Category: Security

  • Feds: Ex-Georgia office manager stole $3.5 million to fund Tennessee tickets, trips

    She paid for her daughter’s wedding, bought designer purses and purchased season tickets for University of Tennessee football and basketball games, according to federal investigators.

    Sonya Hesenius, 59, of Suwanee, also bought a recreational vehicle, took cruises and paid for plane tickets for more than 20 family members and friends. But she stole all the money she used to pay for the lavish lifestyle, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

    Hesenius, a former office manager and executive assistant for an Alpharetta company, pleaded guilty to federal wire fraud this week after allegedly embezzling more than $3.5 million between 2015 and 2020, U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia Ryan K. Buchanan said Thursday.

    “Hesenius stole millions of dollars from her employer to fund a lavish lifestyle,” Buchanan said in a news release. “Those entrusted with a fiduciary role for a company accept great responsibility. The defendant’s actions demonstrate that she cared far more about personal gain and much less about the faith and trust that her employer placed in her.”

    Federal prosecutors said Hesenius made fraudulent charges on corporate credit cards and had the unnamed yard company reimburse her credit card for personal expenses. She approved all of the charges and hid the fraud by claiming they were legitimate expenses, such as newspaper advertisements, according to investigators.

    “Hesenius worked in a position of trust for a company that expected her to honor that trust,” Keri Farley, FBI Atlanta special agent, said in the release. “Instead, she chose to abuse it, and her personal greed not only hurt the company, but everyone who worked for them. This plea should send the message that the FBI takes wire fraud extremely seriously and will work to hold offenders accountable.”

    Hesenius is scheduled to be sentenced March 6.

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    © 2023 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • The Rolling Stones’ boomer superfans crashed AARP’s website

    When Taylor Swift’s superfans took to Ticketmaster last November to purchase Eras Tour presale tickets, they caused the site to glitch and crash, prompting outrage and even antitrust investigations.

    Now, boomer and Gen X superfans of a different musical artist experienced their own version of presale ticket hell — prompting a very different website to crash briefly.

    Fans of the Rolling Stones took to AARP’s website in hopes of scoring tickets to the band’s upcoming Hackney Diamonds Tour on Wednesday. AARP, or the American Association of Retired Persons, is an official sponsor of the 61-year-old band’s tour.

    “We are currently experiencing technical difficulties and are unable to complete your request,” AARP’s website said at the time. “Our team is actively working to fix the issue, and we hope to resolve it soon. Thank you for your patience.”

    The website was back up and running by the afternoon.

    Still, the glitch proved frustrating for some of the band’s older fans, who said online that they missed the days of camping out and lining up for tickets instead of duking it out behind keyboards. Others reported having better luck.

    A wave of issues with concert ticket queues has prompted musicians and even lawmakers to examine the process. Indie artist Maggie Rogers, for instance, invited fans to line up to physically purchase tickets to her tour. And when tickets to see the Cure went on sale last spring, the band’s leader, Robert Smith, fought Ticketmaster’s dynamic pricing model, forcing the company to reimburse customers for hidden fees.

    In all, AARP served as a launching pad to enter ticket queues with other providers, including Ticketmaster and AXS depending on the tour stop.

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    © 2023 The Philadelphia Inquirer

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Shannen Doherty says cancer has spread to her bones but she’s ‘not done with living’

    Shannen Doherty is sharing more bad news about her eight-year cancer battle: The disease has now spread to her bones.

    Despite the bleak development, the “Beverly Hills, 90210” and “Charmed” star said she still has a lot more living to do.

    “I don’t want to die,” the People cover star said in this week’s issue, telling the mag that she’s hoping to inspire others by focusing on her future.

    “I’m not done with living. I’m not done with loving. I’m not done with creating. I’m not done with hopefully changing things for the better,” the 52-year-old ’90s icon said. “I’m just not — I’m not done.”

    The “Heathers” star said she thinks of the disease as “the Pac-Man video game where they start to go into your bones,” but noted that she’s doing much better on a new treatment regimen. She also had a growth removed from her brain earlier this year. Now, she’s hoping to get into clinical trials to develop new treatments.

    “People just assume that it means you can’t walk, you can’t eat, you can’t work. They put you out to pasture at a very early age —’You’re done, you’re retired,’ and we’re not,” she said of being a cancer patient. “We’re vibrant, and we have such a different outlook on life. We are people who want to work and embrace life and keep moving forward.”

    Doherty was first diagnosed with breast cancer in 2015, a public disclosure made in a lawsuit against her former manager. She had a mastectomy, underwent chemotherapy and radiation and declared herself in remission in 2017. By February 2020, however, Doherty said that the disease had returned and metastasized, spreading beyond her breasts and lymph nodes into her spine.

    Later that year, she said that she expected to be in treatment for the rest of her life. In June, she shared that the cancer had spread to her brain, requiring surgery and more radiation treatment.

    While Doherty has chronicled her harrowing journey on social media and in the press, the TV star is making good on her declaration that she’s “not done creating”: She plans to discuss her illness in a new memoir-style podcast, “Let’s Be Clear With Shannen Doherty,” that premieres Dec. 6 on iHeartRadio.

    On Instagram, Doherty said Wednesday that the program will touch on her career highlights, friendships, divorce and health regimens and will include “a series of brutally honest conversations with some very special and influential people” in her life.

    “She will share her own personal stories, how she manages the lows all while celebrating the highs, and her hopes and dreams for the future,” according to iHeartRadio’s description of the show. “As Shannen says, it doesn’t matter how many times you fall, it’s about how you get back up. So, LET’S BE CLEAR… this is the truth and nothing but.”

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    © 2023 Los Angeles Times

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • TSA shatters one-day record for screened passengers amid Thanksgiving travel period

    The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) estimated that this Thanksgiving holiday would be a whopper.

    Little did it know.

    TSA set an American aviation record when it processed an all-time high number of passengers on Sunday, Nov. 26.

    Airport officials moved 2,907,378 passengers through security checkpoints on the last day of the extended Thanksgiving weekend.

    In fact, it’s been an extraordinary month for airline travel. TSA reported that it moved more than 2 million passengers per day through security every day this month, with the exception of Thanksgiving Day itself.

    The agency has processed more than 2 million passengers per day, with the exception of Thanksgiving Day, dating all the way back to Sept. 19, 2023.

    TSA has never approached 3 million passengers in a single day before and it did so with more than 7,500 flights canceled or delayed in the Midwest because of a snowstorm.

    Outside of the disruptive weather, U.S. airlines and airports did not appear to have any significant problems or meltdowns during the holiday. It was a welcome change from last year.

    With the heightened demand for travel, TSA added four new participants for its PreCheck program earlier this year.

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    © 2023 Northstar Travel Media, LLC

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Police dog bites teen suspect, leaves flesh hanging

    Newly released video footage shows Los Angeles Police Department officers using a police K-9 to arrest a teen theft suspect in October. During the arrest, the police dog bit the teenager, resulting in a bloody injury that left the teenager’s flesh hanging off his arm.

    Video footage released Tuesday by the Lost Angeles Police Department shows 18-year-old Andrew Valdez being arrested after he and four other suspects allegedly stole an SUV and engaged in roughly a six-mile high-speed chase with police that eventually resulted in the crash of the stolen SUV.

    Following the police chase, police arrested the four other vehicle theft suspects. However, in the video, Valdez can be seen climbing the wall of an overpass and attempting to hide from the police, resulting in a police search of the area.

    According to The Daily Caller, police officers asked local residents to remain indoors, while the officers shouted warnings to Valdez that a police K-9 would be deployed in the area if he did not come out from hiding. Valdez was warned that the deployment of the K-9 could result in him being attacked and possibly injured by the police dog.

    Despite the warnings of the police officers, Valdez did not emerge from his hiding spot. Not long after the police K-9 was deployed, a sharp cry of pain came from the shrubs where Valdez was attempting to hide.

    READ MORE: Video: NYC mayor cuts police, school funding over migrant crisis

    Body camera footage from the police officers documented the exchange between Valdez and the officers after the 18-year-old suspect was attacked by the dog.

    “All right, start crawling towards us, we’re gonna take care of you,” an officer told the teenager. As Valdez emerged from hiding, he was recorded moaning in pain due to a major wound on his left arm, which was covered in blood and had flesh hanging off it, according to the video footage.

    As Valdez complied with the police officer’s orders to drop to his knees, the 18-year-old claimed, “I was just sleeping.” He added, “What am I being arrested for?”

    Additional video footage shared by the police department showed officers tending to his wound. One officer can be heard addressing the flesh hanging from his arm, saying, “It’s just—it’s just flap of skin, that’s all that is.” Another officer assured Valdez that they would put a bandage on his wound.

    Asked if he was going to be alright, an officer said, “Yeah, it’s gonna be fine.” Meanwhile, another officer said, “We’re gonna stitch it back right now.”

    In response to Valdez questioning what he did to deserve the wound that was inflicted by the police K-9, the police officer applying medical aid to Valdez’s wound said, “The ambulance is on its way. I know, I know, it’s horrible, I know.”

    Los Angeles Police Department Captain Kelly Muñiz explained in the video that was released Tuesday that the 18-year-old was arrested for felony evading and was booked at Valley Jail Division while he received medical attention at a local hospital. Muñiz noted that the October incident is still under investigation due to the department’s “Use of Force” policy.

    Graphic video footage of the incident can be seen below.



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  • Idaho wolf-killing proposals prompt petition for feds to ban ‘barbaric’ aerial hunts

    A group of environmental organizations has submitted a petition to the federal government to ban wolf killing by shooting from helicopters, calling the practice “barbaric.”

    The Center for Biological Diversity, Western Watersheds Project and International Wildlife Coexistence Network in Tuesday news releases said they were prompted by Idaho’s Wolf Depredation Control Board’s October decision to approve the scope of proposed lethal wolf control plans at two Wood River Valley ranches. The proposals, which included plans for aerial gunning, were submitted by Trevor Walch, the owner of a predator control corporation, without the knowledge of the ranches involved.

    The petition, which cited the Idaho Statesman’s reporting on the decision, asks the U.S. Forest Service to prohibit aerial gunning on national forest land. The petition noted that five proposals submitted to the wolf board included control efforts in Idaho Fish and Game management units that overlap five of the seven national forests in Idaho.

    The Statesman reported that owners of two ranches involved in the Wood River Wolf Project “were unaware of the proposal” and had not agreed to partner with the predator control company.” Those ranches have since asked to be withdrawn from the proposals to the board, the petition said.

    Board co-chairs Jim Fredericks, who heads Fish and Game, and Chanel Tewalt, director of the Idaho State Department of Agriculture, told the Statesman the proposals were part of an effort to include ranchers in wolf management and are still in early stages.

    The groups asked the Forest Service to ban private contractors from killing wolves via aerial hunting — though government agencies, like U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Wildlife Services and Idaho Fish and Game, would not be barred from the practice.

    Petitioners said the proposed aerial gunning over forest lands isn’t for the benefit of wildlife or livestock, citing a healthy population of elk in Idaho and ranches’ claims that they suffered no livestock depredations from wolves in the last year.

    “This is essentially illegal sport hunting from aircraft and there is no reason for the government to allow the state’s anti-science bloodlust for wolves to be slaked on federally managed lands,” said Talasi Brooks, a Western Watersheds Project attorney, in the news release.

    The environmental groups also said they believe aerial gunning could be disturbing or dangerous to outdoor recreators and could prove detrimental to endangered species like grizzly bears, wolverines and Canada lynx.

    The groups said they will consider legal action if the Forest Service does not respond to the petition.

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    © 2023 The Idaho Statesman

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Davenport man, former Army medic, starts long road to recovery after fall

    It was a mundane Wednesday afternoon when Ben Wallace almost lost his life.

    And what a life he has lived.

    Ben, a 43-year-old construction worker who grew up in Davenport, served in combat as a United States Army medic during Operation Iraqi Freedom, married his high school sweetheart, went to college after the military and earned a degree in marketing, raised three kids and even started doing stand-up comedy around the Quad-Cities.

    He took to the stage because he wanted a way to face his fears of an audience and tell stories about his time in the military. He now faces an even greater challenge.

    Sometime after noon on Oct. 4, Ben was on the deck of a home in Geneseo, working a room-addition job with a construction company.

    “It was a normal day in every way. It was, like, just after lunch on a regular day,” he said. “I’m raised up, by the railing of the deck, using the hammer to remove a portion of this pergola over the deck, and I slipped and fell and landed on my back.

    “I knew right away that I was hurt. I thought I’d separated my shoulder. I even got up, you know, trying to walk it off.”

    Tess, Ben’s wife, works as a massage therapist and was on the job when her phone rang.

    “Our deal is that when we are busy, we call back,” she said. “So I call him back at 1:15 p.m. and Ben says to me ‘Don’t panic, I got hurt at work. I’m on my way to the hospital.’ So asked him how bad he was hurt and he says: ‘I fell off a deck and I think I dislocated my shoulder.’

    “So I make this joke about ‘Lethal Weapon,’ you know the movie with the Mel Gibson torture scene, and I say ‘So you don’t need me there” and then the medic cuts in and says ‘Yes he needs you.’ and so I headed for the hospital.”

    Ben was transported to the Genesis Medical Center in Silvis. An emergency room doctor there determined Ben had much more than a dislocated shoulder. That doctor order a life flight to University of Iowa Hospitals in Iowa City.

    “My fourth vertebrae was crushed until my fifth vertebrae and I was in a lot of trouble,” Ben explained. “Getting prepped for the helicopter, that was terrifying. The crew, they were great, very calm, very reassuring.

    “But I knew from my own experience as a medic that if they called in the helicopter, I was in some trouble. It started to really get to me.”

    Ben underwent surgery to realign his fourth and fifth vertebrae, as well as to have his neck fused. He said he felt the same feeling he felt during his time in combat.

    “I want to try and explain this,” he said. “I was a medic like any other medic. Most days, it was pretty routine stuff, and some of what I saw was pretty graphic. I experienced the death of soldiers.

    “But I didn’t flash back to that when they put me in the helicopter. It’s been almost 20 years since what I experienced in Iraq and I have had a lot of time to grieve.”

    Ben groped to find the right words.

    “But once we were on the way, it felt like war,” he said. “It’s this feeling of powerlessness. It’s this feeling you have when you know you are going to lose a patient and there is no way to effect the outcome.

    “I was on the stretcher with no way to effect the outcome. That has a certain kind of terror to it.”

    Ben can walk and sit up. He doesn’t have use of his right arm and he could be in a neck brace another six weeks.

    Ben made a joke of his arm. Comedy was always a way to share something of himself with others.

    “I told Tess that I could switch from comedy to being a puppeteer,” he said. “I started doing open mic comedy nights because the idea of an audience terrified me, but I was drawn to it. It was a challenge, a monster to be slain.

    “And, you know, I had kind of moved away from it. But I’ve been thinking I have to go back now. There is no way I can’t try to share about this.”

    Ben’s wife expects him to meet the challenges.

    Tess first met Ben in 1995. They married in 2007. She said her husband will fight and recover. She is not surprised by seeing his strength.

    “But now I’ve seen him fragile, too,” she said. “I think he is struggling to accept his limitations right now. I have not seen him this way and I don’t know if he has really ever seen himself this way.

    “But this is like his ‘Rocky’ moment. I get to see him fight back because not for a second do I doubt his ability to overcome this.”

    Ben expressed what he called “gratitude.”

    “Like I said, it was a normal Wednesday and then it wasn’t. I wasn’t very high off the ground, fell maybe seven feet. But that was all it took,” he said. “I can’t be upset because this could have been so much worse. I’m here. I’m in the same room with my wife.

    “I’m just very blessed. Not many people get to see their life in a moment of fracture and get to come back. I’m grateful and I’m going to find a way to get back and share my gratitude with others.”

    People can help out Ben and Tess and their family through GoFundMe: www.gofundme.com/f/bringing-ben-back-home/.

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    (c) 2023 Moline Dispatch and Rock Island Argus

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Former Kentucky FBI agent pleads guilty to federal charges, admits taking guns from storage

    A former Central Kentucky FBI agent pleaded guilty Monday to federal charges after he illegally took guns from an FBI storage office, according to court records.

    Michael Van Aelstyn, 45, pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice and possessing an unregistered firearm, according to court documents. He was originally charged with possession of a firearm made in violation of the National Firearms Act, possession of an unregistered firearm, and unlawful transfer of a firearm to an out-of-state resident, according to a May indictment.

    Van Aelstyn is alleged to have removed two illegal firearms from a suspect’s home, transported them to an FBI office for storage, and later removed them from the evidence room, taking them to his residence, according to court documents.

    Van Aelstyn also gave an AM-15 multi-caliber rifle to a man identified in court documents as “MH,” and told him “he should not let anyone else know the source of that firearm.”

    Another gun, a Cugir Mini Draco pistol, was allegedly destroyed by Van Aelstyn and thrown away, according to court documents.

    Van Aelstyn also illegally possessed a 20-gauge Winchester shotgun with a sawed-off barrel, which was not registered in the National Firearms Registration and Transfer Record, according to the plea deal.

    His attorney, Thomas Bullock, declined to comment Tuesday.

    FBI agent took guns from office, stored them at home

    Van Aelstyn was working as a special agent with the FBI on July 5, 2017, when he seized the pistol and rifle from a suspect’s Lexington home during an investigation, according to court documents. Both the guns and illegal substances were placed into Van Aelstyn’s government vehicle and transported to the FBI Lexington Resident Agency office evidence room, according to court documents.

    Van Aelstyn admitted to the government that between January and April 2018, he knew that a formal office inspection was imminent because of an upcoming office relocation. He knew the guns were still in the evidence room without proper documentation ,which would be “cause for concern for office inspectors,” court documents state.

    Van Aelstyn said that’s why he removed the firearms from the office, took them home and put them in a safe, court documents state.

    By signing the plea agreement, Van Aelstyn admitted he “knowingly, corruptly, and illegally” retained the guns, his plea deal states.

    Van Aelstyn faces a maximum of one year and a day in prison, fines up to $360,000 and six years supervised release. His sentencing is scheduled for March 28 in Covington. A federal judge will consider the circumstances of the case and U.S. sentencing guidelines to determine what Van Aelstyn’s sentence will be.

    Assistant U.S. Attorney Karl Kadon, the prosecutor in the case, was not immediately available for comment Tuesday morning.

    Van Aelstyn indicated in court records that he is moving to Texas, which U.S. Magistrate Judge Candace Smith permitted him to do as part of conditions of release while he awaits final sentencing.

    FBI spokesperson Katie Anderson confirmed Tuesday that Van Aelstyn no longer works for the FBI.

    Former agent still suing local police

    The discovery of the guns was the result of a separate investigation into alleged domestic violence. Versailles Police Department officers showed up to Van Aelstyn’s residence on July 9, 2021 to investigate allegations against him.

    As a result of the incident, Van Aelstyn faced charges of assault-domestic violence and strangulation. A Woodford County grand jury declined to indict him on those charges in September 2022. Van Aelstyn then filed a federal lawsuit against the Versailles police officers who investigated him, claiming they violated his civil rights.

    Van Aelstyn’s lawsuit, filed in May, alleges Scott Carnes and Coleman Sparks continually violated Van Aelstyn’s rights by pursuing a criminal complaint against him, including testifying or presenting to the grand jury without reviewing or presenting evidence which would demonstrate his innocence.

    The lawsuit is still pending. Recent filings indicated attorneys were going through discovery.

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    © 2023 Lexington Herald-Leader

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Bay Area tech layoffs pass grim milestone with new Qualcomm job cuts

    Qualcomm has revealed plans to chop scores of jobs in the Bay Area, cutbacks that have brought the region’s tech layoffs to a grim economic benchmark.

    The Qualcomm layoffs in the Bay Area are part of the tech and telecommunications titan’s move to slash more than 1,000 positions in California.

    With the new job cuts the Bay Area has now passed a forbidding milestone for tech layoffs.

    During 2022 and so far in 2023, tech companies have revealed plans to eliminate more than 30,000 jobs in the Bay Area, according to this news organization’s review of many WARN notices that companies have sent to the state labor agency.

    So far in 2023, tech companies have disclosed their intentions to chop 19,617 jobs in the Bay Area. During 2022, tech companies revealed plans to eliminate 10,433 jobs, WARN letters filed with the state Employment Development Department show.

    That brings the total for the last 23 months to 30,050 tech layoffs in the Bay Area, according to the analysis of the WARN letters.

    Qualcomm has decided to eliminate 194 jobs in the Bay Area, all of them at the company’s office complex on Kifer Road in Santa Clara, WARN letters sent to the EDD show. The job cuts were described as permanent.

    In two rounds of layoffs during 2023, Qualcomm has revealed plans to chop 278 jobs in the nine-county region.

    Qualcomm said it expects the most recent round of job cuts to take effect on or around Dec. 13, the company stated in the WARN letter, according to a post on the EDD public site.

    The prior round of Qualcomm job cuts in the Bay Area took effect around July 18, WARN letters disclosed. Those triggered the layoffs of 84 workers.

    Qualcomm also revealed it intends to slash 1,064 jobs in San Diego. Those also were slated to take effect around Dec. 13.

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  • Family travels on foot to Carters’ home for burial

    By the time the motorcade left the church and hit N. Bond Street at about 12:30 p.m., the earlier joyful mood of the mourners along the street had given way to respectful, mournful silence.

    Aside from the humming of eight motorcycles, there were almost no sounds. People picked up their phones to record the moment.

    As Rosalynn Carter’s hearse made the slow ride through Plains, Pastor Tony Lowden slowly walked in front of it and nine members of the military marched behind it.

    Dozens of Carter family members — including Chip, Amy and Jason — followed behind for the long walk from the church to Rosalynn and Jimmy Carter’s home.

    The former first lady will be buried on the Carters’ property in a private ceremony.

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    © 2023 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC



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