Where is Kierra Coles? Pregnant postal worker’s mysterious disappearance still torture for her mom

Where is Kierra Coles? Pregnant postal worker’s mysterious disappearance still torture for her mom
Where is Kierra Coles? Pregnant postal worker’s mysterious disappearance still torture for her mom
U.S. Postal Inspection Service

(CHICAGO) — Three years ago, a 26-year-old postal worker who was eagerly expecting her first child mysteriously disappeared in her own neighborhood.

There’s still no resolution, leaving her heartbroken mother desperate to know if her daughter is even alive or dead.

Kierra Coles was about three months pregnant when she vanished on Oct. 2, 2018, on Chicago’s South Side. Her car was found in front of her apartment with her phone and packed lunch still inside.

The Chicago Police Department considers the case “a high-risk missing person investigation with potential foul play suspected.”

For Coles’ mother, Karen Phillips, having no answers is torturous.

Phillips said police have not provided any information whenever she’s called over the last year.

“I could never reach nobody. They’re gone to lunch, they’ll call me back, they’re out of the office. It’s always something,” she told ABC News last week. “They don’t even reach out and say, ‘Well, Ms. Phillips, we’re still going through this’ … or, ‘We don’t have any new leads.’ Just say something.”

The Chicago police didn’t respond to Phillips’ claim that they ignored her calls, but in a statement to ABC News the police department said it urges “anybody with knowledge of her last whereabouts … to contact the Chicago Police Department.”

“We are seeking any and all information in an attempt to locate her and we won’t stop until we do,” police said.

For Phillips, the loss is “unbearable.”

“I went from seeing my child every day — if not seeing her, at least talking to her every day — to not seeing her in three years,” Phillips said. “I try to stay strong for the other kids, I try to not really break down in front of them. But we talk about her all the time, we got pictures everywhere. We just really want her home.”

Coles’ siblings range in age from 35 to 24. Coles, a devoted aunt to her nieces and nephews, was the last of Phillips’ children to have a baby.

Phillips said she misses the grandchild she never got a chance to meet.

“I miss him — he or she — even though they wasn’t born yet. I just miss him because she would’ve been a great mother,” she said. “For her to be a mother, we were so excited. … That was the last thing she was waiting for.”

Coles had a plan for her life and so far “everything was going according to plan,” her mother said.

Coles first wanted a good job, and after years with the post office she had saved for a car and a home. Then, she and her boyfriend decided they were ready for a baby, Phillips said.

For her to vanish “out of the blue,” she said, “I can’t understand it.”

The United States Postal Inspection Service and the FBI are both working with the Chicago police on the case.

“Since October 2018, Postal Inspectors have tracked down and vetted nearly 400 leads across the country. The U.S. Postal Inspection Service distributed thousands of reward flyers,” the Postal Inspection Service said.

“Kierra Coles is a member of our Postal family and we will continue looking for her and following up on all leads,” the agency continued. “If you know something, no matter how trivial it may seem, please come forward as it may be crucial to our investigation. Please contact the U.S. Postal Inspection Service hotline at (877) 876-2455 and reference case number 2693502.”

Some days Phillips said she “really can’t function because my mind just, you know, keeps wondering — where’s my child? Is she being harmed? Is she dead or alive?”

“It’s hard waking up every day wondering,” she said. “I just want somebody to come forward and say what happened.”

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

In theaters now: ‘Venom: Let There Be Carnage’

In theaters now: ‘Venom: Let There Be Carnage’
In theaters now: ‘Venom: Let There Be Carnage’
© 2021 CTMG, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

After multiple pandemic delays, Venom: Let There Be Carnage is now in theaters.

The sequel to the critically-panned but $856 million-plus-grossing 2018 movie Venom again stars Tom Hardy as journalist Eddie Brock, who shares a body with the shape-shifting, trash-talking alien symbiote, Venom.

This time around, the Sony Pictures’ Spider-Man universe spin-off sees the unlikely pair having to face off with another of their kind: Woody Harrelson‘s serial killer Cletus Kasady, who infects himself with Eddie’s blood to get his own symbiote, Carnage. 

But before Eddie and Venom can fight Carnage, they need to stop fighting each other.

“In this movie, it’s like the ‘seven-year-itch’ cycle of the relationship,” director Andy Serkis says. “You’ve got two characters who are literally stuck with each other — that Odd Couple relationship was what this movie was always going to be about.”

“They have had enough of each other,” Serkis says with a smile. “Watching Tom as Venom and Eddie and was so much fun,” the Marvel movie and Lord of the Rings series veteran says. 

Venom: Let There Be Carnage also stars returning player Michelle Williams, Spidey series star J.K. Simmons, and 007 movie alumna Naomi Harris.

The film’s off to a good start: it earned $11.6 million in Thursday night previews in the U.S., putting it ahead of preview numbers for F9 and Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, and only a few million behind Black Widow.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

LCD Soundsystem announces 20-show NYC residency

LCD Soundsystem announces 20-show NYC residency
LCD Soundsystem announces 20-show NYC residency
Credit: Tristane I. Mesquita

LCD Soundsystem is returning to the live stage in a big way.

The beloved dance-punk outfit has announced a 20-show residency running from November 23 to December 21 at New York City’s Brooklyn Steel.

Tickets go on sale next Friday, October 8, at 10 a.m. ET, with a fan pre-sale beginning Wednesday, October 6, at 10 a.m. ET. American Express Card members will also have access to pre-sale, as well, starting Tuesday, October 5, at 10 a.m. ET.

Additionally, three of the shows, taking place December 13, 15 and 16, will be exclusive to American Express Card members.

For the full list of dates and all ticket info, visit YouAreHere.BoweryPresents.com.

The Brooklyn Steel residency will mark LCD Soundsystem’s first live performances since 2018.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Listen to new Bullet for My Valentine song, “Rainbow Veins”

Listen to new Bullet for My Valentine song, “Rainbow Veins”
Listen to new Bullet for My Valentine song, “Rainbow Veins”
Spinefarm/Search & Destroy

Bullet for My Valentine has released a new song called “Rainbow Veins,” a track off the band’s upcoming self-titled album.

Despite its colorful title, “Rainbow Veins” is a creepy, eerie listen, though things do brighten up in the chorus a bit, thanks to some soaring background vocals. You can download “Rainbow Veins” now via digital outlets.

“Rainbow Veins” is the fourth song to be released from Bullet for My Valentine, following “Knives,” “Shatter” and “Parasite.” The album was originally supposed to drop on October 22, but has been delayed to November 5 due to “COVID-related manufacturing delays.”

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Brothers of Liberté: The Doobie Brothers’ new studio album arrives today

Brothers of Liberté: The Doobie Brothers’ new studio album arrives today
Brothers of Liberté: The Doobie Brothers’ new studio album arrives today
Island Records

The Doobie Brothers on Friday released their first new studio album featuring all-new songs in over a decade.

Liberté features 12 original tunes by the group’s core members — Tom Johnston, Pat Simmons and John McFee — produced and co-written with John Shanks, who’s previously collaborated with Bon Jovi, Stevie Nicks and many others.

The album is The Doobie Brothers’ 15th full-length studio effort and their first album of new songs since 2010’s World Gone Crazy. It’s available now on CD and digital formats.

Coinciding with Liberté‘s arrival, the band has debuted a lyric video for one of the new songs, “Shine Your Light,” on their YouTube channel.

In addition, to celebrate the albums release, The Doobie Brothers will perform and be interviewed as part of a special that will be streamed on YouTube.com starting at 7 p.m. ET.

The Doobie Brothers gave fans an early preview of Liberté in August, when they issued a self-titled digital EP featuring four songs from the album — “Oh Mexico,” “Cannonball,” “Don’t Ya Mess with Me” and “Better Days.”

Also in August, the Rock & Roll Hall of Famers finally launched their 50th anniversary tour, which was postponed from 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The trek, which sees former singer/keyboardist Michael McDonald rejoining the group, continues tonight in Spokane, Washington. The 2021 portion of the outing wraps up with an October 29 concert in Allentown, Pennsylvania, while a second leg is scheduled to begin on June 2, 2022, in West Palm Beach, Florida.

Visit TheDoobieBrothers.com for a full list of confirmed dates.

Here’s the track list of Liberté:

“Oh Mexico”
“Better Days”
“Don’t Ya Mess with Me”
“Cannonball”
“Wherever We Go”
“The American Dream”
“Shine Your Light”
“We Are More Than Love”
“Easy”
“Just Can’t Do This Alone”
“Good Thang”
“Amen Old Friend”

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Jerry Seinfeld explains why he’s not interested in a ‘Seinfeld’ reunion or revival

Jerry Seinfeld explains why he’s not interested in a ‘Seinfeld’ reunion or revival
Jerry Seinfeld explains why he’s not interested in a ‘Seinfeld’ reunion or revival
Courtesy of Netflix

Jerry Seinfeld says it’s important to know when to gracefully bow out. Twenty-three years after his iconic sitcom, Seinfeld, aired its last show on May 14, 1998, Seinfeld says he’s still convinced that there’s no need for a revival.

“Has it happened, could it happen, is it happening, or is it in motion — what kind of motion? When will we see something?,” Seinfeld tells ABC Audio of the questions he’s often asked about a potential revival. “There’s absolutely nothing going on.”

Although the award-winning actor considers himself a “nostalgi[c] person” since he still visits his childhood home in Long Island and supports the New York Mets, Seinfeld believes it’s important not to live in the past.

“I believe in going forward,” he says, before sharing that even if he did do some sort of Seinfeld reboot, he’s not sure what it would be about or if it would even “be as good.”

“I think we did a good job,” he says of the original series.

In fact, Seinfeld believes a reboot could even possibly tarnish his legacy.

“I remember I was in a cab one time and the cab driver said to me, ‘Why did you stop doing that show? It was very successful,” he recalls. “And I said to him, ‘Well… we had done it for nine years and I realized I could go off the air right now. And… I could be a legend in the sitcom world, or I could risk that to make some more money.'”

He continues, “[And] I said, ‘What would you do?’ to the cab driver. He said, ‘I’d go for legend.’ I said, ‘Yeah, that’s what I thought.’ So we went for a legend. That’s why we’re not coming back.”

The entire Seinfeld catalogue is now available to stream on Netflix.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

DOJ and Texas face off in court over restrictive abortion law

DOJ and Texas face off in court over restrictive abortion law
DOJ and Texas face off in court over restrictive abortion law
robertcicchetti/iStock

(WASHINGTON) — Lawyers from the Justice Department and the state of Texas squared off in court Friday as the Biden administration seeks an order that would halt enforcement of the state’s restrictive abortion law.

In an overnight filing, DOJ officials accused Texas of mounting a “brazen” effort to enact a law purely designed to obstruct women’s right to an abortion while evading all traditional methods of judicial review.

“S.B. 8’s novel enforcement scheme is calculated to accomplish what no state should be able to do in our federal system: deter, suppress, and render moot rights guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States,” department officials said in their filing. “The State does not dispute that S.B. 8 has virtually eliminated previability abortions after six weeks of pregnancy in the State. Moreover, the approach Texas has taken need not be confined to the abortion context. If this mechanism works here, it would serve as a blueprint for the suppression of nearly any other constitutional right recognized by the Supreme Court but resented by a state government.”

S.B. 8, or the ‘Texas Heartbeat Act,’ bars physicians from providing abortions once they detect a so-called fetal heartbeat — which can be seen as early as six weeks into a pregnancy. But the language of the law makes it so private citizens can sue anyone they “reasonably believed” provided an abortion, and effectively removes any government officials from being part of its enforcement.

Attorney General Merrick Garland announced last month that the Justice Department would sue Texas over its law just one week after the U.S. Supreme Court let it take effect. Soon after, the department filed for an emergency injunction seeking to halt enforcement of the law entirely as the legal fight plays out.

In a filing Wednesday, Texas officials urged District Judge Robert Pitman to dismiss DOJ’s request for an injunction — arguing the Biden Administration had no standing to pull it before a federal judge and that the matter should instead be resolved before state courts.

“The federal government asks the Court to dispense with the normal cause-of-action requirement based on unfounded fears that the Texas Heartbeat Act will otherwise “evade judicial review.” Nothing could be further from the truth,” officials wrote in their filing. “The constitutionality of the Texas Heartbeat Act can be reviewed in the same way that virtually all of state tort law is: State-court defendants raise constitutional defenses before neutral judges sworn to follow the U.S. Constitution and, if necessary, appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.”

Also in their brief, Texas officials made an eyebrow-raising counterargument to DOJ’s contention that the abortion law hinders interstate commerce — the state instead pointed to reports of women seeking an abortion being forced to travel out of the Texas to Oklahoma, saying that “is stimulating rather than obstructing interstate travel.”

It’s not clear when Judge Pitman might rule on DOJ’s request for an emergency injunction — though the ruling is likely to face a quick appeal from either Texas or DOJ to try and put the matter before the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, which in a separate challenge previously ruled the law could take effect.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Mastodon releases new ’Hushed and Grim’ song, “Teardrinker”

Mastodon releases new ’Hushed and Grim’ song, “Teardrinker”
Mastodon releases new ’Hushed and Grim’ song, “Teardrinker”
Credit: Clay Patrick McBride

Mastodon has released a new song called “Teardrinker,” a track off the band’s upcoming album, Hushed and Grim.

Filled with openhearted lyrics and melodic guitar riffs, “Teardrinker” seems to reflect the motifs of grief that are spread throughout Hushed and Grim, which is dedicated to the memory of Mastodon’s late manger, Nick John. Its accompanying video, streaming now on YouTube, further explores those themes with mystical images of giant stone statues crying waterfalls.

“Teardrinker” is the second Hushed and Grim song to be released, following the single “Pushing the Tides.” The whole album is set to arrive October 29.

Mastodon will launch a co-headlining tour with Opeth in support of Hushed and Grim in November.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Katy Perry thanks Orlando Bloom while accepting ‘Variety”s Power of Women honor

Katy Perry thanks Orlando Bloom while accepting ‘Variety”s Power of Women honor
Katy Perry thanks Orlando Bloom while accepting ‘Variety”s Power of Women honor
Kevin Winter/Getty Images for Variety

Katy Perry was honored Thursday night at Variety’s Power of Women event in Los Angeles.

The singer took the stage to accept the honor, which celebrates her philanthropic work with her Firework Foundation. She thanked her sister, Angela, who co-founded the organization, as well as her partner, Orlando Bloom.

Katy called Orlando “an incredible father [and] an example to our greatest gift ever, our daughter Daisy — a future powerful woman.”

“I pledge to you to do my best to be an example of one, to never put limits on your dreams, to lead with love, never through fear, and to always be your lighthouse in any darkness,” Katy continued. “…Lest we forget, behind every great woman, there is a great man… And I’m sure whether I like it or not, Orlando, a man that is a friend and an ally to women all around the world. Thank you for handling the insanity of my life.”

Katy also performed “What Makes a Woman” at the event, which honored Lorde, TV executive Channing Dungey, poet and activist Amanda Gorman and actress Rita Moreno.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Kings of Leon cancel remainder of tour following death of Followill brothers’ mother

Kings of Leon cancel remainder of tour following death of Followill brothers’ mother
Kings of Leon cancel remainder of tour following death of Followill brothers’ mother
Credit: Matthew Followill

Kings of Leon have canceled the remainder of their U.S. tour following the death of brothers Caleb, Jared and Nathan Followill‘s mother, Betty Ann.

The band had shared last week that they were dropping off of two upcoming concerts to return home to Betty Ann, who’d been “dealing with a medical crisis.” Soon thereafter the sad news came that she had passed away.

In an Instagram post Thursday evening, KoL announced that they’d be staying off the road for the time being to “be with our families.”

“We have been overwhelmed by the outpouring of love and support from our fans,” the band wrote. “Thanks for the kind words and all the love you’ve given to the entire Followill family.”

Along with the Followill brothers, Kings of Leon include their cousin, Matthew Followill, who’s Betty Ann’s nephew.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Kings Of Leon (@kingsofleon)

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