Joe Lieberman, Doug Jones face-off over No Labels’ chances with a ‘unity’ ticket in 2024

Joe Lieberman, Doug Jones face-off over No Labels’ chances with a ‘unity’ ticket in 2024
Joe Lieberman, Doug Jones face-off over No Labels’ chances with a ‘unity’ ticket in 2024
by Marc Guitard/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — Former Sens. Joe Lieberman and Doug Jones appeared Sunday on ABC’s “This Week” to debate the viability of a bipartisan third-party presidential ticket in 2024 — and whether that effort could serve as a spoiler in the race for the White House.

Lieberman, a Democrat-turned-independent who represented Connecticut, is the founding chair of No Labels, which is preparing a possible “unity” ticket that would include both parties and offer, he said, another option for those voters dissatisfied with a potential rematch between President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump.

“We’re in this to give the majority of the American people who feel that the major two parties are failing them a third choice, both in policies, such as we’re going to release in New Hampshire [on Monday], but also possibly in a third candidate,” Lieberman told “This Week” anchor George Stephanopoulos. “And we’ve been very explicit … If the polling next year shows, after the two parties have chosen their nominees, that, in fact, we will help elect one or another candidate, we’re not going to get involved.”

Jones, an Alabama Democrat and staunch Biden ally who has joined a group to counter No Labels, rejected that thinking.

“Those polls right now mean nothing,” he shot back at Lieberman, referencing reticence for both Biden and Trump. “This past weekend, you saw that the Biden-Harris team raised $70 million, 30% of those were new donors,” Jones added. “That is not a candidate that is being rejected by the American people.”

Of No Labels, he said, “There is no way on God’s green earth that they can get to 270 electoral votes, which means they will be a spoiler, one way or another.”

Not so, Lieberman insisted. The problem wasn’t No Labels, he said. “The problem is the American people are not buying what the two parties are selling anymore. And I think the parties would be wiser to think about that.”

Lieberman has experience facing third party bids himself: As the Democratic vice-presidential nominee in 2000, he and presidential hopeful Al Gore lost Florida by a few hundred votes in a state where the Green Party’s Ralph Nader got nearly 100,000 ballots, with Lieberman at the time calling any vote for Nader actually a vote for opponent George W. Bush.

The dueling views on No Labels come amid Democratic handwringing over whether the group’s plan — which it says would comprise of one Democrat and one Republican on the same ticket next year — is more likely to peel off disaffected Republican voters who would vote for Biden in a pure head-to-head with Trump next year.

Lieberman said Sunday that No Labels would hold off on its campaign if Democrats and Republicans both embrace centrism.

“We have said all along that we’re not yearning to run a third-party ticket. If one or both parties move more toward the center in their policies … and maybe think about the two candidates being so unpopular among the American people, we won’t run,” he said.

Jones said there was already a more moderate option available in Biden, noting the president’s cooperation with Republican lawmakers in Congress.

“Look at what he has done, bringing the infrastructure package together, pulling that together for the first time in decades to do infrastructure, for the PACT Act [for veterans], the CHIPS Act [for manufacturing],” Jones said.

“I don’t know why in the world somebody thinks that Joe Biden’s administration is so far left, unlike a Donald Trump or someone else that is an extreme right,” he argued.

In interviews and public statements, the group has repeatedly insisted that while polling proves there’s an appetite for a third option in 2024, No Labels would take an “off ramp” if they are wrong.

“That sort of runs against human nature, doesn’t it? Once a campaign starts, it’s hard to stop,” Stephanopoulos pressed Lieberman on “This Week.”

“The American people don’t like what the two parties are doing,” Lieberman responded. “And they particularly don’t like the two candidates that they seem set on nominating.”

Jones, however, took issue with No Labels largely operating outside of public scrutiny.

“They’re not disclosing their donors. They’re not playing by the same rules,” he said. (A No Labels spokesperson previously told ABC News: “We never share the names of our supporters because we live in an era where far-right and far-left agitators and partisan operatives try to destroy and intimidate organizations they don’t like by attacking their individual supporters.”)

Jones on Sunday criticized how No Labels might also put together its ticket — not through a series of public primaries but through back-room discussions that undercut the very pitch Lieberman was making.

“That’s not very democratic. That’s not a choice,” he said. “It’s a false choice and really an illusion as to what they’re doing.”

Even some Republicans have cast doubts on No Labels’ viability, pointing to past failures by third-party candidates to make a legitimate run at the White House. The group has also faced roadblocks in its effort to get access to the ballot in all 50 states.

“I think it’s a fool’s errand. … I’m not in this for show time. I’m not in this, you know, for making a point. I’m in this to get elected president of the United States,” former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who is running for the White House as a Republican, said on “This Week.”

“And there are only two people who will get elected president of the United States in November of ’24 — the Republican nominee for president, and the Democratic nominee for president.”

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Heat waves, poor air quality and severe storms: US experiencing acute weather conditions from coast to coast

Heat waves, poor air quality and severe storms: US experiencing acute weather conditions from coast to coast
Heat waves, poor air quality and severe storms: US experiencing acute weather conditions from coast to coast
ABC News

(NEW YORK) — Potentially deadly weather conditions are affecting millions of Americans from coast to coast.

Extreme heat, poor air quality and severe storms bringing flash flooding threats will be plaguing regions all over the country on Sunday.
More than 80 million Americans across 14 states from Washington to Florida are currently under heat alerts.

The temperature at Furnace Creek in Death Valley, California, may reach 130 degrees for the first time since 2021, forecasts show. On Saturday, temperatures were measured at 126 degrees.

It has been the hottest first two weeks of July on record for Phoenix and Tucson, Arizona, as well as on the other side of the country in Tampa, Fort Myers and Key West, Florida.

In the Northeast, more than 56 million people are under a flood watch, as heavy rain moves through on Sunday morning, causing flash flooding in parts of Virginia, Pennsylvania and New Jersey.

El Paso, Texas, has seen 100-degree days for 30 days in a row, crushing the former record. The forecast calls for triple-digit temperatures for at least the next week.

Elsewhere in the country, daily record-high temperatures are expected to be broken in at least 38 cities from Oregon to Florida, including cities in California like Palm Springs, Fresno and Sacramento; cities in Arizona from Flagstaff, Phoenix and Tucson; Las Vegas and Reno in Nevada; El Paso, Houston, Austin and Corpus Christi in Texas; and Salt Lake City.

On Saturday, Phoenix broke its daily record when it reached 118 degrees, continuing the stretch of temperatures past 110 degrees to 16 days.

The South is also still dealing with hot temperatures, with heat indexes along the Gulf Coast forecast to reach past 110 degrees in the upcoming week. Miami has been upgraded to an excessive heat warning through Monday as the heat index is expected to reach up to 112 degrees.

The smoke that has been over the upper Midwest the last couple of days is about to make a push eastward as 900 wildfires continue to burn in Canada, the vast majority in British Columbia. More than half of the fires in Canada are characterized as “out of control.”

By 6 p.m. ET the smoke will have reached Cleveland and eastern Kentucky, forecasts show.

On Monday at 7 a.m. ET, the smoke will still be heavy from Montana to Nebraska, while the eastern plume of heavy smoke reaches along the East from western New York to the Smoky Mountains and Asheville, North Carolina.

By Monday afternoon, the smoke is expected to become very heavy over parts of New York and Pennsylvania. For now, New York City seems to remain only under light conditions through Monday.

Areas from Montana to Chicago woke up to reduced air quality and hazy skies on Sunday morning, with Chicago among cities with the worst air quality in the world this morning, according to IQAir.

The influx of precipitation is a continuation of flash flooding conditions that plagued the region on Saturday. More than 3 inches of rain fell in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, on Saturday, which caused flash flooding and killed at least three people.

The ground is already extremely saturated in much of the Northeast from more than a week of rainfall, which is increasing flood risks. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Weather Prediction Center has issued a moderate risk advisory for excessive rainfall from Maine to Delaware, including large cities like New York City and Philadelphia, indicating that numerous flash floods are likely, with significant events possible.

A tornado watch has also been issued for 14 million people in the Northeast until 3 p.m. Included in the alert are much of Long Island, New York, all of Connecticut, much of Massachusetts, New Hampshire and parts of Rhode Island and southern Maine. Flash flooding and severe thunderstorm warnings had already been issued in those areas.

The heaviest and strongest storms will move through the Northeast on Sunday morning and through the afternoon. Storms are expected to quiet down by the evening, except for some lingering activity from upstate New York to Vermont, forecasts show.

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Ukraine-Russia war hasn’t become stalemate but counteroffensive is ‘hard going’: Sullivan

Ukraine-Russia war hasn’t become stalemate but counteroffensive is ‘hard going’: Sullivan
Ukraine-Russia war hasn’t become stalemate but counteroffensive is ‘hard going’: Sullivan
Drew Angerer/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said Sunday that the war in Ukraine hasn’t devolved into a stalemate but he acknowledged it remains “hard going” against Russia.

“We said before this counteroffensive started that it’d be hard going, and it’s been hard going,” Sullivan said in an interview with ABC “This Week” anchor George Stephanopoulos, referring to a new push by the Ukrainians that began this summer. “That’s the nature of war, but the Ukrainians are continuing to move forward.”

“We’re continuing to supply them with the necessary weaponry and capabilities to be able to do that and they will keep attempting to take back the territory that Russia has illegally occupied,” Sullivan continued, pointing to what he called “progress both in the east and the south.”

He said the Biden administration is also confident that congressional Republicans will not waver on aid to Ukraine, despite divisions in the party and among GOP presidential candidates over how involved the U.S. should be.

Last week, a majority of Republicans rejected proposed amendments to the National Defense Authorization Act that would have curtailed Ukraine assistance. One such change only got 89 GOP votes.

But major conservative figures outside of Congress have voiced skepticism over the scope of U.S. support. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a 2024 White House hopeful, said last week, “I think that right now you have an open-ended blank check. There’s no clear objective for victory. And this is kind of dragging on and on.” Other prominent voices, like former Fox News host Tucker Carlson, contend that the U.S. should focus on domestic problems rather than look abroad.

At an event in Iowa on Friday, Carlson pushed former Vice President Mike Pence, who is also running in 2024, on Ukraine — with Pence at one point being booed. He told Carlson that the U.S. can tackle its own problems while still backing Ukraine.

Sullivan on Sunday singled out “a small cadre of Republicans who stand up and say we should stop helping Ukraine in the face of Russian aggression.”

But, pointing to a joint statement from Senate leaders Mitch McConnell and Chuck Schumer, he said, “I actually think there is a strong backing for Ukraine in the Congress, not just among Democrats, but among Republicans as well.”

The public, too, is still generally pro-Ukraine, Sullivan said: “The American people have really hung in there and supported the Ukrainian people.”

Longer-term, Sullivan said that the U.S. plans to help Ukraine join NATO once the country has made “certain democratic reforms” and after the Russian invasion is ended.

Despite Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s anger at the lack of a more concrete timeline for his country to enter the alliance, Sullivan said on Sunday that Zelenskyy had a “great conversation” with President Joe Biden at last week’s NATO summit in Europe and was “very satisfied with the support that he’s getting from his Western partners.”

Back at home, Sullivan had sharp words for how the House’s Republican majority has handled this year’s National Defense Authorization Act, which they modified with some hot-button amendments, including on abortion access and transgender service members.

Asked by Stephanopoulos to respond to GOP criticism of Democrats who largely voted against the military spending bill in light of those changes, with conservatives arguing that Democrats were walking away from America’s troops, Sullivan maintained that it was “just the opposite.”

“Trying to mix up domestic political issues into support for America’s military and America’s troops, that’s what the set of amendments that the Republicans brought forward did,” Sullivan said.

He said lawmakers who opposed Republican amendments that took aim at abortion, transgender medical procedures and diversity, equity and inclusion programs were the ones who were focused on “what’s real.”

“What’s real is the necessary capabilities, technologies and fundamental social support for our troops and their families,” Sullivan said. “That’s what this all should have been about, not these domestic political issues.”

But the fight over the NDAA was “of a piece … with the larger challenge that we’re facing,” he said, referring to Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., who for months has blocked many military nominations because of his opposition to the Pentagon’s policy on supporting members who travel for abortions.

“For the first time in 150 years, we don’t have a commandant to the Marine Corps., we are very soon not going to have a chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff or a chief of naval operations,” Sullivan said. “This is making America less safe. Any why? Because of the attempt to score domestic political points.”

“It’s just got to stop,” Sullivan said.

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Alabama police locate missing woman who reported toddler walking on the highway

Alabama police locate missing woman who reported toddler walking on the highway
Alabama police locate missing woman who reported toddler walking on the highway
Hoover Police Department

(HOOVER, Ala.) — An Alabama woman who went missing on Wednesday after reporting a child walking on the highway returned home late Saturday and was transported to a hospital for evaluation, police said.

The Hoover Police Department said 25-year-old Carlethia “Carlee” Nichole Russell made a 911 call on Wednesday to report that she saw a toddler walking on the side of Interstate 459 in Alabama at around 9:30 p.m.

Russell then stopped her car to check on the toddler and called a family member to report what she saw. The family member lost contact with Russell, but the line remained open, according to police.

Police who responded to her 911 call found the Russell’s vehicle and some of her belongings at the scene when they arrived. But, they were unable to find her or a child in the area.

Police said they had not received any additional calls of someone missing a small child.

Police said a single witness reported seeing a grey vehicle and a man standing outside Russell’s car, but police have no further information about that person or the vehicle.

Russell was wearing a black shirt, black pants and white Nike shoes, according to police.

An anonymous donor had offered $20,000 for the safe return of Russell and Crimestoppers of Metro Alabama were offering an additional $5,000.

“We are leaving nothing off the table and no stone unturned in investigating some of these facts,” Hoover Police Department Lieutenant Daniel Lowe said at a press conference.

ABC News’ Victoria Arancio contributed to this story.

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Trump’s ‘ego’ won’t let him skip 1st GOP primary debate, Christie predicts

Trump’s ‘ego’ won’t let him skip 1st GOP primary debate, Christie predicts
Trump’s ‘ego’ won’t let him skip 1st GOP primary debate, Christie predicts
Drew Angerer/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said Sunday that he believes Republican front-runner Donald Trump will — despite suggesting otherwise — end up attending the first GOP primary debate, in Milwaukee next month.

Christie, a former ABC News contributor, told ABC “This Week” anchor George Stephanopoulos he thinks Trump’s “ego” will “not permit him to have a big TV show that he’s not on,” as Stephanopoulos said Christie may be trying to “bait” Trump into changing his mind and attending the Aug. 23 debate.

“I don’t think I have to, but I’ll happy to say right now: Come on, Donald, get on the stage and defend your record,” Christie said.

“If you want to be the nominee, you need to defend your record,” he said, criticizing Trump’s handling in the White House of the Affordable Care Act, the growing national debt and bolstering the southern border wall.

“He has a record, four years as president, where he didn’t deliver on a lot of issues that Republicans cared deeply about,” Christie said.

In an interview with Fox News last month, Trump said he didn’t see real value in a primary debate given his major lead in early polls. “I like to debate. I mean, I probably am here because of debates. … But why would I let these people take shots at me?” he told Bret Baier.

Trump has also dismissed Christie as a “failed governor” and told Baier that Christie has “got nothing going.”

Given Trump’s current status as, far and away, the leader in the early GOP primary polling, Stephanopoulos on Sunday pressed Christie on how he plans to change the hearts and minds of the base’s voters.

“Look, George, I think it’s just about patience and persistence on this,” Christie said.

“This guy’s been at the front of every Republican primary voter’s mind for eight years. I’ve been in the race for five weeks,” he said. “Give me some time. And you can see already … I think we’re in his head.”

Christie reiterated what has become a key part of his campaign so far: The only path he sees to the Republican nomination is through Trump.

“You have to make the case against Donald Trump and convince Republican primary voters two things: One, that he is not electable, and he will not beat Joe Biden, and probably, Joe Biden would bring a Democratic House and Senate with him,” Christie said. “And, two, that his record doesn’t merit him to be the nominee again given all the failures, both personal and policy, that he’s had.”

Christie also sought to draw a contrast between himself and some other conservatives, including fellow White House hopeful Ron DeSantis, who question the scope of U.S. aid to Ukraine.

Former Fox News host Tucker Carlson pushed back on the importance of American support in the war during an event in Iowa on Friday, which Carlson moderated with multiple other 2024 candidates, but not Christie.

“How would you have responded?” Stephanopoulos asked Christie.

“You’ve always been wrong about this, Tucker, and you’re still wrong. That, in fact, what’s going on, George, is that this is a proxy war with China. … If the Chinese watch us back away from Ukraine, as Tucker Carlson and others would advocate, believe me, the next move will be Taiwan,” Christie said.

Asked about the news that top officials in the Trump administration, including son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner, have appeared before a federal grand jury investigating Jan. 6 and the push to overturn the 2020 race, Christie said those developments show special counsel Jack Smith is “running a serious investigation, and that’s what he should be doing because the American people are owed at least that much.”

“If you’re going to bring charges related to Jan. 6, you better be right, and you better have proof beyond a reasonable doubt that a jury is going to be able to understand, and that’s unimpeachable,” Christie said.

Trump has denied any wrongdoing in the insurrection and claimed he is being politically persecuted.

Christie on “This Week” also explained why he has said he won’t get involved in the group No Labels’ push for a “unity” campaign in the 2024 race that would include Republicans and Democrats.

“It’s a fool’s errand. … I’m not in this for show time. I’m not in this, you know, for making a point,” Christie said.

“There are only two people who will get elected president of the United States in November of ’24: the Republican nominee for president and the Democratic nominee for president,” he said, “and I don’t want to participate in something, which by the way, is also a scattergun approach to this.”

“They want to hurt Donald Trump if he’s the nominee,” Christie continued. “But you know, when you get into a third-party campaign … you never quite know who you’re going to hurt in that process.”

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Four killed in mass shooting in Georgia, shooter remains on the loose: Police

Four killed in mass shooting in Georgia, shooter remains on the loose: Police
Four killed in mass shooting in Georgia, shooter remains on the loose: Police
Sheila Paras/Getty Images/STOCK

(HAMPTON, Ga.) — A gunman remains on the loose after fatally shooting four people in Hampton, Georgia, on Saturday morning, police said.

Police said they are looking for 41-year-old Andre Longmore in connection with the shooting of 3 adult males and 1 female. The names of the victims have not been released.

There were at least four different shooting locations within close proximity, police said at an afternoon press conference.

Longmore was last seen in a Black GMC Acadia with Georgia tags.

There is no motive for the shooting at this time, police said. The suspect is considered armed and dangerous.

The incident began at around 10:45 a.m. Saturday, in the Dogwood Lakes subdivision in Hampton, a city about 40 miles south of Atlanta, Henry County officials said.

The Hampton Police Department is leading the investigation with the assistance of the Henry County Police Department, Henry County Sheriff’s Department, Henry County Homeland Security and Henry County Crime Scene Unit.

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

90 million Americans across 16 states from Washington to Florida under heat alerts

90 million Americans across 16 states from Washington to Florida under heat alerts
90 million Americans across 16 states from Washington to Florida under heat alerts
ABC News

(NEW YORK) — A deadly heat wave continues as 90 million Americans across 16 states from Washington to Florida are under heat alerts on Saturday.

The all-time global heat record is in jeopardy at Furnace Creek in Death Valley. The current world record is 134ºF. Death Valley has only reached above 130 degrees five times.  

It has been the hottest first two weeks of July on record for Phoenix and Tucson, Arizona, as well as Tampa, Fort Myers and Key West, Florida.  El Paso, Texas, has been in 100-degree days for 29 days in a row and Saturday will mark a full month. The forecast calls for 100-degree days for at least the next week. Sunday will be the big day for record temperatures. At least 38 records are in jeopardy from Oregon to Key West, Florida. 

Water temperatures are also staying hot off the Florida coast as a maritime heat wave continues. Water temps in the 90s are widespread off the southern Florida coast. This means anyone looking for relief from the heat won’t find it in the water.  

Canadian fires ramping up

 There are currently 910 active wildfires in Canada – with more than 4,000 fires already this year having burned more than 24 million acres of land – a record start. The season, however, is far from over.

Much of the new smoke is being funneled in from British Columbia and Alberta thanks to northwesterly winds into the U.S. from a low pressure system over the Manitoba and Ontario province border.

The smoke is strongest this morning over places like Minneapolis, Minnesota, and Bismarck, North Dakota.

By 7 a.m. on Sunday the smoke will have spread to Chicago, Illinois, and Indianapolis, Indiana, remaining strongest in Pierre, South Dakota, and Sioux City, Iowa.

On Sunday evening as the last weekend sunset nears, the smoke will be in Nashville, Tennessee, and Columbus, Ohio. Atlanta, Georgia, will even have a hazier sky. Air quality alerts are in effect from Montana to Kentucky either for current smoke or in anticipation of the smoke. The smoke has aided cooler-than-average temperatures for parts of the Upper Midwest.

Flood watch in the Northeast

Forty million Americans in the Northeast are under a Flood Watch this weekend. Saturated soil and a few rounds of heavy rain/storms this weekend may lead to flooding along waterways and low-lying areas.

Over the weekend, a widespread 2-4 inches are expected for much of the Northeast with some areas accumulating more than 4 inches of rain, namely in parts of eastern Pennsylvania along with parts of New Jersey, New Hampshire and Maine.

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Alabama woman goes missing after reporting toddler walking on the highway

Alabama police locate missing woman who reported toddler walking on the highway
Alabama police locate missing woman who reported toddler walking on the highway
Hoover Police Department

(HOOVER, Ala.) — Alabama police are continuing their search for a woman who went missing after she called 911 saying she saw a toddler walking on the side of a highway.

The Hoover Police Department said 25-year-old Carlethia “Carlee” Nichole Russell made a 911 call on Wednesday to report that she saw a toddler walking on the side of Interstate 459 in Alabama at around 9:30 p.m.

Russell then stopped her car to check on the toddler and called a family member to report what she saw. The family member lost contact with Russell, but the line remained open, according to police.

Police who responded to her 911 call found the Russell’s vehicle and some of her belongings at the scene when they arrived. But, they were unable to find her or a child in the area.

Police said they have not received any additional calls of someone missing a small child.

Police said a single witness reported seeing a grey vehicle and a man standing outside Russell’s car, but police have no further information about that person or the vehicle.

Russell was wearing a black shirt, black pants and white Nike shoes, according to police.

An anonymous donor is offering $20,000 for the safe return of Russell and Crimestoppers of Metro Alabama are offering an additional $5,000.

“We are leaving nothing off the table and no stone unturned in investigating some of these facts,” Hoover Police Department Lieutenant Daniel Lowe said at a press conference.

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Sharon Tate’s sister speaks out for 1st time since Leslie Van Houten’s release

Sharon Tate’s sister speaks out for 1st time since Leslie Van Houten’s release
Sharon Tate’s sister speaks out for 1st time since Leslie Van Houten’s release
ABC News

(LOS ANGELES) — Debra Tate, the sister of slain actress Sharon Tate, has publicly pleaded for years to keep members of the Manson family cult behind bars despite their eligibility to petition for parole.

That includes Leslie Van Houten, who was released on parole Tuesday after spending 53 years in prison for the murders of Leno and Rosemary LaBianca.

According to her attorney, Van Houten is now in a “transitional living facility.” She was released to parole supervision and “will have a three-year maximum parole term with a parole discharge review occurring after one year,” the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation said.

While Manson didn’t commit the killings himself, he commanded his followers to do so. Manson died in prison in 2017.

Now, Debra Tate is speaking out for the first time since Van Houten’s release in an exclusive interview with “Nightline.”

“Is she a nice girl? No. Is she an animal? I think she was then, and I fear that she still is,” Debra Tate said.

Van Houten was 19 when she participated in the Aug. 10, 1969, murders of Leno LaBianca, a wealthy grocer, and his wife, Rosemary LaBianca, at their Los Angeles home. The LaBiancas were both stabbed to death and the word “war” was carved on Leno LaBianca’s stomach – which authorities said were all under the orders of cult leader Charles Manson. Van Houten was convicted of the murders in 1971.

“I prayed until I was gritting my teeth that in every kiss or every smile or every pleasurable action that [Van Houten] might have during freedom, she gets a flashback of the screams, the grunts, the blood,” Debra Tate said.

The LaBianca murders occurred one day after Manson followers killed actress Sharon Tate and four others in the California home Tate shared with her husband, filmmaker Roman Polanski. Sharon Tate was 26 and pregnant at the time of her murder. Van Houten did not participate in the Tate killings.

Van Houten was convicted and sentenced to death for the LaBianca murders in 1971, but her sentence was later reduced to life in prison with the possibility of parole after capital punishment was outlawed in the state.

Van Houten was up for parole more than 20 times before her release earlier this week. California Gov. Gavin Newsom and his predecessor previously blocked her parole four times.

At her 19th parole hearing, Van Houten said, “As a rehabilitated woman, I would like to state that the insight I have gained is not meant to excuse any of my acts.”

Debra Tate says the killing of her beloved sister had a profound effect on her life.

“My dad retired from the military. He went out on his own quest to find the killers. My college money got absorbed into things. It affected everything I did. It had catastrophic direct effects,” Debra Tate said.

Debra Tate has appeared at every parole hearing for every Manson family member since the murders occurred.

“We’re talking about one of the most murderous cults in America. Is it worth giving that a free pass? There are a lot of people that I would give a free pass, but these people are not amongst them,” Debra Tate said.

In a statement to “Nightline,” Cory LaBianca, the victims’ daughter, said, “[Van Houten’s] release may be considered legal, but to me and my family, it is ethically and morally wrong.”

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

How investigators say they connected the dots that led to Gilgo Beach murder arrest

How investigators say they connected the dots that led to Gilgo Beach murder arrest
How investigators say they connected the dots that led to Gilgo Beach murder arrest
Suffolk County Sheriff’s Department

(NEW YORK) — After nearly 13 years, New York investigators arrested the man they allege is responsible for the deaths of three sex workers that were among several corpses found in Gilgo Beach in Long Island, New York.

And all it took was extra sleuthing based on newly discovered evidence and ultimately a discarded pizza crust, according to investigators.

Court documents detailed the 16 months of surveillance and investigation into Rex A. Heuermann, a Long Island architect and married father of two, who has now been charged with the murders of Melissa Barthelemy, Megan Waterman and Amber Costello, whose bodies were found covered in burlap along Ocean Parkway on Long Island’s South Shore in December 2010.

Ten bodies were found in the area between 2010 and 2011. The investigation is ongoing.

Although he is not charged in the death of another victim who was found on the beach, Maureen Brainard-Barnes, who went missing in 2007, Heuermann was named the “prime suspect” in her death, prosecutors said.

Heuermann was held on no bail after his attorney entered a plea of not guilty on his behalf in Suffolk County Friday.

Suffolk County prosecutors assembled an “experienced team of investigators, analysts, and prosecutors,” in January 2022 with local police and FBI to try and solve the cold case, court documents said. Their efforts led them on the path to Heuermann’s arrest Thursday.

On March 14, 2022, two months into the renewed joint investigation, investigators said they discovered a Chevrolet Avalanche that was registered to the suspect and seen by a witness during Costello’s disappearance, according to court documents.

“This discovery led to a comprehensive investigation of Defendant Heuermann which consisted of over 300 subpoenas, search warrants and other legal processes to obtain evidence,” prosecutors said in the court documents.

The Chevy Avalanche has been impounded for evidence according to Suffolk County District Attorney Ray Tierney.

Authorities: Cell phone records connect suspect to victims

Among the evidence authorities said they collected from the subpoenas and search warrants were Heuermann’s cell phone records.

Investigators said the suspect used burner phones to contact the three women during the time they were reported missing between 2007 and 2010. The suspect allegedly used Barthelemy’s phone to make “taunting phone calls to Ms. Barthelemy’s family members” and allegedly used Brainard-Barnes’ cellphone to check her voicemail, according to court documents.

Authorities said cell tower records for Heuermann’s personal cell phone and cell phone site locations showed that his personal phone and the burner phones were connected allegedly to the murders traveled between Massapequa, Long Island and Midtown Manhattan, near where Heuermann worked, at the same times of the victims’ disappearances.

“Investigators could find no instance where Heuermann was in a separate location from these other cellphones when such a communication event occurred,” prosecutors alleged in the court documents.

Prosecutors alleged that after each of the murders, the suspect got rid of the burner phones.

Authorities said cell phone records and travel records showed that Heuermann’s wife and children were away from New York state on vacation during the time of the victims’ disappearances, according to court documents.

Alleged secret online life

Authorities said further digging found that Heuermann had several other burner cell phones and email accounts, according to court documents.

The suspect allegedly signed up for the accounts using fictitious names to search for sex workers and created a Tinder account that looked for “dates” or “hookups,” according to court documents.

Internet search records from the burner phones showed that between March 2022 and June 2023 indicated the suspect searched for sites “related to active and known serial killers, the specific disappearances and murders of Maureen Brainard-Barnes, Melissa Barthelemy, Megan Waterman, and Amber Costello, and the investigation into their murders,” as well as “sex workers, sadistic, torture-related pornography and child pornography,” prosecutors alleged.

“This supported our decision to keep our investigative focus secret and we didn’t want to give him any insight into what we were doing,” Tierney said at a news conference Friday afternoon.

Prosecutors said they discovered selfies of Heuermann that he sent to other persons using one of his burner e-mail accounts to allegedly solicit sex.

When the suspect was arrested at his home Thursday, one of the burner phones allegedly linked to the suspicious searches, was recovered, court documents said.

Investigators: Pizza crust cracks DNA puzzle

Hair samples were found on the bodies of Barthelemy, Waterman and Costello, however, authorities said could not get a DNA match to a suspect at the time they were discovered.

A new analysis was done in 2020 on a hair sample found on Waterman’s body using more advanced DNA and was able to determine that it came from a man and got more genetic information, according to Tierney.

“Because it was out there for so long those hairs were degraded, so you couldn’t use traditional DNA analysis on it,” Tierney said. “The investigation proceeded but technology proceeded as well.”

After investigators said they linked the Chevy Avalanche in early 2022 to Heuermann, he was under surveillance, according to the court documents.

On Jan. 26, investigators saw Heuermann throw a pizza box into a trash can in Midtown Manhattan, according to authorities.

A swab of leftover crust in the box was taken by crime lab specialists and sent for DNA testing, shortly after, investigators said.

On June 12, authorities say the results came back showing that Heuermann’s DNA was a match to the male hair found on Waterman’s body.

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