a severe lack of medical supplies. Throughout the war, Israeli forces have largely kept vital border crossings shut, preventing the entry of much-needed medical supplies, as well as food and other aid, including fuel.

“They performed surgery on me while I was awake,” Ajjour said, the shock still evident in his voice.

“I couldn’t bear the pain, I was screaming very loud. My voice filled the hallways.”

‘Everything is difficult’

Ajjour is one of thousands of children in Gaza who are suffering life-changing injuries due to relentless, indiscriminate Israeli bombardment.

According to the United Nations Children’s Fund, more than 10 children each day have lost one or both of their legs since October 7, 2023, when Israel launched its ongoing genocide in Gaza.

That is more than 1,000 children.

“Gaza now has the highest number of children amputees per capita anywhere in the world – many losing limbs and undergoing surgeries without even anaesthesia,” UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in December.

Ajjour is now learning to write, play games on his phone, and dress himself using his feet – but still needs special assistance for most daily activities.

ISRAEL-PALESTINIANS/QATAR-EDUCATION
Ajjour drinks water while getting ready for school, in Doha, Qatar [Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters]

He now longs for the days when his arms were still intact.

Before the attack, Ajjour said he used to go to the market and buy his mother vegetables and food she needed.

“Now, everything is difficult, including feeding myself, helping myself to the bathroom … but I try my best,” he said. “I manage my life like this. I make it work.”

Ajjour dreams of a future where he can return to Gaza and help rebuild the devastated enclave.

He hopes the world can “end the war on Gaza”.

“We want to live on our land. We don’t want the Israelis to take it,” he said.

“People are dying there [in Gaza]. And my home was bombed. How could I live like this?”

Israel’s ongoing assault on the besieged and bombarded territory has so far killed more than 51,000 Palestinians and wounded at least 116,505 others, according to Gaza’s Ministry of Health.

It has also forcibly displaced most of its 2.3 million strong population, ravaged most of the land, damaged basic infrastructure and dismantled its already-struggling healthcare system.

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Judge moves toward shuttering troubled Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall

A Los Angeles County judge took a major step Friday toward shutting down Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall in Downey, months after a state oversight body found it “unsuitable” to house youth.

Judge Miguel Espinoza issued a tentative ruling that it was “unlawful” to allow the L.A. County Probation Department to continue housing juveniles at the facility.

Espinoza did not immediately order the hall closed, but told the probation department to submit a plan by early May detailing how it will relocate approximately 270 juveniles — mostly between the ages of 15 and 18 — to other secure locations. The parties are due back in court next month.

The ruling escalates a months-long legal battle. The state Board of State and Community Corrections ordered Los Padrinos shut down in December 2024, finding the department did not have enough staff to safely operate.

But probation officials ignored the order with the backing of the L.A. County Board of Supervisors. The L.A. County public defender’s office immediately filed a legal challenge on behalf of one of its clients, which put the matter before Espinoza.

“The Probation Department’s chaos creates dangerous ripple effects on our youth’s safety. Time and again, in report after report, we’ve seen neglect, mismanagement, and abuse, all while officials insist that change is coming,” Luis Rodriguez, chief of the public defender’s office Youth Services Division, said in a statement. “The Court’s order today is a step in the right direction.”

Board of State and Community Corrections Chairwoman Linda Penner also celebrated Espinoza’s ruling.

“We believe today’s order is an important and meaningful step in ensuring the safety and well-being of youth in the custody of Los Angeles County,” she said.

Probation Department Chief Guillermo Viera Rosa was present for the hearing Friday and declined to comment outside the East L.A. courtroom. In light of the order, the department “will move swiftly to implement a depopulation plan for Los Padrinos Juvenile Hall that aligns with our broader facilities strategy and prioritizes public safety,” Vicky Waters, communications director for the Probation Department, said.

Roughly three-quarters of the youths housed at Los Padrinos are awaiting court hearings connected to violent offenses including murder, attempted murder, assault, robbery, kidnapping and gang crimes, according to Waters.

Viera Rosa traveled to Sacramento last week to appeal the Board of State and Community Corrections’ decision, arguing the department had met minimum staffing requirements.

But the board rejected the appeal, noting “staff shortages” were still leading to situations where youth were not receiving proper medical attention, missing school time and sitting around unattended after being hit with chemical spray that is at times used to quell disturbances.

“We continue to have concerns with the ability of the department to develop a long-term sustainable solution to address deficiencies with staffing,” the board’s last report read. “Facility staffing documentation continues to indicate that deployed staff are used to backfill youth supervision staffing, an indication that the department continues to rely on a solution that was intended to be a short-term solution as far back as 2022.”

In the months since probation ignored the Board of State and Community Corrections’ order, news of misconduct and injuries to youths at Los Padrinos have continued to pile up.

The California attorney general’s office indicted 30 officers last month for allegedly allowing, or in some cases arranging, so-called “gladiator fights” between youths for months inside Los Padrinos. A surveillance video first published by The Times in April 2024 showed a group of officers standing by while eight youths took turns attacking one teen, who suffered a broken nose and other injuries. Some officers could be seen laughing and shaking hands with the assailants.

Last week, at least three teens suffered drug overdoses at Los Padrinos. In March, a teen was stabbed in the eye during school hours, according to multiple sources with direct knowledge of the incident who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation. A probation department spokeswoman said the victim suffered only “non-life threatening injuries.”

A 19-year-old also alleged last month that he’d been sexually abused by a 29-year-old Department of Mental Health employee for nearly a year at Los Padrinos, according to court records. His attorney, Jamal Tooson, claimed the abuse was only uncovered when probation officers found explicit pictures sent by the employee during a search of the teen’s room.

Representatives for the probation and mental health departments declined to comment on that incident. It was not clear if a criminal investigation had been opened into the alleged abuse.

Los Padrinos was shut down in 2019 due to a decrease in the number of youth jailed in L.A. County and allegations of excessive force against officers concerning their use of pepper spray. The facility was reopened in July 2023, after the Board of State and Community Corrections shut down L.A. County’s two other juvenile halls.

Within a month, a chaotic incident occurred in which seven youths smashed apart a table and used the pieces as weapons, attacking staff and attempting to break out into the surrounding neighborhood.

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Dodgers games used to be affordable family entertainment. No more.

Four days after the Dodgers won the World Series, and two days before he won the presidential election, Donald Trump was the guest on a sports podcast.

America’s major sports leagues, he said, were pricing out their most loyal customers.

“The leagues are not taking care of their fans,” Trump said on the “Let’s Go!” podcast. “They really aren’t. They’re making it impossible.”

The Dodgers are the greatest show in baseball, with an international tourist attraction atop their lineup. They pack the largest stadium in the major leagues every night.

If tickets to sporting events have gotten too expensive for the average fan — and 86% of sports fans say they have, according to an Ipsos poll released last month — then Dodger Stadium is a flash point in the debate over whether teams should pursue every dollar they can or sacrifice a few bucks so they can better nurture a new generation of fans.

Baseball, after all, is touted as America’s last great affordable sport.

Fans are more likely to develop a lifelong baseball habit if they attend a game as a kid, according to research cited by the commissioner’s office. Can a family of four afford hundreds of dollars to enjoy a day at the ballpark?

“That inability to have that family experience is an incredible negative if you’re just going for the green,” said Andy Dolich, who has run marketing operations for teams in all the major North American sports leagues. “That’s where you are building your fan bases of the future.”

In an interview with The Times, Commissioner Rob Manfred challenged the notion that baseball tickets have become too expensive. The 30 major league teams sold a combined 71 million tickets last year, the most in seven years, and attendance has increased every year since the pandemic.

“If we had an affordability problem, I think you would see it in terms of those numbers,” Manfred said. “Those numbers tell you the opposite.”

According to the league, tickets for $20 or less were available for 70% of MLB games last season. No Dodgers game this season is currently on sale at that price.

Fans line up to buy food at a concession stand before a baseball game against the Chicago Cubs at Dodger Stadium on Friday.

Fans line up to buy food at a concession stand before a game earlier this month at Dodger Stadium.

(Kevork Djansezian / For The Times)

“If you want to sit next to Mary Hart, it’s expensive,” Manfred said. “I think it’s really important to think about that from an access perspective.”

Many studies about fan costs use the average price of a resale ticket, but a study released this month used the cheapest ticket price on official sale sites, as sampled on a variety of dates this season.

The estimated price for a family of four to see a game at Dodger Stadium this season — four of those cheap tickets, parking, four hot dogs, two beers and two sodas — was a league-high $399.68. The league average, according to that study: $208.

Ticket prices can rise and fall daily, based on supply and demand. On the day before the Dodgers’ home opener, The Times checked the prices for every game on the Dodgers’ website.

The cheapest ticket all season, available only for a Wednesday afternoon game against the Miami Marlins, before school lets out: $38. For four seats that day, parking, four hot dogs, and four sodas, the price would be $249.96.

In Los Angeles County, the median family income is $101,800, according to Elly Schoen, assistant director of the Neighborhood Data for Social Change program at the USC Lusk Center. If both parents work, and if they subtract costs for housing, food, child care, health care and transportation, the amount left over each month would be $530.

“I don’t know if you can spend half your discretionary income on a baseball game,” Schoen said.

Shohei Ohtani, left, is greeted by Dodgers team president Stan Kasten after Game 5 of the World Series at Dodger Stadium.

Dodgers team president Stan Kasten, right with Shohei Ohtani following the team’s World Series win over the Yankees, said the team and its corporate sponsors work to provide free and discount tickets. Even so, the range of of cheapest available prices per game ranged from $38 to $156.

(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

Dodgers president Stan Kasten said the team and its corporate sponsors work to provide free and discount tickets. The Dodgers’ foundation said it distributed 64,000 tickets last year through the Commissioner’s Community Initiative, described by the league as a program that “provides $2.5 million in ticket distributions to deserving communities league-wide.”

Said Kasten: “We’ve had a lot of success maintaining and even starting to grow our youth fan base. We’re very proud of that, and we work hard at it.”

In 2015, the Dodgers’ average ticket price was $29, according to Team Marketing Report. A decade later — after winning the World Series twice and signing Shohei Ohtani as the crown jewel of a superstar-studded roster — the range of cheapest available prices per game ranged from $38 to $156.

“You can’t have it all ways, right?” Manfred said. “The Dodgers have made a massive financial commitment in terms of players, and they have to run a business that supports that massive financial commitment.”

Notwithstanding Manfred’s belief that MLB does not have an affordability problem, a popup survey on the league website last week asked fans whether they strongly agreed, somewhat agreed, somewhat disagreed, or strongly disagreed with this statement: “Attending a Major League Baseball game is affordable.”

If local fans consider the Dodgers’ prices too high, Manfred suggested where they could find a cost-effective alternative.

“One of the leaders in terms of thinking about affordability has been the other Los Angeles team,” Manfred said.

Soon after Arte Moreno bought the Angels in 2003 — and with the team coming off a World Series championship — the team introduced $3 tickets for kids and teenagers one night per week. The Angels now offer a $44 family pack — four tickets, four hot dogs and four drinks — at more than half their home games. They also feature a “Junior Angels” kids’ club, with a $20 membership that includes four game tickets.

Arte Moreno, owner of the Los Angeles Angels, stands on the field.

Arte Moreno, who has owned the Angels since 2003, on affordability in baseball: “We want everybody to have access to the stadium. We’ve worked really hard to keep tickets low and have families come in.”

(Ashley Landis / Associated Press)

Parking is $20 at Angel Stadium and $40 at Dodger Stadium.

“I just really believe there should be affordability,” Moreno said. “We want everybody to have access to the stadium. We’ve worked really hard to keep tickets low and have families come in.”

The Angels last appeared in the playoffs 11 years ago, the longest postseason drought in the majors. Moreno did not discount the notion that prices might rise if the team returns to contention, but he did not guarantee it either.

“If the demand exceeds the supply, prices go up,” he said. “But, for us, you have 45,000 seats.”

The New York Yankees sold more tickets than any team besides the Dodgers in each of the past three seasons. The Yankees sell $10 tickets for every game: sometimes a few dozen, sometimes a few hundred, sometimes a couple thousand, based on overall demand for each game. As part of a corporate promotion, they also sell tickets under $10 or at 50% off for a handful of games.

The league maintains a fan value page, where the vast majority of teams display a variety of ticket discounts, concession deals and family packs. The Dodgers’ entry on that page features its promotional schedule, highlighted by bobblehead dolls so coveted that they drive ticket prices ever higher.

On that November podcast, Trump said he knew how to address high ticket prices.

“I think there are things that have to be done,” Trump said.

Manfred declined to comment about whether he had heard from Trump or whether he would work with him on the issue.

The Times asked the White House press office what ideas Trump had to lower ticket prices and what timeline he might have for pursuing any such actions. White House spokeswoman Liz Huston packed six sports phrases into a 48-word statement — “stepping up to the plate” and “home run economy” included — that did not provide a response to the questions.

Trump did not say he would make the Dodgers affordable again. In Los Angeles, some fans have stuck with their team through the lean years — the Fox and McCourt years, as we call them — only to be priced out when the team returned to glory.

On the podcast, without reference to any particular team, Trump said middle-class fans are “your biggest sports fans.”

Said Trump: “They’re being shut out of seeing a team they grew up with and that they love.”

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All 6 Florida State shooting victims expected to make full recovery, hospital says

Flowers were left near the scene Thursday after a gunman shot eight people, including two killed at Florida State University in Tallahassee, Fla. Photo by Don Hayes/EPA-EFE

April 18 (UPI) — All six people injured during a mass shooting at Florida State University are expected to make a full recovery, the hospital said Friday.

The two people killed Thursday were not students and they haven’t been identified by authorities.

“They were all very very brave,” Dr. Brett Howard, a general surgeon with Tallahassee Memorial Hospital, said about the victims. “There’s the moment of shock … but they were all able to talk to us.”

Phoenix Ikner, the 20-year-old Florida State student accused of the shooting at the state university in Tallahassee, was wounded during a gunfire exchange with law enforcement and remains hospitalized.

Howard, who declined to say whether Iklner was at the hospital, appeared with about a dozen colleagues.

The doctor said all of the victims were in surgery or stablized within an hour of their arrival at the trauma center, which is close to the shooting.

They were all treated for gunshot wounds to their “extremeties,” the chest and the abdomen.

Three of the patients were to be discharged Friday and the conditions of the others improved.

Dining worker died

Family members identified Robert Morales, a long-time university dining worker, as one of the fatalities. The shooting was near the Student Union, where meals are served.

“Today we lost my younger brother,” Ricardo Morales Jr. posted X on Thursday night. “He was one of the victims killed at FSU. He loved his job at FSU and his beautiful wife and daughter. I’m glad you were in my life.”

Robert Morales was attending a meeting with other university employees at the time of the shooting, the Miami Herald reported.

He was an assistant football coach at Leon High School, where he served “with dedication, integrity, and a true passion for mentoring young athletes,” the athletic department said.

The victim is the son of Ricardo “Monkey” Morales, a Cuban American CIA operative and anti-Castro militant active during the Cold War. He was killed in a bar fight in Miami in 1982.

During a 2021 radio interview in Miami, Ricardo Morales Jr. claimed that his father had ties to Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin of President John F. Kennedy.

There is a growing memorial outside the Student Union, where people fled during the gunfire. Backpacks, glasses and notebooks were abandoned.

School in mourning

The Student Union and other buildings remain closed as law enforcement processed evidence from the crime scenes.

The university canceled classes Thursday and Friday, and activities through the weekened.

At 5 p.m., a school-wide vigil is planned at Langford Green, a grassy area on the campus. It is in front of Doak Campbell Stadium near the Unconquered Statue, which represents persistence, pride and glory, according to the school’s website.

“All of us at Florida State are hurting,” FSU President Richard McCullough said in a statement Thursday night. “But we grieve together, and we will heal together.”

Eleven years ago there was a shooting at Strozier Library in which two people were injured.

Those with video, audio or other information related to the incident, can send them to an FBI site.

The accused shooter

Phoenix Ikner is the stepson of a Leon County Sheriff’s Office deputy, Jessica Ikner. The 18-year deputy was a school resource officer and “her service to this community has been exceptional,” Leon County Sheriff Walt McNeil said during a news conference Thursday.

“Unfortunately, her son had access to one of her weapons, and that was one of the weapons found at the scene. We are continuing our investigation as to how that weapon was used and what other weapons perhaps he may have had access to,” McNeil said.

Phoenix Ikner was a member of the 2021-22 Leon County Sheriff’s Office Youth Advisory Council as a high school junior.

Ikner transferred this spring semester from Tallahassee State College to nearby FSU, where he was a political science major.

Ikner was involved in an extracurricular political club a few years ago. Reid Seybold, an FSU student, told CNN he was asked to leave the group.

“He had continually made enough people uncomfortable where certain people had stopped coming. That’s kind of when we reached the breaking point with Phoenix, and we asked him to leave,” Seybold said.

Ikner, a registered Republican, attended a rally against Donald Trump on Jan. 17, three days before he became president again.

“These people are usually pretty entertaining, usually not for good reasons,” Ikner told the student newspaper, FSU News, at the time. “I think it’s a little too late, he’s [Trump] already going to be inaugurated on Jan. 20 and there’s not really much you can do unless you outright revolt, and I don’t think anyone wants that.”

In 2020, the suspect changed his name from Christian Gunnar Eriksen. He was a dual U.S.-Norwergian citizen like his biological mother.

Ikner was involved in a custody battle.

In 2015, he was taken by his biological mother to Norway in violation of a child custody order. Anne-Mari Eriksen was accused of telling his father, Christopher Ikner, that she was taking him to South Florida for spring break.

The child was on medication for “several health and mental issues, to include a growth hormone disorder and ADHD,” according to the affidavit.

He was brought back to the United States with his mother, who was arrested at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport in July 2015. She later pleaded no contest to illegally removing a child from Florida.

In October 2015, Anne-Mari Eriksen sued the father, stepmother and two other relatives for slander and libel on behalf of herself and her son.

“The emotional and psychological harm done to the minor child will be evident for years, and will require counseling, and given the child being the age of 11, will have memory impacted by the behaviors of all the defendants for the false claims done on his mother, and for the parental alienation of the close relationship of the minor child,” the lawsuit claimed.

A judge dismissed the lawsuit seven months later.



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Russia jails 19-year old for condemning its war in Ukraine | Censorship News

Daria Kozyreva used 19th-century poetry and graffiti to protest Russia’s war on Ukraine.

A Russian court has handed down a prison sentence of nearly three years to Daria Kozyreva, a young activist who used 19th-century poetry and graffiti to protest the war in Ukraine.

A Reuters news agency witness in the court on Friday said Kozyreva, 19, was found guilty of repeatedly “discrediting” the Russian army after she put up a poster with lines of Ukrainian verse on a public square and gave an interview to Sever.Realii, a Russian-language service of Radio Free Europe.

She has been sentenced to two years and eight months in prison.

On Friday, Kozyreva pleaded not guilty, calling the case against her “one big fabrication”, according to a trial transcript compiled by Mediazona, an independent news outlet.

“I have no guilt. My conscience is clear,” she said, according to Mediazona’s transcript.

“Because the truth is never guilty.”

In December 2022, aged just 17, Kozyreva sprayed the words, “Murderers, you bombed it. Judases,” in black paint on a sculpture of two intertwined hearts, erected outside Saint Petersburg’s Hermitage Museum that represents the city’s links with Mariupol, a Ukrainian city largely razed to the ground during a siege earlier that year.

In early 2024, after being fined 30,000 roubles ($370) for posting about Ukraine online, Kozyreva was expelled from the medical faculty of Saint Petersburg State University.

A month later, on the war’s second anniversary, she taped a piece of paper containing a fragment of verse by Taras Shevchenko, the father of modern Ukrainian literature, onto a statue of him in a Saint Petersburg park:

“Oh bury me, then rise ye up / And break your heavy chains / And water with the tyrants’ blood / The freedom you have gained.”

Kozyreva was swiftly arrested and held in pre-trial detention for nearly a year, until she was released this February to house arrest.

‘Punished for quoting poetry’

Natalia Zviagina, Amnesty International’s Russia director, said Friday’s verdict “is another chilling reminder of how far the Russian authorities will go to silence peaceful opposition to their war in Ukraine”.

“Daria Kozyreva is being punished for quoting a classic of 19th-century Ukrainian poetry, for speaking out against an unjust war and for refusing to stay silent,” she said in a statement.

“We demand the immediate and unconditional release of Daria Kozyreva and everyone imprisoned under ‘war censorship laws’.”

Kozyreva is currently one of an estimated 234 people imprisoned in Russia for their antiwar position, according to a tally by Memorial, a Nobel Prize-winning Russian human rights group.

Arrests on charges of spying and collecting sensitive data have also become increasingly frequent in Russia since it began its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Evan Gershkovich, a reporter with the Wall Street Journal, was arrested last year on suspicion of trying to obtain military secrets and charged with espionage, which carries a sentence of up to 20 years, and is currently in custody awaiting trial. The United States has designated him “wrongfully detained” and is seeking his release.

Russian-American journalist Alsu Kurmasheva was arrested last October and is awaiting trial on charges including failing to register as a “foreign agent”. She too is being held in custody pending trial.

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Emmerdale ‘lets slip’ character return in Aaron and John’s wedding invite list

Emmerdale fans think the name of a past character being included on Aaron Dingle and John Sugden’s wedding invite plan could be a sign they are returning to the ITV soap

John Sugden and Aaron Dingle's wedding planning revealed a list of people possibly being invited
John Sugden and Aaron Dingle’s wedding planning revealed a list of people possibly being invited(Image: ITV)

A scene this week may have teased a surprise Emmerdale return in just a matter of weeks.

John Sugden and Aaron Dingle’s wedding planning revealed a list of people possibly being invited to their rather rushed nuptials. One name in particular on the draft list could seal a comeback a year on from their abrupt exit when they fled the village.

Nicky Miligan was named as a possible invite on the initial list Aaron was using while chatting with his fiancé John. There was a second list that appeared to show Aaron removing people which maybe hinted Nicky was no longer on the guest list.

That said, his name was clearly printed on the initial list that had been drafted up by Aaron’s mother Chas Dingle. It was for her big day, with Chas set to wed her partner Liam Cavanagh.

But after some drama with Ella Forster, with John actually to blame, Chas decided to push back her and Liam’s wedding. But with them already having booked things and put down deposits, they realised they would have lost a lot of money if they did not go through with it.

With Chas not comfortable with getting wed so soon now that Ella was causing them trouble, her son Aaron decided to take the slot after his engagement to John. Just weeks on from them getting engaged, Aaron told John he was thinking of taking the wedding slot from his mum.

READ MORE: Emmerdale John Sugden’s next victim ‘sealed’ as Aidan’s fate exposed

A scene this week may have teased a surprise Emmerdale return
A scene this week may have teased a surprise Emmerdale return(Image: ITV)

John was initially hesitant about it, but soon he agreed and now they will be getting married. With wedding planning underway this week amid a twist surrounding Aidan Moore, Aaron used his mum’s guest list to plan his own invites.

Viewers noticed Aaron’s cousin Nicky was on the initial list, and wondered whether this meant he was returning. Nicky fled the village after falling out with his parents Caleb and Ruby last year, and he went travelling with his boyfriend Suni.

He’s been mentioned constantly in recent months with Steph Miligan in touch with her brother, while Ruby went to stay with her son earlier in the year. Fans have long predicted he will be back soon after his abrupt exit last year, so might he come back for the big wedding?

One fan asked on social media: “So is Nicky coming back?” as another commented: “Nicky & Steph would be guests of Chas.” Others were left very confused about the list and who was attending for who.

Emmerdale fans think the name of a past character being included on Aaron Dingle and John Sugden's wedding invite plan could be a sign they are returning
Emmerdale fans think the name of a past character being included on Aaron Dingle and John Sugden’s wedding invite plan could be a sign they are returning(Image: ITV)

It comes as fans wondered if someone was in danger after they expose John’s lie about Aidan next week. We found out this week the truth around Aidan’s fate, with hints at what led to him being hospitalised. After months of John claiming he was dead, we saw he was actually alive and in a coma.

But amid speculation he may wake up, new spoilers have revealed someone learns the truth about Aidan’s fate next week. His sister Victoria Sugden meets with an old army mate of John’s called Connor, who tells her all about Aidan. When she finds out Aidan is alive and in a coma she goes to visit him before rushing out.

Back at home she wastes no time in confronting her brother about Aidan and the truth about his fate. She demands answers and John is left agitated as he’s faced with having to reveal why he lied about Aidan being dead. But could Victoria be in serious danger, and might John end up having to silence her to stop others finding out the truth?

Emmerdale airs weeknights at 7:30pm on ITV1 and ITVX, with an hour-long episode on Thursdays. * Follow Mirror Celebs and TV on TikTok , Snapchat , Instagram , Twitter , Facebook , YouTube and Threads .



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Obamacare 101: Repair instead of repeal? Here’s what a smaller fix might look like

With Senate Republicans struggling to find votes for sweeping legislation to roll back the Affordable Care Act, several GOP lawmakers have raised the prospect of a more limited bill — passed with help from Democrats — to stabilize health insurance markets around the country.

That may be heresy for conservative Republicans who’ve spent seven years demanding the full repeal of Obamacare, as the law is often called.

Obamacare 101 is a periodic primer on the debate over repealing and replacing the Affordable Care Act »

But most patient advocates, physician groups, hospitals and even many health insurers say more-targeted fixes to insurance marketplaces make more sense than the kind of far-reaching overhaul of government health programs that Republicans have been discussing.

Could such an approach work? Here’s a primer on what such legislation might look like and how it might get done.

Why do a more limited Obamacare ‘fix’?

For one thing, it would be politically easier. More-targeted legislation also wouldn’t threaten insurance protections for tens of millions of Americans.

The political debate over the 2010 healthcare law has focused for years on what has been happening to insurance marketplaces like HealthCare.gov, which were created by the law for Americans who don’t get health insurance through work.

For a variety of reasons, the marketplaces’ first several years have been rocky.

Insurers in many states struggled to figure out how much to charge for their plans and then raised premiums substantially when customers turned out to be sicker than they expected.

And as uncertainty over the future of the markets has intensified since President Trump’s election last year, several leading national insurers have decided to stop selling plans in some states, leaving consumers in some places with few if any health plans to choose from. Trump has called Obamacare a “disaster” and “dead.”

But the marketplaces — where about 10 million Americans currently get coverage — represent a very small fraction of the U.S. healthcare system.

By contrast, more than 70 million Americans rely on Medicaid and the related Children’s Health Insurance Plan, the government safety net plans for the poor.

Altering Medicaid, as proposed under the GOP plan, would be far more disruptive. And, as congressional Republicans are learning, it is much more controversial.

But isn’t Medicaid a big problem, too?

Many conservatives have long argued the federal government can’t afford to provide so much healthcare assistance to the poor.

But Medicaid has become a vital lifeline for tens of millions of Americans. Medicaid provides assistance to more than one in three U.S. children, protects millions of Americans with disabilities and is the largest funder of nursing home care for elderly Americans, in large part because Medicare does not cover nursing homes.

Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion, which made coverage available to working-age adults in many states, is credited with driving down the nation’s uninsured rate to the lowest levels ever recorded.

And a growing body of evidence shows it is improving low-income Americans’ access to needed medical care, reducing financial strains on families and improving health.

That is why Medicaid has been fiercely defended by patient groups, doctors, nurses, educators and even some Republican governors.

What would it take to stabilize insurance markets?

Probably not that much, actually.

There is widespread agreement that the federal government must first continue funding assistance through Obamacare to low-income consumers to help offset their co-pays and deductibles.

This aid — known as cost-sharing reduction, or CSR, payments – was included in the original law.

But the payments have become a political football as Republicans argued the aid can’t be provided without an appropriation by Congress. And Trump administration officials keep threatening to cut off the payments.

Many insurers say that would be devastating, forcing them to raise premiums by double digits.

Congress could simply put an end to that uncertainty by voting to appropriate the CSR money.

Secondly, most insurance industry officials and independent experts say the federal government must create a better system to protect insurers from big losses if they are hit with very costly patients.

Such reinsurance systems are used in other insurance marketplaces such as the Medicare Part D prescription drug program and are seen as critical to stabilizing markets.

Thirdly, current and former marketplace officials say, the federal government should aggressively market and advertise to get younger, healthier people to buy health plans on the marketplaces.

This strategy has helped Covered California, that state’s marketplace, which has not been beset by some of the problems in other markets.

Finally, many experts say, federal officials likely will have to come up with additional incentives to convince health insurers to offer plans in remote, rural areas.

Some Republicans have suggested that consumers in these areas could be allowed to buy health plans that don’t meet standards set out in the current law.

Would these steps cost more money?

Yes.

But both the House and Senate GOP bills to roll back Obamacare included billions of dollars to stabilize markets over the next several years.

So could Congress put that aid in a smaller healthcare bill?

That’s still unclear.

Many congressional Republicans are reluctant to spend any more money on healthcare aid, especially for a law that most have sworn to repeal.

But polls indicate that Americans now hold congressional Republicans and the Trump administration responsible for the fate of the nation’s healthcare system, including the insurance marketplaces.

That suggests that there could be a political price to pay for the GOP if the markets are not stabilized.

At the same time, Senate Democrats have signaled a willingness to work with Republicans on marketplaces fixes if GOP lawmakers agree to drop their repeal campaign.

But major hurdles remain, including demands from many GOP lawmakers that at least some of Obamacare’s provisions be repealed, such as the highly unpopular mandate requiring Americans to have health insurance.

Rather than stabilizing markets, however, eliminating the insurance requirement could lead to even more turmoil, experts say.

[email protected]

@noamlevey

MORE OBAMACARE 101

What’s going to happen to 70 million Americans who rely on Medicaid?

A side-by-side comparison of Obamacare and the GOP’s replacement plans

Would sick Americans still be able to get insurance under the House Republican bill?



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London Marathon 2025: World record holder Ruth Chepngetich and defending champion Peres Jepchirchir pull out of race

World record holder Ruth Chepngetich has pulled out of the London Marathon along with defending champion Peres Jepchirchir.

Kenya’s Chepngetich, 30, became the first woman to clock a sub-two hour 10 minute time at the 2024 Chicago marathon, but said she was not ready for next weekend’s race.

Chepngetich said she was “very sad to miss the race” but she hoped “to be back” for the London Marathon in 2026.

“I’m not in the right place mentally or physically to race my best in London and I am therefore withdrawing,” she added.

Fellow Kenyan Jepchirchir, who won last year’s London Marathon in a record time of two hours 16 minutes 16 seconds, will miss the race with an ankle injury.

“Winning last year’s London Marathon was one of the highlights of my career and I was very much looking forward to returning this year to defend my title,” 31-year-old Jepchirchir said.

“Unfortunately, my injury has made this impossible but I am focused on getting healthy again and hope to return to London again in the future when I’m fully fit.”

In the absence of Chepngetich and Jepchirchir organisers have announced that their compatriot Vivian Cheruiyot will take a spot in the elite field.

Cheruiyot, 41, has run the London Marathon three times and won it in 2018.

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‘Ripple effect:’ In US, anti-immigrant policy strains child and eldercare | Business and Economy

When she saw the Trump sign in the yard, Camila knew she would have to watch out.

It was February 2025, and Camila* had shown up at a home in North Texas to meet the new family for whom she would nanny.

The 22-year-old college student doesn’t have legal documentation, but that’s never been an issue. In her experience, many families like to pay their childcare workers in cash. Still, this new family posed an interesting challenge. The interior of the home was filled with more Trump paraphernalia. “Trump everything, everywhere,” Camila says. It turned out the father works for Fox News.

“It was very ironic,” Camila told Al Jazeera. “If I were to say, ‘Hey, this is my legal situation,’ it could have gone one of two ways. Maybe they wouldn’t care, or maybe they would’ve told me to get out. And who knows what would’ve happened then.”

She ultimately decided not to tell them and just focused on her job of caring for their children. The uncomfortable encounter and the “chill” it gave Camila evoke a larger problem.

In the US, immigrant labour, including undocumented workers, has long propped up the childcare, home care and elder care industries. Yet amid the anti-immigrant policy and posture in US President Donald Trump’s second administration, including the threat of “mass deportations”, those ailing industries face new threats that experts say could have a “ripple effect” on millions of Americans.

“People are not showing up for work because they’re concerned about raids happening in their workplace,” said Lori Smetanka, executive director of the National Consumer Voice for Quality Long-Term Care.

And children, she added, “have been really worried about their parents and whether or not they’re going to be coming home at the end of the day”.

‘Attacked from every angle’

Economists have documented the devastating effect mass deportations would have on the economy, and organisations like the American Immigration Council map the trillions of dollars immigrants contribute to the US in taxes and spending power.

But some industries are uniquely vulnerable to shifts in immigration policy.

For instance, about one in five US childcare workers are immigrants, and some studies indicate that nearly 30 percent of direct care workers are immigrants. As multiple experts emphasised to Al Jazeera, these roles have a far-reaching effect on communities across the country.

“There are going to be ripple effects based on some of the policies that we’re seeing being put into place,” Smetanka said. The policies, she continued, “are impacting the ability of immigrants to not only come to this country, but get their citizenship, to feel safe in staying and working in this country, and to provide the services that are necessary in those communities”.

Early in his second term, Trump rescinded the “sensitive areas” guidance that has prevented immigration raids from occurring in schools, churches and places of employment. The government is also denying or delaying H-1B visa permits, which continues a decade-long trend of diminishing access to a programme that helps immigrants find work.

“We want people, by the way, to come into our country, but we want them to come in through a legal process,” President Trump said in his April 2 tariffs announcement. “We need people to run these plants and to help the auto workers and the teamsters and the non-union people and everybody else, but we need people.”

Despite this rhetoric, the president’s administration has limited legal pathways by freezing the US refugee resettlement programme. Then, in an interview on April 15, Trump proposed a new pathway by which “great people” could be eligible to re-enter the US and attain permanent citizenship status if they first leave the country, then receive sponsorship from an employer.

The president has also proposed the creation of a “gold card” visa that would cost applicants $5m.

Colleen Putzel-Kavanaugh, a policy analyst for the Migration Policy Institute, said the policy’s core objective “seems to be to bring wealth to the US”.

To evaluate if the legal pathways for immigrants are getting stronger, one would have to look at not just the number of visas granted but also “who those visas are reaching, if strengthening legal pathways reduces irregular migration, or the timeframe in which visas are processed”.

In other words, admitting more immigrants through a “legal process” Trump referred to in his April 2 speech would involve making visas easier to attain, something he failed to do in his first term, where so-called legal migration diminished.

Further still, the revocation of temporary protected status has school administrators, nursing home leaders and daycare operators wondering who they can hire and how they can protect them.

Wendy Cervantes says these changes have been made so that immigrant families are “attacked from every angle”.

Cervantes is the director of immigration and immigrant families at The Center for Law and Social Policy, and her team recently held a webinar to provide technical assistance for childcare providers across the US. She said more than 1,000 people showed up, driven by the “stress and fear” created by the new administration’s approach to immigration.

“People aren’t just worried about parents any more; they’re worried about staff, too,” she told Al Jazeera.

As a result, administrators in fields like childcare are learning about the intricacies of warrants: Which kind of documentation is needed, and what information an immigration officer needs to provide to be legally allowed on the premises.

“This knowledge at least gives them some measure of agency,” she said. “But that’s a really scary place to be in.”

‘I want to stay’

One of Cervantes’s goals is similar to that of the economists tracking the effect of deportations: She wants people to realise how much their lives are shaped by immigrants.

This is especially true for anyone whose family has some connection to the childcare, home care or elder care sectors. Roughly 20 percent of all US seniors live in rural communities, and in the last five years, 40 new counties have become nursing home deserts: Areas where nursing care is needed but unavailable, forcing residents to drive long distances for much-needed care.

According to Smetanka, when a nursing home closes, it leaves a gaping hole in the community. Dozens lose jobs, and patients – who likely had few options to begin with – are left scrambling to find a new home. It’s difficult to quantify the economic and psychological effect this has on a family or a community at large, just as, for Cervantes, it’s difficult to quantify the damage done to a child’s psyche when they’re afraid of being deported.

Despite all of this, Smetanka says it’s important to remember how much immigrants want to remain in the US and keep working in places like nursing homes. The average hourly pay for direct care workers increased by less than $3 between 2014 and 2023, but healthcare fields remain widely popular among immigrants.

Sarah Valdez, an immigration lawyer based in Austin, Texas, puts it bluntly, “You [won’t be able to] replace the 10 people you deported with 10 American-born workers.”

Camila, the nanny from North Texas, is one of those people who is willing to work long hours, without complaint, and for little pay. Nannying may not be her long-term career, but she chose the field because she needed to pay for her school, and she loves working with kids.

In many cases, she feels as if she spends as much time with her clients as their parents do. Her typical day involves getting up at 6am and working until about 10pm, while finding time for classwork and studies in any free time she can manage. She’s helped multiple children cope with divorce and sudden deaths in the family, among many other life situations.

“With everything happening in the world, I don’t know what’s next for me,” she said. “I’m just taking it day by day, week by week. But I know I want to stay. I’m just glad to be here right now.”

*Camila’s name has been changed to protect her identity.

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I grew up with no money & now make £1.1m a month with OnlyFans, I’ve retired my parents, got them cars & pay their bills

A MODEL who grew up with no money revealed how she is now able to support her family.

The OnlyFans creator said that her impressive salary has helped her parents to retire early.

Woman in a red bikini sitting on a paddleboard on a beach.

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OnlyFans model Camilla Araujo explained how she was able to help her parents retire earlyCredit: Jam Press/@realcamillaara

Camilla Araujo recalled how she spent her childhood wearing second-hand clothes while her mum and dad worried about affording rent.

For years, she watched her immigrant parents – who arrived in the US from Brazil with nothing but $300 to their name – graft to get by.

Camilla was determined to do her part and had originally intended to become a doctor before taking a less traditional path.

The North Carolina influencer who has nine million followers on her TikTok account @camilla, turned to social media instead of a traditional nine to five.

This eventually led her to OnlyFans and now the model pulls in up to $1.5 million per month.

She has even retired her parents – Thyago, 50, and Humberta, 49 – as well as treating them and her brother, Christian, to plenty of luxuries.

“Mom, who used to wake up at 6 am to go to work, woke up at 10 am and called me crying,” Camilla remembered.

“She couldn’t remember the last time she had felt so free, I almost burst out in tears as well when she told me this.”

Despite her less luxurious childhood, the influencer recalled how her parents protected her and her brother from the hardship.

“I wasn’t deprived of a good childhood,” she said.

“My parents did such an amazing job of trying to not show that we were financially struggling – but deep down, I knew that they had it tough.

“When I was just a toddler, mum, dad, and I lived with my aunt and uncle in one apartment.

“My mum used to work at Subway and she had a second job – all while being pregnant with my brother.”

The family moved seven times in a short period because they couldn’t afford rent.

“Now, I pay their bills so they don’t have to work,” Camilla explained.

“They are ‘retired’ but my parents are not ones to sit idly by – so they still choose to work at their cleaning company.

“But my mom in particular just looks lighter now; she went from cleaning six to seven houses a day with her team and my dad, to going on vacation and being able to sleep in.

“Being able to give my parents this opportunity is my greatest achievement.”

Camilla, who is part of the now-famous Bop House – also sometimes dubbed the ‘OnlyFans House’ – loves surprising her family with gifts they could previously only dream of.

“I got my dad a brand new 2024 Corvette for his birthday – it’s his dream car,” she said.

“Mom received a pink BMW convertible and my brother Christian gets pretty much anything he wants.

“I take them on crazy vacations, my family is definitely spoiled, but I love giving them gifts.”

She explained that her family, and her parents in particular, “deserve luxury”.

“I get to watch my family live a whole different life and it feels amazing,” she said.

While Camilla dreamed of being a cardiologist she embarked on a new journey after taking part in a viral Squid Game video hosted by YouTuber Mr. Beast.

After this appearance, she gained 145,000 followers in just 24 hours.

Camilla soon decided to drop out of college and spent the next two years working towards her goal of becoming a social media star.

She juggled a bottle service job at night, worked in real estate by day, and filmed content whenever she could.

But with money tight and her parents pushing her to return to school, Camilla eventually chose to join OnlyFans at the start of 2023 and the cash soon came rolling in.

“When I made my first hundred thousand dollars, I just remember crying,” said the content creator, who also has 4.3 million followers on Instagram @realcamillaara.

“I couldn’t believe I did it, you don’t really stop to think about [the money] because you’re so focused on making more, it’s like a drug.

“You fall into this endless cycle of pushing and pushing and you can’t stop, because if you stop, you’re left behind.

“I never stop to think about that and how crazy my monthly millionaire salary is, I can’t believe I’ve done this.”

She explained that she is most grateful for the freedom her bank balance has given her family.

“I have been able to give back to the people who supported me through tough times,” she said.

“I have retired my parents and provide for relatives in Brazil and any friends in need.

“It’s stressful at times but there’s no better motivation knowing that you can provide peace for others.”

A man and woman stand beside a red sports car.

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Camilla bought both her parents their dream cars and helps them pay their bills in retirementCredit: Jam Press/@realcamillaara



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At least one killed by Israeli strike near Sidon in southern Lebanon | Israel attacks Lebanon News

Israel has continued to conduct near-daily strikes in Lebanon despite a ceasefire with Hezbollah last November.

Lebanon’s Health Ministry has said an Israeli strike on a vehicle near the southern coastal city of Sidon killed one person, with Israel announcing that an attack in the same area had targeted a Hezbollah operative.

Despite a ceasefire last November that sought to halt more than a year of conflict between Israel and Iran-backed Hezbollah, Israel has continued to conduct near-daily strikes in Lebanon.

“The attack carried out by the Israeli enemy against a car on the Sidon-Ghaziyeh road resulted in one dead,” a Health Ministry statement said on the fourth consecutive day of Israeli attacks in the south on Friday.

An AFP journalist said the Israeli attack hit a four-wheel-drive vehicle, sending a pillar of black smoke into the sky.

At the scene of the strike, members of the security forces stood guard as a crowd gathered to look at the charred remains of the vehicle after firemen put out the blaze.

Israel’s military later said it had killed a member of Hezbollah in the area.

“Earlier today [Friday], the IAF [Israeli air force] conducted a precise strike in the area of Sidon and eliminated the Hezbollah terrorist Muhammad Jaafar Mannah Asaad Abdallah,” a military statement said.

It added that Abdallah was “responsible, among other things, for the deployment of Hezbollah’s communication systems throughout Lebanon”.

The Israeli military also said it was behind other attacks this week that it claimed had killed Hezbollah members.

Civilians killed since ceasefire

Hezbollah, significantly weakened by the war, says it is adhering to the November ceasefire, even as Israeli attacks persist.

The United Nations says at least 71 civilians have been killed by Israeli forces in Lebanon since the ceasefire.

Thameen al-Kheetan, spokesperson for the UN Office for the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), said on Tuesday that the death toll included 14 women and nine children. He called for investigations into “each and every military action where civilians are killed”.

Under the November ceasefire, Israel was to withdraw all of its forces from south Lebanon and Hezbollah was to pull its fighters back north of Lebanon’s Litani River and dismantle any remaining military infrastructure in the south. But despite the deal, Israeli troops have remained at five south Lebanon positions that they deem “strategic”.

Lebanon’s army has been deploying in the south near the border in regions where Israeli forces pulled back. Lebanese President Joseph Aoun told Al Jazeera on Monday that the army was “dismantling tunnels and warehouses and confiscating weapons bases” south of the Litani “without any problem from Hezbollah”.

On Thursday, a senior Hezbollah official told the Reuters news agency the group is ready to hold talks with the Lebanese president about its weapons if Israel withdraws from southern Lebanon and stops its strikes.

Separately, a Hezbollah official said on Friday that the group categorically refused to discuss handing over its weapons to Lebanon’s army unless Israel withdrew completely from the south and stopped its “aggression”.

“Wouldn’t it be logical for Israel to first withdraw, then release the prisoners, then cease its aggression … and then we discuss a defensive strategy?” Wafiq Safa said in an interview with Hezbollah’s Al Nur radio station.

“The defensive strategy is about thinking about how to protect Lebanon, not preparing for the party to hand over its weapons.”

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Chelsea legend and FA Cup winner swaps football for completely different sport as he’s named tournament director

CHELSEA legend Ruud Gullit has swapped football for fairways – by taking charge of a top golf tournament.

The Euro 1988 winner had three seasons as Chelsea player-boss, lifting the 1997 FA Cup.

Ruud Gullit playing golf.

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Ruud Gullit has taken up a shock new job in golfCredit: Getty
Ruud Gullit holding the FA Cup trophy after Chelsea's victory.

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Gullit won the FA Cup as Chelsea player-manager in 1997Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd

He went on to manage Newcastle for a year, and has also played for AC Milan, Sampdoria, Feyenoord and PSV Eindhoven.

Gullit, 62, has recently taken part in a number of golf events.

And he has now been appointed tournament director of the KLM Open, which will take place at The International near Amsterdam from June 5-8.

The versatile ex-footballer hails from the Dutch capital city. 

The KLM Open is part of the DP World Tour, with over £2million in prize money.

Gullit declared: “Golf is a sport that brings me connections and pleasure. 

“The KLM Open is a great event, which brings together top-level sport and experiences.

“For me to be able to take on this role in the year my home city turns 750, and at my home course, makes it extra special.

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“I am crazy about the game and find it a huge honour to have been given the job.”

Leading players including Guido Migliozzi, the 2024 winner, plus Jimmy Walker and Pablo Larrazabal, will compete at The International.

Enzo Maresca is concerned with Chelsea’s missed ‘easy chances’ after limping into the Conference League semi-final

Fellow tournament director Daan Slooter added: “The KLM Open has a very good name, and is a leading event for both players and fans on the DP World Tour calendar.”

When Gullit tees-off in his spare time, he plays off a seven handicap.

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Man Utd career summed up by ‘Maddest game’ – Maguire | Football News

Manchester United scored two goals in two minutes in the closing stages of their Europa League quarterfinal with Lyon.

Harry Maguire said the “maddest game” of his life summed up a topsy-turvy Manchester United career after scoring the winner in a 5-4 victory over Lyon to send his team into the Europa League semifinals.

After a 2-2 draw in the first leg, United appeared to be cruising into the last four when they led 2-0 at half-time on Thursday.

Lyon fought back to level at 2-2 before having Corentin Tolisso sent off just before extra time.

Yet the 10 men found themselves 4-2 up with just six minutes of extra time remaining.

Bruno Fernandes’ penalty and Kobbie Mainoo’s cool finish levelled at a raucous Old Trafford before Maguire headed in after being sent forward as a makeshift striker.

Maguire, who joined United for a world record fee for a defender in 2019, has often been a lightning rod for criticism during his time with the Red Devils.

He went from being club captain to dropping out of the team under Erik ten Hag and has struggled to hit top form despite being reintegrated since Ruben Amorim took charge.

“I’ve been here six years now and I’ve had some great times. Some bad times as well,” said Maguire.

“I think that game pretty much summed up my time at this club, to be honest.

“It was an incredible feeling to score that winner in such an important game, in a game that was full of emotion and the strangest, maddest game I’ve ever played in or witnessed.”

Soccer Football - Europa League - Quarter Final - Second Leg - Manchester United v Olympique Lyonnais - Old Trafford, Manchester, Britain - April 17, 2025 Manchester United's Harry Maguire celebrates scoring their fifth goal with teammates REUTERS/Phil Noble
Manchester United’s Harry Maguire celebrates scoring his side’s fifth goal with teammates [Phil Noble/Reuters]

United face Athletic Bilbao in the semifinals with the chance to save their season.

Amorim’s men sit 14th in the Premier League and will almost certainly miss out on European football entirely unless they win the Europa League.

“We’re only in the semifinal, so we don’t want to get carried away in terms of winning the competition,” added Maguire.

“This season it’s been so difficult for everyone involved, all the fans, all the players, the staff.

“It’s just been nowhere near good enough and when you get moments like that, and memories you create like that, I think it’s so important for the fans to go home with a smile on their faces.”

Athletic have lost fewer games in LaLiga this season than Barcelona or Real Madrid.

The Basques also have the extra motivation of hosting the final at their own San Mames stadium on May 21.

And Maguire knows United must drastically improve on their performances against Lyon if they are to make the final.

“We’ve got to do far better than that if we want to win this competition,” said the England international.

“We can’t be doing that and be leaving it to turn it around in that situation.

“But it does show great spirit, fight, togetherness, and that’s the one thing this group of lads is doing, they’re giving everything.”

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Trump releases new files on RFK assassination 

The Trump administration announced Friday that it has begun to release thousands of pages of classified documents on Democratic Sen. Robert F. Kennedy’s 1968 assassination — a move that is almost certain to fuel renewed speculation about a pivotal moment in Los Angeles and U.S. history.

President Trump’s release of the files is backed by the senator’s son, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has long believed there may have been a second gunman, and insisted his father’s convicted assassin, Sirhan Sirhan, might not have fired the fatal shots.

“Lifting the veil on the RFK papers is a necessary step toward restoring trust in American government,” Kennedy said in a statement. “I commend President Trump for his courage and his commitment to transparency. I’m grateful also to Tulsi Gabbard for her dogged efforts to root out and declassify these documents.”

Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated shortly after midnight on June 5, 1968, at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles after celebrating his victory in the California presidential primary.

Soon after the killing, which was captured by television cameras and broadcast around the world, Sirhan, a 24-year-old Palestinian immigrant, was arrested.

Sirhan was captured at the scene with a .22-caliber handgun in his hand. He had also written a manifesto calling for Kennedy’s death.

“Kennedy must be assassinated June 5, 1968,” he wrote.

The date marked the first anniversary of the Six-Day War between Israel and its neighbors Egypt, Syria and Jordan. Israel won decisively, capturing a swath of territory including the Gaza Strip, West Bank and the Old City of Jerusalem.

But Sirhan’s gun held only eight bullets and new evidence has emerged over the years that suggests as many as 13 shots may have been fired that night.

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard said in a statement that about 10,000 pages of previously classified records on the assassinations of Robert F. Kennedy and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. “sat collecting dust in facilities across the federal government for decades.” Now they have been scanned and uploaded by the National Archives, she said, and they will be available to view online, with limited redactions for privacy reasons, at archives.gov/rfk.

“Nearly 60 years after the tragic assassination of Senator Robert F. Kennedy, the American people will, for the first time, have the opportunity to review the federal government’s investigation thanks to the leadership of President Trump,” Gabbard said in a statement. “My team is honored that the President entrusted us to lead the declassification efforts and to shine a long-overdue light on the truth. I extend my deepest thanks for Bobby Kennedy and his families’ support.”

Trump pledged during the 2024 election campaign that he would fully release previously classified records on the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy , and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Days after taking office, Trump signed an executive order ordering the declassification of the records and last month his administration released a cache of unredacted classified documents related to the 1963 assassination of Kennedy.

The 10,000 pages of files released Friday on Robert K. Kennedy is just the first batch of files related to his assassination.

The Office of the Director of National Intelligence said in a news release Friday that agents discovered an additional trove of 50,000 pages during searches of CIA and FBI warehouses for documents that had not been turned over to the National Archives. According to the office, agencies are working to make those documents available to the public and will continue searching government facilities for more records.

This story will be updated.

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Prep talk: Mt. SAC Relays are set for Saturday

One week after great performances at the Arcadia Invitational, the Mt. SAC Relays at Mt. San Antonio College take center state on Saturday.

Among the entrants is the state’s fastest sprinter, defending state champion Brandon Arrington from Mt. Miguel High. He’s run 10.24 seconds in the 100 meters and 20.35 in the 200 this year and won both at Arcadia. Jack Stadlman of Temecula Valley, the top 400 runner, is entered in the 200.

High jumper JJ Harel of Sherman Oaks Notre Dame, who stopped workouts for two weeks and missed Arcadia, could be back on Saturday. He resumed training this week.

Servite’s outstanding relay teams are expected to compete after winning twice last week. Leo Francis of Santa Margarita is in the long jump after winning at Arcadia last week. …

The Collision All-Star basketball games will take place Saturday at St. Bernard. The girls’ game is at 3:30 p.m. and the boys’ game at 5:30 p.m.

This is a daily look at the positive happenings in high school sports. To submit any news, please email [email protected].

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Analysis: Syria, Lebanon embark on long healing process to repair relations

Syrian interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa (R) greets Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam in Damascus, Syria, on Monday. Salam was visiting Damascus as the first senior official since the new Lebanese government was formed in February. Photo by Mohammed Al-Rifai/EPA-EFE

BEIRUT, Lebanon, April 18 (UPI) — Leadership changes in Syria and Lebanon, driven by the ouster of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and the weakening of Hezbollah‘s influence, have created a rare opportunity for the two neighboring countries to repair their relations and move beyond decades of political domination and military interference.

The stunning collapse last December of the Syrian Baath regime at the hands of Islamist rebels, led by Ahmad Sharaa — now Syria’s new ruler — has created a new reality in the country and across the region.

Just a month later, Lebanon began to show signs of its own transformation with the election of Joseph Aoun as president and the appointment of Nawaf Salam to lead the new government.

The once-powerful Hezbollah, long accustomed to dictating national policy and hand-picking key officials, was forced to compromise and endorse these new leadership choices.

Leaders in both countries were quick to offer assurances to one another, expressing a willingness to move beyond their troubled, tense and often hostile past, and to open a new chapter in relations based on mutual respect.

The road to recovery will be far from easy, burdened by long-standing and complex disputes, deeply rooted historical grievances and a rapidly shifting Middle East landscape ravaged by years of destructive conflicts.

However, the visit by Lebanese Prime Minister Nawaf Salam to Damascus earlier this week, where he met with Syria’s ruler, Ahmad Sharaa, laid the groundwork for dialogue aimed at resolving key points of contention between the two countries.

The visit marks “a watershed moment” in Lebanon-Syria relations, according to Imad Salamey, a senior Middle East policy adviser and associate professor of political science and international affairs at the Lebanese American University in Beirut.

Salamey explained that for the first time, both states are engaging on equal sovereign footing, signaling a departure from decades of Syrian tutelage over Lebanon.

“This diplomatic shift recognizes Lebanon’s independence and Syria’s need to recalibrate its regional posture post-Assad’s ouster,” he told UPI.

The Sharaa-Salam talks, Salamey added, suggest that both parties are now willing to talk as peers, with mutual interests in securing sovereignty and territorial integrity.

The emerging approach emphasizes non-interference in each other’s affairs, with Syria committing to refrain from aggression against Lebanon and Lebanon ensuring it will not serve as a base for launching attacks against Syria.

“This process would pave the way for consolidating stability between the two countries,” a well-informed Lebanese source told UPI.

Lebanon has suffered from decades-long Syrian military presence, political domination and manipulation that greatly impacted its governance, political life, economy and stability.

The Syrian Army first entered Lebanon in 1976 to stop the then-raging civil war and remained until it was forced to pull out after the assassination of Lebanon’s former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri in a powerful explosion that targeted his convoy in Beirut on Feb. 14, 2005.

Syria, which imposed itself as the main power broker after having been granted guardianship over Lebanon when the civil war ended in 1990, was accused of being behind Hariri’s assassination and numerous other such killings during the civil war and in peace.

But its influence on Lebanon began to wane rapidly starting in 2011, when anti-Assad peaceful protests broke out and soon turned into a bloody civil war.

Syrians, on their part, hold grudges against Hezbollah — and its patron, Iran — for siding with the Assad regime and joining the bloody battles against the opposition fighters in 2012. The Hezbollah-Iran involvement in Syria ended with Assad’s fall.

Last month, three soldiers in Syria’s new army and seven Lebanese were killed when clashes erupted near the border town of Al-Qasr in northeastern Lebanon — one of several key smuggling and supply routes long used by Hezbollah. The fighting ended after two days, with the Lebanese Army deploying in the area.

“No attacks or smuggling will be allowed from the Lebanese side,” the source said. “The army now has control of the border to prevent any drug and weapons smuggling, as well as any cross-border interaction or interference.”

Smuggling has been a main problem since the establishment of the border between Syria and Lebanon, which extends for approximately 230 miles from the east to the north, with no clear demarcation in many areas.

Land and sea border demarcation, security coordination, preventing smuggling, closing illegal crossings, and adopting security and military measures to prevent the recurrence of the cross-border clashes were at the top of the Salam-Sharaa discussions, according to the Lebanese source.

He said the discussions also covered gas and oil exploration, boosting trade and potential joint projects that would bring mutual benefits in the fields of economy, agriculture and investment.

Both countries, he added, agreed to form a joint committee that included the ministers of justice and defense to address lingering issues, such as uncovering the fate of Lebanese detainees and missing persons in Syria, as well as Syrians held in Lebanese prisons.

“The committee will also work to shed light on the dozens of political assassinations that took place in Lebanon during the Assad regime’s rule,” the source said.

While historical grievances are “deeply embedded,” Lebanon and Syria have a shared interest in securing and demarcating the borders, especially in compliance with U.N. Security Council Resolution 1680, Salamey said.

“This provides an achievable starting point,” he said. Controlling illegal crossings, which has cost Lebanon some $5 billion annually due to smuggling, per the World Bank’s estimates, and halting currency outflows from Syria “are pragmatic, mutually beneficial goals.”

Salamey said border control could encourage greater economic cooperation and mutual stabilization, but emphasized the need for international guarantees, technical support and “political insulation from spoilers — particularly Hezbollah and other non-state actors who benefit from open borders.”

Encouraged by the recent political shifts, Saudi Arabia stepped in to bring Syria and Lebanon closer, playing a key mediating role in helping the two countries address their long-standing disputes.

The Lebanese source revealed that land and maritime border demarcation talks will proceed with the support of Saudi Arabia, which believes that there is “a serious opportunity” for both countries to emerge from their successive crises and embark on a new process aimed at consolidating stability.

Besides the disputed territories, securing the return of 1.5 million Syrian refugees from Lebanon represents a major challenge. While crisis-ridden Lebanon can no longer host them, war-ravaged Syria is not yet ready to take them back because of its limited resources.

Salamey also noted that their divergent political systems — Lebanon’s consociational democracy versus Syria’s Islamist autocratic trajectory — also pose “enduring risks.”

He said that without broader regional reconciliation and internal reforms, progress may be limited to “transactional arrangements” rather than leading to “transformational peace.”

“The road to healing is long and fraught, but the current moment offers a window for engagement that didn’t exist in recent decades,” he said.

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