Category: Security

  • Left-wing protesters shut down major Calif. bridge

    Left-wing protesters calling for an Israel-Gaza ceasefire caused the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge to shut down Thursday morning.

    At least 50 protesters were arrested and 15 vehicles were towed over the effort to block traffic, according to SFGate. Around 250 police were mobilized to deal with the protest, CBS Bay Area reported.

    California Highway Patrol officer Art Montiel said between 100 and 200 protesters took part in the demonstration.

    “It’s gonna take a little while. However, we’re not going to be blocking all the lanes so we’re hoping we can reopen at least one or two lanes in the meantime so that traffic can start flowing,” Montiel said. 

    Podcaster Robby Starbuck shared footage of the demonstration on X, formerly Twitter.

    “Left wing activists shut down the Bay Bridge during peak commuting hours. Doing this is a really good way to get people to hate you and your cause no matter what your cause is. People who do this pose a threat to stranded drivers jobs and health,” he wrote. “They deserve hard prison time. Do you agree or disagree?”

    This is breaking news that will be updated as more information becomes available. Keep reading below.



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  • Nearly 60 US troops injured in Iran-backed terrorist attacks

    The Pentagon announced Tuesday that the number of United States troops injured in the 56 attacks against U.S. forces in Iraq and Syria since Oct. 17 has risen to 59. The injured U.S. personnel have reportedly either been designated with non-serious injuries or with traumatic brain injuries.

    Sharing an update Tuesday on the Middle East terrorist attacks against U.S. forces in Syria and Iraq, Deputy Pentagon Press Secretary Sabrina Singh said, “We are also tracking 59 U.S. personnel who have received injuries in the TBI or non-serious categories since these attacks began. Approximately 27 personnel have been evaluated for TBI, and 32 for other non-serious injuries. As of today, all 59 have returned to duty.”

    Multiple terrorist organizations in the region began launching increased attacks against U.S. forces in both Iraq and Syria in the middle of October, less than two weeks after Hamas terrorists conducted a brutal surprise attack against Israel, resulting in the tragic death of hundreds of civilians.

    An anonymous defense official told Stars and Stripes that the latest attack against U.S. forces in the Middle East came Tuesday morning, as multiple rockets were launched against a United States base located at Mission Support Site Euphrates in Syria. According to the official, no casualties were reported, and the attack did not result in infrastructure damage.

    READ MORE: US military strikes Iran-backed Syria facility

    Tuesday’s attack brings the total number of terrorist attacks by drones and rockets against U.S. forces in Syria to 29 and the total number of attacks against U.S. forces in Iraq to 27.

    Prior to Tuesday’s attack, U.S. forces were attacked four times between Sunday and Monday, including at Rumalyn Landing Zone, Mission Support Site Green Village, Mission Support Site Euphrates, and U.S. bases at al-Shaddadi.

    The United States has carried out multiple airstrikes against sites used by Iran-backed terrorist organizations in response to the continued attacks against U.S. forces in the Middle East. The most recent retaliatory strike by the U.S. military took place last week, as two F-15s targeted a weapons storage facility in eastern Syria.

    Despite the persistence of the attacks against U.S. forces in the region, Singh told reporters Tuesday that the Pentagon believes the military’s deterrence airstrikes have been working since the war between Israel and Hamas has not escalated into a larger-scale conflict in the Middle East.

    “I think we are being very deliberate on how and when we conduct our strikes against these groups,” she said. “And I think that Iran is certainly seeing that message.”



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  • Matthew Perry’s death certificate released 3 weeks after star’s sudden passing

    Matthew Perry’s death certificate was released Tuesday, just over three weeks after the “Friends” star was discovered dead in his hot tub at age 54.

    The five-time Emmy nominee died at 4:17 p.m. on Oct. 28, according to the certificate released by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health media and obtained by Deadline.

    Though the beloved actor was initially reported to have succumbed to an accidental drowning, his cause of death is listed as deferred pending toxicology reports. On the heels of his passing, it was reported that the toxicology results were expected to take anywhere from six weeks to six months.

    Though officials suggested an autopsy had already been performed, no new information was listed on the certificate, per the outlet.

    Those close to Perry, who was open about his struggles with substance abuse and alcoholism, have come out in the wake of his death to confirm he was sober and in good spirits at the end.

    The “Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing” author was laid to rest on Nov. 3 at Forest Lawn Memorial Park, in a funeral attended by his “Friends” family — co-stars Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Lisa Kudrow, David Schwimmer and Matt LeBlanc.

    The cast, who was known to be close both on- and off-screen, released a joint statement in the wake of his death, which they said left them “all so utterly devastated.”

    The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health did not immediately respond to the Daily News’ request for comment.

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    © 2023 New York Daily News

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Kevin McCarthy allegedly attacks Tennessee congressman

    Rep. Tim Burchett, a Republican congressman from Tennessee, told CNN that former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy elbowed him during a House Republican conference meeting. Burchett is one of eight Republicans who voted to remove McCarthy from the speakership last month.
    According to Burchett, McCarthy hit him with a “clean shot to the kidneys.”

    NPR reporter Claudia Grisales was speaking with the Tennessee congressman at the time and shared on X that McCarthy’s jab almost knocked Burchett into her.

    “Have NEVER seen this on Capitol Hill: While talking to @RepTimBurchett after the GOP conference meeting, former @SpeakerMcCarthy walked by with his detail and McCarthy shoved Burchett. Burchett lunged towards me. I thought it was a joke, it was not. And a chase ensued…,” Grisales wrote.

    Burchett called out McCarthy in the moment, saying, “Why’d you elbow me in the back, Kevin?”

    “Hey Kevin, you got any guts? Jerk,” he added before chasing after McCarthy.

    The former speaker denied any wrongdoing.

    “I didn’t elbow you in the back,” McCarthy insisted.

    “You got no guts, you did so … the reporter said it right there, what kind of chicken move is that?” Burchett responded. “You’re pathetic, man, you are so pathetic.”

    “What a jerk,” Burchett continued. “You need security, Kevin.”

    READ MORE: McCarthy voted out as Speaker of the House

    Burchett later told CNN that McCarthy is a “bully with $17 million and a security detail.

    “I’m probably not going to do an ethics complaint on him. He’s not worth it,” he added.

    After the incident ended, McCarthy once again denied hitting Burchett.

    “I guess our shoulders hit because Burchett [ran] up to me after — I didn’t know what he was talking about,” McCarthy told reporters. “I didn’t run and hit the guy, I did not kidney-punch him.”

    “If I would hit somebody, they would know I hit them,” McCarthy added.



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  • Streets lined with Chinese flags for Chinese Communist president

    Prior to President Joe Biden’s Wednesday meeting with Communist Chinese President Xi Jinping in San Francisco, California, videos of the city’s streets lined with Chinese flags circulated on social media, sparking widespread outrage.

    According to Newsweek, Xi and Biden’s Wednesday meeting, which is part of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Forum, is the first face-to-face meeting between the two leaders in a year. The meeting between Biden and the Chinese communist leader has been viewed as a pivotal measure in preventing tensions between the United States and China from escalating.

    However, as the Chinese president and his motorcade escort arrived in San Fransisco, controversial video footage was posted on social media, showing the city celebrating Xi’s arrival with countless Chinese flags.

    In a post on X, formerly Twitter, The Post Millennial’s investigative reporter, Katie Daviscourt, shared a video of the Chinese flags along the streets of San Francisco, saying, “Oh look, San Francisco turned into China for President Xi’s arrival. Finally revealing its true colors.”

    Sharing similar video footage on social media, Charlie Kirk, Turning Point USA founder and CEO, tweeted, “Xi Jinping arrives in San Francisco and not a single American flag to be seen.”

    A social media user with the X account “I Meme Therefore I Am” shared a photo of Chinese flags lining the streets of San Fransisco, stating, “This is happening on American soil. You will never see American flags paraded on the streets of Beijing.”

    In addition to the public outrage over Chinese flags lining the streets of California in celebration of the Chinese president, social media users questioned the sudden disappearance of homeless camps throughout San Fransisco this week in preparation for Xi’s arrival.

    READ MORE: China now has 500+ nukes, will have 1,000+ by 2030: Pentagon

    One social media user, sharing a video comparison of the streets, tweeted, “Did Gavin sell California to China? He didn’t clean up the streets for Californians. But cleaned it up for a communist dictator. Where did all the homeless go? They can clean up their cities but refuse to.”

    Other social media users blamed the Biden administration and Democrat policies for the poor conditions of San Francisco that have been recorded in recent years while calling out the same Democrat leaders for quickly changing the conditions of the city in order to impress the Chinese president.

    “The CCP flew a SPY BALLOON over America and now they get a parade down the streets of San Francisco,” Alec Lace, a podcast host and journalist, wrote. “Notice there’s no drug addicts lining the streets as usual. They were stuffed in hotels, not to make them safer for American citizens, but so Xi Jinping doesn’t see how badly democrat policies have failed. This is Joe Biden’s AMERICA.”

    After meeting with Biden on Wednesday, Xi is scheduled to remain in California until Nov. 17, according to Newsweek.



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  • GOP senator, union boss nearly fistfight on Capitol Hill

    A fistfight almost commenced Tuesday on Capitol Hill between Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-Okla.) and Teamsters Union President Sean O’Brien. Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee Chairman, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), was forced to step in and prevent the fight from breaking out.

    The intervention by Sanders can be seen in a video, along with the interaction between Mullin and O’Brien that almost led to a fistfight during Tuesday’s Senate hearing. Benny Johnson, a conservative media personality, shared the video on X, tweeting, “Teamster President Sean O’Brien challenged Senator Markwayne Mullin to a fight during a hearing in the Senate. Bernie Sanders stepped in to stop it.”

    According to NBC News, the heated exchange between Mullin and O’Brien took place as Mullin, a previous MMA fighter, brought up a social media exchange he had in June with the union president. At the time of the social media exchange in June, Mullin and O’Brien had mentioned holding an MMA fight for charity to settle their disagreement that stemmed from an intense congressional hearing on Capitol Hill.

    On Tuesday, Mullin read O’Brien’s tweet to members of the Senate committee during the hearing. The tweet said, “Greedy CEO who pretends like he’s self-made. In reality, just a clown & fraud. Always has been, always will be. Quit the tough guy act in these senate hearings. You know where to find me. Anyplace, Anytime cowboy.”

    After reading the tweet, Mullin addressed O’Brien’s challenge, saying, “Sir, this is a time; this is a place. You want to run your mouth? We can be two consenting adults. We can finish it here.”

    READ MORE: US Senate gives anti-carjacking tips after lawmakers, staff held at gunpoint

    In response to Mullin’s statement, O’Brien said, “OK, that’s fine, perfect.” Asked whether he wanted to have the fight right then, O’Brien said he would “love” to have the fight “right now.”

    Responding to O’Brien’s challenge, Mullin said, “Then stand your butt up then.” After O’Brien replied by telling the Oklahoma senator to “stand your butt up,” Mullin began to stand up in front of the committee hearing in order to engage in the fistfight.

    However, Sanders, as the chairman of Tuesday’s hearing, was able to prevent the fistfight from happening, as he ordered Mullin, “Stop it! No, no, sit down! You know, you’re a United States senator.”

    “This is a hearing,” he added. “God knows the American people have enough contempt for Congress, let’s not make it worse.”

    Following the intervention by Sanders, Mullin and O’Brien continued to call each other names and interrupt each other before Mullin eventually challenged the union president to an official cage match in April to benefit charity, prompting Sanders to once again intervene.

    “Excuse me, hold it. Sen. Mullin, I have the mic,” the Vermont senator said. “If you have questions on any economic issues, anything that was said, go for it. We’re not here to talk about physical abuse.”

    Toward the conclusion of Tuesday’s episode, Mullin and O’Brien appeared to agree to have coffee together to discuss their disagreement.



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  • Dystopian YouTube animation draws on themes from today’s Hong Kong

    This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission.

    As a satirical YouTube animation satirizes a dystopian future for China using scenes from the 2019 protests in Hong Kong, the city’s police force has announced that its officers will soon be boarding buses to “fight crime.”

    The 11-minute animation uses a long-standing meme used to express empathy – Wojak – as the main character, and takes aim at pervasive surveillance and censorship in Xi Jinping’s China, but also at an ongoing crackdown on dissent in Hong Kong, where public criticism of the authorities has been criminalized under the 2020 National Security Law.

    As Hong Kongers’ flocked to the Mr. Marmot YouTube channel to say how moved they were by the tribute to their movement, the city’s police force was warning residents to get ready for their bus to be boarded by patrolling police officers in the weeks and months to come.

    “If you see the police on the bus – no need to think it’s weird,” the Mong Kok District police division said in a recent Facebook post. “The police will patrol all forms of public transportation to step up protection of citizens’ lives, and property.”

    “The police will never tolerate or condone any criminal behavior!” says the post, which was published shortly after claims emerged in a new book that the police had known in advance that mobsters were planning to attack passengers in Yuen Long MTR on July 21, 2019, at the height of the protest movement, and did nothing about it.

    It’s 2077

    Meanwhile, the animated short film “Cyber Rebels 2077” on the YouTube channel Mr Marmot envisages a world in which the ruling Communist Party’s “social credit” scheme that currently imposes restrictions on individuals who have black marks on their personal record – perhaps for unpaid debts – is expanded and integrated with a nationwide mass surveillance system that already exists across the country.

    It’s 2077, and in a fit of frustration at work, Wojak utters a few ill-chosen words that are heard by the system, and immediately receives a text message informing him that he has forfeited 10 credit points, taking him below the 50 minimum points needed to access public transport.

    As he walks wearily home from his workplace, Wojak, who wears a shirt bearing the numbers 8964 in a coded reference to the 1989 Tiananmen massacre, meets an old man selling banned movies and other media content, and agrees to buy something from him.

    The pair are immediately identified by a patrolling drone, and Wojak is sent to “the world’s largest political prison,” where he is invited along on a long-planned breakout by other inmates. The group are intercepted and arrested by riot police, in scenes based on real-life news photos of police arresting protesters in 2019.

    Later, Wojak’s denial that he tried to escape with the help of “American reactionaries” is twisted by deepfake technology into a confession and broadcast on national news.

    In a plot twist at the end, the crowd gets angry about having points deducted from their social credit scores en masse, affecting their children’s right to go to school, and challenges riot cops sent to quell the protests to join them instead and make a better world — too late for Wojak, who has by then died of his injuries.

    ‘I really cried’

    The animation, which had garnered more than 420,000 views by 1500 GMT on Monday, ends with a frame showing a smashed portrait of late supreme Communist Party leader Mao Zedong, and struck a chord with many in Hong Kong.

    “I am a Hong Konger. I really cried when I saw the memories and pain of those years,” one comment said. “I can never let it go, this kind of injustice continues to this day.” 

    “A memory that I will never forget,” read another.

    The plot draws on China’s insistence on forcing “confessions” out of the political prisoners, its nationwide “SkyNet” surveillance and facial recognition system, and widespread and often rapid online censorship of banned political keywords.

    However, similar themes are already starting to be visible in today’s Hong Kong, with students at the Chinese University of Hong Kong recently warned to keep to the Student Code of Conduct after people turned up on campus with portable “Lennon walls” in the form of blackboards that invited students to leave stick-on messages about their hopes for the future of the university.

    The protesters were hauled off by campus security and told off for their behavior, although they were also told they hadn’t broken the law.

    U.S. lawmakers are gangsters

    Jen-Shuo Hsu, assistant professor at the School of Media Studies at Hokkaido University, said the plan for police patrols on buses would likely achieve little in terms of fighting crime.

    “It will have an effect, and it may make some people scared,” Hsu told Radio Free Asia. “Showing up is a kind of police measure that is generally regarded as a light touch.”

    “But legally speaking, it also constitutes a kind of restriction on people’s rights.”

    Hong Kong officials are also quickly picking up Communist Party rhetoric targeting the United States, with Secretary for Security Chris Tang describing U.S. lawmakers as “gangsters” for trying to impose sanctions on judicial officials and judges tasked with enforcing the National Security Law.

    A brief survey by Radio Free Asia on Monday found that the United States has been described as “gangster-like” on at least one radio show, in the pro-China Sing Tao Daily and in the Beijing-backed Ta Kung Pao newspaper.

    Current affairs commentator Sang Pu said such language is reminiscent of the political denunciations of the Cultural Revolution under Mao.

    “Officials should be tough and enforce the law … instead of saying people are mafia, underworld or running dogs,” Sang said in a reference to recent comments by Tang.

    “It’s actually a way to show loyalty to the Chinese Communist Party,” Sang said. “They are all sticking to the Communist Party line.”

    He said there is an inherent threat signaled in the ramping up of rhetoric, which uses pro-democracy media mogul Jimmy Lai, a British citizen, and other high-profile opposition figures, as bargaining chips, albeit in a coded manner.

    “The threat is that if they pass this bill [mandating sanctions] they may not be able to help Jimmy Lai and others,” he said. 

    A brief online survey of Tang’s background showed a number of media reports alleging that he protected rural triads in the New Territories during his tenure as police chief in the northern border town of Yuen Long, where the 2019 mob attacks took place.

    According to some reports, the stories prompted officials from the Police Public Relations Division to call assignment editors at major news organizations and ask them to “show mercy” over the story. Tang resigned from the Yuen Long post in 2013.



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  • Defense contractor wins up to $16.5M award to advance Air Force AI in weather planning

    A NextGen Federal Systems research division has won its first Small Business Innovation Research Phase III award from the Air Force, the company announced Monday.

    The company said the award is its largest contract award to date for its Research and Development division.

    The ceiling for the award is $16.5 million, with options that could extend contract work over four years.

    The company has offices in Beavercreek. Ohio R&D elements will be involved in aspects of the work, said Daryl Everding, who leads the company’s Research & Development/Technical Solutions division.

    Phase III awards are considered significant. They can offer the right to sole-source contracts, and there are no limits on the dollar size of a Phase III procurement, among other benefits.

    This project involves work on a cyber-secure weather machine learning operations production platform, with a “global synthetic weather radar” to meet Air Force weather mission needs, the business said. Machine learning is a branch of artificial intelligence.

    The work will involve machine learning, data science and engineering, and software development.

    “NextGen is excited to embark on this groundbreaking project, and through collaboration with the United States Air Force, we aim to enhance weather intelligence capabilities, ultimately contributing to the success of military operations,” NextGen Technical Director Bob Farrell, said in a statement.

    “By developing accurate and timely weather intelligence for military planning and execution, NextGen will sustain and build on the work already accomplished to deliver a world-class ML (machine learning) operation that provides accurate weather insights in support of US strategic programs,” the Morgantown, W. Va.-based company said.

    The company has offices at 2661 Commons Blvd., Beavercreek.

    NextGen opened that office in 2016 to support subcontract work on the Advanced Technical Exploitation Program with the National Air and Space Intelligence Center at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.

    “NextGen Federal Systems is proud to be at the forefront of innovation, and this award represents our commitment to advancing the field of weather forecasting and machine learning,” Chetan Desai, NextGen chief operating officer, said in his release. “The company looks forward to continuing its collaboration with the U.S. Air Force and other stakeholders to create more groundbreaking solutions for the future.”

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    (c) 2023 the Dayton Daily News

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Father of 2, military veteran was killed 3 years ago in Tacoma. Here’s how you can help

    Dante Robinson, 28, was found shot to death on March 31, 2020, in the 1800 block of South 15th Street.

    Officers responded around 11 that night and spoke to Robinson’s girlfriend, who said they both recently returned to the apartment from a nearby store. She realized they forgot something and went back to the store. When she returned about 15 minutes later, Robinson was found unresponsive.

    No one has been arrested, and police say they don’t have any suspects.

    A news conference was held at Tacoma Police Department headquarters on Monday.

    Detective Julie Dier said surveillance footage from Robinson’s apartment complex showed a subject dressed in dark clothing walking around prior to the shooting. The subject was seen running away from the building after the shooting.

    Police are looking for the public’s help. They hope anyone who did not come forward in 2020 with information is able to do so now since time has passed. Dier said they did a canvas that night and spoke to neighbors but no information was given that would help.

    Several of Robinson’s family members were at the news conference. His mother, Rena Joens-Charrette, and stepfather, Craig Charrette, flew in from Florida. Robinson’s father, Michael, and brother, Angelo Edwards, flew in from Virginia. Each family member held a photo of Robinson as they spoke.

    “We want to reach out to anyone that’s out there, if you know something, please let us know. We’ve been suffering for three years and we just need some answers,” Michael said.

    Edwards said he and his brother would talk almost every day. They would either talk over the phone or when playing video games. Edwards said he called himself Batman and Robinson was Superman. Edwards said Robinson was called Superman because when he was a child he would always try to play with the older children.

    “He was so young hanging out, playing with big boys and he never went crying home to mom, no matter how much he got banged up,” he said. “Anytime he got banged up, still won’t get me in trouble.”

    On March 31, Robinson told Edwards that he was going to the store. That was the last time Edwards heard from him. He learned Robinson had been killed when their mother called to tell him the news.

    Robinson had two children, a 9-year-old and 4-year-old. Edwards said Robinson was dedicated to everything including his children. Robinson served in the military and did two tours in Afghanistan. He was stationed at Joint Base Lewis-McChord.

    “What is hard for me as a father, I could accept losing my son in a war, because that’s what he sacrificed for, but just to come back home in a country he was fighting for to protect, to come back home and be murdered senseless,” Michael said.

    Michael said his son was a victim to “senseless” gun violence and he believes laws need to be passed to prevent this from happening to more parents.

    Dier said they believe there was somebody who saw the suspect leaving the apartment complex after the shooting.

    “We just want this person to come to us and tell us what it is that you saw that time,” she said. “So if you were there, and you saw the individual that was leaving this area, please come speak with us and let us know what it is that you saw that night.”

    Anyone with information can reach out to the Tacoma Police Department at 1-800-222-TIPS or Crime Stoppers.

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    (c) 2023 The News Tribune

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Matt LeBlanc says goodbye to ‘Friends’ co-star and ‘brother’ Matthew Perry

    Matt LeBlanc on Tuesday wrote a heartfelt farewell to his longtime “Friends” scene partner Matthew Perry.

    The “Episodes” and “Friends” actor, who had released a joint statement with his iconic co-stars in the days after Perry’s late-October death, became the first “Friends” cast member to share a more personal tribute to his friend: the sarcastic and financially supportive Chandler Bing to his dim-witted but good-natured Joey Tribbiani.

    “Matthew. It is with a heavy heart I say goodbye,” LeBlanc wrote on Instagram, alongside photos of scenes from their Emmy-winning NBC sitcom.

    “The times we had together are honestly among the favorite times of my life,” he added. “It was an honor to share the stage with you and to call you my friend. I will always smile when I think of you and I’ll never forget you. Never. Spread your wings and fly brother you’re finally free. Much love. And I guess you’re keeping the 20 bucks you owe me.”

    LeBlanc’s post featured images of him and Perry from when they played roommates in the series, including their apartment shenanigans and numerous hugs. Another showed a candid moment of the central cast hugging.

    Perry and his five co-stars shared the screen and entertained live-audience members in the hit sitcom from 1994 to 2004 and scored new generations of fans from syndication and streaming. As the wisecracking Chandler, Perry brought his signature sarcasm to a playful group of actors that quickly became one of TV’s most iconic ensemble casts.

    The beloved “comedic genius,” who died at 54, was mourned by Hollywood and beyond, as well as by his castmates in a joint statement on Oct. 30. LeBlanc, Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Lisa Kudrow and David Schwimmer said that they “are all so utterly devastated by the loss.”

    “We were more than just cast mates. We are a family,” they said. “There is so much to say, but right now we’re going to take a moment to grieve and process this unfathomable loss.”

    “In time we will say more, as and when we are able. For now, our thoughts and our love are with Matty’s family, his friends, and everyone who loved him around the world.”

    The “Fools Rush In” and “The Odd Couple” star, who was open about his struggles with addiction for years, was found unresponsive in a hot tub on Oct. 28 and was declared dead at the scene.

    While officials say they are working to determine a cause of death, the investigation could take three to six months to complete, the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner said earlier this month. Foul play has been ruled out.

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    © 2023 Los Angeles Times

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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