Suspect in New Year's Eve machete attack on police near New York's Times Square expressed desire in diary to join Taliban, die a martyr, sources say



CNN
 — 

The 19-year-old being held by New York City police as the suspect in a New Year’s Eve machete attack against three police officers just outside a Times Square security screening zone carried a handwritten diary that expressed his desire to join the Taliban in Afghanistan and die as a martyr, law enforcement sources said.

Trevor Bickford remains in custody and under police guard at Bellevue Hospital, where he is being treated for a gunshot wound to the shoulder sustained during the attack, sources said.

The three officers – injured at one of New York’s most high-profile events just a day after their department had warned of an “ISIS-Aligned” video calling for “Lone Offender Attacks” – have all been treated and released, according to the New York Police Department.

On Sunday, federal authorities from the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, and the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office were discussing whether to charge Bickford federally or under state law or both in relation to the attack, the sources said.

The suspect has not been charged, and it is unclear whether he has an attorney. The US Attorney’s office declined to comment. CNN has reached out to the Manhattan DA’s office for comment.

Trevor Bickford

Investigators believe Bickford arrived Thursday in New York and checked into a hotel on Manhattan’s Lower East Side, the sources said. Then Saturday, he went just after 10 p.m. to the Times Square checkpoint at West 52nd Street and 8th Avenue where officers would check bags for weapons or suspicious items, NYPD Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell and police said.

Bickford pulled out a machete, striking one officer with the blade and another officer in the head with the handle before swinging the blade at a third officer, who then shot him in the shoulder, according to the sources and the NYPD.

Investigators on Sunday were seeking search warrants for the suspect’s phone and online activities to determine if he had been viewing violent extremist propaganda, law enforcement sources said.

The NYPD had sent a bulletin Friday to law enforcement partners across the country titled, “ISIS-Aligned Media Unit Releases Video Ahead of New Year’s Eve, Demanding Lone Offender Attacks,” according to the sources. The video, being circulated in online chat rooms, shows “selected video clips, suggesting various means of attack, including explosives, handguns, knives, and toxins,” according to the bulletin, obtained by CNN.

It’s not clear if the checkpoint attack suspect has viewed terrorist propaganda. The tactics appear to follow a familiar model of prior attacks against New York City by lone offenders.

If deemed a terrorist attack, it would be the first by a suspected terrorist on the event in Times Square, one of the world’s most watched New Year’s Eve celebrations.

Bickford is from Wells, Maine, according to sources, a beach town with a population of just over 11,000 people.

Correction: An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated when the NYPD sent a bulletin about a video released by ISIS-aligned media. It was Friday.

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The most anticipated Broadway shows opening in 2023



CNN
 — 

Broadway babies, we’ve reached that spectacular segment of the theatrical season in which musicals and plays open in droves and vie for a chance to win a Tony Award – or 11.

There are tigers and murderous barbers and cookouts and corn-centric fables opening on Broadway this year, and those are just the ones that will open early enough to be considered for a 2023 Tony. Later in the year, the music of Britney Spears gets its due and a DeLorean will delight fans of a certain ’80s franchise.

All that to say, we devotees of the stage are in for several theatrical treats this year. Here are a few of the musicals and plays set to premiere in 2023 that already have Broadway fans buzzing.

Hiran Abeysekera (left) performs alonside the several puppeteers who power Richard Parker the Bengal Tiger at the 2022 Olivier Awards.

Yann Martel’s beloved novel gets the theatrical treatment this spring, and it continues the new Broadway tradition cemented by “Into the Woods” of an animal puppet stealing the show out from under its human co-stars. How will Pi’s sea-set journey with Richard Parker the Bengal tiger translate on stage? If its London reviews are to be believed, it works effortlessly.

Performances begin: March 9

Officially opens: March 30

Who knew? It took seven people to bring the Richard Parker puppet to vivid life in the West End production, all of whom shared the Olivier Award for best actor in a supporting role. There are actors crouched underneath his spine and head who walk for him, another who provides his voice and more who control his limbs and tail.

The DeLorean featured in "Back to the Future: The Musical" was on display during New York Comic Con 2022.

Doc Brown’s DeLorean is careening onto Broadway this summer. A hit in London’s West End, “Back to the Future: The Musical” promises sci-fi spectacle, ’80s nostalgia and attempted unintentional incest. The musical retains all the signature moments from the original movie, from Biff’s bullying to Marty’s “Johnny B. Goode” performance, but jazzes them up with extended dance sequences and soaring solos.

Performances begin: June 30

Officially opens: August 3

Who knew? The DeLorean seen onstage in the British production isn’t a real vehicle – less than 10,000 DeLorean cars were ever made, so the musical’s crew painstakingly recreated one for the production. As for what it’s capable of onstage… well, we’ll let audiences discover those delights for themselves.

There is an unofficial rule in musical theater that Andrew Lloyd Webber must always have a show running on Broadway. And when his long-running musical “Phantom of the Opera” closes later this year, his new spin on Cindy’s rags-to-royalty tale will carry the mantle. Webber’s new version of “Cinderella,” with a book by Emerald Fennell (“Promising Young Woman,” “Killing Eve”), paints our protagonist not as a faultless princess-to-be but as a grungy and headstrong heroine.

Performances begin: February 17

Officially opens: March 23

Who knew? Webber ruffled feathers this summer when he called the London production a “costly mistake” in a letter the West End cast read aloud after their final performance. (Webber opted to forgo an in-person appearance at the show.) His letter earned him boos in absentia, for which he later apologized.

If you can, attend the tale of Josh Groban-as-Sweeney Todd. One of the late Stephen Sondheim’s darkest works (and that’s saying something), this revival follows the “Demon Barber of Fleet Street,” his lovesick and deranged assistant, a pair of innocent lovers and an evil judge who lords over them all. Expect spilled blood and turned stomachs, especially if you get a whiff of one of Mrs. Lovett’s meat pies.

Performances begin: February 26

Officially opens: March 26

Who knew? This production stars a number of TV stars, including Gaten Matarazzo (the lovable Dustin from “Stranger Things”), Annaleigh Ashford (Paula Jones in “American Crime Story: Impeachment”) and Jordan Fisher (various Disney Channel series and Netflix originals), though Ashford outnumbers them all in Broadway credits.

This new country-tinged musical invites audiences to embrace their inner “Corn Kid.” Yep, the title is a reference to the process by which corn husks are stripped from cobs, though the show’s vague description promises to provide a “kernel of hope for our divided nation.”

Performances begin: March 8

Officially opens: April 4

Who knew? This show boasts some Southern bonafides. Two Nashville songwriters penned the music to this twangy production – Brandy Clark, known for writing songs for Sheryl Crow and Reba McEntire, and Shane McAnally, who produced Kacey Musgraves’ debut album.

This Pulitzer Prize-winning “Hamlet” update earned unanimous acclaim during its off-Broadway run. Set at a Southern cookout, James Ijames’ play maintains the basic contours of Shakespeare’s plot – there’s a dead father and duplicitous uncle – but centers a Black, queer protagonist instead of a Danish prince.

Performances begin: March 21

Officially opens: April 12

Who knew? When “Fat Ham” begins previews, it’ll be one of two Pulitzer winners on Broadway (the other is the indomitable hit “Hamilton”). Another Pulitzer Prize-winning play, “Between Riverside and Crazy,” is scheduled to close in February, and the musical “A Strange Loop,” which also won a Pulitzer, will close this month.

Jessica Chastain stars in this new adaptation of Henrik Ibsen’s landmark play about a wife and mother whose delicate existence begins to crack under the weight of societal expectations. Playwright Amy Herzog penned the script that “makes freshly relevant” the feminist themes of the original.

Performances begin: February 13

Officially opens: March 9

Who knew? “A Doll’s House” has been staged in New York at least 13 times prior to this iteration since the 1890s, per the Internet Broadway Database. Playwright Lucas Hnath wrote a sequel to it in 2017, aptly titled “A Doll’s House, Part 2,” that picks up 15 years after the original.

"The Mousetrap" celebrated its 70th anniversary in London in 2022.

This Agatha Christie play is finally premiering on Broadway after running for a whopping 70 years in London’s West End. Expect plenty of delicious twists, period costumes and sets and, naturally, shady characters without alibis.

Performances begin: 2023, no date set

Who knew? Since the show is famously long-lived, the UK theater where it plays installed a wooden counter that ticks up a digit for every performance. As of November 25, 2022, “The Mousetrap” had been performed 28,915 times, making it far and away the longest-running play in the world.

There are plenty more plays and musicals also coming to Broadway in 2023, though some haven’t secured opening dates or theaters yet. Here are a few of the most notable:

Jodie Comer will lead "Prima Facie" on Broadway after receiving acclaim for the role in London.

  • A revival of “Camelot” starring Philippa Soo of “Hamilton” is coming to Lincoln Center. Now with an updated book by Aaron Sorkin, this classic musical became synonymous with the Kennedy administration during its original run.
  • Jodie Comer comes to Broadway in “Prima Facie,” a one-woman show led by a barrister losing faith in the legal system.
  • Britney Spears soundtracks the jukebox musical “Once Upon a One More Time,” in which classic fairy tale heroines experience a feminist awakening. Spears’ complicated personal life is not a plot point.
  • “Merrily We Roll Along,” an infamously troubled musical by Stephen Sondheim, will move to Broadway after a successful off-Broadway run that began in November. Current stars Jonathan Groff, Lindsay Mendez and Daniel Radcliffe will transfer with the show.

A bevvy of revivals, original musicals and classic plays closed out 2022. Here are a few you may have missed that are still running:

  • The bittersweet comedy “Kimberly Akimbo,” considered a frontrunner for this year’s Tony for best musical, follows a teenager with a condition that ages her body at several times the normal rate, but she remains impossibly peppy and optimistic.
  • “Some Like It Hot,” a musical take on the classic film, was co-written by comedian Amber Ruffin and features music by “Hairspray” songwriting duo Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman. Expect massive dance sequences and larger-than-life drag personas.
  • The always luminous Audra McDonald leads “Ohio State Murders,” a haunting play by Adrienne Kennedy, who, until this production, had never seen one of her scripts produced on Broadway.


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France makes condoms free for everyone younger than 26, emergency contraception free for all women

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Condoms are now free in French pharmacies for everyone younger than 26 years old as part of the government’s efforts to curb sexually transmitted diseases

The measure, which went into effect on Jan. 1, was announced by French President Emmanuel Macron in early December. It was originally aimed at French citizens between the ages of 18 and 25, but was expanded to minors as well. France has also made emergency contraception free for all women, according to a government spokesman’s tweet

“Sexually transmitted diseases are on the rise among young people,” Macron said on Dec. 8. “This is why we are embarking on a small prevention revolution.” 

NEW HAMPSHIRE’S EXECUTIVE COUNCIL REJECTS FUNDING FOR SEX EDUCATION PROGRAM

Condoms were already available for free at STD screening centers and some school health centers, according to the French Ministry of Health. French citizens who are 26 or older can be reimbursed for condom purchases with a prescription from a doctor. 

France followed the lead of several other European countries last year by making all contraceptive methods free for women and girls up to 25 years old. 

Contraception is free in the United Kingdom, while Spain’s health system funds dozens of different birth control methods. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

 

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Colts’ Jeff Saturday rips Kayvon Thibodeaux’s celebration as ‘tasteless’ and ‘just trash’

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Indianapolis Colts interim head coach Jeff Saturday tore into New York Giants rookie linebacker Kayvon Thibodeaux for celebrating on the field as quarterback Nick Foles was on the ground injured, calling it “tasteless” and “trash.” 

During a press conference on Monday, Saturday was asked about Thibodeaux’s snow angel celebration after he sacked Foles late in the second quarter. 

Foles, who was visibly in pain, suffered a rib injury. 

GIANT’S KAYVON THIBODEAUX SAYS HE DIDN’T SEE NICK FOLES IN CELEBRATION, COLTS TEAMMATE CALLS IT ‘HORSES—‘

“Tasteless from the celebration afterwards. Just trash. Not a fan of it at all and yeah, disappointed from the o-line perspective and from teammates in general. We protect our own,” Saturday said.

“Y’all know me, I’ve been here a long time. I’m just going to tread lightly. Obviously, I didn’t like it at all and that’s where I’ll leave it.” 

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

Thibodeaux said after the game that he wasn’t aware of Foles’ injury at the time.

“When I did realize that he was hurt, that’s when we started getting up,” he said, via ESPN. “When you’re doing a celebration, you’re not looking to see who’s doing what. But I hope he gets well and I hope he’s all right.”

Thibodeaux also made a “sleeping” gesture once back on the sideline. 

Saturday said Sam Ehlinger will close out the regular season in Sunday’s game against the Houston Texans.

“I was happy with the way he played yesterday when he came in,” Saturday said of Ehlinger. “He didn’t do everything perfect but I thought his energy was good. I thought he worked the ball down the field and in all fairness to him, at the end of the game we kind of pulled off knowing where we were.”

 

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Conservatives threaten to withhold critical McCarthy support, hours before speaker vote

Politics, Policy, Political News Top Stories 

Kevin McCarthy has already moved into the speaker’s office, even as an influential conservative group urges members to vote against him unless he concedes to key rules changes.

With the House slated to start voting on who will command the gavel in less than 24 hours, McCarthy remains short of the necessary 218 votes. And his last-ditch efforts, including a long list of concessions he released to his conference over the weekend, has done little to sway his most ardent detractors.

And even as McCarthy predicted concessions he made to the House rules are helping him pick up support, his opponents and skeptics spent Monday lobbing new criticisms his way.

“Why didn’t we get McCarthy’s proposed rules package at least 72 hours in advance?” tweeted Rep. Dan Bishop (R-N.C.), a Freedom Caucus member.

Electing a speaker is typically a symbolic moment, with the vote decided weeks if not months ahead of time. But absent a sudden flip among his detractors, McCarthy’s bid for the gavel will prompt a historically rare showdown, marking just the second time since the Civil War that the race could go beyond one ballot. In fact, many Republicans are bracing for votes that could last multiple days, as McCarthy’s allies vow to only vote for him and five conservatives promise to oppose him, with no clear alternative candidate.

McCarthy met briefly with Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.), one of his most ardent opponents, as well as Reps. Scott Perry (R-Pa.) and Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.), neither of whom have committed to voting for the California Republican.

But while Gaetz quipped heading into the meeting that they could be on “the verge of a New Year’s miracle,” he said afterward that the talk was “brief and productive” — and, critically, that he and five others are still “no” votes.

The conservative Club for Growth released a whip notice for the speakership vote on Monday, urging a no vote on McCarthy — without explicitly naming him — if he didn’t concede to various rules being pushed by some of those opposing him, many of them members of the House Freedom Caucus.

Those lawmakers’ demands have included allowing any one member to force a vote on the House floor to depose a speaker. The Club for Growth also mirrored those members’ calls for prohibiting the Congressional Leadership Fund, a campaign committee closely aligned with McCarthy, from “spending money or providing grants to any Super PAC to engage … in open Republican primaries or against any Republican incumbent.” The group also took issue with the lack of “true conservatives” being represented in leadership.

The fresh signs of trouble come as McCarthy convened a strategy session on Monday evening with dozens of his supporters. The meeting, according to GOP attendees, was meant to motivate his backers, as they gathered in the speaker’s office for the first time, and McCarthy vowed to fight no matter how many ballots it takes.

“There’s still a few things up in the air,” said Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick (R-Pa.), who attended the meeting. “[But] I think he gets there. The question is when.”

Despite not yet having a lock on the gavel, McCarthy is spending Monday working out of the speaker’s office, a tradition routinely granted to the speaker-elect. If he falls short, he would have to move back out of the prestigious office.

Republicans are preparing for a grueling day Tuesday. Rep. Kelly Armstrong (R-N.D.), a McCarthy ally, predicted Republicans will go “however long it takes.” But the first vote would provide some early indications on how the day would play out, he added.

“The way the alphabet works, you’ll know on the first ballot pretty quickly. And then we’ll figure out how it grinds out,” Armstrong said, referring to the alphabetical process for calling on members to cast their votes.

Armstrong predicted that it would be a “long night.” When asked if that meant votes would last until Wednesday’s early hours, he quipped back: “January 10th?”

Meanwhile, Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.), who McCarthy opponents are backing as a figurehead for their frustration, described the Californian as being in “total bargaining mode” but that he doesn’t believe McCarthy “will ever get to 218 votes.”

Others issued more cryptic takes: “Some people who run campaigns against the swamp sure are quick to wilt in the face of challenges (to different degrees) to that very swamp…” tweeted Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) on Monday.

But as McCarthy’s opponents take a hard line, some of his supporters are reviving their own threats.

McCarthy ally Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.) said Monday his previous warning — that a band of moderate Republicans would work with Democrats to elect a centrist GOP speaker, if conservatives tank McCarthy — remains on the table.

“If a few won’t be part of the 218 members we need to govern, we’ll then find other ways to get to 218,” Bacon wrote in an op-ed in the Daily Caller.

Some Republicans have floated Rep. Steve Scalise (R-La.) as a possible alternative to McCarthy if he fell short, though his No. 2 is vowing to support him. However, Bacon told reporters on Monday night that if McCarthy withdraws he and a bipartisan group would put forward another name besides Scalise.

“I love Steve but … I just don’t think it’s fair to say we want Kevin’s scalp, so then we’ll take Steve. I think you’re paying ransom money to the hostage takers by doing that,” Bacon said.

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Kody Brown opens up about latest 'Sister Wives' marital split from Meri Brown



CNN
 — 

“Sister Wives” stars Meri and Kody Brown are sharing more about their split.

The two, who were in a plural marriage for more than 30 years, revealed more about the end of their relationship during the “Sister Wives: One on One” interview special on Sunday.

“We have a lot of history and I love him,” Meri Brown said to host Sukanya Krishnan. “He has chosen not to love me and not to want a relationship with me and so far, as to consider himself not married to me. So I think that’s what we’re sitting with.”

Meri was shown a clip of Kody saying, “I don’t consider myself married to Meri. If she wanted to move on and marry another, she wouldn’t get an argument with me.”

He added that the two were married from a “young age” and that their relationship had been challenging.

“I married Meri and it was a hard relationship from the very beginning,” he said.

Janelle Brown and Christine Brown have now also separated from Kody Brown. Robyn Brown and Kody remain married.

When Meri is asked on the special, “Where does that leave you? Are you still married to Kody? Or, do you get to decide?” she responded, “Well, he’s already made the decision. You just saw him say that.”

Meri added that despite everything, she’s still open to making things work, saying, “I would. I definitely would. But I don’t think that he’s interested.”

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What we still don't know about the suspect in the Idaho college student killings



CNN
 — 

Three days after the arrest of a suspect in the fatal stabbing of four University of Idaho students, authorities have yet to release key details in the case, from whether the suspect knew the victims to what his alleged motive might have been and what finally prompted his arrest.

The arrest of Bryan Christopher Kohberger, 28, came almost seven weeks after Kaylee Goncalves, 21; Madison Mogen, 21; Xana Kernodle, 20; and Ethan Chapin, 20, were found dead November 13 in an off-campus home.

The killings shook the college town of Moscow, Idaho, which hadn’t seen a murder in seven years, as some in the community grew frustrated with the limited information authorities shared as their investigation developed.

That was partly due to state law, which limits what information authorities can release before the suspect makes an initial appearance in court, Moscow Police Chief James Fry said Friday, the day authorities announced Kohberger’s arrest in his home state of Pennsylvania.

And the probable cause affidavit – the legal document used to justify Kohberger’s arrest and obtain a warrant – remains sealed until he is returned to Idaho, where he faces four counts of first-degree murder as well as a felony burglary charge, per Latah County, Idaho, prosecutors.

That document, “will tell us an awful lot,” said CNN legal analyst and criminal defense attorney Joey Jackson. “It will speak to the issue of probable cause – why is he under arrest, what is the justification for holding him and for going after him from a prosecution perspective.”

Kohberger is due in court Tuesday, when his attorney has indicated the suspect would waive extradition. The chief public defender for Monroe County, Pennsylvania, expected Kohberger to be returned to Idaho within 72 hours of Tuesday’s hearing, the attorney has said.

Kohberger’s parents and two sisters plan to attend Tuesday’s hearing, public defender Jason LaBar told CNN Monday. They will not be permitted to visit him while they’re there.

Until then, here are a few of the key details that remain unknown.

Authorities have not said publicly whether Kohberger knew any of the victims, who all were found dead hours after a Saturday night out: Chapin and Kernodle had attended a party on campus earlier that night, police have said, while Mogen and Goncalves went to a downtown bar before ordering food at a late-night food truck.

Kohberger lived in the area, Fry indicated Friday: He was a PhD student in the criminal justice program at Washington State University’s campus in Pullman, about a 15-minute drive west of Moscow.

Kohberger was a graduate student at the school, Washington State University confirmed in a statement last week, adding the school’s police department helped Idaho law enforcement execute search warrants at Kohberger’s campus apartment and his office.

There also was law enforcement activity Friday at a Pullman apartment complex where graduate students live, a CNN team observed.

Meanwhile, DNA played a role in the investigation, sources have indicated to CNN.

Investigators focused on Kohberger as a suspect, in part, after his DNA was matched to genetic material recovered at the home where the students were slain, two law enforcement sources briefed on the investigation have said.

Genetic genealogy techniques were used to connect Kohberger to unidentified DNA evidence, a source with knowledge of the case told CNN. The DNA was run through a public database to find potential family member matches, and subsequent investigative work by law enforcement led to his identification as the suspect, the source said.

Information about Kohberger’s DNA and any prior relationship with the victims are both key pieces of evidence, Jackson told CNN on Monday.

“No. 1: I’m looking for DNA,” he said. “Was his DNA (in the residence)? … Is there any reason to explain the DNA, is there a basis to know or understand why he would be there?”

“Which leads me to No. 2” Jackson said: “Is there any pre-existing relationship? Did he know them? If so, how?”

Investigators also have yet to give any indication of why Kohberger allegedly carried out the stabbings.

In the days since his arrest, there has been a heavy focus Kohberger’s study of criminal justice and criminology as a Washington State University student – a detail a former senior FBI profiler called “very interesting.”

“We have had other cases where offenders have been in areas of study that more or less prepare them to commit a crime,” Mary Ellen O’Toole told CNN on Sunday. If he is guilty, Kohberger’s “area of study is not a result of cause and effect,” she stressed, noting studying the criminal mind did not “cause him to do this.”

“He’s interested in this, but the ideation of committing a violent crime had to already be there in order to motivate him to commit the crime,” O’Toole said. “So, this was kind of a conduit to explore what he was already interested in doing.”

Kohberger was previously an undergraduate and graduate student at DeSales University, a Catholic university in Pennsylvania, according to a statement from the school. He graduated with a bachelor’s degree in 2020 and this year completed his “graduate studies for the Master of Arts in criminal justice program,” according to a university spokesperson.

In a post removed from Reddit after his arrest was announced, a student investigator associated with a DeSales University study named Bryan Kohberger sought participation in a research project “to understand how emotions and psychological traits influence decision-making when committing a crime.”

“In particular,” it read, “this study seeks to understand the story behind your most recent criminal offense, with an emphasis on your thoughts and feelings throughout your experience.”

Last month, Kohberger finished his first semester as a PhD student at Washington State University, the school confirmed.

It’s also unclear why Kohberger wasn’t arrested until more than six weeks after the victims were found dead. Fry would not reveal Saturday when Kohberger came onto law enforcement’s radar, saying details in the case would be released in time.

Kohberger went home to Pennsylvania for the holidays, LaBar told CNN on Saturday, adding the suspect and his father – who accompanied his son on the cross-country drive – arrived around December 17.

A white Hyundai Elantra authorities had been looking for in connection with the killings was found at Kohberger’s parents’ house, LaBar confirmed.

The suspect drove the car to his parents’ house, according to another law enforcement source, who told CNN, “Sometime right before Christmas we were zeroing in on him being in or going to Pennsylvania.”

An FBI surveillance team from the Philadelphia field office had been tracking him for four days in the area where he was arrested, according to two law enforcement sources briefed on the investigation.

While Kohberger was being watched, investigators from the Moscow Police Department, the Idaho State Police homicide bureau and the FBI worked with prosecutors to develop sufficient probable cause to get the warrant. Once the arrest warrant was issued, the Pennsylvania State Police and the FBI made the arrest.

Authorities continue to ask the public for information. Within an hour of announcing the arrest, Fry told CNN, authorities got roughly 400 calls.

“We want information on that individual,” Fry said Saturday. “We want that updated information so that we can start building that picture now. Every tip matters.”

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Winter Classic 2023: Penguins’ Tristan Jarry replaced by Casey DeSmith after suffering apparent injury

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Pittsburgh Penguins goalie Tristan Jarry was replaced by Casey DeSmith in the first period of Monday’s Winter Classic matchup against the Boston Bruins after showing signs of discomfort. 

The two-time NHL All-Star headed back to the locker room with just under five minutes remaining in the period after showing signs of an apparent injury on his right side during the league’s 14th annual Winter Classic. 

“After speaking with the Penguins training staff, Tristan Jarry heads back to the locker room and Casey DeSmith will come in to take over in goal with 4:30 left in the 1st period,” the Penguins said on Twitter. 

FAMILY RENTS CAR TO DRIVE FROM PHOENIX TO BOSTON FOR NHL WINTER CLASSIC DUE TO DELAYED SOUTHWEST FLIGHT

The Winter Classic at Fenway Park is scoreless after one period with the Penguins out shooting the Bruins 14 to 11. 

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

The Penguins have a chance to break a four-game skid with a win over the Bruins. They are 1-3-2 in their last six games. 

“This is a lifetime experience for our guys,” Pittsburgh coach Mike Sullivan said Friday, via NHL.com.  “I think we need to see that for what it is and embrace that moment and enjoy that moment. We also need to understand that there’s business at hand and there’s two points on the line.”

“It’s two points,” Jarry added Friday. “It’s another game where we could trend in the right direction. It’s another step we could take. It’s just a game we have to focus on trying to get two points.”

Jarry did not return for the start of the second period and was ruled out for the remainder of the game. 

 

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Chicago ends 2022 in violence as holiday shootings leave 7 dead including young boy, 21 others wounded

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Chicago ended the year and began a new one in violent fashion over the holiday weekend as a series of gun crimes left seven people dead and 21 others wounded. 

One of those killed was a 9-year-old boy, Jarvis M. Watts, inside his home Sunday night, Fox Chicago reported. Several adults were being questioned in the case. 

DC DEMOCRAT FIGHTS OWN PARTY OVER VIOLENT CRIME RESPONSE: ‘TRULY PUZZLING’

Hours earlier, a 17-year-old boy was fatally shot and three others, ages 14, 15 and 17, were wounded in a shooting between two vehicles in Washington Park.

Several men were killed and wounded in several other shootings over the weekend, according to media reports. In one incident, two men were shot and killed inside a home Friday night when shots rang out. 

Killings in the city were down from 804 in 2021 to 695 by the end of Saturday, according to police data. Robberies, vehicle thefts, burglaries and thefts saw increases. Vehicle thefts more than doubled from 2021 to last year.

Shootings saw a 20% decrease in 2022 as well. 

Over the course of 2022, the Chicago Police Department seized 12,716 guns off the streets, the department said in an annual review. 

 

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[World] Russia plans to ‘exhaust’ Ukraine with prolonged attacks – Zelensky

BBC News world 

Image source, Getty Images

Ukraine’s president says Russia is planning a protracted campaign of drone attacks in a bid to demoralise Ukraine.

Volodymyr Zelensky said he had received intelligence reports suggesting that Moscow would launch the attacks using Iranian-made Shahed drones.

It comes after Ukraine carried out a strike that it said killed hundreds of Russian troops in the Donbas region.

In a rare admission of battlefield losses, Russia said the attack killed 63 of its troops.

Speaking from Kyiv in his nightly address, Mr Zelensky said Russia planned to “exhaust” Ukraine with a prolonged wave of drone attacks.

“We must ensure – and we will do everything for this – that this goal of terrorists fails like all the others,” he said. “Now is the time when everyone involved in the protection of the sky should be especially attentive.”

Russian drone strikes on Ukraine appear to have increased in recent days, with Moscow launching attacks on cities and power stations across the country over the past three nights.

Mr Zelensky said Ukrainian air defences had already shot down over 80 Iranian-made drones in the opening days of 2023.

Russia has been targeting Ukraine’s energy infrastructure for several months, destroying power stations and plunging millions into darkness during the country’s freezing winter.

Elsewhere, Ukraine has confirmed it carried out a strike in the occupied region of Donetsk, which it earlier claimed killed 400 Russian troops.

Russian officials contested the figure, saying only 63 troops were killed. Neither claim has been verified, and access to the site is restricted.

Image source, Telegram: Horevica / ZSU StratCom

Image caption,

Footage, apparently from the scene of the attack, was posted by the Ukrainian military

The Ukrainian attack on New Year’s Day hit a building in the city of Makiivka, where Russian forces were stationed.

It is extremely rare for Moscow to confirm any battlefield casualties.

But this was such a deadly attack, says the BBC’s Russia editor Steve Rosenberg, that staying silent probably wasn’t an option.

It is the highest number of deaths acknowledged by Moscow in a single incident since the war began ten months ago.

In a statement on Monday, Russia’s defence ministry said Ukrainian forces fired six rockets using the US-made Himars rocket system at a building housing Russian troops. Two of them were shot down, it added.

Igor Girkin, a pro-Russian commentator, earlier said that hundreds had been killed and wounded, although the exact number was unknown because of the large number still missing.

The building itself was “almost completely destroyed”, he said.

He added that the victims were mainly mobilised troops – that is, recent conscripts, rather than those who chose to fight. He also said ammunition was stored in the same building as the soldiers, making the damage worse.

“Almost all of the military equipment was also destroyed, which stood right next to the building without any disguise whatsoever,” he wrote on Telegram.

Girkin is a well-known military blogger, who led Russian-backed separatists when they occupied of large parts of eastern Ukraine in 2014. He was recently found guilty of murder for his part in the shooting down of flight MH17.

Despite his hawkish stance, he regularly criticises the Russian military leadership and their tactics.

According to the Ukrainian military’s earlier statement, 300 were wounded in addition to the estimated 400 killed. Ukraine’s army claims, almost daily, to have killed dozens, sometimes hundreds, of soldiers in attacks.

A later statement from the Ukrainian military’s general staff said “up to 10 units of enemy military equipment” were “destroyed and damaged” in the strikes, and that “the losses of personnel of the occupiers are being specified”.

Ukraine has not confirmed the strikes were carried out with Himars missiles, maintaining a long-held strategy of not releasing specific details about its attacks.

Image caption,

Makiivka is just to the east of Donetsk city

 

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