Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Daniella Silva"


25 mentions found


The man accused of killing Georgia nursing student Laken Riley was found guilty of murder Wednesday in a case that became a flashpoint in the immigration debate earlier this year, ahead of the presidential election. Riley’s killing drew national attention to the immigration debate after officials announced that Ibarra is a Venezuelan citizen who entered the United States illegally in 2022. UGA students during a vigil for Laken Riley on Feb. 26. Joshua L. Jones / USA Today NetworkDuring the trial, prosecutors argued that Ibarra killed Riley after she fought off his attempt to rape her. The prosecution pointed to DNA and other evidence that they said linked Ibarra to Riley on the day of her murder.
Persons: Laken Riley, Jose Antonio Ibarra, Tom, , Jose Ibarra, Hyosub Shin, H, Patrick Haggard, Ibarra, Haggard, Allyson Phillips, Riley’s, , ” Phillips, Phillips, ” Prosecutors, Riley, Donald Trump, Joshua L, Jones, Sheila Ross, Riley “, ” Ross, Diego Ibarra, Kaitlyn Beck, Diego, Jose Organizations: Superior Court, , University of Georgia, UGA, USA Locations: Athens, Clarke, Ga, Venezuelan, United States
The defense’s first witness, Joseph Clementi, said he was out running on the same trail as Riley the day of the murder. She testified Tuesday that Diego Ibarra told her he would "kill you, too," if she talked to police. She also admitted to having a sexual relationship with Diego Ibarra and to being upset that he may have been involved with someone else. She also said that she was the one who told Diego Ibarra about the murder that night and that he appeared not to know what had happened. The defense also called Diego Ibarra to testify Tuesday, but he did not take the witness stand because his attorney in a federal immigration case was not present.
Persons: Jose Ibarra’s, Laken Riley, Riley, Joseph Clementi, , , Clementi’s, Ibarra, Clementi, Tom, Diego, Diego Ibarra, Stephanie Slaton Organizations: University of Georgia, NBC Locations: Venezuelan, Athens
Courtesy Riley familyProsecutors have said a variety of forensic, digital and video evidence presented during the trial will point to Ibarra as Riley’s killer. The evidence includes a jacket police found in a dumpster near where Ibarra lived, which prosecutors say had both Ibarra’s and Riley’s blood on it. FBI Special Agent Jamie Hipkiss also testified about cellphone data he examined, which included photos on a phone connected to Ibarra from the early morning of Feb. 22. On Friday during opening statements, Ibarra’s defense attorneys said there was not enough evidence to prove Ibarra was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. She fought for her dignity, and in that fight she caused this defendant to leave forensic evidence behind,” Ross said.
Persons: Laken Riley —, , Jose Antonio Ibarra, Riley, Tom, ” Ibarra, Donald Trump, Ibarra, Laken Riley, Rosbeli Flores Bello, Flores Bello, Diego Ibarra, Argenis Ibarra, James Berni, Jamie Hipkiss, Hipkiss, Diego, , Jose Ibarra, Rafael Sayan, ” Sayan, “ didn’t, ” Prosecutors, Layling Franco, Franco, Abeisis Ramirez, Dustin Kirby, Sheila Ross, Ibarra “, Laken, ” Ross Organizations: University of Georgia, U.S, Prosecutors, FBI, University of Georgia Police, Locations: Georgia, Athens, Venezuelan, New York City, Ibarra, Ibarra’s, New York
The man accused of killing Laken Riley earlier this year "went out hunting for females" on the day the nursing student in Georgia was slain, prosecutors told a judge Friday on the first day of Jose Antonio Ibarra's trial. "When Laken Riley refused to be his rape victim, he bashed her skull in with a rock repeatedly," prosecutor Sheila Ross said in her opening statement. Laken Riley. “The evidence that Jose Ibarra killed anyone is circumstantial,” defense attorney Dustin Kirby said, adding the evidence “that links Mr. Ibarra to that event, is lacking” upon closer inspection. Previously, police said there was no indication the suspect knew the victim and that Ibarra did not have an extensive criminal background.
Persons: Laken Riley, Jose Antonio Ibarra's, Sheila Ross, Riley, Ibarra, Donald Trump, Jose Ibarra, Brynn Anderson, Ross, ” Ibarra, Tom, , accosting Riley, Riley's, H, Patrick Haggard, Dustin Kirby, Kirby Organizations: University of Georgia Locations: Georgia, Venezuelan, United States, Athens, Ga, Clarke
The number of measles cases around the world rose by 20% in 2023 compared with 2022, leading to an estimated 10.3 million cases, according to estimates released Thursday by the World Health Organization and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. More than 22 million children did not receive a first dose of the two-dose measles vaccine in 2023, the WHO and CDC said. Globally approximately 83% of children received a first dose of the vaccine last year, and 74% received a second dose, the agencies said. “The number of measles infections are rising around the globe, endangering lives and health,” CDC Director Mandy Cohen said in the statement. “Measles vaccine has saved more lives than any other vaccine in the past 50 years,” WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a statement.
Persons: Mandy Cohen, , Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus Organizations: World Health Organization, U.S . Centers for Disease Control, WHO, CDC, Health
A woman in Kentucky who is seeking an abortion filed a lawsuit Tuesday that seeks to strike down the state’s near total ban. The suit, filed by a woman referred to in the documents as Mary Poe, alleges that two Kentucky abortion laws violate the state Constitution’s rights to privacy and self-determination. “I feel overwhelmed and frustrated that I cannot access abortion care here in my own state, and I have started the difficult process of arranging to get care in another state where it’s legal. Poe’s lawsuit is also requesting class-action status for all pregnant people in Kentucky who are seeking access to abortion in the state but are not allowed to receive the medical treatment because of the abortion laws. In 2022, the ACLU was involved in a lawsuit brought by abortion providers on behalf of their patients.
Persons: Mary Poe, , ” Poe, Court’s Dobbs, Roe, Wade, Brigitte Amiri, ” “, , Poe, Amber Duke Organizations: Circuit Court, American Civil Liberties Union, NBC News, ACLU Locations: Kentucky, Jefferson, ” Kentucky
For many Democratic voters, Vice President Kamala Harris' loss to Donald Trump was disappointing but not surprising, they said in interviews, agreeing that their party hadn't done enough to talk about the economy and lamenting lingering racism and sexism. Voters in Dearborn, America's only Arab-majority city, broke decisively for Trump over Harris, a departure from Joe Biden’s beating Trump there in 2020. "I was really praying that she would get it," said Deborah McKinnon, 68, a Black Democratic voter from Pittsburgh. "It just underscores that Black women are the most loyal Democrats, and they were the power behind Kamala Harris' campaign," Allison said. John Park, 37, a Black Democratic voter in suburban Atlanta, said that as a warehouse worker for an automotive company, he initially liked Trump's "pro-America" approach.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Harris, Trump, Laytza Hernandez, , Hernandez, Sami Khaldi, Joe Biden’s, Khaldi, Biden, Luis Muza, Symone Sanders, Townsend, Sanders, “ Kamala, they're, Angela Weiss, MJay Hawkins, Hawkins, wasn’t, , Deborah McKinnon, Hillary, Clinton, Gary Tate, Tate, Aimee Allison, Allison, George W, Bush, John Park, Trump's, Steve Harvey's, Harvey, Park, Luis Cortés, Esperanza, Harris didn't, Cortés Organizations: Democratic, NBC, Trump, Arizona State University, Biden, Howard University, Washington , D.C, Getty, , Puerto Ricans Locations: Gaza, Dearborn , Michigan, Dearborn, America's, New York , Illinois, California, Milwaukee, Pennsylvania, Washington ,, Pittsburgh, Atlanta, America, Philadelphia
Trump’s Hispanic vote percentage beat the previous record, set by George W. Bush's in 2004, when Bush won as much as 44% of the Hispanic vote. Pennsylvania voter Regino Cruz, 25, said Tuesday that he voted for Trump, believing the former president could improve the economy. In the battleground state of Pennsylvania, 4 in 10 Latino voters supported Trump, up from 3 in 10 in 2020. Carlos Odio, co-founder of Equis Research, a Democrat-leaning polling and research company, said Latino voters who backed Trump liked his prioritization of the economy. “Trump is going to put an end to that.”Hispanic men were key in propelling Trump to victory and a historic Latino vote share.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Trump, George W, Bush, Barack Obama, Hilary Clinton, joe Biden, Harris underperformed Biden, underperformed Biden, Regino Cruz, , Cruz, John B, Puerto Rico, Harris, Sen, Ted Cruz of, Ethan Miller, Eduardo Gamarra, ” Gamarra, Biden, Carlos Odio, ” Odio, , Odio, Justin Hamel, Artemio Muniz, Muniz, Kalman Nunez, “ Trump, Fernando Rivera, Danny Martinez, Yahaira Rodríguez, ” Christianea Valentine, Vianca Rodriguez Organizations: House, Republican, NBC, Trump, Stetson Middle School, Puerto, Telemundo, CNBC, Democratic, Republicans, Ted Cruz of Texas, Department, Florida International University, Equis Research, Democrat, National Guard, Border Patrol, Bloomberg, Getty, Federation of Hispanic Republicans, Puerto Rico Research, University of Central, Locations: Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Texas, Florida, Puerto Rican, Northern Philadelphia, Starr County , Texas, Miami, Dade , Florida, Clark, Las Vegas, U.S, , New York, New Jersey, Mexico, Sasabe, Milwaukee, Puerto Rico, University of Central Florida, Philadelphia
As Americans across the country voted early in record numbers ahead of Tuesday's election, it has become clear that they are motivated, arguably like never before. But it was my daughter's vote I placed inside the envelope," wrote David Frum on X (formerly known as Twitter) last week. She told NBC News that she had voted Democrat for many years before switching parties during the pandemic and will vote for Trump this year. Other issues she said are motivating her decision to vote for her daughter’s future are inflation and the price of groceries as well as her stance against mandatory vaccination policies during the Covid pandemic. “I chose freedom, decency and democracy — along with a bright, just and prosperous future for my five children and future grandchildren,” he wrote.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, David Frum, Frum's, Miranda, Frum, George W, Bush, Miranda “, , can’t, David Frum Audra Worlow, ” “, ” Worlow, Worlow, “ It’s, Cheryl Mooney, Mooney, , Mark Lyon, Jon Cooper, Harris, Tim Walz, Cooper Organizations: Twitter, Atlantic, NBC News, Trump, Democratic, Minnesota Gov Locations: Broadview Heights , Ohio, Hendersonville , Tennessee, Republican, Port Jefferson, Long, New York, ” Lyon, Suffolk County
ASHEVILLE, N.C. — One month after Hurricane Helene destroyed mountain towns, swept away homes and upended countless lives here, thousands of Buncombe County’s students returned to school Friday. The district has more than 22,000 students and 45 schools, according to Rob Jackson, the superintendent of Buncombe County Schools. Caleb Freeman, a senior at A.C. Reynolds High School, said he was looking forward to being “around people again” after feeling “pretty lonely and kind of helpless.”Caleb Freeman, senior at A.C. Reynolds High School. Zoe Love, a senior at A.C. Reynolds High School. Students in the marching band at A.C. Reynolds High School practice Thursday.
Persons: Helene, Rob Jackson, Caleb Freeman, ” Caleb Freeman, Freeman, it’s, , , ” Hall, ” “, Zoe Love, I’ve, Love, they’re, we’ve, ” Jackson, Jaime Canton, Liz Tallent, Tallent, Kathy Park, Daniella Silva Organizations: A.C, Reynolds High School, NBC, Rawleigh, football, Jackson Locations: ASHEVILLE, N.C, , North Carolina, Buncombe, Buncombe County, Asheville, New York
The student gunman in a small-town Iowa school shooting in January in which two people were killed and several others injured was known to have a fascination with school shooters and exhibited a number of unreported “warning signs,” the Iowa Public Safety Department said Friday. “There is significant evidence of this shooter’s fascination with prior school shootings” and there was also evidence of “copycat behavior” in his actions, Stephan Bayens, commissioner of the Iowa Public Safety Department, said in a news conference. The evidence bears that out.”“Those concerns, along with a number of other warning signs, were unreported or were otherwise unrecognized,” Bayens said. He said the shooter exhibited “broad behavioral issues” and mental health concerns that were present years before the shooting. The shooter was “suicidal coupled with a homicidal intention to take others with him in an effort to gain notoriety,” Bayens said.
Persons: Dylan Butler, Ahmir, Dan Marburger, Stephan Bayens, Bayens, , ” Bayens, , Marburger Organizations: Iowa, Iowa Public Safety Department, Perry High School, Meta Locations: Iowa,
“I believe there was 100% negligence on the Secret Service, probably everybody involved in setting that security, down to inter-department communications,” Dutch said. “The negligence was vast. When asked if he believed the Secret Service failed him and the former president, Dutch said: “Big time.”“The whole security setup was poor,” he said. Copenhaver and Dutch were critically injured in the July 13 shooting at the Trump campaign rally in Butler. Copenhaver was shot in the tricep and abdomen, and Dutch was hit in the liver.
Persons: , ” Read, Lester Holt ”, ” Copenhaver, , Copenhaver Organizations: Service, NBC, Trump Locations: Butler
VALDOSTA, Ga. — Fear lingers in this hard-hit city, where trees toppled onto houses and several downtown buildings were destroyed. Anxious families worry their community could be without power for weeks in the wake of Hurricane Helene. Bythwood said that after Hurricane Idalia last August, he and his wife lost power at their home for five days. We’ve got a lot, a lot of damage,” he said. “A lot of houses torn up.”Rosana Baluss, 35, was living in a hotel with no power.
Persons: , Ronney, Brian Kemp, Bythwood, Hurricane Idalia, Helene, Mike Stewart, We’ve, , Nekisha Williams, ” Williams, that’s, Hurricane Helene, Daniella Silva, Roy Rhodes, she’ll, Rhodes, ” Rosana, Sean Rayford, ” Baluss, Bill Parmelee, who’s, Parmelee, ” Kemp Organizations: Lowndes County Civic Center, Hurricane, NBC, Idalia Locations: VALDOSTA, Ga, Hurricane, Valdosta, Lowndes, Lowndes County,
Susan Grant, 63, whose home in Steinhatchee was damaged by Hurricane Helene. Daniella Silva / NBC NewsWhile thankful she still had a home to return to, her longtime workplace and local landmark, Crabbie Dad's Bar & Grill, was flattened to the ground. It’s sad that we’ve had to endure this much in one year.”A scene of devastation in Steinhatchee, Fla., on Friday. Daniella Silva / NBC NewsThe street in front of Gary Keen’s house was unrecognizable Friday after the surge retreated, leaving behind layers of branches, seaweed and other plant debris. A scene of devastation at Roy’s restaurant in Steinhatchee, Fla., on Friday.
Persons: Hurricane Helene, we’ve, , Susan Grant, Daniella Silva, ” Grant, Helene, Grant, Idalia, they’ve, it’s, Gary Keen’s, Keen, “ I’m, Paul Nawlin, Ron Bloom, First Baptist Church Steinhatchee, Hurricane Idalia, , they’re, Alicia Victoria Lozano Organizations: — Residents, NBC, National Hurricane Center, First Baptist Church Locations: Fla, Hurricane, Steinhatchee, Florida, Roy’s, Los Angeles
Helene was forecast Wednesday evening to become a dangerous Category 4 hurricane before it makes landfall in Florida's Big Bend area Thursday night. This is the biggest storm in the history of the city of Tallahassee to hit us head-on,” Mayor John Dailey told NBC News on Wednesday evening. “If the city of Tallahassee is hit directly by a Category 3 hurricane, it’ll be the strongest hurricane in recorded history ever to hit our community. Tallahassee State College professor Pamela Andrews helps prepare for possible flooding as Hurricane Helene heads toward the Florida Gulf Coast in Tallahassee on Wednesday. Three major colleges, Florida State University, Florida A&M University and Tallahassee State College, have canceled classes for the rest of the week.
Persons: Helene, John Dailey, , Leslie Powell, “ I’m, , Powell, “ I’ve, ” Dailey, Dailey, Pamela Andrews, Sean Rayford, Leroy Peck, Peck, Daniella Silva, Major Thornton III, “ You’ve, ” Major Thornton III, Ahmiyah Phillips, Hurricane Michael, Latoya Williams, can’t, I’ve Organizations: , NBC News, National Hurricane Center, Tallahassee State, Florida Gulf, NBC, ., . Tallahassee International, Florida State University, Florida, M University, Tallahassee State College Locations: TALLAHASSEE, Fla, , Florida’s, Tallahassee, Florida's Big Bend, Florida, Quincy, Gadsden County, Mexico, United States, . Tallahassee
Missouri is set Tuesday to execute Marcellus Williams, a death row inmate whose case has spurred several efforts to save his life amid doubts about the evidence presented at his 2001 murder trial and the actions of a trial lawyer in the case. The attorneys are asking for the court to either find that those actions violated Williams’ rights or have a lower court address those issues. A St. Louis County circuit judge and Gayle’s family also agreed to the deal, but state Attorney General Andrew Bailey, a Republican, opposed it, and the state Supreme Court agreed. A judge ultimately rejected the motion to vacate, a ruling Williams’ attorneys appealed to the state Supreme Court in the hearing Monday. In addition to the state Supreme Court appeal, Williams’ attorneys also have an appeal before the U.S. Supreme Court and a clemency request before Missouri Gov.
Persons: Marcellus Williams, Williams, Felicia, Lisha, Gayle, Louis, , Marcellus Williams ’, Jonathan Potts, Potts, ” “, , Michael Spillane, Wesley Bell, Louis County, Bell, St, Andrew Bailey, Mike Parson, Parson Organizations: Reuters, Missouri Supreme Court, Democrat, Republican, U.S, Supreme, Missouri Gov, NAACP Locations: Missouri, St, Louis, Louis County
BEIRUT — An eye doctor in Lebanon said he has treated some 40 to 50 people with serious injuries, including some who lost both eyes, after a wave of communication device explosions targeted members of the militant group Hezbollah this week, killing dozens. “We’ve never seen that much cases of patients and casualties that have been losing their eyes because of explosions,” Dr. Elias Warrak told NBC News. Warrak said he has been running between several different hospitals to tend to the injured. “This is the first time that I had to take out that much eyes in a couple of days,” he said. “As a human being, definitely, it is devastating.
Persons: “ We’ve, Dr, Elias Warrak, , Ziad Jaber, Warrak, neurosurgeons, Yoav Gallant, Israel, Hassan Nasrallah, Organizations: NBC News, Hezbollah, NBC, Israel Locations: BEIRUT, Lebanon, Israel, Beirut
Victims' families and a survivor of a Maryland bridge collapse that killed six people filed claims Friday for wrongful death and punitive damages against the owner and the operator of the massive cargo ship that crashed into the bridge earlier this year. The 100,000-plus-ton ship Dali slammed into the Francis Scott Key Bridge in the early hours of March 26 as a work crew was fixing potholes. Six construction workers died when the bridge went crumbling down into the Patapsco River. The nearly two dozen crew members on the ship survived, along with two pilots who were helping the vessel navigate the harbor. Days after the bridge collapse, the ship’s Singapore-based owner and manager petitioned a Maryland court to limit their monetary liability to $43.67 million, the value of the ship and its cargo, based on a pre-Civil War provision of maritime law.
Persons: Dali, Francis Scott Key, Dorlian Ronial Castillo Cabrera, Carlos Daniel Hernandez Estrella, Alejandro Hernandez Fuentes, Jose Mynor Lopez, Miguel Angel Luna, Maynor Yasir Suazo Sandoval, Julio Cervantes Suarez, , , ” Darrell Wilson, ” Wilson, General Merrick Garland, ” Cervantes Suarez, ” Suarez Organizations: Maryland Transportation Authority, Baltimore Port, District of Maryland Northern Division, NBC, Grace Ocean Private Ltd, Synergy Marine, Ltd, City, Justice Department, Justice, NBC News Locations: Maryland, Patapsco, Baltimore, U.S, Singapore, of Baltimore, City of Baltimore,
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio — The dozens of bomb threats and the onslaught of public attention that has befallen a small Ohio city since President Donald Trump and others pushed the false claim that Haitian migrants were stealing and eating pets has children living in fear, worried parents said Thursday. A U.S. flag is displayed on Sept. 16, 2024 in Springfield, Ohio. Luke Sharrett / Getty Images“I really feel bad for the Haitian children, because they’re here for an education,” Moore said. That’s not right, that my daughter has to be fearful,” Springfield parent Martin McWhorter said. “Why are you messing with my baby?”McWhorter said his daughter’s school was a target of the bomb threats and lamented that what had been a small, peaceful city now doesn’t feel safe.
Persons: Donald Trump, “ They’re, ” John Michael Moore, Trump, Kamala Harris, Trump’s, Sen, JD Vance, hasn’t, Luke Sharrett, ” Moore, , that’s, That’s, , Martin McWhorter, ” McWhorter, Melanie Flax Wilt, we’ve, Wilt, Pierre, ” Pierre, Isaac Mackey, Sharice Otieno, couldn’t, ” Otieno, Otieno Organizations: Commission, NBC News, Walmart Locations: SPRINGFIELD , Ohio, Ohio, Springfield, U.S, Springfield , Ohio, ” Springfield, Clark, Haitian, Springfield from Florida, Columbus, Cincinnati, Indiana, Florida
The program had marked a shift in Denver’s strategy of housing migrants in massive temporary shelters to providing individual resources. About 860 people are currently part of the program, which offers six months of housing, job training, language instruction and legal support in filing asylum claims, according to city officials. In addition to ending the program, the city is closing its remaining migrant shelter at the end of the month, Jon Ewing, a city spokesperson who manages communications for Denver’s newcomer response, said Tuesday. Denver, Chicago and New York have had to adapt over the past two years as their migrant populations have grown since Texas Gov. Ewing said Denver is “enormously proud” of its asylum-seeker resource program and its broader migrant response.
Persons: Jon Ewing, Greg Abbott, Ewing, “ It’s, That’s, ” Ewing, , , they’re, Joe Biden, Biden Organizations: Denver, Biden, Denver Asylum Seekers, Texas Gov, Democratic, Customs, Protection, Border Patrol, Patrol Locations: Denver, Chicago, New York, Texas, United States
In protests that followed the killing and the police sweeps, six people were arrested and charged with domestic terrorism. In December, the same charges were filed against five people after law enforcement moved in to clear barricades and confront protesters. But in a number of states, including Georgia, domestic terrorism laws include a wide range of offenses outside those motivated by hate. The Atlanta Solidarity Fund said that the state of Georgia was trying to “set an alarming precedent” with the charges. “If they are successful, protesters across the country could be facing similar speech-chilling ‘domestic terrorism’ charges,'” it said in a statement this week.
Kristi and Steve Goncalves told Dateline that their daughter, 21-year-old Kaylee Goncalves, was due to graduate college early and had lined up a job with an IT firm in Austin, Texas. Kaylee Goncalves had just moved out of the house she shared with her longtime best friend, 21-year-old Madison "Maddie" Mogen. “These girls were best friends since sixth grade, like inseparable,” Kristi Goncalves said. “Maddie had been a huge part of our life.”Steve and Kristi Goncalves during an interview with Dateline on NBC. “I hope that maybe in a struggle, she pulled it off of him,” Kristi Goncalves said.
Protecting property does not typically justify the use of lethal force under Washington, D.C., law, legal and criminal justice experts said as police investigate the fatal shooting of a 13-year-old boy in Washington over the weekend. Legal experts agreed that deadly force is not a legally justifiable way to defend property, except, perhaps, in cases of self-defense or home intrusion. "I know of no law that allows for deadly force purely in the defense of property," NBC News legal analyst Danny Cevallos said. "It’s always been the case that you can’t use deadly force to protect your property." But he added that in Washington and in most of the country, the use lethal force is not allowed in defense of property.
"That’s what’s killing me, he’s a baby.”Long's grandson, Karon Blake, was killed Saturday, Metropolitan Police said, after he was shot by a man who “heard noises and observed someone that appeared to be tampering with vehicles” in his Northeast Washington neighborhood. Courtesy Sean LongThe man who shot Karon called police after the incident, according to authorities. The man who shot him has not been identified or arrested. Contee said detectives are gathering the facts and will present the case to the U.S. attorney’s office for possible charges. Long said he was “really proud” of Karon’s mother, who has been devastated by her son’s death, but also working hard toward planning his funeral.
An active-duty Marine was arrested and charged with the death of his 4-month-old baby in Jacksonville, North Carolina, police said Friday. The baby was pronounced dead on the scene by paramedics with the Onslow County Emergency Medical Services, the statement said. The Jacksonville Police Department conducted an investigation into the death of the infant and then arrested McGill, according to the statement. Investigators were working with the local district attorney’s office as well as the Naval Criminal Investigative Services, because of McGill’s status as an active-duty Marine, the statement said. The Naval Criminal Investigative Services confirmed that McGill, who is an Active-Duty Marine Lance Corporal, was arrested on Friday in connection with a murder investigation.
Total: 25