Powerlifter reacts to biological male taking women's national record: 'Completely unfair'

A competitive female powerlifter responded to a record-breaking win from a transgender athelete who lifted 200 kilograms more than the second place winner, calling it “completely unfair.” 

April Hutchinson discussed Anne Andres, a 40-year-old transwoman setting all-time records at the Canadian Powerlifting Union’s 2023 Western Canadian Championship Sunday. 

Hutchinson has been a powerlifter with the Canadian Powerlifting Union for about four years. She said on Talk TV that has been fighting her federation to ban trans women in powerlifting, stating that many other female lifters do not agree with it and have been complaining.

“My boyfriend could basically walk in tomorrow, identify as a female, compete, and then the next day, go back to being a man again. No proof, no ID required, just basically going on how you feel that day or whatever gender you want to it,” she said.

DETRANSITIONED BOY CASTRATED BY DOCTORS WARNS KIDS ABOUT PERILS OF GENDER IDEOLOGY: ‘PATIENT FOR LIFE’ 

Powerlifter in Canada

Powerlifter, Anne Andres, a 40-year-old biological male, wins women’s record in Canada (Fox News Digital)

Andres’ total weight lifted in squat, bench and deadlift resulted in a final score of 597.5 kilograms, which was over 200 kilograms more than her closest opponent, SuJan Gill, who finished at 387.5 kilograms. With that total, Andres set a new Canadian women’s national record at the championship, while it also being an unofficial women’s world record. 

“It’s been very disheartening the national record that he broke,” said Hutchinton. “Athletes have been chasing that for years. And we’re talking we’re talking top athletes who have been training and training and training.” 

female powerlifter canada transgender

Female powerlifter speaks out after biological male lands record.  (Fox News Digital)

CA PRESCHOOL TEACHER BLASTS ‘INNOCENCE,’ SAYS TODDLERS SHOULD BE TAUGHT ‘QUEERNESS,’ SEXUALITY IN CLASSROOM

She added that some women quit the competition because they knew Andres would be lifting. 

“It’s completely unfair. It’s bodies that play sports, not identities. Remember, bodies are biology, not identities that play sports.” 

White House pride flag

The Biden administration has said that it u (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

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The powerlifter has previously been accused of mocking women. The athelete said, “Why is women’s bench so bad? I mean, not compared to me.”

“We all know that I’m a tranny freak, so that doesn’t count. And no, we’re not talking about Mackenzie Lee. She’s got little T-Rex arms, and she’s like 400 pounds of chest muscle apparently. I mean, standard bench in powerlifting competition for women. I literally don’t understand why it’s so bad.”

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Fox News’ Scott Thompson contributed to this report. 

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DeSantis: Trump never 'drained the swamp,' but I did in Florida

Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis declared that he is the right person to “drain the swamp” in Washington as a president – a feat, he argued, former President and 2024 GOP front-runner Donald Trump never accomplished in his term.

“I give him credit, even though we’re competing, for the great things he did do. But one of the things he did not do was drain the swamp… the swamp got worse in his four years,” DeSantis said on “The Ingraham Angle” Tuesday.

DeSantis told host Laura Ingraham he is the best candidate to end the political “weaponization” of the federal government, which he said would start with the termination of FBI Director Christopher Wray

Wray, a Trump appointee, was suggested by ex-New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, according to the current front-runner, who has since distanced himself from that decision.

“You’re going to see the DOJ cleared out. We are going to ensure a single standard of justice in this country again. And I can say that with credibility, because I’ve done that in the state of Florida,” DeSantis said.

DESANTIS PLEDGES TO FIRE CHRISTOPHER WRAY

Donald Trump and Ron DeSantis shake hands

Then-President Donald Trump greets Florida Republican gubernatorial candidate Ron DeSantis as his wife, Casey DeSantis, looks on in Estero, Fla. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

DeSantis cited several examples of Floridian officials at the state and county level either being removed from office at his behest, or having his office accept their resignations.

He said there have been two left-wing prosecutors “funded by [Hungarian-American financier George] Soros who were not enforcing the law.

Last week, DeSantis suspended Monique Worrell, a state prosecutor for Orange and Osceola Counties. Worrell reportedly received support funded by groups linked to Soros, though she later distanced herself from the left-wing billionaire, according to the Washington Examiner.

Worrell responded to her suspension by calling DeSantis a “weak dictator” and claiming it represented the “loss of democracy.”

In 2022, DeSantis fired Hillsborough County State Attorney Andrew Warren, a Tampa Democrat whom the governor accused of neglecting his law enforcement duties via selective prosecution and the like.

DESANTIS RECOUNTS ‘REBELLING THE OTHER WAY’ AGAINST IVY LEAGUE DOCTRINE

Ron DeSantis

DeSantis (Election 2024 DeSantis)

“I’ve shown an ability to take action and get the job done. And as the president, I am going to do the same thing,” DeSantis said.

He also cited his 2019 executive order suspending Palm Beach County’s top election official, Susan Bucher, and accepting the resignation of neighboring Broward County Elections Supervisor Brenda Snipes following a ballot-counting controversy.

On Fox News, DeSantis said Trump had, for example, several years to terminate Wray, adding that he also ultimately declined to “lock her up” in the case of Hillary Clinton.

“Two weeks after the election, he said, ‘Never mind that I said that’ and let her off the hook,” DeSantis said.

When pressed on how the GOP base could rally behind a Trump-less ticket in 2024, DeSantis pointed to how Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp was able to win a resounding re-election despite warring with Trump and the fact Republicans largely underperformed in 2022.

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Donald Trump opposed him throughout that election, and even suggested Stacey Abrams would be a better governor,” he said, referring to comments the former president made at a Perry, Ga. rally in 2021. 

“And then in Florida, we won re-election by a record margin for a Republican: Over 1.5 million votes. Donald Trump attacked me three days before the midterm election.” 

In 2022, DeSantis handily defeated Republican-turned-Democrat Charlie Crist, a former governor and then-congressman from St. Petersburg.

He said 2024 turnout issues would only surface if the GOP nominated a “Rockefeller Republican” or someone without a successful track record in their former role.

For his part, Trump has repeatedly criticized DeSantis, calling him “Ron DeSanctimonious” and asserting he only endorsed him over Florida Agriculture Commissioner Adam Putnam in the 2018 primary essentially because the then-congressman asked him to.

In the key caucus state of Iowa, Trump claimed DeSantis “totally despises ethanol” – a product key to a state known for its corn production, which a DeSantis campaign official told the Associated Press was a distortion and that the governor will “use every tool available to open new markets” for U.S. farmers.

For more Culture, Media, Education, Opinion, and channel coverage, visit foxnews.com/media. 

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Elvis Presley’s war buddy says they were ‘blood brothers’: ‘Greatest laugh I ever heard’

August 16 marks 46 years since Elvis Presley died. His legacy lives on — not just for fans, but for those who got to know the man behind the music.

More than 60 years after befriending the iconic southern crooner while enlisted in the U.S. Army, author Johnny Lang put pen to paper and documented a few of the fond memories he had with Presley in his novel, “My Army Days with Elvis: Friendship, Football, & Follies.” 

Lang exclusively told Fox News Digital he was motivated to write the novel after watching Austin Butler’s “outstanding” performance in the award-winning film, “Elvis.”

Walking out of the theater with his children and grandchildren, Lang’s son asked, “What do you think, Dad? Do you think you’re ready to write a book?” 

ELVIS PRESLEY’S 1968 ‘BORDELLO’ SCENE ORIGINALLY CUT FOR BEING TOO RISQUE: DIRECTOR

“After seeing this, man, it inspired me,” Lang responded.

His wild memories with Elvis lasted a lifetime. From spending hours in training to countless weekends together playing football and nearly becoming blood brothers, Lang cherished the close bond he formed with the “Jailhouse Rock” singer.

Elvis Presley wears Army uniform in portrait snaps

Author Johnny Lang detailed Elvis Presley’s humor and larger-than-life persona in a book about their time together in the Army. (Getty Images)

Elvis was drafted into the Army in 1958 while Lang volunteered for the service, which was typical at the time. The only difference was that Presley already had thousands of fans across the country as the “Heartbreak Hotel” artist with a Las Vegas residency under his belt.

Lang had seen Elvis on the firing range in Fort Hood, Texas, but his first opportunity to speak with the musician was on a train headed to New Jersey before they were due to hop on the USS Randolph to Germany.

WATCH: Author Johnny Lang remembers special moment with Elvis Presley

Charlie Hodge, Presley’s long-time best friend, introduced Lang to the singer while en route.

ELVIS PRESLEY’S FINAL MONTHS WERE PLAGUED WITH PHYSICAL PAIN AS HE EMBARKED ON GRUELING TOUR, AUTHOR CLAIMS

“I never met a celebrity in my whole life,” Lang recalled. “There’s Elvis, sitting down there like that, and I walk up to him, standing up and my heart’s going like this. And I just stare at him. 

Elvis Presley wears US Army uniform

Elvis Presley was drafted into the United States Army in 1958. (Getty Images)

Elvis drafted into the Army

Presley stands with a group of young men at an induction center raising their right hands as they are sworn into the United States Army by an officer standing next to an American flag.  (Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

“And he’s looking at me. Finally, he says, ‘Sit down, chief.’ So I sit down, and I’m so nervous. I said, ‘Hey, will you autograph my grandmother’s picture? My sister’s picture? My mother’s picture?’ He says, ‘No problem.’ Anyway, I was there for about 15 minutes and in awe, in awe. And the last thing he says to me, ‘I’ll see you on the boat, Johnny. Maybe we can spend some time together.’ I say, ‘I’ll be looking for you.'” 

Presley was allowed to live off base while stationed in Germany, and Lang was a regular visitor.

WATCH: Elvis Presley was a jokester at heart

“I spent all my weekends at his house.” Lang said. “I’d get up about noon, and then at about one o’clock, I’d be at the house, and there would be about three or four hundred people there because they all want an autograph,” Lang said. “I just knock on the door. … I spent almost a year and a half with him every weekend.

“We’d play football with three or four hundred people watching us play ball.” 

Elvis Presley pictured saluting the Army

Presley served for two years and was discharged in 1960. (Michael Ochs Archive)

Elvis Presley in the army

Elvis Presley had already found fame when he was drafted into the Army in 1958. (Vittoriano Rastelli)

One of Lang’s favorite stories with his friend was from a time Elvis had a head cold, and the pair shared a quiet, yet poignant moment together.

“We were combat training in a place called Grafenwöhr,” Lang recalled. Presley had a “tank outfit” while Lang was in a “scout outfit,” but they somehow reconnected. 

“I find the barracks. Elvis is all by himself. So, I walk in and say, ‘Hey, babe, what’s going on?’ He says, ‘I don’t feel good. All the guys are at training. They left me here behind.’ So, he’s laying on an army bed, and I’m sitting there, just him and me. Biggest guy in the world. But we’re talking,” Lang remembered. 

ANN-MARGRET DESCRIBES HER ELVIS PRESLEY CONNECTION, REMEMBERS NIBBLING ON PAT BOONE’S SHOULDER

“I sat on the edge of the bed, and I said, ‘Hey El, will you tell me something?’ I said, ‘Why are you, with all the fame you have and all the money you have, why are you and I friends?’ He said, ‘I’m going to tell you something Johnny Lang. You’d still like me if I was a janitor, and thank God I’m not.’ And I say, ‘You’ve got that right.’ I got up, and in my mind, I’m thinking, ‘Unbelievable, just him and I, the whole world would love to see it.’” 

Elvis Presley wears suit during Ed Sullivan performance

Presley performed on the “The Ed Sullivan Show” Jan. 6, 1957, in New York City. (Michael Ochs Archives)

Elvis Presley squats while waiting for exams in the Army

Along with fellow recruits, Elvis (left) waits for a physical examination upon entering the U.S. Army at the Fort Chaffee training installation at Fort Smith, Ark., March 25, 1958.    (Don Cravens)

Lang remembered helping Presley fix his blanket because he wasn’t feeling his best and said, “You take care. I know you’re not feeling good. I won’t keep you up, but God bless you. I’ll see you when that opportunity arrives again.”

“He said, ‘No problem, Johnny. Thanks for coming by.’ And that’s my favorite story of all. I mean. Entertainer of the century!”

Elvis kept Johnny on his toes, too. 

WATCH: Elvis Presley had ‘the greatest laugh’ and a huge heart

“You never know what he’s going to do,” Lang said. “He says to me, he says, ‘Hey, Johnny, why don’t you and I become blood brothers?’”

Presley asked Lang to get a knife, but he played a little joke on the singer in return. 

“So, I go in the kitchen. I get a butter knife. Come in the living room. And I say, ‘OK, babe, I got you. And he says, ‘You do it first, and I’ll follow you,’ I said OK. So, I take the knife, and I’m going, ‘Man this ain’t cutting! It’s a butter knife!’ And Elvis, he’s looking at me and says, ‘I’ll tell you what Johnny, forget it!’ Greatest opportunity in the world for me to be a blood brother with the entertainer of the century!”

Elvis Presley gets his hair cut in the Army

Presley lived like most soldiers while in the Army for two years. (Michael Ochs Archives)

While they were together at the border of Czechoslovakia (now the Czech Republic and Slovakia) during the Cold War, they didn’t see combat. Lang and Presley went their separate ways after the Army. While Presley continued with his music career, Lang got married and raised five kids with his wife. He did recall the “sad day” when they said their goodbyes.

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“I remember that like yesterday,” he said. “I’m standing up, and Elvis is coming downstairs, and there’s about seven or eight guys saying goodbye to him.”

WATCH: Elvis Presley had hundreds of fans waiting for his autograph

“He comes up to me, shakes my hand, he says, ‘Johnny, it was real nice knowing ya and meeting ya.’ And I got tears coming down, and I’m crying. I said, ‘El, I can’t thank you enough for my two years in the service with you, because without you, it wouldn’t have been the service the way [it] had.’ And he said, ‘Ah, think nothing of it, Johnny. If you get a chance, come on down and see me in Vegas,”‘ Lang said. “I was hurting ’cause I loved the guy.”

The world may know Elvis for his music and charming looks, but Lang insisted there was more behind the mirror.

Elvis Presley poses for portrait by military tanks

Presley was stationed at the Ray Barracks in Friedberg, Germany. (Vittoriano Rastelli)

Elvis Presley and Johnny Lang shared laughs in the Army together

Author Johnny Lang recalled his favorite times with Elvis Presley in the Army. (Johnny Lang)

Elvis Presley strums guitar on set of movie

Elvis was also known for his acting career and starred in a handful of films before the Army. (Michael Ochs Archives)

“I don’t think the average person knows. … They all know how much heart he had, the whole world knows that, but how funny he was,” Lang said. “The greatest laugh I ever heard in my life was Elvis Presley, and funny as hell. And, of course, a heart as big as this building, but the majority of the world knows how much heart he had. But I don’t think they know how funny he was. And I used to make that boy laugh.”

Even when the “Unchained Melody” musician would make jokes, they were always lighthearted. 

Before a game of football one day, Elvis “looks over me and says, ‘Hey, Johnny. You think I’ll ever be bald?’ I say, ‘No, you’ll never be bald.’ I say, ‘I’ll be bald someday, but listen, I’ll tell you what, you’re going to be uglier.’ He says, ‘Let’s go play ball.’”

WATCH: Author Johnny Lang recalls first meeting Elvis Presley in the Army

Elvis is one of the best-selling music artists of all time across a number of genres and still holds records for his albums and singles. Presley died in 1977 at his Graceland estate in Memphis. He was 42.

Lang remembered his friend for having “nothing but heart. Sense of humor. … Give you the shirt off his back.” 

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“The closest guy I’ve ever seen to Elvis Presley, entertainment-wise … is Michael Jackson,” he said. “The man’s [in a class] all by himself.

“You have to be outstanding to get in one Hall of Fame. He did three — rock ‘n’ roll, gospel and country. That tells me pretty well what Elvis Presley was all about.”

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Pennsylvania researchers reveal possible links between natural gas industry and health issues

  • Researchers in Pennsylvania, a state extensively impacted by gas drilling, are poised to unveil their findings from a four-year, $2.5 million study exploring potential connections between the natural gas industry and pediatric cancer, asthma, and adverse birth outcomes. 
  • The release of these findings follows a broader trend of states enhancing regulations related to hydraulic fracturing (fracking) and waste disposal. 
  • The University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health and the state Department of Health are set to host a public meeting to discuss the study’s conclusions.

Researchers in heavily drilled Pennsylvania were preparing Tuesday to release findings from taxpayer-financed studies on possible links between the natural gas industry and pediatric cancer, asthma and poor birth outcomes.

The four-year, $2.5 million project is wrapping up after the state’s former governor, Democrat Tom Wolf, in 2019 agreed to commission it under pressure from the families of pediatric cancer patients who live amid the nation’s most prolific natural gas reservoir in western Pennsylvania.

A number of states have strengthened their laws around fracking and waste disposal over the past decade. However, researchers have repeatedly said that regulatory shortcomings leave an incomplete picture of the amount of toxic substances the industry emits into the air, injects into the ground or produces as waste.

The Pennsylvania-funded study involves University of Pittsburgh researchers and comes on the heels of other major studies that are finding higher rates of cancer, asthma, low birth weights and other afflictions among people who live near drilling fields around the country.

Tuesday evening’s public meeting to discuss the findings will be hosted by University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health and the state Department of Health, on the campus of state-owned Pennsylvania Western University.

BLUE STATES ARE CASHING IN ON FOSSIL FUEL PRODUCTION DESPITE CLIMATE AGENDA: ANALYSIS

Edward Ketyer, a retired pediatrician who is president of the Physicians for Social Responsibility Pennsylvania and who sat on an advisory board for the study, said he expects that the studies will be consistent with previous research showing that the “closer you live to fracking activity, the increased risk you have a being sick with a variety of illnesses.”

“We’ve got enough evidence that associates, that links, that correlates fracking activity to poor health — and the biggest question is why is anybody surprised about that?” Ketyer said.

The gas industry has maintained that fracking is safe and industry groups in Pennsylvania supported Wolf’s initiative to get to the bottom of the pediatric cancer cases.

The study’s findings are emerging under new Gov. Josh Shapiro, also a Democrat, whose administration has yet to publish or otherwise release the researchers’ reports since taking office earlier this year.

The advent of high-volume hydraulic fracturing combined with horizontal drilling miles deep in the ground over the past two decades transformed the United States into a worldwide oil and gas superpower.

Fracking Study Health

Work continues at a shale gas well drilling site in St. Mary’s, Pennsylvania, on March 12, 2020.  (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic, File)

But it also brought a torrent of complaints about water and air pollution, and diseases and ailments, as it encroached on exurbs and suburbs in states like Texas, Colorado and Pennsylvania.

One of the most enduring images of gas drilling pollution was residents in a northern Pennsylvania community lighting their tap water on fire. A state grand jury investigation later found that a company had failed to fix its faulty gas wells, which leaked flammable methane into residential water supplies in surrounding communities.

The Pennsylvania-funded study comes on the heels of other major studies, such as one published last year by Harvard University researchers who said they found evidence of higher death rates in more than 15 million Medicare beneficiaries who lived downwind of oil and gas wells in major exploration regions around the U.S.

Yale University researchers last year said they found that children in Pennsylvania living near an oil or gas wellsite had up to two to three times the odds of developing acute lymphocytic leukemia, a common type of cancer in children.

Establishing the cause of health problems is challenging, however. It can be difficult or impossible for researchers to determine exactly how much exposure people had to pollutants in air or water, and scientists often cannot rule out other contributing factors.

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Because of that, environmental health researchers try to gather enough data to gauge risk and draw conclusions.

“The idea is we’re collecting evidence in some kind of a systematic way and we’re looking at that evidence and judging whether causation is a reasonable interpretation to make,” said David Ozonoff, a retired environmental health professor who chaired the Department of Environmental Health at Boston University.

Another key piece of evidence is to identify an activity that exposes people to a chemical as part of assembling evidence that fits together in narrative, Ozonoff said.

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China's statistics bureau rejects deflation concerns at Beijing press conference

There is no deflation in China and there will be no deflation in the future, a spokesman of China’s statistics bureau said on Tuesday.

China’s economic recovery faces challenges, National Bureau of Statistics spokesperson Fu Linghui told a press conference in Beijing.

Still, the bureau expects a decline in producer price index to moderate further, according to Fu.

7 PROMINENT ADVOCATES CHARGED IN HONG KONG’S 2019 PRO-DEMOCRACY PROTESTS GET CONVICTIONS OVERTURNED

Woman shopping

A customer shops for vegetables at a wet market in Beijing, China, on Aug. 10, 2023.  (REUTERS/Yew Lun Tian)

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China’s consumer sector tipped into deflation and factory-gate prices extended declines in July, official data showed.

Fu also said that risks for property developers could be gradually resolved due to policy optimisation.

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Georgia housewife accused of plotting husband's murder calls life 'tough': report

A Georgia housewife who is charged with conspiring with her Bahamian lover to try to snuff out her wealthy insurance executive husband said it’s been difficult since she was arrested for the alleged plot.

“It’s been really tough,” Lindsay Shiver, 36, who was wearing an ankle monitor, told the New York Post after checking in at a local police station in Nassau, Bahamas. “It’s been hard. But I can’t speak about it.”

She was released Wednesday on $100,000 bail after spending 19 days in the notorious Fox Hill prison in Nassau.

The mother of three, her boyfriend, Adrien Bethel, 28, and suspected hit man Faron Newbold Jr., 29, are charged with scheming to kill her husband, Robert Shiver, 38.

EX-AUBURN FOOTBALL PLAYER WAS LOCKED IN NASTY CUSTODY BATTLE BEFORE WIFE’S ALLEGED MURDER PLOT

Adrien Bethel in the Bahamas

Lindsay Shiver and her lover, Adrien Bethel, far left, are charged with plotting to kill her husband, Robert Shiver. (Daniel William McKnight/Instagram)

Bethel and Newbold were each released on $20,000 bail and must also wear GPS tracking devices.

The Shivers, who are locked in an acrimonious divorce and custody battle over their boys, share a vacation home in the Bahamas.

As a condition of her bail, the former beauty queen has to check in with authorities three times a week.

Lindsay Shiver in workout gear walks through a carpark holding a manila folder

Lindsay Shiver leaves Cable Beach Police Station in Nassau, Bahamas, on Aug. 11, 2023. Shiver is charged with plotting to kill her husband, Robert Shiver, who was once a star football player at Auburn University. (Daniel William McKnight)

Lindsay, wearing a Nike hat, gray hoodie and exercise pants, nodded affirmatively when asked if the case against her has been overblown, according to the Post.

“I really can’t say too much right now,” she added before climbing into her Kia sedan.

EX-AUBURN FOOTBALL PLAYER HELPS BAIL OUT WIFE, HER LOVER WHO ARE ACCUSED OF PLOTTING HIS MURDER: REPORT

As part of her bond package, she can’t leave the Bahamas or her leased apartment from 8 p.m. to 5 a.m.

She has also been barred from contacting her estranged husband or coming within 100 feet of him.

Lindsay SHiver in a wedding dress

Lindsay and Robert Shiver are shown on their wedding day on March 6, 2010, left, and the couple are seen with their children at an Auburn University game, where they both attended college. (Facebook)

The alleged plot came to light when police investigated a break-in at Grabbers Bar and Grill on Great Guana Cay, where Bethel worked, and uncovered incriminating messages on a suspect’s phone.

Before the trio was arrested, Robert Shiver, a former Auburn University football player, confronted Bethel after hiring a private investigator to track his wife’s movements, the Post reported.

“Thanks for taking care of my wife,” Robert Shiver allegedly told Bethel after the PI snapped photos of the lovers at several different locations. 

Georgia woman shown in tropical water posing with friend wearing hat that reads 'bad influence.'

Lindsay Shiver, far right, wearing a hat that reads “Bad Influence,” is charged with plotting to kill her husband, Robert Shiver, with the help of her lover. (Instagram)

Robert Shiver filed for divorce on April 5 on grounds of “adulterous conduct.” Lindsay Shiver responded by accusing her husband of physical and emotional abuse and demanding sole custody, alimony and child support.

COUPLE ALLEGEDLY BURNED MARINE EX-HUSBAND’S BODY IN ‘SOPHISTICATED’ MURDER PLOT

They are squabbling over their $2.5 million mansion in Thomasville, Georgia, use of their private jet and other assets.

On the same day that Lindsay Shiver allegedly sent her Bahamian beau a text that said, “Kill him,” she called 911 on her husband at their Georgia home, according to police body camera footage posted to YouTube.

Lindsay Shiver is walked from court by law enforcement

Lindsay Shiver leaves court in the Bahamas on Aug. 9, 2023. (Daniel William McKnight)

The pair got into a fight on July 16 over who got to use the private jet to fly to the Bahamas. Lindsay Shiver had a getaway planned with her boyfriend while Robert was taking their three boys to their vacation home.

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Lindsay Shiver told police that he barred her from using the plane, then pushed her out of the way to retrieve the kids’ bags. He denied touching her.

She was arrested five days later in the Bahamas for the alleged murder-for-hire scheme.

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'Vacation' star Anthony Michael Hall tried to sneak a peek at Beverly D'Angelo's breasts: 'I got busted'

“National Lampoon’s Vacation” star Anthony Michael Hall admitted he once tried to sneak a peek at co-star Beverly D’Angelo’s breasts while on set.

Hall, D’Angelo, Christie Brinkley, Randy Quaid and Dana Barron all appeared for a mini movie reunion at Fan Expo Chicago over the weekend, choosing not to speak specifically about the 1983 film that brought them together due to the ongoing SAG-AFTRA strike.

“I get a lot of guys who say I was the first boobs they saw,” D’Angelo noted, seemingly hinting at her nude scenes in the film, according to Entertainment Weekly.

“Somebody walked up to my booth yesterday and said, ‘I just love you in the naked scenes,’” Brinkley chimed in.

CHEVY CHASE, CHRISTIE BRINKLEY AND BEVERLY D’ANGELO ENJOY ‘NATIONAL LAMPOON’S VACATION’ REUNION

Checy Chase and the cast of "National Lampoons Vacation" in a scene from the movie

Anthony Michael Hall recalled trying to sneak a peek while Beverly D’Angelo filmed a nude scene for the 1983 film “National Lampoon’s Vacation.” (Warner Brothers/Getty Images)

Barron then brought up a time Hall got “busted” trying to catch a glimpse of D’Angelo nude while she was filming.

“Should I pick up the story right here?” Hall cut in. “So, I got busted because I tried to sneak onto the set when Beverly was doing the shower scene.”

Anthony Michael Hall then and now split

Anthony Michael Hall starred as Rusty Griswold in “National Lampoon’s Vacation.” (Getty Images)

Chevy Chase and D’Angelo starred as Clark and Ellen Griswold in the classic family series which began with an innocent, cross-country drive to Walley World theme park. The 1983 film directed by Harold Ramis and written by John Hughes also starred Hall, Barron, Quaid and John Candy. Brinkley had the iconic role as “The Girl in the Ferrari.”

The Griswolds headed to Europe for the second movie, and returned to Chicago for the ultimate holiday tradition, “National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation.”

Beverly D'Angelo and Chevy Chase on set

Beverly D’Angelo and Chevy Chase starred as Ellen and Clark Griswold in the classic films. (Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)

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D’Angelo previously spoke about the “chemistry” between her and Chase and how it helped shape their characters.

“Ellen and Clark are born out of the chemistry that Chevy and I have,” D’Angelo explained during an appearance on the podcast, “A Cinematic Christmas Journey.” 

“It’s not like we slip into those roles, but there’s something about our brains that makes it very easy to go into. Just there’s something about our chemistry we’re comfortable with, we’re suburban kids, maybe,” she mused. “I don’t know. But whatever it is, it’s our chemistry that made those people.”

Chevy Chase and Beverly D'Angelo in a scene from European Vacation

Chevy Chase and Beverly D’Angelo on the set of “National Lampoon’s European Vacation” in 1985. (Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)

“By ‘European Vacation.’ I inherited the role of Chevy whisperer,” D’Angelo recalled. “So it would be a weird dynamic. Like nobody would want to say, ‘Chevy, move over there’ or ‘Chevy, do this or do that’ because it’s Chevy. You know what I mean? And you don’t know what he’s going to say to you.”

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Fox News Digital’s Tracy Wright contributed to this report.

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Pennsylvania woman sentenced after plotting with son to kill ex-boyfriend who broke up with her

A Pennsylvania woman was sentenced to 20 to 40-years in prison for conspiring with her son to kill an ex-boyfriend.

Joyce Brown-Rodriguez, 56, was sentenced to 20 to 40 years in prison on Monday after she pleaded guilty to criminal conspiracy, third-degree murder, and other related charges related to the death of her then-boyfriend, Christopher Wilson, 52, according to FOX 29.

Prosecutors say Brown-Rodriguez pleaded guilty as part of a plea agreement and testified against her son, 34-year-old Khalill Brown at his July trial.

Khalill Brown was convicted of fatally shooting Wilson in December 2020 at his workplace, Kuusakoski Recycling in Middletown Township, Pennsylvania.

KANSAS POLICE RAID NEWSPAPER’S OFFICE, PUBLISHER’S HOME TO SEIZE RECORDS; REPORT INJURED

PA woman

56-year-old Joyce Brown-Rodriguez was sentenced to 20 to 40 years in prison on Monday after she pleaded guilty to criminal conspiracy, third-degree murder, and other related charges related to the death of her then-boyfriend, Christopher Wilson, 52, according to FOX 29. (Bucks County DA)

Wilson’s daughters claimed that Brown-Rodriguez pretended to grieve with them after their father’s death.

One day before the shooting, Brown-Rodriguez called and texted Wilson after he ended the relationship, officials said. She went on to text her son for help.

The following day, Brown-Rodriguez and her son drove to Kuusakoski Recycling, where Wilson was shot multiple times.

NASHVILLE CHRISTIAN SCHOOL SHOOTER HAD MYSTERIOUS HANDWRITTEN NOTES ON CLOTHES, NUMBERED ANKLET: AUTOPSY

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Christopher Wilson, 52 (Bucks County DA)

Brown-Rodriguez fled the scene with her son, driving home to Philadelphia, officials said.

Bucks County Court Judge Jeffrey Finley said he wants to know why Brown-Rodriguez resorted to violence after Wilson broke up with her, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer.

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“It makes no sense that anything that occurred here, in any way, should have led to you taking the life of Mr. Wilson,” Finley said. “Your actions not only took his life, but had a significant impact on the people who were there that day.”

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Utah man accused of selling unproven COVID-19 treatment in 2020, behind bars after 3-year fugitive hunt

A Cedar Hills, Utah, man who falsely claimed to be a doctor and was indicted in 2020 for crimes associated with the selling of an unproven solution that could prevent and treat coronavirus, is behind bars after a three-year fugitive hunt.

U.S. Attorney Trina A. Higgins of the District of Utah announced on Monday that 63-year-old Gordon Hunter Pederson had been taken into custody after he was spotted by federal agents conducting surveillance on July 5, 2023.

Pedersen was wanted after failing to appear in federal court on Aug. 25, 2020 for an indictment charging him with mail fraud, wire fraud and felony introduction of misbranded drugs into interstate commerce with intent to defraud and mislead.

UTAH BUSINESS OWNER ALLEGEDLY PUSHED SILVER PRODUCTS, FALSELY CLAIMING THEY PREVENT, TREAT CORONAVIRUS

Gordon Pedersen

Gordon Pedersen is accused of selling an unproven treatment for coronavirus before vaccines were approved. (U.S. Attorneys Office – YouTube.com Public Record)

Court documents allege that before approved COVID-19 vaccines were available, Pedersen was using the internet to sell a “structural alkaline silver” product he claimed “resonates, or vibrates, at a frequency that destroys the membrane of the virus, making the virus incapable of attaching to any healthy cell, or to infect you in any way.”

Higgins said the suspect also falsely claimed on YouTube videos to be a board certified “Anti-Aging Medical Doctor,” while also falsely claiming to have PhDs in immunology and naturopathic medicine.

NEW COVID SUBVARIANT, ERIS, IS NOW MOST COMMON AND FASTEST-SPREADING IN US: ‘NEVER GOING AWAY’

Dr. Gordon Pedersen

Doctor Gordon Pedersen (Facebook)

A company Pedersen previously owned, My Doctor Suggests LLC, was alleged to have operated without registering with the Food and Drug Administration.

The company agreed to plead guilty to one count of criminal information related to its false and misleading marketing of ingestible silver products to treat COVID-19.

Along with the guilty plea, the company severed ties with Pedersen and agreed to corporate in his prosecution, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said at the time of the agreement.

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Pedersen is expected to make his initial appearance on the indictment on Tuesday. With the indictment appearance, Pedersen is also scheduled to have a detention hearing. Both hearings will take place at the Orrin G. Hatch U.S. District Courthouse in Salt Lake City.

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Dershowitz slams GA indictment, says Trump used same tactics as Al Gore in 2000: not a ‘crime'

The former legal counsel for Al Gore who challenged – and lost – the presidential election results in 2000 says Gore’s team did “the same thing” as what a Georgia prosecutor is claiming Trump committed as a crime

Donald Trump is facing a fourth indictment, this time from Fulton County, Georgia district attorney Fani Willis, involving allegations that Trump sought to overturn the 2020 presidential election results in Georgia. 

Harvard professor Alan Dershowitz, speaking to Fox News Digital, criticized the pending indictment, calling Trump’s actions  “very similar” to that of Al Gore’s legal strategy in the Bush v. Gore case that decided the 2000 presidential election. 

“We challenged the election, and we did much of the things that are being done today and people praised us. I wrote a bestselling book called ‘Supreme Injustice. Now they’re making it a crime,” Dershowitz said.

TRUMP INDICTED OUT OF GEORGIA PROBE INTO ALLEGED EFFORTS TO OVERTURN 2020 ELECTION

Former President Donald Trump

Former U.S. President Donald Trump gestures to the crowd at a campaign event on July 1, 2023 in Pickens, South Carolina. (Sean Rayford/Getty Images)

On Monday a grand jury returned an indictment of Trump after a years-long criminal investigation led by state prosecutors in Georgia into his alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election in the state.

Former Trump White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, attorneys Rudy Giuliani, Sidney Powell, Jenna Ellis, Kenneth Chesebro, Jeff Clark, John Eastman, and others, were also charged out of the years-long investigation.

READ THE INDICTMENT

The charges include violating the Georgia RICO Act—the Racketeer Influenced And Corrupt Organizations Act;  Solicitation of Violation of Oath by a Public Officer; Conspiracy to Commit Impersonating a Public Officer; Conspiracy to Commit Forgery in the First Degree; Conspiracy to Commit False Statements and Writings; Conspiracy to Commit Filing False Documents; Conspiracy to Commit Forgery in the First Degree;  Filing False Documents; and Solicitation of Violation of Oath by a Public Officer.

Dershowitz, in speaking to Fox News’ Sean Hannity Monday evening, said it would be wrong to “expand” the RICO statute to “include political objections,” including ones that members of the Democrat party have made. 

“You cannot start making crimes out of things that the Democrats did — Tilden Hayes, John Kennedy election 2000 election 2016 election, Jamie Raskin gets up and does some of the same things. These are political actions that the Constitution prefers us to take rather than going out on the streets and rioting. We’re supposed to go to court. We’re supposed to go to Congress. You can’t make those things crimes. And you can’t expand the RICO statute to now include political objections,” he said. 

When Trump was disputing the results of the 2020 election, he made a phone call to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to help him “find 11,789 votes,” 

“All I want to do is this. I just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more than we have. Because we won the state,” Trump reportedly said.

Georgia certified election results showing that Trump’s Democratic opponent Joe Biden won the state’s Nov. 3 election by 11,779 votes.

Dershowitz compared the call to Gore’s legal strategy in 2000. 

“It’s pretty much the same thing I did and Professor Lawrence Tribe did, and those of us who were on the Al Gore team,” Dershowitz said. 

“I was representing the voters of Palm Beach County, and we were saying ‘please check this county, check that county, find this vote find those votes. We think there are more votes,’” Dershowitz described. 

GEORGIA SECRETARY OF STATE TO INTERVIEW WITH SPECIAL COUNSEL JACK SMITH AS PART OF JAN. 6 PROBE

Donald Trump

Former President Donald Trump was indicted for a fourth time on Monday. (Sean Rayford/Getty Images)

“We did the same thing and Professor Tribe, wrote a legal memorandum essentially laying out a strategy very similar to the strategy for which these folks are being indicted today,” he said. 

“So if you look back at the 2000 election and the protests, I still think to this day, and I’ll say it here on television, that that election was stolen from Al Gore by Bush that he won the actual election. I’m saying that — are they going to come after me now?” Dershowitz said. 

The district attorney’s office erroneously posted an indictment document earlier on Monday prior to the grand jury vote. They reportedly said that document was “fictitious” and it was taken down off the website. 

TRUMP PLEADS ‘NOT GUILTY’ TO CHARGES STEMMING FROM SPECIAL COUNSEL’S JAN. 6 PROBE

Former President Donald Trump

Former President Donald Trump gestures on stage during the Alabama Republican Party’s 2023 Summer meeting at the Renaissance Montgomery Hotel on August 4, 2023 in Montgomery, Alabama. (Julie Bennett/Getty Images)

Dershowitz commented that the indictments should not be taken seriously after the prosecutor’s flub.

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“Nobody should take the indictments at all seriously, because they announced the indictment before the grand jury even voted. So the grand jury is just a rubber stamp. And so, nobody should say, ‘Oh, the grand jury indicted, so it must be serious,’” Dershowitz said.

“It’s not the grand jury who indicted, it’s the prosecutors,” he added. 

Fox News Digital’s Brooke Singman and Danielle Wallace contributed to this report. 

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