Category: Security

  • ‘Terror cult’ members arrested over murder of Border Patrol agent

    Law enforcement officials have arrested the leader of the “Ziz” transgender “terror cult” and Michelle Zajko, a member of the terror cult who has been the target of a police manhunt since a U.S. Border Patrol agent was killed during a January 20 traffic stop in Vermont.

    According to The Post Millennial, the terror cult leader, who has been identified as Jack “Andrea” LaSota, and 32-year-old Zajko were arrested in Allegany County, Maryland, on Sunday.

    The Baltimore Banner reported that court records indicate that the two members of the Ziz terror cell, also known as the “Zizians,” were taken into custody at the Allegany County jail due to firearm and trespassing offenses, as well as charges of obstructing or hindering authorities.

    Asked about the arrest of LaSota and Zajko on Monday, Maryland State Police Lt. Jeremy Stonebraker said, “The investigators that are working on the case aren’t going to do any press releases at this time because the investigation is kind of fluid and ongoing and the FBI is involved now.”

    READ MORE: Pics: Manhunt underway for suspect in murder of Border Patrol agent: Report

    In a post on X, formerly Twitter, Post Millennial editor Andy Ngo shared a video confirming that law enforcement had arrested LaSota and Zajko, whom he described as “one of the other dangerous, wanted members” of the transgender group.” Ngo also shared pictures of LaSota and Zajko.

    “THEY GOT ‘EM!” Ngo wrote. “The two wanted members of the Trantifa terror cult who have been on the run have been arrested.”

    According to The Post Millennial, Zajko, who was previously identified by Ngo as “trans nonbinary,” has been accused of supplying weapons to Teresa Youngblut and Felix Bauckholt, two other transgender individuals who are believed to have been involved in the murder of U.S. Border Patrol Agent David “Chris” Maland on January 20.

    Court documents obtained by The Times Union show that law enforcement officials discovered a .40-caliber semiautomatic handgun and a .380-caliber handgun at the scene of the fatal shooting of the Border Patrol agent in Vermont and that both of the weapons were purchased last February by Zajko.

    In addition to Zajko’s alleged connection to the murder of the Border Patrol agent, The Post Millennial reported that Zajko is wanted by law enforcement officials for the murders of Zajko’s parents, Richard and Rita Zajko, in 2023. The outlet noted that Zajko has also been listed as a “person of interest” in the murder of a landlord in Vallejo, California.


    Source: American Military News

  • Democrat slammed for using position to raise funds for private PAC

    David Hogg, who was recently appointed as the vice chairman of the Democratic National Committee (DNC), is being accused by members of his own party of demonstrating “a stunning lack of judgment” by using his position with the DNC to request donations from Democrat supporters for his personal political action committee (PAC).

    The New York Post reported that within the first couple of weeks of serving as vice chairman of the DNC, Hogg has already used DNC contact lists to solicit donations to his “Leaders We Deserve” PAC. According to Federal Election Commission records obtained by the outlet, Hogg receives over $100,000 in compensation from the PAC each year and has already been paid over $175,000 through the PAC.

    In one of the text messages sent out to the DNC’s database, Hogg wrote, “David Hogg here: I was just elected DNC Vice Chair! This is a huge win for our movement to make the Democratic Party more reflective of our base: youthful, energetic, and ready to win.”

    The New York Post reported that the text messages sent by Hogg to Democrat supporters included a link to his personal PAC.

    While Hogg’s messages encouraging DNC supporters to donate funds to his personal PAC are not against election fundraising rules, one top Democrat told The New York Post, “David Hogg — talk about living up to your name. A trough of DNC dollars all for him and he doesn’t seem to give an oink.”

    READ MORE: Video: Democrat lawmakers stage ‘insurrection’ at Education Department

    Another senior Democratic Party official told The New York Post, “It’s especially important for all Democratic national officials to focus on raising support for the party and not using their position to raise money for themselves or their personal political PACS. It’s a stunning lack of judgment that is concerning to many people.”

    The New York Post reported that the 24-year-old DNC vice chairman is one of the survivors of the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, which resulted in the death of 17 people in Parkland, Florida, in 2018.

    Addressing Hogg’s rise to leadership in the Democrat Party, Cameron Kasky, another survivor of the deadly mass shooting, told The New York Post, “I mean it’s just very frustrating to be in a party in desperate need of increased accountability for our struggling leadership, and watch someone who is never held accountable ascend to leadership.”

    Hogg told The New York Post that he “was not doing any interviews” when the outlet contacted him regarding his recent actions. A Hogg spokesman later provided a statement to The New York Post, saying, “David has already raised money for the DNC since becoming Vice Chair, and many times before.”


    Source: American Military News

  • Major plane crash leaves at least 15 injured

    A Delta airplane crash at Toronto Pearson International Airport left at least 15 passengers injured on Monday. Pictures shared on social media show the plane upside-down on the airport runway.

    According to CTV News, three individuals, including one child, suffered critical injuries in Monday’s airplane crash. The outlet noted that Peel Paramedics confirmed that 12 other individuals were transported to the hospital with mild injuries.

    A video shared on X, formerly Twitter, shows the airplane flipped upside-down on the runway of the Toronto Pearson International Airport.

    The Toronto Pearson International Airport confirmed Monday’s Delta airplane crash in a post on X, saying, “Toronto Pearson is aware of an incident upon landing involving a Delta Airlines plane arriving from Minneapolis. Emergency teams are responding. All passengers and crew are accounted for.”

    According to flight records obtained by The New York Post, the airplane involved in Monday’s crash has been identified as Delta Flight 4819. The New York Post reported that the Mitsubishi CRJ-900LR airplane departed from Minneapolis at roughly 11:47 a.m. on Monday before crashing prior to 3 p.m.

    Shortly after Monday’s crash, Ontario Premier Doug Ford tweeted, “I’m relieved there are no casualties after the incident at Toronto Pearson. Provincial officials are in contact with the airport and local authorities and will provide any help that’s needed.”

    READ MORE: Video: Famous singer’s private jet involved in fatal plane crash

    Canada’s transportation minister, Anita Anand, confirmed that she was “closely following” the crash at the Toronto Pearson International Airport. Anand noted that all 80 of the Delta Flight 4819 passengers and crew were “accounted for” and that additional updates would be provided.

    Gov. Tim Walz (D-Minn.) also released a statement on X, explaining that he was “in touch” with Delta Airlines “after a flight taking off from MSP crash landed in Toronto this afternoon.” Walz added, “Grateful to the first responders and professionals on the scene.”

    Pictures of the Delta airplane crash were shared on social media by Breaking 911. The photos show the airplane after it flipped upside-down on the airport runway.

    In a statement obtained by CTV News, the United States Federal Aviation Administration announced that the Transportation Safety Board of Canada would be leading an investigation into Monday’s plane crash.


    Source: American Military News

  • New York rapper, ‘House Party’ actor Gene ‘Groove’ Allen dead at 62

    Long Island-born rapper and actor Gene “Groove” Allen has died unexpectedly, according to his family.

    His death was confirmed on social media by his daughter, Nikki Wilkins.

    “Gene ‘Groove’ Allen may be a celebrity to y’all but to us he was the man who made sure we stayed smiling through this rollercoaster we call life,” she wrote. “He is loved, he is needed and yes it was a total shock. I know he is watching over me and my siblings.”

    While no cause of death was given, a family member told TMZ that Allen died Wednesday at his home in Maryland following a medical emergency. No foul play is suspected. The outlet reported his age as 62, while his IMDb profile lists him as 60.

    Fans of the Kid ‘n Play “House Party” movies of the early 1990s will remember Allen as Groove. He went on to land small roles in 1992’s “Boomerang” starring Eddie Murphy, and a year later in the Tina Turner biopic “What’s Love Got to Do With It?”

    But to music fans, Allen was known for founding the New York City hip-hop trio Groove B. Chill, alongside Daryl “Chill” Mitchell and DJ Belal Miller. The group released one studio album, 1990’s “Starting From Zero,” and are best remembered for the song “Hip Hop Music.”

    In more recent years, Allen dedicated himself to community service and raising funds for good causes as the president and CEO of Groove E. Productions. Late last year, he hosted hip-hop shows to raise money and resources for veterans, a women’s shelter and a holiday toy drive.

    He’d also recently been promoting new music off his anticipated EP “Bring Back the Party.” Video posted to Instagram earlier this week shows him rapping in front of a live audience.

    Queens hip-hop star Eric B. joined a long list of old-school fans mourning Allen’s death. He said he learned of the bad news from Mitchell, now an actor known for his roles in “NCIS: New Orleans” and “Fear the Walking Dead.”

    “Got a call from my brother Chill that his brother Groove passed away,” Eric B. wrote on Instagram Friday. “Dam rest in peace brother Groove. We will continue to celebrate your life. Let the house party continue on.”

    Allen is survived by his wife and three children, according to TMZ.

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    © 2025 New York Daily News

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


    Source: American Military News

  • 9 killed in major flood in Kentucky

    Kentucky officials have confirmed that major flooding in the state has led to at least nine deaths, including a mother and her 7-year-old daughter.

    According to WNKY-TV, Hart County Coroner Tony Roberts confirmed that a mother and her 7-year-old daughter were killed on Saturday night after their vehicle was submerged in water. The outlet noted that Roberts confirmed the 7-year-old’s body was recovered on Saturday night, while Hart County Search and Rescue confirmed that the mother’s body was recovered on Sunday afternoon.

    In a Sunday statement on X, formerly Twitter, Gov. Andy Beshear (D-Ky.) announced that nine individuals had been confirmed dead as a result of the flooding.

    “I am sad to share some more tough news tonight, Kentucky,” Beshear said. “We just confirmed another weather-related death out of Pike County, bringing our total loss to 9 people.”

    According to Fox News, Beshear noted that the majority of the flooding-related deaths were caused by vehicles getting stuck in the flood waters. Beshear also confirmed that over 1,000 rescues had been conducted since the start of the flooding on Saturday.

    READ MORE: Video: Cars drive on flooded bridge as hurricane leaves 6 dead, 3 million without power

    “So folks, stay off the roads right now and stay alive,” the Kentucky governor warned. “This is the search and rescue phase, and I am very proud of all the Kentuckians that are out there responding, putting their lives on the line.”

    Fox News reported that roughly 39,000 homes lost power as a result of Saturday’s storm; however, Beshear warned residents that power outages could increase due to high winds.

    One social media user shared a video and pictures of the widespread flooding in Kentucky, writing, “This flood is like nothing I’ve ever seen! Clay County, Kentucky is under water.”

    Another social media user shared pictures of the damage caused to entire communities by the devastating flooding in Kentucky. The pictures also show cars almost completely submerged in water. “Pray for Kentucky. We are not okay!” the social media user tweeted. “Over a thousand rescues today, 9 confirmed deaths, roads swept out, bridges collapsed, countless homes & property destroyed.”

    On Sunday, Beshear announced that “widespread flooding” in Kentucky was “continuing.” He added, “The statewide impact is massive, with hundreds of water rescues and multiple fatalities. Evacuations are continuing as this event will continue through today.”

    According to Fox News, President Donald Trump approved Kentucky’s request for a disaster declaration, which will allow the Federal Emergency Management Agency to help coordinate disaster relief efforts.

    On Monday, Beshear shared an update on social media regarding the flooding, saying, “Kentucky is still experiencing widespread impacts from the severe weather. We need everyone to be aware that conditions are dangerous, and folks need to stay off the roads in areas with high water.”


    Source: American Military News

  • Kansas woman faces life sentence in killing of husband stationed at Fort Riley

    A 31-year-old Kansas woman was convicted Friday in the fatal shooting of her husband who was a U.S. Army soldier.

    Margaret E. Shafe was found guilty of second-degree murder in the killing of Greg Shafe on Feb. 19, 2024 at their home on Fort Riley, a U.S. military base southwest of Manhattan, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Kansas said.

    Shafe faces a maximum penalty of life in prison,” a news release said. Her husband was stationed at Fort Riley at the time of the killing.

    The circumstances behind the incident are unknown. The affidavit and related court documents were sealed, federal court records show.

    Agencies involved in the investigation included the FBI, U.S. Department of Criminal Investigation Division and the Fort Riley Fire and Emergency Services.

    Fort Riley is roughly 101,000 acres in size and houses some 15,000 active duty service members.

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    © 2025 The Wichita Eagle

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC


    Source: American Military News

  • Jet skids off runway at St. Louis airport; no injuries reported

    No one was injured when a jet ran off the runway Wednesday at St. Louis Lambert International Airport.

    The United regional jet operated by GoJet Airlines was landing in St. Louis at 10:50 a.m. CST after taking off from Washington Dulles International Airport. In a news release from the St. Louis airport, officials said the aircraft “went into a section of grass after landing on St. Louis Lambert International Airport’s Runway 11-29.”

    There were 27 people on board the plane, including crew members, and all were taken by airport buses to the facility’s Concourse A.

    A winter weather system moved through St. Louis on Wednesday, dropping a wintry mix of sleet and snow in the region. Most of the snow was forecast for areas north of St. Louis, where St. Louis Lambert International is located in north St. Louis County.

    The incident comes after several recent aircraft mishaps, including a military jet crashing with a commercial airliner in midair over Washington, D.C.; a medical transport plane crashing in Philadelphia; and an aircraft that went missing in the Alaskan mountains. There were also incidents in Seattle and Scottsdale, Arizona.

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    © 2025 The Telegraph

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC


    Source: American Military News

  • NJ woman facing federal charge for robbing bank of $60,000 with toy gun

    A New Jersey woman accused of robbing a Mercer County bank of more than $60,000 with a spray-painted toy water gun is now facing a federal charge, officials said.

    Ciara Brascom has been charged with one count of bank robbery, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of New Jersey announced Tuesday. If convicted, she faces up to 20 years in prison and a fine of $250,000.

    On July 28, 2024, a masked Brascom entered the TD Bank on Route 206 in Princeton, brandishing what appeared to be a handgun, according to a criminal complaint. She then allegedly handed over a note to one of the bank tellers, demanding cash and threatening to use her weapon should the bank alarm be triggered.

    When Brascom learned there was no money in the teller’s drawer, she accompanied him to the bank vault and then allegedly made off with $60,500. She did not have a bag with her, authorities noted, so she walked out of the building with hands full of cash.

    After an extensive investigation, authorities called in 39-year-old Brascom for questioning on Sept. 28. She described for them “certain financial difficulties, which fueled her desire to rob the bank,” according to the criminal complaint.

    Brascom also recalled how she searched for a replica gun to use during the robbery, and when she couldn’t find one, she instead purchased a pack of water pistols and black spray paint, police said. She then went home, where she “painted one of the guns with black paint to make it look more realistic.”

    “After the paint dried,” Brascom made her way to the bank, according to the documents. Following the robbery, she once again returned home and tossed the pistol as well as the hat she’d been wearing, which was captured in bank surveillance video.

    Brascom was arrested and charged with robbery, criminal restraint, theft, terroristic threats, money laundering, aggravated assault and weapons offenses, NJ.com reported. The status of her local charges were not immediately clear.

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    © 2025 New York Daily News

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


    Source: American Military News

  • 6 men accused of kidnapping Chicago family, forcing a transfer of $15 million in cryptocurrency

    Six men are accused of kidnapping three family members and a nanny from a Chicago townhouse in October and forcing a transfer of about $15 million in cryptocurrency assets before releasing them five days later near a dry cleaners, according to recently unsealed court records.

    The five-day kidnapping is detailed in a 44-page FBI affidavit unsealed last week. Agents collected evidence — including receipts, unused zip ties and surveillance footage — from rental cars, cryptocurrency wallets, a suburban Airbnb and various fast-food restaurants and retail stores, court records show.

    One of the alleged kidnappers, 34-year-old Zehuan Wei, was arrested Jan. 17 while trying to enter the United States from Mexico at a California border crossing. He made an initial court appearance in California.

    Five other men are charged with kidnapping in the case: Fan Zhang, Huajing Yan, Shengnan Jiang, Shiqiang Lian and Ye Cao. Some of them are believed to have taken flights from Mexico to China last month after Wei’s arrest, according to an FBI search warrant affidavit.

    The court records do not say where the suspects are from but indicated that some held U.S. drivers licenses. At least Zhang and Wei also had Chinese passports, documents show.

    Four people kidnapped

    Authorities were first notified of the kidnapping after a father, referred to as “Individual A” in the affidavit, got a call from his son on WeChat, a Chinese messaging app, around 1 p.m. Oct. 27 alerting him that the group had been kidnapped. The victims also aren’t named in the court records and are referred to as “Victims A-D.”

    The man’s son, who had moved into a Chicago townhouse a couple weeks prior, told him he was kidnapped with two of his family members and a nanny and that the kidnappers demanded a ransom payment or they’d be killed, the affidavit says. The kidnappers demanded the father send Bitcoin or Ethereum, popular cryptocurrencies, according to the affidavit.

    A man wearing a hat and glasses had knocked on the family’s door in Chicago, claiming to have accidentally damaged their garage door, the victims later told the FBI after they were released. When the door opened, multiple unknown men with guns grabbed the family members and nanny, the affidavit says. The son told authorities he was grabbed after getting out of the shower.

    The kidnappers immediately asked the son to conduct cryptocurrency transactions, and he said they drove him around multiple times to make additional transactions, the affidavit says. They later made independent transactions after gaining access to his accounts, totaling about $15 million in cryptocurrency assets, according to the affidavit.

    The kidnappers put the victims into a white Ford van and drove them for about an hour to an Airbnb in what the FBI later learned was in Forest Park, the affidavit says. After one night, the victims were taken to a different house and were eventually released on the afternoon of Nov. 1. They walked to a nearby dry cleaners, called an Uber and went to Northwestern Memorial Hospital, the affidavit says.

    The son said he was hit on the head with a gun — which he later said may have been fake — but that otherwise they were treated fine, the affidavit said. The victims remembered eating McDonald’s, Culver’s, Subway and PF Chang’s. One of the victims also recalled that the suspects spoke both Mandarin and Spanish.

    The FBI reviewed surveillance footage from the Forest Park Airbnb, which showed the alleged kidnappers arriving in a white van and talking on a cellphone. The FBI believed, based on that footage, that there were at least six offenders, the affidavit says.

    They compared the footage to Cao’s picture taken by U.S. Custom’s and Border Patrol, Jiang’s Illinois driver’s license picture and California driver’s license pictures for Zhang, Yan, Lian and Wei.

    Agents found a water bottle, baby wipes and unused white zip ties inside the white Ford van, which they tracked down to a Chicago auto leasing company. They also found DNA swabs, receipts, clothing, medical masks, cigarettes, an AirPod case and latent prints inside a white Chrysler Pacifica that Wei rented Oct. 29 in Hoffman Estates.

    They also spotted some of the kidnappers in surveillance footage at a McDonald’s in far northwest suburban Hampshire, a Culver’s in Berwyn, a BP gas station in Oak Park and Target stores in Streamwood and Schaumburg during the kidnapping time frame, the affidavit says. The son and a family member were able to identify some of the kidnappers in a photo array, according to the affidavit.

    By analyzing travel records, authorities learned that Wei and Zhang flew from O’Hare International Airport to Las Vegas on Nov. 1. Lian, Cao, Yan and Jiang were believed to have left Chicago for Los Angeles the same day, the affidavit says.

    The six men were charged Dec. 13 with kidnapping.

    Customs and Border Patrol arrested Wei on Jun. 17 while he tried to enter the United States from Mexico at the Otay Mesa, California, border crossing, according to an FBI search warrant affidavit. The affidavit was filed Jan. 24 in support of a search warrant for two cellphones Wei carried with him. He also had a California driver’s license, a Chinese passport and $661 in cash.

    The FBI later learned that Jiang and Yan had boarded the same flight departing Tijuana, Mexico, for Beijing, at about 8:30 a.m. Jan. 19. Lian boarded a flight from Tijuana to Beijing the next morning, the affidavit says.

    About $9 million of the cryptocurrency remains unaccounted for, according to the affidavit.

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    © 2025 Chicago Tribune

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


    Source: American Military News

  • Mandy Moore blasts Amazon for delivering a package to her in-laws’ burned-down home

    Mandy Moore had some words for an Amazon delivery person who dropped off a package at her family’s burned-down home in Altadena: “Do better.”

    The “This Is Us” star blasted the company for delivering the parcel in the wake of the devastating Eaton fire that burned more than 14,000 acres over 36 days, killing 17 people and destroying nearly 10,000 structures. One of them, Moore said, was her in-laws’ home.

    “Do better, Amazon. Can we not have better discretion than to leave a package at a residence that no longer exists? This is my mother and father in law’s home. Smh,” Moore wrote Tuesday on Instagram stories, sharing a photo of the package amid the debris at the leveled residence.

    The singer-actor, who is married to Dawes musician Taylor Goldsmith, was among many who have called out the e-commerce giant for continuing service to destroyed and damaged properties in the burn zones. The company’s delivery-confirmation photos have been making the rounds on social media in recent weeks.

    Steve Kelly, a spokesperson for Amazon, confirmed Wednesday in a statement to The Times that the company had reached out to Moore to apologize.

    “We’ve reached out to Ms. Moore via Instagram to apologize for this and to ask for more information from her in-laws so we’re better able to investigate what happened here,” Kelly said. “Those who deliver on our behalf have been advised to use discretion in areas impacted by wildfires — especially if it involves delivering to a damaged home — that clearly didn’t happen here.”

    The “A Walk to Remember” and “The Princess Diaries” star has not commented publicly on Amazon’s statement. However, she did post about the fires again on her Instagram grid.

    Reflecting on the month that has passed since the wildfires, Moore said that in addition to feeling survivor’s guilt she is struggling and “reaching out and asking for help and guidance on how to process this trauma.” Her brain and heart, she said, “are so deeply broken.”

    In the Tuesday post, Moore said that she, like many Altadena residents, “never got an evacuation notice” as the wind-fueled fires moved through her community. Instead, she received a call from her brother-in-law at 6:45 p.m. Jan. 7 encouraging her and her family to get “the heck out of Dodge.”

    “I calmly walked downstairs and relayed this to my husband and without skipping a beat, we promptly packed up the kids (in their pjs), our dog, and scrambled to find our 3 cats as the power went out. I’ll never forget Taylor trying to figure out how to manually open our two little garage doors … in the harrowing 60 mph winds, as the sky glowed a dark red and ash started to fall all around us,” she wrote. “We raced across town amidst fallen trees on the freeway to the safety of our dear friend’s place, got the kids down, and then I raced to Target to grab a litter box and some water, impulsively refreshing the watch duty app over and over. As we did all night. Over and over. Watching the evacuation zone narrow in on our little 8-block radius. It took until 4 a.m. for it to turn red. All the while, tossing and turning with a stomach-churning anxiety I’ve never experienced before.”

    Moore said that she found out this week that the structure of her Altadena home is still standing. But, due to its proximity to the fire, its contents “are a near total loss.”

    “We won’t be there for a very long time as it and the neighborhood itself get sorted out and cleaned and the rebuilding starts. I say all of this because i’m struggling. Yes we are exceedingly lucky to technically still have the structure of a home. But also… do we still have a home? I think my definition is in flux,” she added.

    Moore and Goldsmith weren’t looking to move to that home until they stumbled upon it amid the COVID-19 pandemic in summer 2020, she said. She found out she was pregnant with her first child two weeks after closing escrow and they spent four years restoring and remodeling the house. They were two weeks away from completing the renovation when the fires hit, she said.

    “I’m not saying all of this because I’m asking you to feel more sorry for us than someone else,” Moore explained. “Like I said, I am grateful. We’re so lucky! By the grace of god we found a place to stay in the meantime and the kids are happy and safe. We’ve even starting collecting the books and toys that they’ve lost. It’s not a competition of who lost what or more. Real human beings across this town, regardless of their jobs or socioeconomic status, lost the life they’d come to know and count on in an instant. My whole heart is with them. Every one of them. This place, our home and the town itself, was our dream and I hope in time it will feel like that again… just a slightly different one.”

    State investigators have not yet determined a cause for the Eaton fire, but video of flames at the base of a Southern California Edison transmission tower in Eaton Canyon the night the fire began has raised suspicions that the utility’s equipment was at fault. Residents have filed more than 40 lawsuits against SCE since the fire.

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    © 2025 Los Angeles Times

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


    Source: American Military News