Sunday, May 25, 2025

Trading card featuring Menendez brothers after parents' murder becomes collector's itemNew Foto - Trading card featuring Menendez brothers after parents' murder becomes collector's item

A 1990 basketball card of former NBA star Mark Jackson, which was photo-bombed byErik and Lyle Menendez, skyrocketed in value following the infamous brothers' 1996 conviction in their parents' Beverly Hills, California, double murder. The trading card featuringNew York Knicks guardMark Jackson, obtained by Fox News Digital, gained notoriety after eagle-eyed collectors noticed that the Menendez brothers were sitting in a pair of floor seats at the game. The discovery of their presence on the card sparked significant interest among collectors and true crime aficionados. Previously valued at mere cents, the card's price surged, with some listings reaching hundreds of dollars. However, eBay eventually removed listings that explicitly referenced the Menendez brothers, citing policies against items associated with violent crimes. According to aTMZ report, some collectors are sending the card to the brothers in prison so it can be autographed. Gov. Newsom Doing 'Political Calculus' Ahead Of Menendez Brothers Resentencing Decision Along with purchasing courtside seats for a New York Knicks game at Madison Square Garden during the 1989–1990 NBA season, the brothers lavishly spent their parents' fortune following theAugust 1989 murdersof Kitty and José Menendez. Read On The Fox News App In the months following the brutal murder of their parents, Erik and Lyle Menendez began living an extravagant lifestyle that starkly contrasted with their earlier claims of grief and trauma. While the defense would later frame the spending as part of a psychological escape from years of alleged abuse, prosecutors alleged that the brothers' crimes had been due to their efforts to gain access to the family's fortune. Menendez Brothers Resentencing: Timeline Of Killers' Fight Over Freedom In Parents' Murders Lyle, the older brother, indulged in high-end purchases, including designer clothing and a Porsche. He also invested heavily in a Princeton, New Jersey, restaurant called Chuck's Spring Street Café. In their 1995 trial, jewelry sales representative Mary Ellen Mahar testified that the brothers had come to her store just four days after the killings and spent about $15,000 on three Rolex watches. Lyle rented upscale properties and lived in expensive hotels like the Beverly Hills Hotel. Erik, too, spent the family's money freely on luxury clothing, high-end accommodations and international trips. He also tried to become a professional tennis player following the 1989 slayings. He hired a private coach, took lessons and traveled internationally to train and compete. On March 8, 1990, when Lyle was arrested in connection with their parents' murders, Erik was competing in a tennis tournament in Israel. He later turned himself in. Sign Up To Get The True Crime Newsletter Both brothers admitted to killing their parents in a gruesome 1989 shotgun massacre inside their Beverly Hills home. Since their resentencing last week, the brothers are now eligible for parole. The brothers are set to appear before the parole board via video on June 13, 2025, at the Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility. The board will either recommend or veto the brothers' release.California Gov. Gavin Newsomhas the final say over whether they should go free. Original article source:Trading card featuring Menendez brothers after parents' murder becomes collector's item

Trading card featuring Menendez brothers after parents' murder becomes collector's item

Trading card featuring Menendez brothers after parents' murder becomes collector's item A 1990 basketball card of former NBA star Ma...
This is how loved ones want us to remember George FloydNew Foto - This is how loved ones want us to remember George Floyd

EDITOR'S NOTE:A version of this story was originally published in 2020 in the wake of George Floyd's death. It has been republished as Minneapolis is set to mark his passing, five years later. George Floydmoved to Minnesota for a fresh start — an opportunity to better himself and to be a better father. And while so many now know the Houston native by his full name, those who knew him best called him Floyd. He worked security at a restaurant where he developed a reputation as someone who had your back and was there for you when you were down. "Knowing my brother is to love my brother," Philonise Floyd, George's brother, told CNN in 2020. "He's a gentle giant, he don't hurt anybody." Floyd, 46, died on May 25, 2020, in the city he moved to for a better life. While being detained, Floyd was held down by a Minneapolis police officer's knee. A video of the encounter, shows Floyd pleading that he is in pain and can't breathe. Then, his eyes shut and the pleas stop. He was pronounced dead shortly after. The video of Floyd's last moments painted a stark picture of the ways Black people have long said the American criminal justice system dehumanizes them. Floyd's death ignited widespread protests around the world, lasting for weeks in 2020. The following statements were made in the wake of Floyd's death and in the years since. CNN is reflecting on them five years later as Minneapolis is set to mark the anniversary with vigils and gatherings. Floyd grew up in Houston's Third Ward neighborhood and graduated from Jack Yates High School where he played football and basketball, according to CNN affiliateKPRC. After high school, head basketball coach George Walker recruited Floyd to play for him at South Florida State College in Avon Park, Florida. Floyd was a student there from 1993 to 1995, Walker told CNN. "He didn't give me too much trouble as a basketball coach," Walker said. "He was a pretty good athlete, averaged 12 to 14 points a game." Floyd was a coachable kid with a big heart, according to Walker's wife, Gloria. Of all the college athletes on the school's team, she said Floyd had her attention the most "because he was just a fun person to be around." "He was never one that tried to blame others for his own mistakes," she said. "He always owned up to them and always tried to do better." Philonise Floyd remembersthe banana mayonnaise sandwiches and syrup sandwiches his brother would make the siblings. "He was so much of a leader to us in the household, he would always make sure we had our clothes for school, make sure we would get to school on time," Philonise Floyd said in the 2021 trial of one of the former police officers involved in his brother's death. "He just was like a person that everybody loved around the community. He just knew how to make people feel better." Floyd moved to Minnesota for work and to drive trucks, according to friend and former NBA player, Stephen Jackson. Jackson, a Houston native also, calls Floyd his twin. "I've heard George in the last couple days more than I've heard my whole life, and we had a 21-plus (year) relationship," Jackson told CNN. "His name was always Floyd, my twin." Floyd was known in the community as a protector and a provider who didn't have a hateful bone in his body, according to Jackson. He got along with everybody and seldom wanted anything in return for helping someone out, Jackson said. "The difference between me and bro was I had more opportunity than he did," wrote Jackson, who won a championship with the San Antonio Spurs in 2003. "2 things we have in common both from the bottom and both of our names will live forever." Once Floyd moved to Minnesota, Jackson said Floyd talked at great length about his journey to create better opportunities for himself. "The last time I talked to him was about a year ago and every conversation we had in that year was about bettering ourselves and being better fathers," Jackson said. "That's all he talked about." Floyd was the father to two daughters, according to Jackson. "I want justice for his kids," he said. "I want his kids to be taken care of. Their father is not here." Jackson vowed to support his friend's children and "fill in for Floyd" and said he wanted to make sure they are provided for. In Houston, Rose Hudson, who dated Floyd more than 20 years ago, toldCNN affiliate KTRKthat Floyd was a grandfather, but he never got to meet his granddaughter. "I will just let her know what a great guy he was," Hudson said. "He was a good father to his girls. I just have memories, that's all I can give her, memories of her grandfather." Floyd worked security at Conga Latin Bistro, a restaurant serving Spanish and Latin food in Minneapolis, for five years, according to its owner, Jovanni Thunstrom. Even though he was Thunstrom's employee, the pair were also friends. "He was loved by all my employees and my customers," Thunstrom told CNN. "I was looking at the video and I said that can't be Floyd, but later it just blew out. It was Floyd. And that's when it hit me, it hit me hard," Thunstrom told CNN affiliateWCCO. Floyd would help clean up after the bar had closed and was a "very nice guy and really good with customers," according to Thunstrom. "He stood up for people, he was there for people when they were down, he loved people that were thrown away," Courteney Ross, Floyd's girlfriend, told WCCO. "We prayed over every meal, we prayed if we were having a hard time, we prayed if we were having a good time." Anger over Floyd's death went beyond his family and friends. A number of celebrities reacted to the incident on social media. NBA player LeBron James shared a side-by-side photo on Instagram. On one side you can see a screen grab from the encounter between Floyd and police. In the photo on the left a Minnesota police officer's knee can be seen on Floyd's neck. In the photo on the right is the image of San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick kneeling inprotest during the national anthemfor a preseason football game in 2016. At the time, Kaepernick had said he would not honor a song nor "show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses black people and people of color." James' post is accompanied by the caption, "Do you understand NOW!!??!!?? Or is it still blurred to you?? #StayWoke" Others sports figures like Formula One starLewis Hamilton, NBA legend Michael JordanandKaepernickvoiced their outrage over Floyd's killing and paid respects to his memory. Three days after Floyd's death, rapper and songwriter Ice Cube evencanceled an on-air appearancewith Good Morning Americasaying, "After the events in Minnesota with George Floyd I'm in no mood to tell America, good morning." FromLondon to SydneyandLos Angeles to Philadelphia, tens of thousands of people marched in cities and small towns. They poured into busy streets, occupying popular landmarks, chanting, waving handmade signs andrekindling the Black Lives Matter movement. Some of the protests were peaceful, while others were destructive. In Minnesota, more than 500 members of thestate's national guardwere sent to St. Paul, Minneapolis, and surrounding communities because of the increase in demonstrations in the area, officials said at the time. Floyd's family was out front calling for justice, saying the firing of the police officers involved in Floyd's death was not enough. Over the years they've become vocal aboutpolice reform legislation, bonding withother familiesimpacted by police brutality and racial injustice. "They were supposed to be there to serve and to protect and I didn't see a single one of them lift a finger to do anything to help while he was begging for his life. Not one of them tried to do anything to help him," Tera Brown, Floyd's cousin, told CNN in 2020. The four former police officers involved in Floyd's death were convicted on both state and federal crimes. Derek Chauvin, the former police officer who killed Floyd, is serving twosentencesof more than 20 years in prison for a federal charge of depriving Floyd of his civil rights, and state charges of unintentional murder, third-degree murder and manslaughter. Thomas Lane and J. Alexander Kueng, who helped restrain Floyd, and Tou Thao, who held a crowd of bystanders, werefound guilty in federal courtof violating Floyd's civil rights and of failing to intervene to stop Chauvin during the restraint.They received sentencesbetween two and a half and nearly four years in prison for those crimes. The three officers were also givensentences of three to more than four yearseach for state charges of aiding and abetting second-degree manslaughter. "Real justice in America will be (when) Black men and Black women, and people of color will not have the fear (of) being killed by the police just because (of) the color of their skin,"Floyd family attorney Ben Crump saidsaid in 2021. When Floyd's family learned of the verdict in Chauvin's case for the state charges, they described the moment as being"able to breathe again" and"monumental." "I will salute him every day of my life," Terrence Floyd said in 2021. "He showed me how to be strong. He showed me how to be respectful. He showed me how to speak my mind. I'm going to miss him, but now I know he's in history. What a day to be a Floyd, man." And while the verdict brought some closure, Philonise Floyd said at the time the fight against social injustice now goes beyond his brother. "I'm not just fighting for George anymore," he said at the time. "I'm fighting for everyone around the world." CNN's Omar Jimenez, Josh Campbell, Ray Sanchez and Joe Sutton contributed to this report For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

This is how loved ones want us to remember George Floyd

This is how loved ones want us to remember George Floyd EDITOR'S NOTE:A version of this story was originally published in 2020 in the wa...
Israeli strikes kill 23 in Gaza, including a journalist and rescue service officialNew Foto - Israeli strikes kill 23 in Gaza, including a journalist and rescue service official

CAIRO (Reuters) -Israeli military strikes killed at least 23 Palestinians across the Gaza Strip on Sunday, including a local journalist and a senior rescue service official, local health authorities said. The latest deaths in the Israeli campaign resulted from separate Israeli strikes in Khan Younis in the south, Jabalia in the north and Nuseirat in the central Gaza Strip, medics said. In Jabalia, they said local journalist Hassan Majdi Abu Warda and several family members were killed by an airstrike that hit his house earlier on Sunday. Another airstrike in Nuseirat killed Ashraf Abu Nar, a senior official in the territory's civil emergency service, and his wife in their house, medics added. There was no immediate comment by the Israeli military. The Hamas-run Gaza government media office said that Abu Warda's death raised the number of Palestinian journalists killed in Gaza since October 7, 2023, to 220. In a separate statement, the media office said Israeli forces were in control of 77% of the Gaza Strip, either through ground forces or evacuation orders and bombardment that keeps residents away from their homes. The armed wing of Hamas and the Islamic Jihad said in separate statements on Sunday that fighters carried out several ambushes and attacks using bombs and anti-tank rockets against Israeli forces operating in several areas across Gaza. On Friday the Israeli military said it had conducted more strikes in Gaza overnight, hitting 75 targets including weapons storage facilities and rocket launchers. Israel launched an air and ground war in Gaza after Hamas militants' cross-border attack on October 7, 2023, which killed 1,200 people by Israeli tallies with 251 hostages abducted into Gaza. The conflict has killed more than 53,900 Palestinians, according to Gaza health authorities, and devastated the coastal strip. Aid groups say signs of severe malnutrition are widespread. (Reporting by Nidal al-MughrabiEditing by David Goodman)

Israeli strikes kill 23 in Gaza, including a journalist and rescue service official

Israeli strikes kill 23 in Gaza, including a journalist and rescue service official CAIRO (Reuters) -Israeli military strikes killed at leas...
A crypto investor is charged with kidnapping and torturing a man in an NYC apartment for weeksNew Foto - A crypto investor is charged with kidnapping and torturing a man in an NYC apartment for weeks

A cryptocurrency investor has been arrested and charged with kidnapping a man and keeping him locked up for weeks in an upscale Manhattan apartment, where authorities say he was beaten, shocked and led to believe that his family was in danger if he didn't give up his Bitcoin password. John Woeltz, 37, was arrested Friday night after the victim escaped from the eight-bedroom town house and flagged down a traffic officer on the street for help, according to prosecutors. Woeltz was arraigned Saturday on charges of kidnapping, assault, unlawful imprisonment and criminal possession of a firearm, court records show. He was ordered held without bail, a spokesperson for the Manhattan district attorney's office confirmed Saturday. His lawyer, Wayne Gosnell, said Saturday in an email that he had no comment. The 28-year-old victim arrived in New York City from Italy in early May, a law enforcement official told The Associated Press. The official was not authorized to speak publicly about the ongoing investigation and did so on condition of anonymity. It's not clear how or if the two knew each other, but the district attorney's office said in an email that prosecutor Michael Mattson told a judge Saturday that the victim, whose name has not been released, was abducted on May 6. Mattson said others were involved in the scheme to empty the victim's Bitcoin wallet. That includes a person referred to in court records as an "unapprehended male." The victim said he was bound by the wrists and tortured for weeks inside the apartment. His captors, according to prosecutors, drugged him, used electric wires to shock him, hit him in the head with a firearm and, at one point, carried him to the top of a flight of stairs where they dangled him over a ledge and threatened to kill him if he didn't share his Bitcoin password. Believing that he was about to be shot, the victim was able to escape Friday after agreeing to give up his password, which was stored on his laptop in another room. When the suspect turned his back, Mattson said, the victim ran out of the apartment. The victim was taken to a hospital and treated for injuries that Mattson said were consistent with his descriptions of being bound and assaulted. A search of the town house turned up a trove of evidence, Mattson said, including cocaine, a saw, chicken wire, body armor and night vision goggles, ammunition and polaroid photos of the victim with a gun pointed to his head. Woeltz was ordered Saturday to surrender his passport. Prosecutors said he has the means to flee, including a private jet and a helicopter. He is due back in Manhattan criminal court next week. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

A crypto investor is charged with kidnapping and torturing a man in an NYC apartment for weeks

A crypto investor is charged with kidnapping and torturing a man in an NYC apartment for weeks A cryptocurrency investor has been arrested a...
America's carousels are spinning out of existence. There's a fight to save them.New Foto - America's carousels are spinning out of existence. There's a fight to save them.

WASHINGTON – On a humid Saturday afternoon in the shadow of the Washington National Cathedral, Esme Ohlsen sat atop a colorful wooden horse and waved to her mother and grandmother as she and a dozen smiling children spun around and around. It was a moment the young girl had eagerly awaited ever since learning that the cathedral's two-day fundraising event would feature a merry-go-round. "I like how fast it went," the 9-year-old said over the sound of an antique Wurlitzer organ playing "The Carousel Waltz." She added, "I wish it went up and down." What Esme didn't know was the antique wooden carousel she rode is one of a rare group of merry-go-rounds built at the turn of the 20th century and still spinning more than 100 years later. Experts estimate that as many as 3,500 carousels were built by a handful of American companies and artisans between the 1880s and the 1930s. Today, about 150 remain and only a fraction of those are still operational. "It's pretty amazing," said Patrick Wentzel, the president of the National Carousel Association. "These rides are the only antiques that you can not only touch but throw your leg over and ride." These rotating historical artifacts are the survivors of decades of economic, social and technological upheavals that destroyed the majority of their peers, from the Great Depression and the invention of the roller coaster to an antique carousel frenzy that saw countless carousels broken apart and sold piecemeal. Faced with what appeared to be a looming extinction, nonprofits, local governments, museums and other groups stepped in to save the last of the great American carousels. These operators pay artisans and specialized mechanics top dollar to maintain and refurbish the century-old rides, all in an effort to preserve their original design and craftsmanship. Though financially burdensome, today's carousel caretakers have made it their mission to preserve what remains of the golden age of U.S. carousel production. "It's completely financially indefensible," said Carol Kelleher, a member of the All Hallows Guild, which maintains the carousel at the National Cathedral. "But we want to keep it the way it was." Merry-go-rounds originated in Europe but didn't gain popularity in the U.S. until the late 1800s when artisans from Germany and England capitalized on the country's vast, untouched forests. These carvers – many of them classically trained – hand-chiseled and painted intricate designs that often evoked memories of their homelands. Meanwhile, cities and small towns were developing parks and looking for attractions to draw crowds. Vibrant, spinning carousels became a perfect centerpiece. To meet rising demand, companies sprang up and began churning out rides – smaller versions for traveling carnivals and larger ones for town squares and amusement parks. However, the carousel boom that began at the turn of the 20th century came to an abrupt end. The rapid decline was touched off by World War l and punctuated by the Great Depression. "Parks were closing down and no one was buying carousels anymore," Wentzel said. "That pretty much killed everything." After World War II, carousels saw a modest revival as new companies began making them from cast aluminum and, later, fiberglass – the materials used in most modern carousels today. Hundreds of these easier-to-manufacture rides appeared in suburban parks across postwar America. But unlike their wooden predecessors, these lacked the craftsmanship and individuality that defined the earlier era. Collectors took notice, and by the 1970s and '80s wooden carousel animals began appearing at auctions as operators discovered they could make more money selling individual horses than maintaining entire rides. For carousel enthusiasts, this was devastating. "Carousel figures were selling for $40,000 apiece," Wentzel said, recalling how beloved, historic carousels were dismantled for profit. "It was really tragic." As antique carousels were dismantled or left to deteriorate, the National Carousel Association formed to advocate for their preservation. The group eventually found success as local governments, museums and nonprofits joined the cause, often maintaining carousels at a steep financial loss. "We haven't sold any carousels for 20 years now," Wentzel said. Today, these historic rides can be found in parks, playgrounds and museums across the country, though few remain fully original. Many have replaced steam engines with electric motors, swapped out pipe organs for modern sound systems and installed straps and ramps for wheelchair accessibility. Kelleher, who helps maintain the carousel at the National Cathedral, said the ride has seen several major restorations over the past 60 years, including a 1990s campaign where donors adopted and redesigned the animals. In 2021, the guild hired a company for a multi-year project to touch up all 22 of the ride's animals. "It's a huge undertaking," Kelleher said, noting that it costs between $6,000 and $8,000 to restore each animal. In New Philadelphia, Ohio, a 1928 carousel is the centerpiece of Tuscora Park. Like the carousel in Washington, it underwent a major renovation in the 1990s, including a new paint job and the installation of a $53,000 motor. Richard Geib, president of the nonprofit, RTY Inc., which oversees the ride, says it's well worth the money to make sure the people of New Philadelphia can enjoy the carousel as he and his family have for decades. "I have pictures of me on that carousel with my grandparents, and now my grandkids are helping to operate it," he said. "It's almost like a member of our family and it's like that for a lot of people in town." The grassroots movement to restore and maintain antique carousels created a steady stream of work for a small group of skilled artisans. One of the leading companies in this field is Carousels and Carvings, based in Marion, Ohio. Its workers have refurbished some of the country's most beloved merry-go-rounds, including the carousel at the Washington National Cathedral. Former cabinetmaker Todd Goings, known as "the carousel doctor," founded the company in the 1990s as advocacy to restore antique carousels was in full steam. What started as a foray into carousel repairs turned into his life's work. Today, Goings and his 20 employees maintain dozens of carousels across the country, repainting animals, upgrading mechanical systems and performing routine maintenance. They have also begun building their own carousels from scratch inside the company's 35,000 foot warehouse in Marion. "I can't speak for everyone, but we are busier than ever," he said. Still, Goings has had to confront an existential threat to his business: the aging workforce of carousel craftsmen. About five years ago, he realized most of his employees were over 60 and some were well into their 70s. To secure the future of his trade, he began hiring and training what he sees as a new generation of artisans, including his son, whom he hopes will eventually take over the family business. "The shop has a good feeling about the future now," he said. "We're no longer counting the years to the end." On May 3, a long line of families waited eagerly for a turn on the historic carousel outside the Washington National Cathedral, which is only operational for two days out of the year. Among the bustling crowd was 81-year-old Katherine Wardlaw, who attended the event with her family. Wardlaw said she was never able to ride carousels herself but grew to love them through her granddaughter Emily. For Emily, who was nonverbal and struggled with mobility, the carousel was the one ride she could enjoy safely. Until her death at age 25, Emily would beg to be taken to the carousel at the mall near her home in Columbia, Maryland. "She would go round and round – she was so happy," Wardlaw recalled. "It was one of the few things that brought her joy, to come with granny and ride the carousel." Others echoed the sentiment, often tying carousels to their own childhood memories. Sarah Ohlsen, who brought her son and daughter to the fundraising event at the cathedral, said she grew up riding the over-100-year-old carousel at Hersheypark in Pennsylvania. What makes the ride special, she said, is both the whimsy of the animals and its accessibility. "Anyone can go on them," she said. "And it doesn't matter how old you are – people just love getting on a horse." That enduring appeal is part of what keeps Goings and others committed to their restoration work. For them – and the countless people who've enjoyed a ride on a merry-go-round – carousels are more than mechanical novelties. "It could seem kind of pointless – a bunch of animals going around in a circle," Goings said. "But when you get on, the magic comes. The lights turn on, the music plays, people laugh – and suddenly, there's something magical." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:How America's great carousels are still spinning a century later

America's carousels are spinning out of existence. There's a fight to save them.

America's carousels are spinning out of existence. There's a fight to save them. WASHINGTON – On a humid Saturday afternoon in the s...

 

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