Au pair in Virginia double murder sentenced to 10 years in prison

Au pair in Virginia double murder sentenced to 10 years in prison
Au pair in Virginia double murder sentenced to 10 years in prison
Christine Banfield is seen in an undated photo. Obtained by ABC News

(FAIRFAX, Va.) — Brazilian au pair Juliana Peres Magalhães, who went along with former IRS agent Brendan Banfield in a northern Virginia double murder plot, was sentenced to to 10 years in prison with two years of probation.  

On Friday morning, Fairfax County Judge Penney Azcarate decided to give the 25-year-old the maximum sentence, which was up to 10 years on a manslaughter charge for which she pleaded guilty in 2024.

“Your actions were deliberate, self-serving, and demonstrated a profound disregard for human life,” Azcarate said in delivering her ruling. “So, let’s get straight: You do not deserve anything other than incarceration and a life of reflection on what you have done to the victim and this family.”

A new “20/20” episode about the case, “The Au Pair, The Affair and Murder” is scheduled to air Friday, Feb. 20, at 9 p.m. ET on ABC and streaming the next day on Disney+ and Hulu. 

Magalhães and Banfield were separately arrested over their roles in the Feb. 24, 2023, murders of Joseph Ryan and Banfield’s wife, Christine Banfield, which were committed inside the Banfield home.

Early in the investigation, detectives discovered evidence suggesting that Banfield and Magalhães were having an affair — and that they had plotted to kill his 37-year-old wife.  

Part of that plot, according to prosecutors and Magalhães’ testimony, involved covertly creating a profile for, and thus masquerading as, Christine on a social media site for sexual fetishes.

Ryan, 39, took the bait in what prosecutors called the “catfishing” scheme. Ryan communicated back and forth with the profile account that was allegedly posing as Christine, as they together crafted a rape fantasy scenario using a knife, chains and rope.  

“I have caused pain that cannot be measured. I pray for forgiveness from the Benson family, and from the Joseph Ryan family,” Magalhães said during Friday’s sentencing hearing.

“There is nothing I could possibly do to make it up to you, for your loss. There are so many regrets, this is my biggest. It’s a tragedy I have been carrying with me, and I know I can never take back the devastation of what I have done,” she added.

Saying she lost herself in the relationship with Banfield, she has changed in jail over the past three years.

At the time, Magalhães and Banfield told police they came home to find Ryan — a stranger to them — stabbing Christine Banfield to death. Banfield and Magalhães each fired a shot, killing Ryan, they said both in their 911 call and to responding officers at the scene.  

In October 2023, Magalhães was charged with the second-degree murder of Ryan, as she had admitted to firing the second, fatal shot.  

One year later, Magalhães took a plea deal with prosecutors, turning on Banfield in exchange for a lesser charge of manslaughter. Prosecutors also promised to recommend to the judge upon sentencing that Magalhães only get time served.  

With that agreement, Magalhães sat for nearly four hours of interviews with prosecutors, largely confirming the theory detectives had developed about their scheme.  

Magalhães also took the stand in the trial against Banfield in January, as he maintained his innocence. During his three-week-long trial, Banfield even took the stand, testifying in his own defense.  

After two days — nearly nine hours total — of deliberations in the trial, the jury reached a verdict on Feb. 2. The jury found Banfield guilty on all four counts, which included two counts of aggravated murder, one count of child endangerment, and possession of a firearm in commission of a felony.   

Family and friends of Christine Banfield and Joseph Ryan filled the courtroom Friday morning for Magalhães’ sentencing.  

Joining remotely online from Florida, Ryan’s mother, Deirdre Fisher, delivered her victim impact statement. She said her son was born two days before Christmas, making it a special holiday for them. Since Ryan’s murder, she has not been able to take down her Christmas tree, which sits behind the urn holding her son’s ashes.  

“I say good morning to him each day when I turn on the tree’s lights, and I tell him I love him each night when I turn off the lights,” Fisher told the court. 

Fisher said she has missed so many milestones now, including the chance to be a grandmother. There have been many times, Fisher said, when she’s reached for the phone to call her son, only to remember that he can’t and won’t answer.  

Ryan’s aunt, Sangeeta Ryan, delivered her impact statement from the courtroom, pausing periodically between sobs.

“He was fun-loving and loved from the beginning. He was inquisitive, curious, smart, charming, and so dang talkative,” she said.

Ryan’s aunt described her nephew’s love for animals and the environment, noting that he often rescued and adopted dogs.

Sangeeta Ryan, added that he also was a dedicated member of their family, especially in taking care of his grandmother, who, she said, sold her home in wake of Ryan’s murder to “dodge memories, grief, and reporters.”

Acknowledging that Magalhães did eventually come forward with the truth, Sangeeta Ryan said that this still was not an act of heroism on Magalhães’ part.

“This could have been a very different ending where Juliana saved two lives,” she said could have been the case if Magalhães had not gone along with Banfield’s plot.

As Magalhães was charged only in Ryan’s murder, Judge Azcarate ruled that prosecutors could not include victim impact statements that Christine Banfield’s family members had prepared.

The death penalty was abolished in Virginia in 2021, meaning that, following his conviction, Banfield is facing life in prison without parole.  

His sentencing hearing is set for May 8. 

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Come undone with Ghost in new video for ’Skeletá’ track ‘Umbra’

Come undone with Ghost in new video for ’Skeletá’ track ‘Umbra’
Come undone with Ghost in new video for ’Skeletá’ track ‘Umbra’
‘Skeletá’ album artwork. (Loma Vista Recordings)

If you were hoping for a more metal version of the new Wuthering Heights movie, then Ghost has you covered.

The Swedish rockers have premiered the video for “Umbra,” a track off their latest album, Skeletá. The clip begins with a footage of a couple sharing a passionate embrace before it cuts to footage of them running and dancing through a gothic mansion.

“‘Umbra’ follows the trajectory of a star-crossed couple hurtling inevitably toward their mutual downfall, all under the watchful eye and narration of Ghost’s Papa V. Perpetua,” a press release reads.

Skeletá, the sixth Ghost album, was released in 2025, and also includes the singles “Satanized” and “Lachryma.” The band’s tour behind the record, dubbed the Skeletour, concludes Feb. 23 in Los Angeles.

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Sarah McLachlan releases ‘Tiny Desk’ concert, adds summer tour dates

Sarah McLachlan releases ‘Tiny Desk’ concert, adds summer tour dates
Sarah McLachlan releases ‘Tiny Desk’ concert, adds summer tour dates
Sarah McLachlan, Better Broken Tour 2026 (Live Nation)

Sarah McLachlan is expanding her Better Broken tour into 2026.  

The singer has announced summer dates on the tour, which comes in support of her 2025 album, Better Broken. The dates start July 1 in Franklin, Tennessee, and are scheduled to wrap up Aug. 9 at Chateau Ste. Michelle Winery in Woodinville, Washington. Allison Russell will open all dates.

One dollar for every ticket sold will go to the Sarah McLachlan School of Music, which provides music education and mentorship to underserved youth.

Tickets are available via Citi and Verizon presales starting Tuesday at 10 a.m local time; an artist presale starts at noon that same day. Tickets go on sale to the general public Thursday via sarahmclachlan.com

If you want to get a taste of what to expect on the tour, Sarah has also released her NPR Tiny Desk concert. During the show, she performed her hits “Building a Mystery,” “Angel” and “Adia,” as well as two songs from Better Broken: “Only Human” and “Reminds Me.”

 

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The Lemonheads’ Evan Dando accused of sending unwanted sexual videos

The Lemonheads’ Evan Dando accused of sending unwanted sexual videos
The Lemonheads’ Evan Dando accused of sending unwanted sexual videos
Evan Dando of Lemonheads performs during the 2025 Newport Folk Festival at Fort Adams State Park on July 26, 2025 in Newport, Rhode Island. (Douglas Mason/Getty Images)

The Lemonheads frontman Evan Dando has been accused of sending unwanted sexual videos to a woman on social media. 

In a report by the Substack page The Underground Bunker, the woman says that Dando messaged her videos of him masturbating.

A statement regarding the allegations to Variety, confirmed to ABC Audio by a rep for The Lemonheads, reads, “Evan Dando has long struggled with mental health issues dating back to his childhood. He’s been admitted to a local hospital where he’s receiving comprehensive help from experienced doctors and mental health professionals.”

Dando released a memoir, Rumors of My Demise, in 2025, along with a new Lemonheads album, Love Chant, marking the band’s first collection of original material in nearly 20 years.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Senate Democrats launch investigation into new EPA rule on air pollution

Senate Democrats launch investigation into new EPA rule on air pollution
Senate Democrats launch investigation into new EPA rule on air pollution
The Environmental Protection Agency flag flies outside the EPA headquarters in Washington on Thursday, August 7, 2025. Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — More than two dozen Senate Democrats are launching an independent investigation into the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency over a rule change on how the agency calculates the health benefits from curbing air pollution.

The EPA wrote in its regulatory impact analysis last month that it would no longer apply a dollar value to the health benefits that result from its regulations for fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and ozone because the agency says there’s too much uncertainty in the estimates. In the past, the EPA calculated a dollar value based on the health benefits of reducing air pollution, which included the number of premature deaths and illnesses avoided, such as asthma attacks.

The senators described the new policy as “irrational” and said it will lead to the EPA rejecting actions that would impose “relatively minor costs” on polluting industries that could result in “massive benefits” to public health, according to a letter sent to the EPA on Thursday and obtained by ABC News.

“The only beneficiaries will be polluting industries, many of which are among President Trump’s largest donors,” the senators wrote.

Led by Senate Committee on Environment & Public Works Ranking Member Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., the senators are requesting documents and information about how EPA made this determination by Feb. 26.

The decision to not quantify the health benefits of environmental regulations is “completely unsupported” and “a very stark departure” from the way the EPA has worked under both Republican and Democratic administrations over the last several decades, said Richard L. Revesz, dean emeritus at the New York University School of Law who specializes in environmental and regulatory law and policy.

The regulatory impact analysis does not cite any science or economics and did not allow for public comments, Revesz told ABC News. The approach was also not submitted to the EPA’s Science Advisory Board, “which is standard,” nor was it submitted for peer review, he added.

“Each of those things are necessary elements for changing scientific policies like this, and EPA violated every single one of them,” Revesz said.

Senate democrats are seeking the basis on which the EPA made the decision; what the EPA willl take into account when undertaking Clean Air Act rulemaking; whether the EPA has discussed ceasing to quantify health effects of other pollutants; and whether the EPA consulted with any third parties, including the Secretary of Health and Human Services, the U.S. Surgeon General, public health experts and interested civil society groups.

It was industry executives who pushed for benefit-cost analysis during Ronald Reagan’s administration in the 1980s, said Janet McCabe, visiting professor at Indiana University’s McKinney School of Law and former deputy administrator of the EPA between 2021 and 2024. In 1993, President Bill Clinton signed Executive Order 12866, which instructs each agency to perform rigorous cost benefit analysis for any rule or regulation to be implemented.

“There’s a whole field of environmental economics where models and analytical methods and data collection have evolved on both the cost and the benefit side to help decision-makers and the public understand,” McCabe told ABC News.

While the EPA points to uncertainties in the estimates, assigning a number to monetize health benefits is “very defensible” because of the vast number of studies that allow economists to estimate ranges of health impacts in terms of monetary value, McCabe said.

In the past, when the EPA felt like it could not rigorously assign a number to either cost or health benefit, “it would say so,” McCabe said.

The EPA has received the letter and will respond through the proper channels, an EPA spokesperson told ABC News.

PM2.5 and ozone — soot and smog — are two of the most dangerous and widespread pollutants in the U.S., according to health and environmental policy experts. They are produced by a number of sources, including emissions from vehicles, power plants, the agriculture industry and oil refineries.

The agency is still considering the impacts that fine particulate matter and ozone emissions have on human health, like it “always has,” but that it will not be monetizing the impacts “at this time,” an EPA spokesperson told ABC News last month.

“EPA is fully committed to its core mission of protecting human health and the environment by relying on gold standard science, not the approval of so-called environmental groups that are funded by far-left activists,” the EPA spokesperson said.

The new EPA rule could prove dangerous to human health in the future because it will make it easier for the Trump administration to weaken air pollution controls, the experts who spoke with ABC News said. The EPA will only have the cost to industry to consider when making policy decisions without factoring in the benefits to health, the experts said.

“There will be nothing on the health side to balance them,” McCabe said. “That will make rules much easier to justify from a cost benefit perspective, because all you will see is the costs.”

In its regulatory impact analysis published in January 2024, the EPA calculated the benefit avoided morbidities and premature death in the year 2032 as worth between $22 billion and $46 billion. In February 2024, when the EPA tightened the amount of PM2.5 that could be emitted by industrial facilities, it estimated that the rule would prevent up to 4,500 premature deaths by 2032.

This data will no longer be considered under the new rule.

“It’s not even estimating how many deaths that is, even though the models for doing both things have been very well established for a long, long time,” Revesz said.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Jackson Dean explores two different worlds on third album, ‘Magnolia Sage’

Jackson Dean explores two different worlds on third album, ‘Magnolia Sage’
Jackson Dean explores two different worlds on third album, ‘Magnolia Sage’
Jackson Dean’s ‘Magnolia Sage’ (Big Machine Label Group)

Jackson Dean’s third studio album, Magnolia Sage, will arrive April 24, featuring 11 songs that fit into two worlds, Magnolia or Sage.

“Magnolia is soulful. Magnolia is the soft touch of someone else’s hand on yours. Magnolia is a Maryland beach. Magnolia is something easy,” Jackson explained on Instagram.

“Sage is western,” he continued in another post. “Sage is the wild in Wyoming. Sage is rust and a crow on a fence post. Sage is the wind in your face.”

The record contains the previously released “Be Your Man,” “Over and Over” and his radio single, “Make a Liar,” as well as the new track “Wildfire.”

Here’s the complete track listing for Jackson Dean’s Magnolia Sage:
“Blacktop Blues”
“Make a Liar”
“Be Your Man”
“5th of July”
“Tennessee Moon”
“Over and Over”
“Hey Mississippi”
“Something Easy”
“Wildfire”
“Dust on a Dirt Road”
“Heart on the Range”

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Police searching for missing Texas college student: ‘Matter of concern’

Police searching for missing Texas college student: ‘Matter of concern’
Police searching for missing Texas college student: ‘Matter of concern’
Brianna Arango is seen in an undated photo released by the Southern Methodist University Police Department. Southern Methodist University Police Department

(DALLAS) — Police are looking for a missing Texas college student, calling it a “matter of concern.”

Brianna Arango, 21, a student at Southern Methodist University, was last seen midday Thursday on the Dallas campus, according to police.

She was last seen around 12:30 p.m. near Harold Simmons Hall, according to the Southern Methodist University Police Department.

A family member contacted SMU Police at approximately 3:30 p.m. Thursday to report that Arango did not meet with them as planned earlier that afternoon, campus police said. She had a class at 1 p.m. that she also did not attend, police said.

“Based on the information available, SMU Police are actively working to locate Brianna and are treating this as a matter of concern,” the department said in an advisory

“SMU Police are asking for the campus community’s assistance in locating her,” the advisory added.

Arango was last seen wearing a white shirt, blue sweatpants and carrying a beige tote bag, police said.

Anyone with information on her whereabouts is asked to contact SMU Police at 214-768-3388.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Patriots wide receiver Stefon Diggs arraigned on charges of strangulation

Patriots wide receiver Stefon Diggs arraigned on charges of strangulation
Patriots wide receiver Stefon Diggs arraigned on charges of strangulation
New England Patriots wide receiver Stefon Diggs attends his arraignment hearing at Dedham District Court on February 13, 2026. (David L. Ryan/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

(DEDHAM, Mass.) — New England Patriots wide receiver Stefon Diggs was arraigned on charges of strangulation Friday morning.

The charges stem from a December 2025 incident in which he allegedly assaulted a private chef. 

Diggs did not speak at the hearing, but his attorney entered a not guilty plea on his behalf. 

The judge released him on his own recognizance and he was ordered to have no contact with the victim, including third party contact. 

The incident stemmed from a dispute over wages the victim was requesting Diggs pay her, according to police records obtained by ABC News.  

Diggs is accused of strangling or suffocating Mila Adams on Dec. 2, according to police records. 

Diggs allegedly entered Adams’ unlocked bedroom, where they began to discuss the unpaid wages. Adams told police that during the discussion, he got angry and allegedly smacked her across the face, according to a police report.

She then tried to push him away, but then he choked her using the crook of his elbow around her neck. As she tried to pry him away, he tightened his grip, Adams told police. He then threw her on the bed, according to a police report. 

When she told him she still hadn’t received her money, Diggs allegedly told her “lies,” according to the police report.

Stefon Diggs categorically denies these allegations. They are unsubstantiated, uncorroborated, and were never investigated — because they did not occur,” Diggs’ attorney David Meier said in a statement in December. “The timing and motivation for making the allegations is crystal clear:  they are the direct result of an employee-employer financial dispute that was not resolved to the employee’s satisfaction. Stefon looks forward to establishing the truth in a court of law.”

Adams told police she believes she is still owed a month of wages, according to police records. 

The next court hearing was set for April 1, 2026. 

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Dua Lipa collaborates with ‘Houdini’ producer Danny L Harle on new song ‘Two Hearts’

Dua Lipa collaborates with ‘Houdini’ producer Danny L Harle on new song ‘Two Hearts’
Dua Lipa collaborates with ‘Houdini’ producer Danny L Harle on new song ‘Two Hearts’
Dua Lipa performs at the 2024 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony. (Courtesy of Disney+ & the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame)

Dua Lipa hasn’t released any new solo music since her album Radical Optimism came out in 2024, but she’s just jumped on a new song by the man who co-wrote and co-produced “Houdini,” the first single from that album.

Dua writes on Instagram, “my dear friend [Danny L Harle] just released his album Cerulean today… and somewhere inside that tide pulled universe is a song we made together on the very first day we ever sat down to write together alongside our other dear friend [Andrew Wyatt].”

“blast the record from start to finish,” she adds. “let it pull you under and let it split your heart open in the softest way.”

The song, “Two Hearts,” is a pounding yet melodic dance-pop banger, which may remind you of “Electricity,” the Grammy-winning 2018 single Dua recorded with Silk City.

Dua has recorded a number of collaborations with other artists over the years, including “Cold Heart” with Elton John, “Prisoner” with Miley Cyrus and “One Kiss” with Calvin Harris.

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Dierks Bentley’s headed ‘Off the Map’ for summer tour

Dierks Bentley’s headed ‘Off the Map’ for summer tour
Dierks Bentley’s headed ‘Off the Map’ for summer tour
Dierks Bentley’s Off the Map Tour (Courtesy Dierks Bentley/The GreenRoom)

Dierks Bentley’s booked for 13 dates on Luke Combs’ My Kinda Saturday Night Tour starting in March, but by summer, he’ll be going “Off the Map.” 

That’s the name of his June/July amphitheater tour, as well as a track on his Broken Branches album. 

“‘Off The Map’ is a song about going to that place where you take a break from it for a little bit, whether it’s a bar stool sipping something cold, or a back porch down a back road,” Dierks says. “I like to think that our shows are a place where our fans can go off the map for a few hours, and recharge the batteries.”

“The band and I are so excited about sharing the road with the one and only Ricky Skaggs, as well as with the other guys and girls on the shows with us this summer,” he continues. “They were all hand picked, as I am big fans of theirs. Can’t wait to get out there and watch their shows before we get to go out and do our thing. Going to be some great on-stage collaborations this summer.”

Ricky Skaggs & Kentucky Thunder, Kaitlin Butts, Cole Goodwin, Owen Riesling and the Mountain Grass Unit will join him on the dates, which kick of June 12 in Rogers, Arkansas, and wrap July 18 in St. Augustine, Florida. 

Tickets go on sale Feb. 20. 

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