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ATTILA’s CHRIS FRONZAK Launches Tour Soundtrack To Monetize Live Set Music

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Chris Fronzak has added another venture to his entrepreneurial portfolio with the launch of Tour Soundtrack, a platform designed to help artists monetize the music played during concerts, including set changes, pre-show audio, and P.A. moments. The service lets musicians pay to have their tracks added to live tour playlists while simultaneously integrating them into Spotify playlists and digital campaigns.

The process is straightforward: browse active tours, select one whose audience matches your sound, submit your track, and get instant placement. Songs then play nightly at live shows with radio-style drops, while social media posts and companion Spotify promotion amplify reach.

Fronzak emphasizes the hyper-targeted approach: “Your music is played directly to the exact audience you want to connect with – live at concerts where fans already love the genre.”

Tours themselves benefit as well. The platform creates a new revenue stream, turning set-change time into income without altering the live show experience. Each tour also receives a free 15-second spot for merch promos, messages, or creative engagement, while fans gain exposure to new artists curated to their tastes.

For artists looking to submit a tour, the steps are equally simple: fill out the onboarding form, receive a revenue estimate, approve, and then integrate the Tour Soundtrack Player at the FOH to start the nightly playlist. Real-time analytics track plays, Shazams, clicks, and more, giving musicians insight into their audience engagement and ROI.

Fronzak‘s latest venture follows a string of business experiments, from his Jawz chewing gum to God Pods coffee and OnlyFans, reinforcing his reputation as a boundary-pushing figure both on and off the stage. Tour Soundtrack aims to give emerging bands a legitimate, trackable way to reach live audiences while providing tours with an extra revenue channel – all controlled with plug-and-play simplicity.

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LSEG Launches Share Buyback of Up to $1 Billion After Pretax Profit, Income Rise

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The group said it is planning further buybacks worth billions of dollars over the next 12 months.



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UConn pounds St. John’s, looks like it can win it all again, may have broken Red Storm

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HARTFORD, Conn. — It was the kind of victory that can give a team ultimate belief, because it might be the definitive evidence, that it can win a national championship.

It was also the kind of loss that can kill a team’s hopes and spirit for the remainder of the season.

What sixth-ranked Connecticut did to No. 15 St. John’s at PeoplesBank Arena on Wednesday night was more than just a record-setting 32-point evisceration. It was an emphatic socking, the likes of which the Red Storm might not shake off the effects from for weeks, if not until next season. The Huskies’ 72-40 vaporizing was arguably the most impressive game played by any team almost four months into this brilliant 2025-26 college basketball campaign.

“What we did today as a rebounding team, as a defensive team, as a team that looked like we did offensively at times in the championship years,” Huskies coach Dan Hurley told CBS Sports outside the locker room. “Twenty assists, four turnovers, really, because we took a we took a turnover late in the game. Out-rebounded a team that kicks ass on the glass.”

Ironically, it was all of a week ago when UConn fell 91-84 at home to mediocre Creighton to take its second loss in four games, bookending that with the 81-72 defeat against St. John’s at Madison Square Garden on Feb. 6, when the Johnnies snapped the Huskies’ 18-game winning streak.

“The defense has been a joke,” Hurley said after that loss to Creighton. “Our defense has been so bad. We’ve been playing with fire.”

On Wednesday, Hurley’s Huskies tamed the flame and used it to burn out the will of St. John’s — snapping its 13-game winning streak — and perhaps scorching its chances of doing something of significance over the next month. The Huskies suffocated the Red Storm by doing the near impossible, not allowing a made field goal from the 17:28 mark of the second half until the end of the game. 

“This is a rivalry,” Hurley told me, and it was obvious how much pride he felt to win so convincingly with all of the anticipation this game brought. “I’ve got a lot of respect for what they do and the amount of success they’ve had, particularly in Big East play. … It was a must-win game today.”

UConn heating up for March as usual 

UConn played like the program’s existence depended on a victory. Credit to assistant Kimani Young, who was assigned the scout, and whose time to get a head-coaching job at the high-major level is overdue.

The Huskies set a program record for their largest win over St. John’s, surpassing the 29-point mark from 1998. They also won a home game over a ranked team by 30-plus points for the first time in school history. The game felt near-over at halftime when it was 41-26. Then it felt violent in the final 10 minutes. It felt personal. 

The UConn team looked — not a lot like — but pretty much exactly like the 2023 and 2024 title-winning squads. There’s one eye-opening stat after another attached to this one.

The 32-point loss was the worst by St. John’s as a ranked team since a 35-point loss to St. Bonaventure in 1960. 

The Red Storm shot 19.6% on 11-of-56 shooting, the worst shooting performance by any team in Division I this season. It happened because St. John’s made its first two field goals of the second half and then missed 24 in a row, also the worst streak by any team in college basketball. 

SJU’s best player, Zuby Ejiofor, was held to one point in the first half while his counterpart, senior big man Tarris Reed Jr., finished with 20 points, 11 rebounds, six blocks and two steals in 31 minutes in what was the best game of his career.

“I’ve never been through that experience,” Ejiofor said, later adding, “tonight was not what I was expecting at all.”

Reed became the third Husky to ever log at least 20 points, 10 rebounds and five blocks against a ranked team, joining Donovan Clingan (twice) and Emeka Okafor (three times).

Loss might linger for St. John’s  

Adding to the embarrassment for Red Storm coach Rick Pitino, he coached a team to just 40 points, marking the lowest of a career that is 1,224 games deep. The previous low came when he was at Boston University in 1981 and his Terriers managed just 43 on the road against UCLA.

“Give [UConn] all the credit,” Pitino said. “They played a great game. That’s probably only happened to me two times in my career. … So, it’s all on me. I’m very disappointed in our performance offensively, especially sharing the ball, moving the ball. So, it’s all on me, but we’ll get ready for Villanova.”

Rick Pitino takes blame for St. John’s dreadful performance in historic loss to UConn: ‘It’s all on me’

Cameron Salerno

Rick Pitino takes blame for St. John's dreadful performance in historic loss to UConn: 'It's all on me'

Although Pitino credited UConn and did own the loss, he did not handle himself well in the aftermath, which speaks to how much this result obviously and understandably burns him. Still, Pitino easily could have walked to the press conference room and taken questions for four or five minutes but opted not to — something that the Big East office will not appreciate — and instead gave one statement and took one question from a reporter, totaling less than 1 minute and 15 seconds after one of the two most important Big East games of the season.

“We’re still playing for a championship,” Pitino said. “It doesn’t matter whether you lose by one or 40, the league championship’s still at stake. Obviously, we got to make our corrections and move on.”

The loss looks all the worse coming mere hours after this social media post from Pitino earlier on Wednesday.

The Red Storm’s résumé looks fairly weak in light of this loss by the way. Its only two quality wins are home against UConn (extremely good) and on the road against Villanova (pretty good). At 22-6, the Johnnies are well on their way to earning a single-digit NCAA seed, but it felt like there was a fracture here in Hartford. SJU is now 1-4 against ranked teams this season. 

Meantime, UConn 29-12 against AP-ranked teams the last four seasons, the most wins of any team in the sport. 

The Huskies look dynasty-good again. The Red Storm need to do more to prove last year wasn’t a one-off pop back into relevancy. 

This game was supposed to be for the supremacy of the Big East. 

Maybe it was.

And maybe it’s going to result in UConn ascending to the top tier of national title contender beside Duke, Michigan and Arizona, while St. John’s settles into something inferior. Their league records are tied, it’s true, with both at two losses apiece. St. John’s still has three more games left, including next up hosting Villanova in a huge game for seeding and the Big East race.

UConn will finish atop the league if it handles business vs. Seton Hall and at Marquette, both likelihoods.

I asked Hurley if he used any special or different motivation tactics in advance of Wednesday’s historic outcome.

“Nothing,” he said. “Coming out of the Creighton game, we got complacent going into that game. And because we played so well at Creighton, I think maybe I didn’t have the team as ready as I needed to, and it put us in this must-win situation the rest of the way to win the regular season. The team is playing right now like these are elimination games, and it’s a good time of year to play with that level of desperation. The fact that we have to win every game the rest of the way to get at least a piece of the regular season, the Big East has forced us to have to play like playoff Game 7s right now, and I think that’s going to bode well for us the rest of the way.”

Hurley has built up and fortified one of the toughest programs in college basketball. A championship-level outfit that is required to carry over year to year. Teams that operate at that standard aren’t just capable of, but actually provide evidence to the type of supremacy on display Wednesday night. 

Just about everyone — Ejiofor included — wants to see the third act in Midtown Manhattan on Saturday, March 14. The Big East championship game. But if we don’t get it, UConn’s win on Wednesday and the aftereffects may well be the reason. The Huskies are the fourth projected No. 1 seed, and it’s hard to see them spoiling that spot until the Big East title game at the absolute earliest. 

These teams’ seasons collided in Hartford, and given how violent the impact was, it’s hard to see both going in similar directions the rest of the season.





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Weakened by war, protests, Iran could still inflict pain in response to a US attack

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JERUSALEM — As U.S. forces mass in the Middle East, Iran faces the threat of major strikes by the world’s most powerful military, potentially targeting its leaders, military, nuclear sites and critical infrastructure.

Iran has nowhere near the same capabilities, and is even more vulnerable after last year’s war launched by Israel and recent anti-government protests. But it could still inflict pain on American forces and allies, and may feel it has to if the Islamic Republic’s survival is at stake.

While Iran suffered major losses last June, it still has hundreds of missiles capable of hitting Israel. While Iran suffered major losses last June, it still has hundreds of missiles capable of hitting Israel, according to Israel’s estimates. Iran boasts a much larger arsenal of shorter-range missiles capable of hitting U.S. bases in Gulf countries and offshore American forces, soon to be joined by a second aircraft carrier.

Iran has previously threatened to close the Strait of Hormuz, a vital waterway for the global oil trade, and claimed to have done so partially during military drills last week.

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei warned that Iran could sink American warships, and top officials have said a U.S. attack would spark regional war. Iran’s U.N. ambassador Amir Saeid Iravani said “all bases, facilities and assets of the hostile force in the region” would be legitimate targets.

Israel carried out heavy strikes on Iran’s longer range missile arsenals — as well as its military leadership and nuclear program — during the 12-day war in June. The U.S. struck Iran’s main nuclear sites, and President Donald Trump said at the time that they had been “obliterated.”

But the extent of the damage — and how much has been rebuilt — is still unknown. Iran continued to strike Israel with missiles and drones until the fighting stopped, increasingly eluding its vaunted air defenses.

Iran’s shorter-range missile arsenal was largely untouched, said Danny Citrinowicz, an Iran expert at Israel’s Institute for National Security Studies. That could make Iran more inclined to retaliate against tens of thousands of U.S. forces based in Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates and elsewhere.

“Iran may be weak. But it still has ways to inflict real pain on the United States — and much more incentive to try than it did before,” Nate Swanson, head of the Atlantic Council’s Iran Strategy Project, wrote in Foreign Affairs. “Iranian officials feel they need to give Trump a bloody nose or they will perpetually be at risk.”

Iran launched missiles at a U.S. base in Iraq after the killing of its top general in 2020 and targeted a U.S. base in Qatar near the end of last year’s war. Those strikes, which appeared to have been telegraphed in advance, caused damage but no fatalities, as early warning systems and missile defenses swung into action.

Iran could also carry out attacks farther afield. The country has been accused of using criminal gangs and armed groups to plan or carry out attacks around the world, including on dissidents, Israelis and Jewish targets.

Last year’s Israeli strikes killed several top generals and nuclear scientists, revealing major vulnerabilities. At one point, Trump said the U.S. knew where Khamenei was hiding, calling him an ” easy target.”

Fresh off the capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, Trump may consider decapitation strikes aimed at bringing down Iran’s decades-old Shiite theocracy, which he recently said “would be the best thing that could happen.”

The Iranians have had eight months to learn from their mistakes and firm up internal security. Citrinowicz said there are likely contingency plans if Khamenei were to be killed. Rather than naming a single successor, power would probably shift to a small committee until hostilities subsided.

Experts say the death of the 86-year-old Khamenei, who has ruled Iran for over three decades, would not in itself spell the end of the Islamic Republic. Power might eventually pass to a member of his inner circle, as it did in Venezuela, or to Iran’s Revolutionary Guard.

American allies are clearly concerned about a regional war, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has warned of a heavy response to any Iranian attack on Israel.

Arab Gulf states have long viewed Iran with concern and leaned on the U.S. for defense, but do not want to be drawn into war. Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, which host thousands of American troops, have said they would not allow their airspace to be used.

An Arab Gulf diplomat said regional leaders were talking to Iran and the United States to avert war, warning that it could have severe consequences, including a spike in oil prices. The diplomat spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive, closed-door talks.

Iran has its own allies, including Houthi rebels in Yemen, armed groups in Iraq, Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in the Palestinian territories. But its self-described Axis of Resistance suffered major losses in the fighting that rippled across the region after Hamas’ October 2023 attack from Gaza.

Another close-in target could allow Iran to inflict wider pain.

Around one-fifth of all traded oil passes through the Strait of Hormuz, just off Iran’s shore. The U.S. Navy is committed to keeping it open, but Iranian attacks could disrupt trade, as the far-weaker Houthis managed to do in the Red Sea for much of the past two years.

Iranian officials have not explicitly threatened to target the strait in the current standoff, but Iranian forces partially closed it last week during military drills, signaling it could be vulnerable if war breaks out.

Other critical oil assets would also be within range. In 2019, strikes on oil infrastructure temporarily halved Saudi Arabia’s production. Yemen’s Houthis claimed responsibility, but U.S. officials later blamed Iran.

After initially threatening military action over Iran’s killing of protesters, Trump shifted attention to its nuclear program, warning that “bad things” would happen if Iran doesn’t agree to a deal. The two sides are set to hold another round of indirect talks in Geneva on Thursday.

Iran has always said its nuclear program is peaceful, while the U.S. and others have long suspected that Tehran intends to eventually develop weapons. After Trump scrapped a 2015 nuclear agreement, Iran ramped up its enrichment of uranium, building up a stockpile of near-weapons grade material.

Iran’s biggest sites were hit by U.S. and Israeli strikes, causing significant damage above ground. But it’s unclear whether enriched uranium was spirited away before they were hit or buried underground. Iran says it has been unable to enrich since then, but it has also barred inspections.

Iran is still believed to be a long ways from developing a usable nuclear weapon, but radioactive material could pose a risk in the event of widespread strikes.

___

Associated Press writer Samy Magdy contributed reporting from Cairo.



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Bernalillo County Sheriff's Office and volunteer groups set up memorial for fallen sergeant

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TIJERAS, N.M. (KRQE) – A new memorial was set up at the Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office’s East Area Command in Tijeras to honor Sergeant Michael Schlattman, who died in the line of duty this week. Adorned with flowers, ribbons, and messages of faith, a patrol unit is now a memorial dedicated to Sgt. Schlattman. “A phone […]



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Carly Pearce Reveals She Has a Shrine of Herself in Her Home

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Carly Pearce is a highly decorated country singer-songwriter who has won countless awards and released four studio albums to date.

How Far Would We Have To Walk Into Carly Pearce’s House to Know It Was Hers?

Pearce told me on Taste of Country Nights, “You would walk in my hallway and turn the corner into my living room and there’s a shrine of myself — and I’m fine with it.”

She went on to explain that her dad actually thinks it’s a little strange.

“My dad thinks it’s a little aggressive, but when you’ve worked your whole life, every plaque, every award — everything — is there.”

“I’m at max capacity,” she added, noting that she’s even had to start a new shrine in her garage to house the rest of the awards and accomplishments she’s collected along the way. “I have some plaques in my garage, which is a nice feeling. I’ll take it.”

What is Carly Pearce Currently Up To?

Fans think Pearce is gearing up to release a fifth studio album after her social media pages were scrubbed — everything is gone except for a professional photo of the singer gazing off to her left.

Read More: Carly Pearce Knocked Her Front Teeth Out Days Before Her First CMAs Performance

Pearce also recently released a new song titled “Church Girl” in January 2026.

Taste of Country logo

That single release, coupled with her November drop of “Dream Come True,” would lead many to assume those two songs will need a home on an album somewhere, sometime soon.

Top 20 Carly Pearce Songs

From her heartbreaking ballads to messages about fun and faith, these are Carly Pearce’s best 20 songs (so far).

Carly Pearce Became a Meme After This Interview Photo Went Viral

No country artist is safe when it comes to the internet. One silly face or odd moment on stage and everyone knows about it in an instant. Some of those screenshots even become memes.

Recently a screenshot of Carly Pearce from an interview on The Viall Files Podcast with Nick Viall picked up steam on the web. Fans jumped on the meme train and shared their best work with the country singer.

See the best Carly Pearce memes below.





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Stellantis Sets Sights on Return to Profit After Losing Billions of Dollars in EV About-Turn

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The group said earlier it would book impairments totaling some $26 billion as it rows back major investments in electric vehicles.



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Jeff Galloway, Olympian and pioneer of run-walk method, dies at 80

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Jeff Galloway, a member of the 1972 U.S. Olympic team who for decades inspired elite athletes and countless everyday runners by promoting a run-walk-run strategy, whether in a marathon or just a neighborhood jog, died Wednesday at age 80.

Galloway had a hemorrhagic stroke and died at a hospital in Pensacola, Florida, daughter-in-law Carissa Galloway said.

His influence was evident in the final days of his life: Throngs of people posted videos online, hoping for Galloway’s recovery from emergency neurosurgery and thanking him for advice that boosted their confidence and took them to race starting lines.

Galloway’s family announced the surgery on Feb. 20 and invited the public to express support.

Jim Vance, an elite endurance sports consultant in San Diego, said Galloway was a “pioneer” in getting people to run.

“He removed the barrier to entry, which was mostly mental,” Vance told The Associated Press. “Running isn’t supposed to be a suffer-fest. It should be something peaceful, something enjoyable, so people can enjoy running and not dread it.”

Galloway survived heart failure in 2021 and was still hoping to complete another marathon after logging more than 230 during his lifetime.

“My mission now, at the age of 80-plus, is to show that people can do things that are normally not done, and can do them safely,” he told The New York Times in December.

Galloway’s run-walk-run method began in 1974 when he agreed to teach a running class through Florida State University, two years after competing in the 10,000 meters at the Olympics. He figured it might attract customers to Phidippides, his new store for runners.

“None had done any running for at least five years. So we started walking with a few one-minute jogs,” Galloway said on his website.

“I spent some time with each group, during the runs, to adjust the frequency of walk breaks so that no one was huffing and puffing — even at the end,” he said. “Walk breaks kept the groups together. Everyone passed the final exam: finishing either a 5K or a 10K with smiles on their faces.”

Galloway believed walking during a run reduced the risk of injury, conserved energy and kept confidence afloat.

“I’ve been using them ever since,” he said, “continuing to fine-tune the ratios of running to walking based upon pace per mile and individual needs.”

And Galloway even had his own recipe. He walked through every water station during the 1980 Houston marathon and finished with a faster time, 2:16:35, than his previous run-only 26.2 mile (42.1 kilometer) races, the Times reported.

He shared his running philosophies through books, websites and retreats. Galloway was the official training consultant for runDisney, a series of races at Walt Disney Co. resorts, and would be among the runners. Many admirers went online to offer tributes after his recent surgery.

“I never thought I would be a runner. I never thought I’d run a half marathon,” Karen Bock-Losee of Jacksonville, Florida, said in a video. “I’m 70 years old and I’ve run several since my 60th birthday when I discovered Galloway running. I just want to say thank you.”

Susan Williams recalled seeing Galloway as she struggled toward the end of a half marathon in Murray, Kentucky, in 2011.

“You passed me, and my butt was cramping,” she said. “You turned around and came back. You talked me through it. It was awesome.”

Bobby McGee, a Colorado-based running coach, said Galloway’s run-walk-run approach made running more accessible to the masses.

“When a group of people in any kind of run — from marathons to fun runs — get together afterwards they talk about their time,” McGee said. “Nobody asks them if they ran the whole thing.”

Galloway is survived by two sons and six grandchildren.



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Minneapolis woman who Ilhan Omar took to State of the Union needed medical care after arrest

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WASHINGTON — Aliyah Rahman, a Minnesota woman whom Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., took as her guest to the State of the Union address Tuesday, needed hospital treatment after she was arrested during the speech, Rahman and Omar said.

Rahman silently stood up during the part of President Donald Trump’s speech in which he called on Democrats to restore funding for the Department of Homeland Security. The people around her remained seated. When U.S. Capitol Police approached and asked Rahman to sit down, she refused.

During her conversation with Capitol Police officers, the crowd around her gave a standing ovation, which Rahman tried to explain to the officers was a reason she should not be forced to leave.

Capitol Police took Rahman, who was walking with the help of a crutch, and started pulling her toward the exit — a move that faced protest from one of the other guests in the gallery, who called on the police to be less aggressive with Rahman.

During Rahman's conversation with Capitol Police officers, the crowd around her gave a standing ovation.
During Rahman’s conversation with Capitol Police officers, the crowd around her gave a standing ovation.Frank Thorp V / NBC News

Rahman said in an interview with Amy Goodman of Democracy Now! that she was in the custody of Capitol Police and then in the hospital until just before 4 a.m.

“I was not just removed and arrested. I was arrested so physically that two other attendees upstairs attempted to intervene in officers pulling on my shoulders after I told them I have a torn rotator cuff tendon and multiple cartilage tears in both of my shoulders,” she said.

Rahman told Goodman that the House sergeant-at-arms told her she was arrested because “I was standing up. Silently. No buttons, no facial expressions, no gestures, no signs. Not one sound. Standing up.”

“There are only two things you can do at the State of the Union, and they are sit down and stand up. All kinds of people were standing up all night. Me, too,” Rahman said.

She said in the interview that she has a torn rotator cuff and cartilage tears after federal agents in Minneapolis dragged her out of her car last month when she drove down a street where an anti-immigration protest was happening. Rahman said she had been trying to get to a doctor’s appointment.

Capitol Police said Rahman was arrested on a charge of unlawful conduct, disruption of Congress.

“All State of the Union tickets clearly explain that demonstrating is prohibited,” Capitol Police said in a statement. “The guest was told to sit down, but refused to obey our lawful orders. It is illegal to disrupt the Congress and demonstrate in the Congressional Buildings.”

Omar blasted Rahman’s arrest Wednesday, calling for a “full explanation of why this arrest occurred.”

“The heavy-handed response to a peaceful guest sends a chilling message about the state of our democracy,” she said in a statement.

Rahman said the House sergeant-at-arms told her she was arrested because “I was standing up. Silently. No buttons, no facial expressions, no gestures, no signs.”
Rahman said the House sergeant-at-arms told her she was arrested because “I was standing up. Silently. No buttons, no facial expressions, no gestures, no signs.”Frank Thorp V / NBC News

Omar said Rahman was taken to George Washington University Hospital for treatment and later booked at Capitol Police headquarters. According to a description provided by Omar’s office, Rahman is a disabled person with autism and a traumatic brain injury from Minneapolis.

Minneapolis was at the center of the Trump administration’s intense immigration crackdown in recent months as part of so-called Operation Metro Surge.

During the operation, federal agents shot several people, killing Americans Renee Good and Alex Pretti, who were killed. Democrats in Congress have demanded that the Department of Homeland Security change its immigration enforcement tactics, refusing to vote for a bill that would fund the department and driving the government into a partial shutdown.



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‘they were in my shed’

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Fort Sumner residents are breathing a sigh of relief after two dangerous suspects were captured following a tense manhunt that shut down the community. Jovan Martinez was on the run after state police said he opened fire on an officer two days ago, and a warrant was out for his suspected accomplice, Makaela Johnson, for first-degree murder. They were also accused of carjacking a couple at gunpoint before hiding out in Fort Sumner.An intensive search took place over the next two days, leading authorities to a residential shed where they believed the two were hiding. State police found them inside. Robert Kenyon left for work on Wednesday morning, thinking it was just another day, only to find his home becoming the center of a high-stakes manhunt. Martinez and Johnson were hiding just feet from his back door.”We kind of live out in the country. We’re not used to this kind of thing happening to us,” Kenyon told KOAT. Kenyon said he had an eerie feeling that he needed to stay home after leaving work, and about an hour later, he received a call from the sheriff’s office asking to search the premises.”Well, at that point, I had these weird feelings that somebody had been watching us, like somebody was watching me. And I didn’t really understand it or pay attention to it very much. And then when the officer called me, it started making a little more sense,” Kenyon said. Kenyon said he had no idea how long the pair had been in his shed, believing they got in through an unlocked window. KOAT observed dried blood on the cement near the home. Fort Sumner Municipal Schools will reopen on Thursday.

Fort Sumner residents are breathing a sigh of relief after two dangerous suspects were captured following a tense manhunt that shut down the community.

Jovan Martinez was on the run after state police said he opened fire on an officer two days ago, and a warrant was out for his suspected accomplice, Makaela Johnson, for first-degree murder. They were also accused of carjacking a couple at gunpoint before hiding out in Fort Sumner.

An intensive search took place over the next two days, leading authorities to a residential shed where they believed the two were hiding. State police found them inside.

Robert Kenyon left for work on Wednesday morning, thinking it was just another day, only to find his home becoming the center of a high-stakes manhunt. Martinez and Johnson were hiding just feet from his back door.

“We kind of live out in the country. We’re not used to this kind of thing happening to us,” Kenyon told KOAT.

Kenyon said he had an eerie feeling that he needed to stay home after leaving work, and about an hour later, he received a call from the sheriff’s office asking to search the premises.

“Well, at that point, I had these weird feelings that somebody had been watching us, like somebody was watching me. And I didn’t really understand it or pay attention to it very much. And then when the officer called me, it started making a little more sense,” Kenyon said.

Kenyon said he had no idea how long the pair had been in his shed, believing they got in through an unlocked window. KOAT observed dried blood on the cement near the home.

Fort Sumner Municipal Schools will reopen on Thursday.



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