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Controversial Igloo Cooler Incident: Officer Appeals Conviction in High-Profile Drug Suspect Case

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Erik Duran, a former NYPD sergeant, has found himself at the center of public attention after being sentenced to several years in prison for the death of a suspect on the run. His defense attorney in New York has expressed being “completely overwhelmed” by the outpouring of public support Duran has received after what many deem a contentious trial.

Earlier this year, Duran was found guilty of manslaughter in a bench trial related to the death of Eric Duprey.

“As a criminal defense attorney, it’s not common to witness such a strong community backing,” said Arthur Aidala, Duran’s lawyer, to Fox News Digital. “The sheer number of people voicing their disagreement with the verdict and the sentence, and their eagerness to support Sgt. Duran, has been both remarkable and unique.”

NYPD Sgt. Erik Duran appearing in court during arraignment

Captured during his arraignment at the Bronx Hall of Justice on January 23, 2024, Duran faced charges connected to the tragic incident involving Eric Duprey in August 2023, during an undercover drug operation. (Luiz C. Ribeiro/New York Daily News via Getty Images)

According to the defense, Duprey was attempting to flee a drug sting on a motorized scooter, heading towards several civilians and police officers, when Duran, in a bid to halt him, threw an Igloo cooler borrowed from a bystander.

He was going close to 30 mph and put the pedestrians at risk of severe injury and possibly death, a defense expert testified at trial. Duran threw the cooler to prevent anyone else from being hurt, according to the defense.

It knocked Duprey to the ground. He wasn’t wearing a helmet. And he suffered a fatal head injury.

Eric Duprey pictured in a flyer.

Eric Duprey died in August 2023 when an NYPD officer threw a cooler at him as he was fleeing a drug operation in the Bronx. (WNYW)

Duran’s supporters allege that Duprey was a known member of the Trinitarios gang — which has been blamed for machete attacks in the Bronx in the past.

Prosecutors from New York Attorney General Letitia James’s office had requested a five-to 15-year sentence.

Judge Guy Mitchell sentenced him to three to nine years in prison last week, drawing political attention and prompting New York’s Republican candidate for governor, Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman, to vow to pardon him on his first day in office if he defeats Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul in November.

“I back the blue — that’s why Nassau County is the safest county in the nation,” Blakeman told Fox News Digital. “Meanwhile, in Kathy Hochul’s New York, a police officer is headed to prison while criminals get second chances. That’s backwards, and it will change when I’m governor.”

Attorney Arthur Aidala is holding a fedora in one hand as he gestures at someone out of frame. He is wearing a blue suit and shirt with an orange tie.

Attorney Arthur Aidala gestures at the Manhattan criminal court in New York on Wednesday, May 7, 2025. (Yuki Iwamura/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Mitchell rejected Duran’s argument that the cooler throwing was justified in order to protect other people from harm and said the sentence would serve as a “general deterrent” for other officers.

“It is such a unique set of circumstances, I don’t know what example it could set except to deter cops from doing the best they can,” Aidala told Fox News Digital. “This wasn’t a routine traffic stop or they were chasing someone and this is gonna deter them from handling a stop a certain way.”

Duran didn’t intend to use lethal force, he said, arguing that’s why he improvised with the cooler rather than drawing his gun.

“They’re telling cops don’t throw a cooler at a guy on a motorcycle on the sidewalk in the middle of the afternoon next to a park going 30 miles an hour after they just committed a felony or a drug sale,” he said. “I don’t know who it’s setting an example to.”

Duran is seeking an appeal, and Aidala said he asked an appellate judge on Friday to release his client on bail while that proceeds. Oral arguments are expected later this week.

Vincent Vallelong is the president on the NYPD’s Sergeant’s Benevolent Association, and the union continues to support Duran, he said.

“The SBA’s focus at this time is to get this horrific injustice overturned before the November elections,” he said. “The silence from many of our elected officials is just as disturbing as the message the judge handed down last week.”

The union and the National Police Defense Foundation have teamed up to raise money for Duran’s appeal through a Kindful campaign, he added.

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Khloé Kardashian Hosts Enchanting Care Bears-Themed Celebration for Daughter True’s 8th Birthday

Khloé Kardashian recently hosted a delightful birthday bash for her daughter True, turning the celebration into an opportunity for giving back as well.

On Sunday, April 12, Khloé shared glimpses of True’s 8th birthday festivities on her Instagram stories, revealing the vibrant party held at Off the Wall.

In one video snippet, her son Tatum made his entrance, approaching three Care Bears mascots with microphone in hand, eager for a performance.

“Tatum is walking into True’s Care Bear party, hoping they’ll sing. Oh my gosh, it’s so adorable! Care Bears, we’re here!” Kardashian exclaimed in the clip.

The venue was transformed with a lively Care Bears theme, featuring a rainbow of balloon arches, whimsical character costumes, and a custom cake topped with a purple Care Bear sitting atop a large pink cupcake adorned with flowers and hearts.

“Happy 8th Birthday True!” was written across the base, with the character holding a number eight. “Is this not the cutest cake,” Kardashian wrote alongside a photo.

Guests in attendance spent time at different activity tables, making charm bracelets and necklaces, decorating trucker hats and Care Bears keychains, and working on slime.

Later, True joined her cousins Stormi Webster, Dream Kardashian and Chicago West on the dance floor, where they sang and danced together

After the celebration wrapped, Kardashian revealed that the event had a second purpose. She and True shared the remainder of their reserved time at Off the Wall with 115 children between ages 4 and 12 from families supported by Hope the Mission.

“We wanted to offer all of these children the opportunity to play at Off the Wall and have the same experience that True and her friends got to have today and so in honor of True’s birthday we are doing that and they get to go hang out at Off the Wall,” Kardashian explained.

“I’m so proud of her [True] and we’re so grateful that Hope the Mission is letting us do something like that … I just feel really grateful and really blessed and really happy that we get to share such a beautiful experience with Hope the Mission. So happy Sunday, happy True day. We love you guys,” Kardashian added.

Kardashian shares True and her younger brother Tatum with her ex, Tristan Thompson.

Tragic Incident in Atlanta: Babysitter and Man Allegedly Involved in 3-Year-Old’s Death

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Armani Deshawn Lyons (GoFundMe).

Authorities in Georgia have charged two individuals, including a 71-year-old woman, in connection with the tragic shooting death of a 3-year-old boy she was babysitting in Atlanta. The young victim, identified as Armani Deshawn Lyons, was under the care of Barbara Edwards, who, along with 35-year-old Jermaine Hardeman, faces serious charges.

Both Edwards and Hardeman have been charged with felony murder, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, and second-degree child cruelty, as reported by the Atlanta Police Department.

The incident occurred shortly after 12:30 a.m. on April 5, when officers were called to the 900 block of Washington Street SW in response to reports of a shooting. Upon arriving, they discovered young Armani suffering from a gunshot wound. Despite being swiftly transported to the hospital by paramedics, Armani sadly succumbed to his injuries.

On Sunday, police issued arrest warrants for both suspects. Edwards was subsequently taken into custody and booked at the Fulton County Jail on Tuesday. Meanwhile, Hardeman remains at large, and the details surrounding the circumstances of Armani’s death are still under investigation. Armani’s family noted that Edwards had been a trusted babysitter for the child for some time.

A heartfelt message on a GoFundMe page set up in Armani’s memory reads, “On Easter Sunday, April 5, our sweet Armani was taken from us far too soon due to senseless gun violence. He was only 3 years old and would have been turning 4 on May 3. Armani was full of life, joy, and innocence—a bright light who brought smiles to everyone he met. No family is ever prepared for a loss like this.”

Armani’s grandmother, Trinetta Julian, in an interview with local Fox affiliate WAGA, spoke about the love she and her grandson had for each other and the excitement he showed when she came to see him.

“Every time I pulled up, he’d just run out,” Julian told the outlet. “He’d run to my car and say ‘Grandma, Grandma!’ He used to be so happy.”

She said she can’t fathom why someone would want to hurt him.

“I just can’t believe this happened,” she said. “I can’t believe somebody would do this to him. Like, why?”

Unmasking the Infowars Empire: Insider Reveals Alex Jones’s ‘Fake News’ Tactics in Explosive New Book

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As the relationship between Donald Trump and MAGA media continues to sour, the former president hasn’t held back in labeling prominent right-wing voices as “losers,” “troublemakers,” and “nut jobs.”

Amidst these verbal clashes, a new book delves into the chaotic world of one of the far-right’s most notorious figures, Alex Jones, and his Infowars platform. The book offers a behind-the-scenes look at the tumultuous environment surrounding these controversial media operations.

In his new memoir, Josh Owens, who spent four years working on video production for the infamous conspiracy theorist, reveals the truth behind the sensationalism. “It was nonsense, it was lies,” Owens candidly writes.

Owens’s memoir, The Madness of Believing, documents a series of elaborate stunts orchestrated by Jones. These include creating unnecessary panic about supposed nuclear threats on California beaches and faking an incident where Jones was allegedly barred from voting in the 2016 elections.

The book guides readers through the painstaking process of fabricating a video that purportedly showed a member of the Islamic State sneaking into the United States from Mexico with a severed human head, highlighting the lengths to which Jones would go to disseminate his narrative.

The book, released Tuesday by Grand Central Publishing, details claims of Jones’s drunken outbursts, verbal tirades, and times when he allegedly punched and even accidentally shot a gun toward his employees, later insisting he was just joking.

Owens also recounts something far more personal – how easy it was to get sucked into Jones’s vortex of paranoia and fear-mongering, and how hard it was to extricate himself from it and come to terms with his role in Infowars’ deceptions.

‘I was struggling with how I’d spent the last four years of my life. The scams I’d contributed to. The lies I’d helped spread. The people I’d harmed,’ he writes. 

A former InfoWars staffer has detailed his experience working for conspiracy theorist Alex Jones and shared his account of how the far-right radio host outright fabricates news

A former InfoWars staffer has detailed his experience working for conspiracy theorist Alex Jones and shared his account of how the far-right radio host outright fabricates news 

Josh Owens is lifting the lid in his new book, after spending four years (2013 to 2017) editing and producing videos for the notorious conspiracy theorist

Josh Owens is lifting the lid in his new book, after spending four years (2013 to 2017) editing and producing videos for the notorious conspiracy theorist 

‘The guilt clawed at me, insistent and unyielding. I had been a cog in a monstrous machine, a part of something I had once believed, in earnest, to be valiant.’

Infowars has not responded to the Daily Mail’s request for comment about the book.

Americans who are neither Infowars fans nor part of the MAGA movement fans might only know Jones, 52, as the deep-voiced, far-right radio host who insisted that the September 11 terror attacks were an inside job and claimed that the 2012 Sandy Hook school shooting was a hoax.

He was ordered to pay more than $1 billion in damages for defaming the families of Sandy Hook victims, and courts are still sorting out how that money will actually be paid.

Owens steers clear of both those stories in his book mainly because they happened before his stint at Infowars from 2013 to 2017 and so he wasn’t involved in the reporting.

Having been raised by evangelicals in the Bible Belt of northern Georgia, he explains why he lied on his resumé, dropped out of film school and moved nearly a thousand miles to Austin to become a warrior in Jones’s right-wing ideological warfare.

‘At 23, I was vulnerable, angry and searching for direction, so I decided to give it a shot,’ he writes.

The movie buff was lured not just by Jones’s right-wing politics, but by what he calls his ‘way of imbuing the world with mystery, adding a layer of cinematic verisimilitude.’

The Madness of Believing - published April 14 - details his four years inside Infowars, including claims of staged videos and fabricated news events

The Madness of Believing – published April 14 – details his four years inside Infowars, including claims of staged videos and fabricated news events

Alex Jones built a massive following with explosive on-air rants - but his former aide says much of it was built on fiction

Alex Jones built a massive following with explosive on-air rants – but his former aide says much of it was built on fiction

‘The dullness of everyday existence parted to reveal a more vivid world beneath the surface,’ he writes about his first weeks on the job. 

‘Suddenly I was no longer a bored, directionless kid staring at a computer screen. 

‘I was Fox Mulder combing through the X-Files, Rod Serling opening a door to the Twilight Zone, Rosemary Woodhouse convinced that the neighbors were members of a ritualistic cult.’

He claims Jones had a penchant for day-drinking Grey Goose vodka out of Dixie Cups at the office and even kept the door to his personal restroom open, making ‘no attempt at discretion with his bowel movements.’ 

At one point, after Jones quickly married his new girlfriend when she got pregnant, then learned the unborn baby might have microcephaly, a rare condition giving it a smaller head than normal, he writes that his boss started wailing in a DC restaurant.

‘I’m going to have a kid with a… with a… with a peanut head!’ he describes Jones sobbing. ‘After a few minutes, his crying had slowed, but under his breath, like he couldn’t believe the unfairness, he kept muttering ‘peanut head…peanut head…peanut head…’

‘The very idea of personal space was alien in Jones’s world,’ writes Owens.

He describes Jones’s demands for a daily ‘churn and burn’ of endless video content — ‘quantity, not quality’ that stoked fears among his audience and leveraged those fears to sell his branded merchandise.

Jones, pictured after a 2022 court appearance, has previously been ordered to pay more than $1 billion in damages over false claims about the 2012 Sandy Hook shooting

Jones, pictured after a 2022 court appearance, has previously been ordered to pay more than $1 billion in damages over false claims about the 2012 Sandy Hook shooting

The far-right radio host infamously and falsely claimed that the 2012 Sandy Hook school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut - which claimed the lives of 20 children and six adults - was a hoax

The far-right radio host infamously and falsely claimed that the 2012 Sandy Hook school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut – which claimed the lives of 20 children and six adults – was a hoax

As Jones was peddling a supplement he touted as a ‘shield’ against radiation exposure, he assigned his video team to fuel panic about nuclear fallout from Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant disaster contaminating California beaches. 

Owens says he couldn’t contain his rage when his video crew, roaming the Pacific coast with Geiger counters, was unable to come up with evidence to back up his conspiracy theory.

‘I felt angry, defensive, anxious, and fearful, but more than anything, I felt confused. 

‘Something inside me was certain Jones wanted us to lie. To fabricate information to sell a product, to make money. But he never explicitly said this. 

‘In all our conversations with him, he never said the words, “I want you to lie.” Instead, Jones had tricked us into examining our abilities, doubting our convictions and questioning our sanity. 

‘If there was a word we needed to define and read aloud at that moment, it wasn’t “reporter.” It was “gaslight”,’ Owens writes.

He illustrates, step by disturbing step, the ways he fabricated news while working for Jones.

Like on Election Day 2016 when, knowing full well that video cameras weren’t allowed in polling places, Owens claims he drunkenly provoked election officials into telling his team to turn off their cameras as false proof that he was being kicked out for voting for Trump.

Owens also details Jones's drunken outbursts, verbal tirades, and times when he punched and even accidentally shot a gun toward his employees, later insisting he was just joking

Owens also details Jones’s drunken outbursts, verbal tirades, and times when he punched and even accidentally shot a gun toward his employees, later insisting he was just joking

‘I don’t think Jones even intended to vote,’ Owens writes.

The most absurd stunt allegedly came when Jones was dead set on proving unsupported claims that ISIS had built a training base in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, close to the US border. 

Given a lack of any evidence and the pressure Jones was putting on his team to find it, Owens admits to dressing a reporter to look like a terrorist carrying what appeared to be a bloody, severed head as he was filmed crossing a stream that Infowars falsely purported was a section of Rio Grande on the border.

The video snagged a million views overnight.

‘Jones never found out we lied. Though, given the numbers, I doubt he would have cared. I told myself it was part of the job, that I minimized risk while still getting the result he wanted,’ he writes. 

‘What I didn’t acknowledge was that I’d become complicit in a new way. I’d given up on my supposed veneration of the truth.’

Owens stayed at Infowars partly, he says, because Jones kept promoting him and upping his pay. 

He writes that he also stayed because Jones is a kind of centrifugal force – a charismatic, manipulative and abusive boss who commanded loyalty through domination and intimidation and responded to staffers’ doubts by labeling them as failures.

President Trump last week took aim at high-profile right-wing influencers, including Jones, Candace Owens, and Tucker Carlson, branding them 'losers,' 'troublemakers' and 'nut jobs'

President Trump last week took aim at high-profile right-wing influencers, including Jones, Candace Owens, and Tucker Carlson, branding them ‘losers,’ ‘troublemakers’ and ‘nut jobs’

In response, Jones shared an X post saying he has made 'very clear' he no longer supports the president

In response, Jones shared an X post saying he has made ‘very clear’ he no longer supports the president 

The book details Jones physically threatening his workers, allegedly demanding that staffers punch him, then punching them, drawing blood by hitting one and cracking the ribs of another.

‘Suck it up,’ Jones told that employee, Owens writes. ‘Quit acting like a baby.’

He also recounts a time when he claims Jones ordered his staff to meet him at a ranch to film ‘click-bait video of explosions and women wielding guns’.

He allegedly forced the crew’s lone female to join in, despite her reluctance, then picked up an AR-15 and accidentally fired it in her and Owens’s direction. 

To make matters worse, he pretended he had done it on purpose as a joke, treating the shaken staffer ‘like she was unhinged and humorless.’

‘Although I cringed, I remained silent; not just among the cowards, but very much a part of them,’ Owens writes.

‘As far as I could tell, Jones had no real friends in his life who weren’t beholden to him financially, and no relationships where the power dynamic wasn’t in his favor. 

‘When he made mistakes, there was always someone there, if not many, to enable him.’

Owens conveys not just a loathing for his erratic boss, but for himself each month, week and day he stayed in Jones’s employment. 

Just when he was about to leave, Jones doubled his salary. And just when he worked up the courage to apply for another job, he told himself that nobody would hire him with Infowars on his resumé.

It was the week of Trump’s first inauguration in 2017, when he writes he was filming a drunk Jones acting out attention-grabbing antics throughout DC, that Owens could no longer dismiss Jones’s behavior as mere eccentricities and excesses.

That’s when he finally decided not only to quit Infowars and write about his time there.

Be it in a moment of vulnerability or manipulation, he writes, Jones confided in him, ‘Let me tell you a little secret. I don’t want to do this anymore either.’

‘So I don’t blame you not wanting to stare into the abyss sometimes, ’cause you can become the abyss.’

Remarkable Survival: Elderly Woman Triumphs Over Near-Freezing Night Lost in the Wilderness

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Authorities are urging bushwalkers to adequately prepare for excursions following an incident where an elderly woman endured a frigid night lost in the southwest of Western Australia.

The 87-year-old woman managed to survive by conserving a packet of raisins until rescuers located her.

Concerns were raised on Friday when she failed to return from a hike in the Donnelly River Village area, approximately 280 kilometers south of Perth.

elderly bushwalker
An 87-year-old bushwalker survived a near-freezing night in WA’s south-west by rationing a packet of raisins until she was found. (9News)

The police were alerted around 8 p.m., prompting an extensive search operation.

She was discovered over 12 hours later on Saturday afternoon in a remote section of bushland. Although fatigued and dehydrated, she fortunately did not suffer any injuries.

Police used this as a reminder for those heading out into remote areas to be prepared.

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Virginia’s Assault Weapons Ban Intensifies: Abigail Spanberger’s New Legislation Sparks Controversy

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Residents of Virginia have been anxiously awaiting Governor Abigail Spanberger’s decision on a controversial bill aimed at prohibiting the purchase of specific “assault firearms.” This legislation has been on her desk for a month, with a critical deadline looming at 11:59 p.m. on Monday.

Governor Spanberger faced multiple options regarding the bill: she could sign it into law, veto it, propose amendments for the General Assembly’s consideration, or let it pass into law without her endorsement by taking no action.

Given Spanberger’s prior congressional support for restrictions on assault weapons, many anticipated she would approve the bill without hesitation. However, the upcoming April 21 referendum, which could impact the Democrats’ ability to redraw congressional districts to their advantage, might influence her decision, especially as indicators suggest the vote might not favor the Democrats.

Considering “Grabby Abby” Spanberger had happily voted in favor of assault weapons bans during her time in Congress, it seemed likely that she wound ink this bill into law without a second thought. However, there was one big mitigating factor hanging over her: the April 21 referendum on whether or not to allow Virginia Democrats to gerrymander Republicans out of four of the five congressional seats they currently hold – and some signs are pointing to the vote not going the Democrats’ way.




Beloved ABC Drama Announces Exciting New Season Return

Nathan Fillion sitting at a table and wearing an LAPD uniform in 'The Rookie' Season 8

ABC has officially announced the renewal of its hit series ‘The Rookie’ for a ninth season.

The exciting update was revealed to fans through a post on the show’s official Instagram account on April 13.

The show’s official Instagram account shared the news in an April 13 post. 

“You’re going to want to buckle up for this one,” it read. “#TheRookie will return for a new season!”

Reaction to the renewal announcement was swift and positive. 

“What a great start to this week!! Can’t wait for season 9!!!” one person wrote. 

“THANK GOODNESS we finally got an announcement!!” another fan commented. 

“Wonderful news!!! Never a doubt in my mind though!” someone else chimed in. 

As supporters pointed out, The Rookie’s Season 9 renewal didn’t come as a huge surprise. While network TV in general has experienced declining numbers of live viewers in recent years, The Rookie performs very well in streaming. More than 60% of its total viewers watch new episodes on Hulu in the week after they first air on ABC – a greater share than any other show, according to The Hollywood Reporter. It’s behind only Tracker, High Potential, Matlock, and Will Trent in total viewers after seven days. The show is also popular with teens, noted Deadline.

“I feel that our popularity has never been higher, which is great … I’ve been feeling like we’ve been putting out really strong episodes all season, and people have been showing up,” creator Alexi Hawley said. 

“I do think that ultimately the success of the show is partly because from week to week, the audience really doesn’t know what version of The Rookie they’re going to get,” he added. “Is it going to be a big fun event in the episode? Is it going to be more comedic or romantic or scary? I like switching things up, I like that sort of energy of it.”

For more​​ news and exclusive interviews, follow Showbiz Cheat Sheet’s Instagram.

Jessica McClure, famously known as ‘Baby Jessica,’ Faces Arrest at 40 in Texas Domestic Incident

Jessica McClure Morales, known widely as “Baby Jessica” due to her dramatic 1987 rescue from a well, found herself in the headlines once again after being arrested on Saturday night. The incident, stemming from a reported domestic disturbance, took place at her residence in Midland County, Texas.

According to the Midland County Sheriff’s Office, deputies arrived at Morales’ home shortly before 10 p.m. After assessing the situation, Morales, now 40 years old, was arrested at the scene.

She faces charges of assault causing bodily injury in a case involving family violence.

Details about the incident remain scarce as authorities have only shared limited information. The Midland County officials have indicated that it might take up to 10 days to process a request for the arrest affidavit, which should shed more light on the circumstances surrounding the charge.

After her arrest, Morales was released from the Midland County Detention Center upon posting bond, though the bond amount has not been publicly disclosed.

A Name Known Around the World

Morales gained international attention as an infant in 1987, when she fell into an eight-inch-wide well at her aunt’s home in Midland.

At just 18 months old, she became the focus of a dramatic, nearly 60-hour rescue effort that captivated the nation and drew global media coverage. Trapped approximately 22 feet underground, she remained lodged in the narrow well as emergency crews worked around the clock to reach her.

Rescuers ultimately drilled a parallel shaft and a horizontal tunnel through rock to access the well. The effort required specialized techniques, including waterjet cutting, after traditional equipment proved ineffective in the dense terrain.

During the rescue, crews reportedly heard the toddler singing, a moment that underscored both the tension and hope surrounding the operation.

Paramedic Robert O’Donnell eventually navigated the cramped tunnel to reach her. Nearly 60 hours after her fall, she was lifted to safety and rushed to a hospital.

The successful rescue sparked widespread celebration across Midland and beyond, with residents recalling cheers echoing through the city as news spread.

Morales underwent multiple surgeries following the incident due to injuries sustained while trapped, though she has said in past interviews she does not remember her ordeal.

Discover History: Springfield Museum Unveils Iconic Ford’s Theatre Chair in New Exhibit


The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum in Springfield, Illinois, is set to enrich its collection with a remarkable historic artifact, slated for exhibition later this year.

This artifact is a chair that was utilized at Ford’s Theatre on the fateful night President Lincoln was assassinated. Unlike modern theaters with connected seats, Ford’s Theatre accommodated its audience with over 1,000 individual chairs during the performance of “Our American Cousin” on April 14, 1865. Following Lincoln’s assassination, the federal government acquired the building, and the chairs were subsequently removed.

According to a report from the National Park Service, these chairs likely found temporary use in government offices before being discarded over time as new furniture replaced them, as noted by the ALPLM in a press release.

Mustard Mayhem: How a Condiment Heir’s Wild Antics Tarnish a Family Legacy

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From his early days, Charles Santich harbored the ambition of leading his grandfather’s renowned mustard enterprise, a dream fondly chronicled on the family’s personal website.

In 1992, Santich realized that dream by taking the reins of the Old Dutch Vinegar & Mustard Company, propelling it to unprecedented success and reaping substantial profits over the past thirty years.

These financial gains afforded Santich, now 60, a luxurious lifestyle. He resides in a $1.9 million mansion nestled on Long Island’s North Shore, complete with a BMW parked in the driveway, and enjoys frequent lavish vacations.

Yet, beneath the surface of this thriving business lies a troubling secret. Since 1972, the modest red-brick mustard factory, standing in Greenville, New Hampshire, has been more than just a symbol of success.

Unbeknownst to many, the quaint Victorian-style five-story building has been illicitly discharging pollutants into the picturesque Souhegan River under Santich’s directive for several years.

Acidic brown vinegar water trickling from the factory to the stream has been wiping out wildlife since the 1990s, and it even contributed to mercury contamination in fish in the picturesque town, according to the Department of Justice. 

The scandal suddenly sullied generations of hard work, and Santich was found guilty of knowingly polluting the river for more than a quarter century this year. 

He was sentenced to 18 months behind bars on Friday, bringing the picture-perfect life he built to come crashing down. 

A Facebook page belonging to Charles Santich's wife, Aimee Santich, 60, who works as the Vice President of the mustard company, displays their ritzy vacations and family life. The photograph above from the account shows Santich with his wife and daughter posing beside a Gucci sign

A Facebook page belonging to Charles Santich’s wife, Aimee Santich, 60, who works as the Vice President of the mustard company, displays their ritzy vacations and family life. The photograph above from the account shows Santich with his wife and daughter posing beside a Gucci sign

Between visits to the factory, Santich, 60, has been living an enviable life with his wife in a $1.9million mansion sandwiched between a golf course and a country club in Long Island, New York, while his company continued to rake in the cash

Between visits to the factory, Santich, 60, has been living an enviable life with his wife in a $1.9million mansion sandwiched between a golf course and a country club in Long Island, New York, while his company continued to rake in the cash

There was a hidden dark side to the simple red-brick mustard factory which has been operating in Greenville, New Hampshire, since 1942

There was a hidden dark side to the simple red-brick mustard factory which has been operating in Greenville, New Hampshire, since 1942

The mustard tycoon was also slapped with a year of supervised release and ordered to personally pay a $250,000 fine, while his company was billed $1.5million. 

It came after he pleaded guilty in February to knowingly discharging a pollutant without a permit in violation of the Clean Water Act.

Santich had hatched a plan to elude monitoring of his company’s impact on the river, by secretly pumping excess wastewater into it to save on shipping costs. 

In May 2017, he even hired an excavation company to extend an underground pipe to the top of a hill several hundred feet behind the factory. 

The company also constructed a drainage ditch to divert water from the pipe into the river. 

Santich carefully erased any trace of a paper trail by asking the owner of the excavation firm to remove any references to the illegal pipe and drainage ditch in documents shared between their companies.   

During the six years that followed, Santich told factory employees to ‘repeatedly pump his acidic wastewater and stormwater through the underground pipe,’ according to the DoJ. 

His cowed employees said he threatened to fire them if they did not assist in the crime. 

The unassuming Victorian-style five-story facility has been quietly pumping pollutants into the beautiful Souhegan River for the last several years - all on Santich's orders

The unassuming Victorian-style five-story facility has been quietly pumping pollutants into the beautiful Souhegan River for the last several years – all on Santich’s orders

Ever since he was a boy, Charles Santich dreamed of taking over his grandfather's successful mustard and vinegar business, according to the family's homespun website. He is pictured above as a child on the Old Dutch Vinegar & Mustard Company factory site in Greenville, New Hampshire, in 1973

Ever since he was a boy, Charles Santich dreamed of taking over his grandfather’s successful mustard and vinegar business, according to the family’s homespun website. He is pictured above as a child on the Old Dutch Vinegar & Mustard Company factory site in Greenville, New Hampshire, in 1973 

Aimee Santich's Facebook page shows the couple enjoying a ski holiday in Vail, Colorado

Aimee Santich’s Facebook page shows the couple enjoying a ski holiday in Vail, Colorado

At Santich’s sentencing hearing, prosecutors said his factory has been wiping out wildlife in the area since the ’90s, and his personal orders had ‘continued to pollute the river and prevent its recovery,’ per the DoJ. 

A toxicologist even told his sentencing hearing that his illegal activities had ‘likely contributed to the conditions’ that resulted in people being sold mercury-contaminated fish. 

Santich pleaded guilty as part of a plea deal that would avoid the case going to trial. He will now spend the next year and a half behind bars in a federal prison – a far cry from the life of luxury he had grown accustomed to. 

His wife, Aimee Santich, 60, also worked as the Vice President of Finance and Planning at the mustard company, according to her LinkedIn page. 

She has not been accused of any wrongdoing. Her Facebook page displays the couple’s ritzy vacations and family life. 

Aimee posed outside a Gucci store with her husband and their 22-year-old daughter in one photograph, while others show them enjoying a ski holiday in Vail, Colorado. 

Aimee also shared a photo of herself enjoying a vacation in glitzy Palm Beach.  

The Daily Mail has reached out to the Santich family for comment. 

US Attorney Erin Creegan condemned the condiment tsar’s conduct in a statement released after his sentencing. 

Pungent brown vinegar water trickling from the factory to the stream has been wiping out wildlife in the Souhegan River (pictured) since the 1990s, and it even contributed to mercury contamination in fish eaten by residents of the picturesque town, according to the DoJ

Pungent brown vinegar water trickling from the factory to the stream has been wiping out wildlife in the Souhegan River (pictured) since the 1990s, and it even contributed to mercury contamination in fish eaten by residents of the picturesque town, according to the DoJ

Charles Santich oversaw the mustard factory while wife Aimee worked as vice president

Charles Santich oversaw the mustard factory while wife Aimee worked as vice president 

‘Throughout years of repeated civil and administrative attempts to encourage Santich and his company to follow the law, Santich lied to state and federal authorities and even purposefully built the illegal infrastructure needed to pump his manufacturing waste into New Hampshire’s waterways, pushing his employees to help him violate the law,’ Creegan said. 

‘New Hampshire is the best place in the country in which to start and run a business. 

‘State and federal agencies tried over and over to help Santich and his company end the pollution that left waterways with fewer fish, and impacted the recreationalists and homeowners who use the Souhegan River. 

‘As the result of this years-long scheme of intentional misconduct and deceit, a criminal sanction is necessary to protect the public.’ 

A spokesperson for the Old Dutch Mustard Company told the Daily Mail it employs more than 60 people and will be continuing with operations. 

Speaking about Santich’s sentencing, they said in a statement: ‘While we are disappointed by today’s outcome, the Company remains steadfast in its commitment to continued compliance, environmental responsibility and to serving the Greenville community that has been our home for generations.’

The mustard company was established in Brooklyn by Santich’s Yugoslavian grandfather Karlo Sancer-Santich in 1941, and it began operating at the Greenville facility in 1972.