Andrew Tate accusers forced into hiding after online harassment from ‘troll army,’ lawyer says

Andrew Tate accusers forced into hiding after online harassment from ‘troll army,’ lawyer says
Andrew Tate accusers forced into hiding after online harassment from ‘troll army,’ lawyer says
Alex Nicodim/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

(BUCHAREST, Romania) — Two accusers of divisive social media personality Andrew Tate, who is charged with human trafficking and rape in Romania, have been the victims of “targeted” harassment designed to “scare them into silence,” their legal adviser in the United States told ABC News.

Tate, 36, and his brother Tristan, 35, were charged alongside two associates in Romania last month with rape, human trafficking and creating an organized crime group. Romanian prosecutors accuse the four of sexually exploiting seven women by coercing them to work for a webcam business at the Tates’ residence in Bucharest. One woman was allegedly raped at least twice, while another woman was allegedly subjected to physical violence to force her to keep performing, according to prosecutors.

The Tate brothers, who are dual U.K.-U.S. citizens, have vehemently denied the charges, claiming that they are the victims of a conspiracy to punish them for their polarizing views and accusing the women of lying.

Both brothers have millions of followers on social media with their controversial content garnering legions of dedicated fans. They promote an “alpha male” lifestyle and have gained widespread notoriety for their self-described misogynist views. Tate himself, who has been dubbed the “king of toxic masculinity,” remains banned from Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and YouTube after an outcry from anti-hate speech campaign groups alleging his accounts encouraged violent misogyny.

Dani Pinter, senior legal counsel at the U.S.-based nonprofit National Center on Sexual Exploitation, is the attorney advising two women — one from Florida and the other Moldovan-British — whom Romanian prosecutors allege were lured to Romania and then sexually exploited. One of the women alleges she was raped.

Pinter told ABC News that since the Tate brothers were arrested in Romania last year, the two women have faced a deluge of harassment and have been targeted by a “troll army” launching online attacks and seeking to discredit the alleged victims. The lawyer accused Tate of inciting the attacks by his supporters with his social media posts, but said she did not have hard evidence he was directing them and Tate has denied doing so.

“I’ve never seen anything like it,” Pinter told ABC News during a recent interview.

Pinter alleged that Tate’s vast social media following has been turned against her clients, who are grappling with thousands of threats and relentless efforts to intimidate and undermine them. Supporters of the brothers have doxed private information of her clients and their relatives online, Pinter said, while at least two private investigators have also pursued her clients, digging into their past and showing up at their homes.

Both women remain anonymous for fears of their safety, but online trolls have been able to identify them and posted their details online, forcing the women to leave their respective homes and go into hiding, according to Pinter.

“It’s incredibly oppressive,” Pinter said. “Because they feel afraid for their safety and for their loved ones and for anyone they engage with, it’s incredibly isolating. It’s incredibly exhausting and frightening.”

On Tuesday, the Tate brothers filed a lawsuit in Florida’s Palm Beach County against both women as well as the Florida woman’s parents and another man, claiming the human trafficking and rape allegations were invented. The suit, seeking $5 million in damages, alleges that the five conspired to fabricate the accusations, leading to the Tates’ imprisonment and costing them millions in lost income.

The National Center on Sexual Exploitation’s Law Center said it has “seen the news regarding the Tates’ lawsuit.”

“We are evaluating next steps as we wait for them to give formal notice, but we do not believe the lawsuit has any merit,” the center told ABC News in a statement on Friday.

The Tate brothers were arrested in Bucharest last December and subsequently held in jail for three months before being released and placed under house arrest in their home on the outskirts of the Romanian capital, where they have lived since 2017. The pair remain in custody under house arrest there.

They have since taken to Twitter to challenge the Romanian case, posting frequently on the social media platform after a 2017 ban on their accounts was lifted. Tate, a former professional kickboxer who appeared on the U.K. version of the television series “Big Brother” in 2016, has more than 7 million followers on Twitter. He and his brother also regularly post videos on the online video platform Rumble, which their supporters clip and share on other social media platforms.

Pinter said there was a spike in the online harassment of her clients every time news articles about the Romanian case or statements from the Tate brothers appeared online. She alleged the same methods that has allowed Tate to build his following through viral social media posts over the years is now being used to instigate mass online attacks against the two women.

“The same strategy that he used to indoctrinate thousands of young men created a readymade army of trolls,” Pinter told ABC News. “So he’s able to engage this mob to very quickly harass and target these women.”

“The swift, immediate, massive response to even the smallest bit of news seems completely consistent with how he always operated with getting his content out there,” she added. “It seems to me to be very clear that he’s just engaging that community intentionally.”

When asked for comment on Pinter’s allegations, a spokesperson for the Tate brothers told ABC News in a statement on Thursday: “Andrew and Tristan do not encourage any form of harassment against the alleged victims, or any other individual, as they have stated multiple times in the past via Twitter and other media. They are fully collaborating with the Romanian authorities and they are complying with the conditions of their house arrest. They remain committed to proving their innocence by using all of the legal means at their disposal.”

The spokesperson also pointed to recent Twitter posts from the Tate brothers, in which they told their followers, “Leave personal attacks and insults out of it,” and, “We win with love, not insults.”

Pinter alleged the harassment of her clients has also moved offline. At least two private investigators have knocked on their doors in the U.S., according to Pinter. She said a social media personality sympathetic to Tate had also gone to one of the women’s hometowns and questioned her former romantic partners. Both women have received rape and death threats online as well, according to Pinter.

She said the barrage of attacks is taking a heavy toll on her clients and has prevented them from coming forward publicly.

“They’re really in a tough position,” Pinter told ABC News. “They don’t feel like they can go home. They’re very isolated. One of the victims was telling me, you know, ‘I feel like I can’t get a traditional job because even if any of the co-workers Google my name, they could find out some of this.’ That’s very scary.”

The Tate brothers continue to be active on social media, but have denied directing their huge following to harass their critics and accusers. While making his initial court appearance as a defendant in the Romanian case in June, Tate thanked their supporters and said “we are not the first affluent and wealthy men who have been unfairly attacked.”

A trial date has yet to be set.

Pinter said there was little she could do to stop the online attacks, besides calling them out publicly and urging social media companies to take down the abusive content.

“These women astound me every day,” she added, “because despite being very distressed and experiencing severe mental anguish and being held back from living their lives to the fullest, they are very committed to not backing down.”

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

One police officer dead, two other cops in critical condition in North Dakota shooting

One police officer dead, two other cops in critical condition in North Dakota shooting
One police officer dead, two other cops in critical condition in North Dakota shooting
Douglas Sacha/Getty Images/STOCK

(FARGO, N.D.) — Police in Fargo, North Dakota, say one of their own was killed in a shooting Friday, an incident that also critically injured two other officers and injured two civilians.

The suspect died as a result of the shooting which took place at the intersection of 25th Street South and 9th Avenue South, Fargo Police said in a press release overnight.

“A total of five individuals sustained injuries in this incident. The Fargo Police Department can confirm that one of its officers has died as a result of sustained injuries and two remain in critical condition this evening,” the City of Fargo said in a statement regarding the shooting. “Two other involved civilians sustained serious injuries, including the suspect who has died as a result of the shooting.”

Police initially evacuated residents in the area of the shooting during the investigation but confirmed shortly after that there was no longer a threat to the general public, police said.

The investigation is ongoing and the identities of those involved are not being released at this time as the process of notifying family members is currently ongoing. The motive for the shooting is currently unknown.

The Fargo Police Department confirmed that they will not be releasing any additional information prior to a scheduled press conference on Saturday morning at 4:30 p.m. ET.

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Mike Pence clashes with Tucker Carlson in Iowa

Mike Pence clashes with Tucker Carlson in Iowa
Mike Pence clashes with Tucker Carlson in Iowa
Scott Olson/Getty Images

(DES MOINES, Iowa) — Former Fox News host Tucker Carlson clashed with 2024 Republican candidates like former Vice President Mike Pence at The Family Leadership Summit in Iowa on Friday, with some candidates expressing frustration that Carlson didn’t focus the “fireside chats” on family issues which unite the crowd of evangelical Midwesterners, but instead, on topics like Ukraine and the 2020 election.

“I regret that we didn’t have very much time during my time on stage talking about the progress for life or issues in the family,” Pence told reporters after a tense encounter with the former Fox News host.

Asked by ABC News Correspondent MaryAlice Parks if Pence was surprised that he had to spend a majority of the discussion defending Ukraine, Pence said, “I’m really never surprised by Tucker Carlson.”

Carlson, who has advocated for ending aid to the war-torn country, grilled Pence on his support for defense spending in Ukraine. At one point, the former vice president was booed when he tried to explain his reasoning.

“I believe that it is in the interest of the United States of America, to continue to give the Ukrainian military the resources that they need to repel the Russian invasion and restore their sovereignty,” Pence said, to some disapproving audience members.

When Carlson alleged without evidence that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s government is suppressing and arresting Christians, Pence explained how he asked that very question when he traveled to Ukraine two months after the invasion began and again last month.

“I asked the Christian leader in Kyiv if that was happening, and he assured me it was not. People were not being persecuted for their religious beliefs,” Pence said, shutting down Carlson’s attempt to interrupt him. “Now, take a break here. I know we disagree on this strongly, but I respect your right, your opinion on Ukraine. I trust you to respect my time.”

“The problem is you don’t accept my answer,” Pence added when Carlson continued. “I just told you that I asked the religious leader in Kyiv if it was happening. You asked me if I raised the issue, and I did.”

The meeting between Pence and Carlson was expected to be awkward given the former Fox News host’s comments about Pence’s tenure as vice president. Last August, he called the idea of Pence running for president “delusional” in an appearance on “The Ingraham Angle.” Host Laura Ingraham played a clip of Pence urging Republicans to stop attacking the FBI during a “Politics and Eggs” breakfast gathering at Saint Anselm College in Manchester, New Hampshire, which Carlson commented on.

“What is Mike Pence doing in New Hampshire? I mean, if Mike Pence doesn’t have a summer house in New Hampshire, then he’s delusional. Mike Pence, very nice guy, or seems like a nice guy, but he spent four years getting bossed around by Donald Trump like a concubine,” Carlson said. “He’s not in a position to lead anything.”

Pence has also been highly critical of Carlson ever since Carlson falsely portrayed the events of the Jan. 6 attack in cherry picked clips from security footage handed to him exclusively by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, including falsely describing rioters as “sightseers” on the former host’s Fox News show.

“I was there at the Capitol, and let me assure you it was not, as some would have us believe, a matter of tourists peacefully enjoying our Capitol,” Pence said in March at the annual Gridiron Club dinner for journalists in Washington, before he launched his campaign for president. “Make no mistake about it, what happened that day was a disgrace, and it mocks decency to portray it in any other way.”

When Carlson asked Pence whether the events that took place on Jan. 6 were an “insurrection,” Pence said he’s never used that term but called it a “riot.”

Other presidential hopefuls were subjected to a similar grilling by the former Fox News host. Carlson asked Hutchinson right off the bat why he vetoed a bill in Arkansas that would have banned gender-affirming health care for minors — a law which has since been struck down by a federal judge as unconstitutional.

Hutchinson reaffirmed his belief that the bill as governor he vetoed went too far:

“If there would have been a bill that said that you should not ever have transgender surgery as a minor, I would sign that. … But this bill did go too far,” Hutchinson said. “So I side with parents.”

“Permanent change is one issue but also hormonal treatment is a different issue,” he added.

When Carlson took issue with Hutchinson using the word “treatment,” Hutchinson replied, “I hope that we’ll be able to talk about some issues.”

“This is one of the biggest issues in the country, and I think every person in this room would agree,” Carlson replied, provoking applause. “It is a central issue.”

Speaking to reporters after his chat, Hutchinson said he maintains a consistent message he believes in, no matter the audience.

“Anytime you go against the grain a little bit to catch his audience’s off guard,” he said. “To me that’s refreshing that you actually see a candidate that thinks through it from a constitutional standpoint, from a parent’s standpoint, from a consistency standpoint, from a limited government standpoint, and I hope that they see that I think there’s some room for disagreement.”

“There’s obviously some room for disagreement, and so I think that I gained respect through that presentation — even with a difficult interviewer,” he added.

Twice during the chat, Hutchinson told Carlson to stop interrupting him. Another tense moment came when Carlson asked, “How many COVID shots did you take, and how do you feel about it now in retrospect?”

“How many COVID shots did you take?” Hutchinson quipped back.

“Zero,” Carlson said to applause. “I can see you recoiled when I asked you that question.”

Carlson has repeatedly promoted false claims concerning the safety of COVID-19 vaccines.

Hutchinson defended how he signed a law forbidding the federal government from mandating government employees take the vaccine in Arkansas, and repeated that, in his view, parents shouldn’t be told whether they can — or can’t — vaccinate their child.

During the summit, Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds signed HF 732, ceasing all abortions after six weeks. The measure is raising alarms among Democrats and abortion rights supporters who argue the majority of Iowans don’t agree with the legislation passed this week in a special session.

The popular governor was applauded by the audience as she signed the bill, but her neutrality in the primaries has become a sticking point for former President Donald Trump, who did not attend the summit, citing scheduling conflicts. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, whose remarks capped off the festivities Friday evening, called Trump’s rebuke of Reynolds a “misstep.”

Other Iowa summit attendees included Sen. Tim Scott, S.C., former Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley, and businessman Vivek Ramaswamy.

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Goo Goo Dolls releasing 25th anniversary vinyl edition of ‘Dizzy Up the Girl’

Goo Goo Dolls releasing 25th anniversary vinyl edition of ‘Dizzy Up the Girl’
Goo Goo Dolls releasing 25th anniversary vinyl edition of ‘Dizzy Up the Girl’
Warner Records

On September 15, almost 25 years to the day after it was first released, Goo Goo Dolls will release a special vinyl version of Dizzy Up the Girl, the 1998 album that made them superstars.

The limited-run LP is pressed on metallic silver ice vinyl. When the original version came out on September 22, 1998, it spun off the hits “Slide,” “Broadway” and “Black Balloon.” It also included the band’s signature hit, “Iris,” which had actually been released months prior on the soundtrack of the film City of Angels.

Since then, 6 million copies of the album have been sold worldwide. “Iris” alone has been RIAA-certified for sales of 7 million copies and 1 billion Spotify streams. You can preorder the special edition now.

Goo Goo Dolls’ Big Night Out tour, which kicks off July 24, will feature performances of the hits from that album, plus “I Won’t Back Down,” the band’s new Tom Petty cover song recorded with their opening act, O.A.R. The Goos’ new single, “Run All Night,” will also be on the set list.

 

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Colorado Springs Mayor Yemi Mobolade discusses historic win as first Black immigrant to lead city

Colorado Springs Mayor Yemi Mobolade discusses historic win as first Black immigrant to lead city
Colorado Springs Mayor Yemi Mobolade discusses historic win as first Black immigrant to lead city
ABC News

(NEW YORK) — Mayor Yemi Mobolade made history in May when he was elected as the first Black immigrant and non-GOP mayor of Colorado Springs, Colorado. The former pastor ran as an independent on a platform, he says, that focused on “quality of life” over party lines.

“To [any]one in this room who is in utter disbelief that Republicans and Democrats and Independents can work together, can find common ground, maybe even like each other, tonight is for you,” Mobolade told supporters after he was elected.

Mobolade immigrated to the United States from Nigeria almost 30 years ago. He became an American citizen in 2017. To coincide with the 6-year anniversary of his naturalization, Mobolade spoke to “GMA3” hosts Eva Pilgrim and DeMarco Morgan about his platform and vision for Colorado Springs.

EVA PILGRIM: You became a citizen six years ago. I’m curious, though, why did you decide to run for mayor?

YEMI MOBOLADE: Yeah, today is a special day for me. Six years ago, I rose my right hand and swore my allegiance to this great country. And, you know, for 21 years leading up to that, I’ve loved my city. I’ve participated in this democracy, but there was one thing missing – I wasn’t able to vote. And six years ago, that all changed.

I’m all in, and to be all in, I took that one step further, and I felt I ran for office because my city needed my leadership. My city needed what I had to offer. And what I have to offer is sound leadership, pragmatic leadership and a leadership that transcends and puts our quality of life ahead of politics.

DEMARCO MORGAN: And mayor, talk about a historic win. Colorado Springs is a heavily conservative, Republican-run city, and you flat out won it unaffiliated. You say you want to disrupt politics. How do you plan to do that? You’ve already done it.

MOBOLADE: We’re already doing that. I believe my city is hungry for leadership that puts our quality of life ahead of special interest, and I just think there’s a tiredness. There’s a tiredness with the political landscape. And they say, you know, desperate times call for desperate measures. I actually say, desperate times call for a new kind of leadership. And sometimes it takes someone with my story, my profile, especially my immigrant story, to remind us of the best of who we are as Americans.

PILGRIM: Let’s talk a little bit about some of the issues facing our country. So many cities across the nation are dealing with gun violence. It’s an issue your city knows all too well after the 2022 mass shooting at Club Q. I mean, what can we do to stop this? Is there anything we can do?

MOBOLADE: No, absolutely. And this is a perfect example where good leadership is needed – not just leadership that prioritizes partisan talking points, because public safety is one of the things I ran on. And I ran on public safety, because that’s what I heard from my residents. That’s a No. 1 priority.

My wife and I are parents of three young kids, so it’s always on the top of our minds. And Club Q was a devastating event in our community. And while justice has been served, the work of justice has only begun. And that’s bringing healing to many of the survivors affected and their family members, but also ensuring that our community is safe. So for my city, ensuring that we are able to recruit and retain our law enforcement officers and provide them the training that they need to do their job well and effectively and to keep our community safe.

MORGAN: Mayor, let’s talk about the problems at the border. It’s a top issue for voters. Migrants are being shipped to cities all across the country, including here in New York. What goes through your mind when you see that happening?

MOBOLADE: Right, I think the immigration story right now is a very complex one. And many times, it is limited to the border issues. And we have to do that dance between caring for people; at the same time, ensuring that we are keeping our country safe. It’s very similar to the work of being a mayor of this great city, even when we talk about issues like homelessness. How do we balance, how we do the dance between showing compassion at the same time and ensuring that we are keeping our community safe?

I do believe the immigrant story, though, it’s limited to the border conversation. And there are so many immigrants like me who have chosen to come here and find community, find work, find family. We are entrepreneurs. We are business owners. We provide jobs. We are in the tech sector, medical sector, and we are bringing in the values that are very aligned to the American way of life of hard work, family and also a brighter future.

And I think that whole story must be told – not just a fragment of the story. And that, from my assessment, I’d say that’s one of the challenges of this conversation.

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

‘This is a crisis’: Passport requests reaching record highs, Sen. Warner says

‘This is a crisis’: Passport requests reaching record highs, Sen. Warner says
‘This is a crisis’: Passport requests reaching record highs, Sen. Warner says
Pool via ABC News

(WASHINGTON) — As the State Department faces historic demand for passports, Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., on Friday renewed his calls for changes in the monthslong renewal process.

The State Department received a record 22 million requests last year and is on track to shatter that mark with an estimated 25 million more this year.

Warner held a news conference outside the Washington, D.C., passport office, one of 29 offices across the U.S., after receiving a tour. The senator commended the federal workers and contractors who work on passports.

But he criticized processing times, flaws in the now-shuttered online renewal pilot system and hourslong waits on the travel emergency phone line.

“We’ve seen these workers, you know, work on Saturdays, work overtime, as we try to get through this enormous challenge,” Warner said. “The flip side is we also know this is a crisis.”

Warner blamed a “perfect storm” of government hiring freezes, drops in renewal fees and lack of travel during the pandemic for the backlog. And he criticized Republicans, who he said cut funding.

Processing estimates for both regular and expedited passports have increased multiple times in the last months, the State Department’s website says. Routine applications now process in an estimated 10 to 13 weeks, while applicants can pay $60 to expedite their application for processing in seven to nine weeks, the website shows.

Warner said he would push the State Department to hire more staff and said he would support an increase in the expedited processing fee to pay for improvements. He emphasized that new hires must include technology specialists who could fix up the State Department’s Online Passport Renewal System.

Piloted from August 2022 to February 2023, the system was shut down after technical bugs frustrated applicants, including Warner’s constituents. Warner wrote to Secretary of State Antony Blinken in March, urging him to find a solution to the confusion.

Warner, chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, noted that passport production requires security clearances. He admitted that the bulk of the issues, from the online system to the hiring concerns might not be resolved until next year.

The senator said he met applicants including his own constituents and other Washington-area residents, as well as a family that traveled from New York to secure their passports. He said the Washington office had just received the highest number of visitors in its history.

Warner said he was hopeful that the summer rush for passports might recede significantly soon, though he warned a possible strike from a union behind package carrier UPS could be crushing.

“If we have the UPS strike, on August 1, all bets are off,” he said.

Warner said his goal is for people to be able to get passports in one day like they could before the pandemic — without three-hour phone calls on the emergency line or glitchy programs.

Still, he urged travelers to think through their plans right now.

“Don’t book that international trip two weeks from now if you don’t have passports,” Warner said.

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Gilgo Beach murders: Suspect identified as Rex Heuermann, charged in deaths of three women

Gilgo Beach murders: Suspect identified as Rex Heuermann, charged in deaths of three women
Gilgo Beach murders: Suspect identified as Rex Heuermann, charged in deaths of three women
CREDIT: Jeremy Hogan/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — A suspect has been arrested in connection with three of the 10 victims linked to the Gilgo Beach, New York, murders, authorities said.

New York City architect Rex Heuermann is 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, according to court records unsealed Friday in Suffolk County Criminal Court.

Barthelemy disappeared in July 2009, Waterman disappeared in June 2010 and Costello was last seen in September 2010. The three women were between 22 and 27 years old and all worked as sex workers, court records said.

Shortly before each woman vanished, she had contact with a person using a “burner” cellphone without a verified identity, according to court records. The cellphones of two victims were used by the killer after their deaths, according to records.

On five occasions in the summer of 2009, someone in midtown Manhattan — which is where Heuermann’s office is located — used Barthelemy’s phone to make “taunting phone calls to Ms. Barthelemy’s family members,” court documents said. Some of the calls “resulted in a conversation between the caller, who was a male, and a relative of Melissa Barthelemy, in which the male caller admitted killing and sexually assaulting Ms. Barthelemy,” documents said.

According to court documents, records established that Heuermann’s wife was out of town when Barthelemy, Waterman and Costello disappeared.

A fourth victim, Maureen Brainard-Barnes, who vanished in July 2007, was also tied to the three women. While Heuermann is not charged in the death of Brainard-Barnes, the court document said he is the “prime suspect in her death.” The investigation into Brainard-Barnes’ death is ongoing, officials said Friday.

“Each of the four victims were found similarly positioned, bound in a similar fashion by either belts or tape,” court documents said.

Male hair was recovered from the burlap used to wrap Waterman’s body, and that DNA was found to be a match to leftover pizza crust Heuermann threw into a Manhattan garbage can in January 2023, according to court documents.

Heuermann, 59, a married father of two, used one of his burner phones “to conduct thousands of searches related to sex workers, sadistic, torture-related pornography and child pornography,” court records said.

Other searches were “related to active and known serial killers,” and the disappearances of the Gilgo Beach victims. One search, according to court records, was, “Why hasn’t the Long Island serial killer been caught.”

He also allegedly searched for photos of the Gilgo Beach victims and their relatives, Tierney said.

Heuermann also searched for and viewed articles about the authorities investigating him, according to documents.

The suspect was arrested in Manhattan Thursday night, authorities said, and law enforcement was seen outside his home in Massapequa Park on Long Island Friday morning.

Heuermann first came up as a suspect in the investigation in March 2022, Suffolk County District Attorney Ray Tierney said Friday.

Heuermann was tracked through his car, a Chevrolet Avalanche, which was discovered in 2022. A witness to Costello’s disappearance reported seeing a Chevrolet Avalanche, court records said.

Detectives also tracked Heuermann through cellphone records, according to court records. Tierney said cellphone mapping led investigators to zero in on areas in Massapequa Park and midtown Manhattan.

Fears of a serial killer on the South Shore of Long Island began in 2010 with the discovery of a woman’s body along Ocean Parkway.

Over the next year, the bodies of seven more women, a man and a toddler were discovered in the same general area.

Investigators have long believed it was possible there was more than one killer because of the different conditions of the victims. Additionally, the wooded stretches along Ocean Parkway were long known as dumping grounds for bodies.

Jasmine Robinson, a cousin of victim Jessica Taylor, told reporters she was “shell shocked” by the arrest.

Taylor disappeared in 2003 at the age of 20. Partial remains were found in 2003 and additional remains were discovered in 2011 along Ocean Parkway.

“I hope that she’s remembered as a beautiful young woman” and not as a sex worker, Robinson said Friday.

Robinson said she is grateful for the hard work of law enforcement and hopes the investigation will continue.

“We have never stopped working on this case,” Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone said. “The work is not done here, but this is a major, major step forward in achieving a goal we have had from the very beginning — and that is to bring closure to these families.”

Heuermann is charged with three counts of first-degree murder and three counts of second-degree murder.

Defense attorney Michael Brown entered a not guilty plea on Heuermann’s behalf at his arraignment on Friday. Heuermann only spoke his name in court. He was ordered held on no bail.

Following the appearance, his lawyer told reporters that, through tears, Heuermann told him, “I didn’t do this.”

“I know there is a community out there that, as the facts unfold, will be sleeping a lot easier tonight,” New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said Friday. “And a lot of families, whose lives have been turned upside down, always wondering, questioning what happened, and will the perpetrator ever be brought to justice?”

“The day has finally come when someone so depraved of heart who would kill individuals, innocent individuals, in the prime of their young lives, is finally brought to justice,” she said.

ABC News’ Mark Crudele contributed to this report.

 

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Critics pounce after new report shows Trump-aligned super PAC paid Melania Trump $155,000

Critics pounce after new report shows Trump-aligned super PAC paid Melania Trump 5,000
Critics pounce after new report shows Trump-aligned super PAC paid Melania Trump 5,000
Octavio Jones/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — A pro-Trump super PAC paid former President Donald Trump’s wife Melania Trump $155,000 in 2021, a newly certified personal financial disclosure report from the former president revealed Thursday — prompting attacks from some Trump critics.

The super PAC, dubbed Make America Great Again, Again, in its separate Federal Election Commission filing from earlier last year, had listed the expenses to a firm called Designer’s Management Agency, thereby masking the true recipient of its payments to the firm. The firm lists Melania Trump as a client on its website.

The super PAC’s filing showed two payments to the firm — one which came on Dec. 2, 2021, in the amount of $30,000, and the next payment the following day, in the amount of $125,000. But Trump’s financial disclosure shows the super PAC’s payment of $155,000 on Dec. 2, 2021, directly to Melania Trump.

The personal financial disclosure report, which was first reported by the New York Times, revealed the payment to Melania Trump was for a “speaking engagement.”

Republican presidential candidate and outspoken Trump critic Chris Christie called Trump “shameless” in response to the news.

“A billionaire using donor money to pay personal legal fees, and now paying his wife more than 2x what the average American makes just to pick some tableware,” the former New Jersey governor tweeted. “There’s grifting and then there’s Trump grifting. Undisputed champs.”

The Make America Great Again, Again super PAC has since dissolved, transferring $8.9 million to a new Trump-aligned super PAC, Make America Great Again Inc.

The Trump campaign did not respond to a request for comment about the payment to the former first lady.

Melania Trump has been absent from the campaign trail since her husband launched his third presidential bid. She previously told Fox News in May that the former president “has my support.”

The financial report also shows Melania Trump received two $250,000 payments from Log Cabin Republicans, an advocacy group focused on LGBTQ conservatives, and Fix CA, an organization founded by Ric Grenell, who served as Acting Director of National Intelligence in former President Trump’s 2020 cabinet.

In all, the former first lady made over $1.2 million for speaking engagements following Trump’s presidency, according to the financial report.

Trump himself made over $12 million for speaking engagements during his post-presidency, the report said.

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Bow Wow announces “Big Move” ownership stake in Scream Tour; 2023 show kicks off in August

Bow Wow announces “Big Move” ownership stake in Scream Tour; 2023 show kicks off in August
Bow Wow announces “Big Move” ownership stake in Scream Tour; 2023 show kicks off in August
Joe Faraoni / ESPN Images

In partnership with The Black Promoters Collective, Bow Wow announced Friday he is now a part owner of the legendary Scream Tour. 

The “Fresh Azimiz” rapper, dubbed “the original face of the Scream Tour,” acquired an ownership stake in the same tour that helped solidify his rap career during its early years.

“BREAKING NEWS,” he wrote in his Instagram announcement. “The SCREAM TOUR IS OFFICIALLY BACK!!! … Talk about it! BIG MOVES! Its only right i made this power play!”

“We are excited to partner with Bow Wow on the Scream Tour as he is the original face of the brand, and we have had the pleasure of working with him for many years on other tours we have produced,” Gary Guidry, CEO of The Black Promoters Collective, said. “By introducing the Scream Tour ’23 and featuring an incredible lineup of rising stars, we aim to create a one-of-a-kind experience for fans, allowing them to relive their teenage years while introducing the next generation to the magic of live music.”

The original Scream Tour toured cities across the U.S. in 2005 with Bow Wow, OmarionMarques Houston and Bobby Valentino. Since then, there have been various iterations of the concert series, including a 2011 lineup of Mindless BehaviorDiggy SimmonsJacob Latimore and The OMG Girlz.

Bow Wow is set to host this year’s Scream Tour, kicking off August 18 with performances by That Girl Lay LayYoung DylanKing Harris and more. 

Tickets are available for purchase at BlackPromotersCollective.com.

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Biden campaign, DNC announce they raised $72 million in Q2

Biden campaign, DNC announce they raised  million in Q2
Biden campaign, DNC announce they raised  million in Q2
Chris J. Ratcliffe/Bloomberg via Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — President Joe Biden’s campaign announced Friday that it, along with the Democratic National Committee and their joint fundraising committees, raised a collective $72 million since the president launched his reelection bid in April.

The groups say they finished the quarter with a massive $77 million on hand.

The campaign said 97% of all donations came from small-dollar donors donating under $200, and that money flowed in from all 50 states.

It said teachers, nurses, and retirees were the most common occupations among donors this quarter.

The campaign also said 30% of its donors were first-time donors to the Biden operation, compared to when he ran in 2020. They add that the campaign held 38 fundraisers last quarter.

The haul came from 394,000 donors who made over 670,000 contributions, the campaign said.

Biden was slow to kick off campaign events after his announcement, holding his first — and so far his only — campaign rally nearly two months after he declared. But the president and his team have made a big push on fundraising.

In the final days before the filing deadline, Biden barnstormed the donor circuit, holding big-dollar fundraisers in New York, California, Connecticut, Illinois, and Maryland.

He held nine fundraisers over 11 days in the final stretch of the quarter.

Vice President Kamala Harris, first lady Jill Biden, and second gentleman Doug Emhoff also made the rounds to collect money from deep-pocketed donors.

Biden’s haul falls short of the $86.8 million former President Barack Obama and the DNC raked in at the same point in his bid for a second term. Biden announced his reelection campaign on April 25, meaning Obama had only a three-week head start over his former lieutenant.

Biden’s net approval has remained below that of Obama’s over the same period of their presidencies, according to tracking poll data analyzed by FiveThirtyEight. Biden is currently 13.7% underwater, compared to Obama having a positive 1% net approval rating at this point in 2011.

Unlike Obama, however, Biden is facing potentially serious, albeit long-shot, primary challenges in anti-vaccine activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and thought-leader and New York Times bestselling author Marianne Williamson, who also ran in 2020 but dropped out before the first votes.

The 2020 presidential election was the most expensive in American history, with $5.7 billion spent in that race, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. Biden’s campaign made history that year, becoming the first to raise more than $1 billion.

The 2024 election, as of now, is gearing up to be a rematch of the last, with Biden and Trump comfortably leading their respective fields in every national poll, and it could be another costly contest.

Presidential campaigns have until Saturday to disclose how much money they raised in the second quarter of 2023, offering an early gauge of their war chests and how much enthusiasm they’ve been able to gin up from the public so far.

Former President Donald Trump’s joint fundraising committee says it took in over $35 million from April through June, roughly doubling the $18.8 million it raised in the first three months of 2023.

Copyright © 2023, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.