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Tragedy in Turkey: Former Student’s Rampage at High School Leaves 16 Injured

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In a tragic event on Tuesday, a former student opened fire at a high school in southeastern Turkey, injuring at least 16 individuals before taking his own life, according to local officials.

The 18-year-old, wielding a shotgun, unleashed a random attack at a vocational high school located in the Siverek district of Sanliurfa province, then sought refuge within the school premises.


A former student opened fire at a high school in southeast Turkey on Tuesday, wounding at least 16 people before killing himself
A former student opened fire at a high school in southeast Turkey on Tuesday, wounding at least 16 people before killing himself. IHA

Governor Hasan Sildak confirmed that the shooter subsequently turned the weapon on himself, resulting in his death.

Reports from NTV television indicate that one of the injured, a teacher, is in critical condition following the incident.

Authorities are still investigating the motive behind the attack, as such violent events are uncommon in Turkey’s educational institutions.

Police special operations units were deployed after the assailant refused to surrender, while all staff and students were evacuated, NTV said.


The 18-year-old attacker, armed with a shotgun, fired randomly at a vocational high school in Siverek, Sanliurfa province, before hiding inside the building.
The 18-year-old attacker, armed with a shotgun, fired randomly at a vocational high school in Siverek, Sanliurfa province, before hiding inside the building. IHA

Video footage showed dozens of students running out of the school toward the gate and onto the street.

How a Haunted Church Experience Led Country Star Ella Langley to Renew Her Faith


Ella Langley recently shared insights into her experience growing up in a small Southern Baptist community.

While chatting on the “This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von” podcast, the 26-year-old country music artist reflected on her childhood in a quaint Alabama town, particularly recalling the fear instilled by the church’s “judgment houses.”

“They hold these events around Halloween,” she explained. “It’s essentially a Christian-themed haunted house. Really terrifying. I remember going with our youth group. You walk in, and there’s a car crash scene, and the whole idea is to convince you that life is fragile, and you should make sure your soul is saved before you leave.”

Langley admitted these experiences had a profound impact on her, prompting her to raise her hand when asked if anyone wanted to talk, leading her to “get saved again.”

Recalling her father’s reaction, the “Excuse the Mess” performer mentioned he said, “Well, you’re kind of silly because that’s the whole purpose of being saved.”

Langley explained that she was homeschooled for many years, and her life consisted of going to church, noting, “Pretty much all we did was go to church.”

She noted it was a “really, really small church. It started in a barn. The house that I also grew up in, my dad grew up in, and there was an old barn across the street, and it started in hay bales on that barn, and then they moved it to a church, and I mean every Sunday and Wednesday until I was 18 years old.”

She compared growing up in a small town to her experience with fame, explaining, “You’ve known all these people your whole life,” and growing up in that environment, “I would hear s— about me all the time,” adding, “you just get used to that.”

Langley began her career on social media, gaining a following by posting covers on TikTok and Instagram, leading her to release her EP “Excuse the Mess” in 2023.

The EP helped solidify her fan base and included many of her early hits, including “If You Have To” and “Country Boy’s Dream Girl.” She achieved mainstream success when she collaborated with Riley Green on her hit song “You Look Like You Love Me,” which went viral on TikTok, got millions of streams on Spotify and Apple Music, and expanded her audience.

Her debut studio album, “Hungover,” was released in August 2024, and in April 2025, Langley was presented with the ACM New Female Artist of the Year award by country icon Miranda Lambert, who has become a good friend to the budding star.

“I was singing constantly as a kid. Like I said, I’ve known my whole life what I wanted to do, so I was always doing it,” she told Grammy.com in August 2024, adding she became a stronger songwriter during COVID, saying, “all I did was write, write, write.”

The “Choosin’ Texas” singer told the outlet that storytelling is in her blood, noting, her “dad’s an incredible storyteller” and so was her grandpa. “Storytelling is what my family did,” she said.

When speaking with Theo Von on the podcast, she credited her grandparents on her father’s side for nurturing her love of music, saying her “grandpa could play anything by ear.”

“I was, like, the first girl in the family, and I started to match pitch with [my grandma] as a baby, and so she figured out I could sing, and singing was her thing, and my grandpa could, like I said, play any instrument by ear, and so at their house, that’s all we did,” she said

“I sang at church a lot. I learned how to read from singing hymnals,” she added. “I really, just the whole time, like, my whole family, we all just were like, ‘This is what she’s gonna do.’”

Qantas Increases Fares and Reduces Domestic Flights Amid Rising Fuel Costs

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Qantas Airways announced on Tuesday that escalating jet fuel prices could potentially increase their expenses by as much as $800 million in the latter half of this year.

The airline attributed the surge in jet fuel costs, which have more than doubled, to the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, describing the market as “extremely volatile” in their latest financial update.

For the second half of 2026, Qantas now anticipates jet fuel expenses to range between $3.1 billion and $3.3 billion, a significant rise from their earlier estimate of $2.5 billion.

In response, the airline is collaborating with the Australian government and fuel suppliers, who have assured a stable fuel supply through the end of April and well into May.

“We are keeping a vigilant eye on the situation due to the persistent unpredictability in the global fuel supply chain,” stated the airline group.

“The Group has taken action to mitigate the impact of the conflict in the Middle East, including international network changes, capacity adjustments and fare increases.”

Qantas said it was benefiting, however, from a boost in demand for travel to Europe as passengers avoided Middle East routes.

“In response, the Group has redeployed capacity from the US and its domestic network to increase flights to Paris and Rome.”

Qantas said unit revenue on international routes was now expected to grow by 4-6 per cent year-on-year in the second half of 2026 — double its previous forecast.

For domestic flights, revenue was set to rise by about 5 per cent, up from its previous expectation of a 3 per cent increase.

Qantas said it may have to take further action on fuel prices.

“The Group continues to closely monitor the dynamic environment and retains optionality to take further actions to mitigate fuel cost increases over time.”


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Gen Z Hacker Matthew Lane Reflects on Chicago PowerSchool Data Breach: ‘Grateful I Got Caught

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A significant data breach has affected thousands of students and parents in the Chicago suburbs, and remarkably, the individual responsible was just 19 at the time of the incident.

Currently, ABC News, along with the ABC7 I-Team, is conducting an exclusive interview with him as part of their report on “Minor Mayhem: The Hackers of Gen Z,” focusing on this growing phenomenon.

ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch

Matthew Lane, now 20, is stepping forward to accept responsibility for infiltrating the PowerSchool K-12 Software & Cloud-Based Solutions back in 2024.

“I compromised their sense of security and safety,” Lane admitted.

The PowerSchool system, which handles crucial data for students and teachers, saw its security compromised, affecting numerous individuals throughout Illinois, including Elena Cutri, a parent with three children attending Elmhurst District 205.

“We locked our kids’ credit information. And then, right around the December timeframe, we did get a letter indicating that one of the kids had a breach in their information,” Cutri said.

Cutri froze all her children’s credit after the hack. Lane, the Massachusetts man behind that cybercrime, talked to ABC News exclusively before going to prison.

“I was dual majoring in cybersecurity and computer science, and I was hoping to, you know, use those skills for you know non-selfish means,” Lane said.

Lane pleaded guilty to four charges related to unauthorized computer access, identity theft, and cyber extortion. In November 2025, he was sentenced to four years in federal prison and ordered to pay more than $14 million in restitution.

“I still have a life after this, and I know that now. Like, I’m mad at myself, obviously, but I’m thankful that I got caught. I’m honestly thankful for the FBI. You know, even the DOJ, like, I’m thankful for them, because I would have never stopped,” Lane said.

Lane is part of what authorities call a concerning trend of young hackers. Some carry out crimes on their own, and others are potentially recruited by criminal organizations on social media or gaming platforms.

While Lane was not believed to have been recruited, court documents say he worked with an unnamed co-conspirator.

“It was one of the worst I’ve seen here when you talk about financial impact, and you talk about the forever impact that these students and faculty will have for the rest of their life. And I don’t want to minimize that fact, because this was an open and shut case for us, which is a win for justice and for the victims, but truly, the downrange victims are the ones that will continue to be re-victimized,” said FBI Supervisory Special Agent Doug Domin.

Cutri also weighed in, saying, “On the one hand, it’s a kid. So, you’d like to believe that they may not have fully been aware of what was happening. But on the other hand, it’s still a reality that there’s having this information out there. It could impact families for many years.”

PowerSchool offered two years of credit monitoring and identity protection services to anyone whose information may have been compromised. The company also told the I-Team, “PowerSchool appreciates the efforts of the prosecutors and law enforcement who brought this individual to justice. Since the moment we became aware of this incident, we have remained focused on supporting our school partners and safeguarding student, family, and educator data.”

And on its website, PowerSchool told customers it paid ransom demanded by the hackers “because we believed it to be in the best interest of our customers and the students and communities we serve.”

Court documents suggest the amount sent was close to $3 million in Bitcoin. It is unclear how much of that Lane collected with co-conspirators, but Lane says the financial gains were only part of his motivation to hack.

“But I couldn’t stop. I was addicted to not only drugs, I was addicted to hacking. That gave me the most natural high ever,” Lane said.

We read Lane’s quotes about his regrets aloud to Cutri, saying, “I think I need to go to prison for what I did, and I’m OK with that.”

“I think that sounds like a young man who, in hindsight, wrestles with the situation that he found himself in,” Cutri said.

The FBI says you should keep a close eye on your children’s habits online, especially on gaming platforms. Make sure they are not interested in hacking and warn them of the dangers and consequences.

The FBI says it is still investigating Lane’s co-conspirators.

ABC News will have much more on this investigation into teen hacking, “Minor Mayhem: The Hackers of Gen Z,” on Tuesday on “Good Morning America” and on a special edition of “Nightline.”

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Eric Swalwell Unwinds in Style: Viral ‘Party Yacht’ Video Captures Congressman Relaxing in Bathrobe

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Eric Swalwell, the embattled California Democrat, has found himself at the center of a storm after a video surfaced showing him reveling in a bathrobe on a yacht. This footage, dating back to September 2022, comes to light as Swalwell acknowledges certain “mistakes” in his conduct.

The 45-year-old, once a promising contender for the role of California’s governor to succeed Gavin Newsom, is now under intense scrutiny. This follows allegations from four women who have accused him of sexual misconduct, claims that surfaced last Friday.

In response to these serious accusations, both the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office and the House Ethics Committee have commenced investigations. This mounting pressure has led Swalwell to not only withdraw from the gubernatorial race but also resign from his congressional seat as of Monday.

Despite these developments, Swalwell stands firm in his denial of the allegations and expresses his intent to contest these claims vigorously.

The unfolding drama took another twist when a video was shared on social media, capturing Swalwell aboard the opulent 200-foot Arience yacht, cruising the waters around St. Tropez in the autumn of 2022.

Sources familiar with the trip told Page Six two of the Democrat’s friends traveled on a private jet from Las Vegas to the French Riviera town, where they chartered the yacht and called Swalwell to come join them.

He then arrived by commercial flight, and joined four or five men on the ship – as well as a group of young women who could be seen in the video dancing around.

One of the women, a Brit believed to be in her late teens, was apparently romantically involved with one of the men in the group, an unidentified source explained.

Yet the five or six other women, a mix of Brits and Americans who were a little older, seemed otherwise unacquainted with the men or with each other. 

Eric Swalwell (pictured earlier this month) in a newly-unearthed video partying onboard a yacht in a bathrobe

A group of young women could be seen dancing around onboard the yacht

A group of young women could be seen dancing around onboard the yacht

Sources familiar with the trip said he joined friends onboard the 200-foot Arience yacht (pictured) as it traveled around St Tropez

Sources familiar with the trip said he joined friends onboard the 200-foot Arience yacht (pictured) as it traveled around St Tropez

‘The people on the boat were told to keep it hush-hush about Swalwell being on the trip,’ a source familiar with the week-long excursion said of the Democrat, who had already been in Congress for nearly nine years at that point.

‘They were told everything stays on the boat.’

Another source familiar with the antics onboard the yacht further claimed Swalwell ‘didn’t seem like a politician.’ 

‘More like president of a frat house,’ the source quipped.

Sources familiar with the trip also said that some of the women were returned to shore, only to be replaced by other women.

They said there was no shortage of alcohol onboard the ship, and the group spent their days jet skiing or lounging on the deck.

But a source insisted they were not specifically aware of Swalwell being sexually or romantically involved with any of the women onboard the ship.

The footage comes just days after multiple women accused Swalwell of sexual misconduct in a bombshell report from the San Francisco Chronicle.

A former staffer also told CNN that Swalwell raped her while she was drunk. 

Swalwell (pictured in September) has faced backlash in recent days after four women accused him of sexual misconduct, leading him to resign from Congress on Monday

Swalwell (pictured in September) has faced backlash in recent days after four women accused him of sexual misconduct, leading him to resign from Congress on Monday

Swalwell had dropped out of the race to succeed Gavin Newsom as the governor of California just one day earlier

Swalwell had dropped out of the race to succeed Gavin Newsom as the governor of California just one day earlier 

He had been considered a frontrunner in the governor's race before the allegations emerged

He had been considered a frontrunner in the governor’s race before the allegations emerged

The unidentified staffer alleged that the married Swalwell raped her twice when she was too intoxicated to consent in 2019 and 2024. 

She told CNN that in April 2024, after a night of heavy drinking in New York City, she woke up to Swalwell having sex with her in his hotel bed.

‘I was pushing him off of me, saying no,’ she said, adding that it happened after she stopped working in his office. ‘He didn’t stop.’ 

Others, including Ally Sammarco, 28, a DC-based political content creator, then came forward to share their stories.

She said she messaged Swalwell in 2021 in hopes of discussing politics. 

At that point, Sammarco said the congressman ‘became very inappropriate, like saying about how hot he thought I was, insinuating we should get together and hook up.’

‘I thought I was the only one that had this experience with him,’ she told NBC

‘These people have authority, and they’re abusing it. I want to validate what these women are saying, and I feel like he needs a public reckoning in some way, or he’s just going to continue doing this.’ 

One woman, Ally Sammarco, claimed that Swalwell set her unsolicited nude photos and 'became very inappropriate' over text

One woman, Ally Sammarco, claimed that Swalwell set her unsolicited nude photos and ‘became very inappropriate’ over text

Sammarco went on to allege that Swalwell would ‘drunk text’ her and send her photos of himself in bed or shirtless, along with the nude images. 

‘I truly never thought he would respond – I had like 1,000 followers at the time,’ she told CNN. ‘And he responded.’

The pair went back and forth, eventually exchanging phone numbers and messaging practically every day, she told the outlet. 

Another woman said that Swalwell kissed her and touched her leg without consent.

She said she woke up naked the next morning in his hotel room without realizing it was his, and said she still has flashbacks of the representative grabbing her as she told him ‘no.’

Almost immediately following the damning report, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office launched an investigation into the claims and the House Ethics Committee announced on Monday that it, too, was investigating the top Democrat.

Eric Swalwell is pictured with his wife Brittany Watts attend a gala in June 2022

Eric Swalwell is pictured with his wife Brittany Watts attend a gala in June 2022

Amid the backlash, Swalwell announced on Sunday that he was suspending his campaign for governor, saying he was ‘deeply sorry for mistakes in judgment I’ve made in my past.’

‘I will fight the serious, false allegations that have been made — but that’s my fight, not a campaign’s,’ he said at the time.

Just one day later, Swalwell also announced he was resigning from Congress.

‘I am deeply sorry to my family, staff and constituents for mistakes in judgment I’ve made in my past. I will fight the serious, false allegation made against me. However, I must take responsibility for the mistakes I did make,’ he said in a statement.

He added that he was aware of efforts to force an immediate expulsion vote, warning that removing a lawmaker without due process ‘within days of an allegation being made’ would be wrong.

‘But it’s also wrong for my constituents to have me distracted from my duties,’ he said. ‘Therefore, I plan to resign my seat in Congress.’

Swalwell said he would work with his staff in the coming days to ensure his district continues to be served after his departure.

Strategic Somaliland Base: A New US Stronghold to Counter Iran and Houthis in Vital Maritime Routes?

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JOHANNESBURG: As global tensions rise with the onset of a blockade at the Strait of Hormuz and increasing threats from Iran-backed entities targeting the Red Sea’s critical Bab el-Mandeb Strait, new avenues for strategic military partnerships are being explored. In this context, Somaliland has offered the U.S. access to a strategically vital airbase and port, highlighting its significance as a pro-U.S. ally in the region.

General Anderson’s visit to the facilities in Somaliland reflects the region’s pivotal role in global shipping routes. Somaliland declared its independence from the conflict-ridden Somalia in 1991 and has since positioned itself as a stable and cooperative partner for the U.S. in the Horn of Africa.

As tensions in the Middle East affect global oil routes, Bab el-Mandeb—aptly named the “gate of tears” in Arabic—has seen a surge in its strategic importance. Bloomberg News reports indicate that Saudi Arabia, adapting to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, is routing up to 7 million barrels of oil per day from its Red Sea port in Yanbu through this vital passage. Remarkably, the narrow 16-mile-wide strait facilitates up to 14% of the world’s shipping traffic, underscoring its global significance.

Somaliland security personnel standing in front of shipping containers at Berbera Port

Meanwhile, security personnel in Somaliland maintain a vigilant watch over shipping containers at Berbera Port, a testament to the region’s growing role as a crucial maritime hub. (Photo credit: Ed Ram/AFP)

Enter the controversial offer to the U.S. of an air and naval base at Berbera in Somaliland. The official Republic of Somaliland site on X extolled Berbera’s virtues last month, boasting that it has “a deep water port along the artery connecting the Red Sea to the Indian Ocean”, and “one of Africa’s longest runways, originally developed as a NASA emergency landing site.”

“Berbera obviously has huge strategic potential,” for sea and air operations, Edmund Fitton-Brown, a former U.K. ambassador to Yemen and a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), told Fox News Digital.

Aerial view of the Bab el-Mandeb Strait showing waterway and surrounding land.

The Bab el-Mandeb Strait, a sea route connecting the Indian Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea via the Suez Canal, on Oct. 22, 2020. (Gallo Images/Orbital Horizon/Copernicus Sentinel Data 2021)

The U.S. does have another Red Sea base in Djibouti, but Fitton-Brown told Fox News Digital the government there is increasingly uncomfortable with some administration’s policies: “Djibouti becomes an increasingly reluctant, unwilling ally to the U.S. in helping enforce sanctions on the Houthis. Somaliland, which is almost equally well-placed to address issues on the western and southwestern coasts of Yemen, can help the U.S., Israel and the UAE combat the Houthis.”

The controversy comes over the question of U.S. recognition of Somaliland.

Somaliland president meets Africom general

Gen. Dagvin Anderson, commander, U.S. Africa Command, meets with Somaliland President Abdirahman Mohamed Abdullahi in Hargeisa, Somaliland, on Nov. 26, 2025. (U.S. Army photo by Capt. Ubon Mendie)

President Donald Trump, in the Oval Office last August, told reporters, “We’re looking into that right now,” when asked about the recognition of Somaliland and the possible resettlement of Gazans there, adding, “We’re working on that right now, Somaliland.”

But this past week, a State Department spokesperson told Fox News Digital, “The United States continues to recognize the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Federal Republic of Somalia, which includes the territory of Somaliland.”

Last year Israel became the first country to recognize Somaliland.

USS Carter Hall and USS Bataan transit Bab al-Mandeb strait

In this image provided by the U.S. Navy, the amphibious dock landing ship USS Carter Hall and amphibious assault ship USS Bataan transit the Bab al-Mandeb strait on Aug. 9, 2023. (Mass Communications Spc. 2nd Class Moises Sandoval/U.S. Navy via AP)

Iran is pushing the Houthis to take action in the Red Sea. “Insecurity in other straits, including the Bab al-Mandab Strait and the Red Sea, is one of the options of the Resistance Front, and the situation will become much more complicated than it is today for the Americans,” the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)-linked Tasmin news agency warned on March 21.

Baraa Shaiban, an expert on the Houthis at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), says the recognition of Somaliland is problematic, as it “will upset the U.S. relationship with the Arab countries like Saudi Arabia and Egypt, many of which are U.S. allies. It would be unwise for the United States to upset its allies in the region just to gain access to Somaliland ports.”

Houthi fighters taking control of the Galaxy Leader Cargo ship off Hudaydah Yemen

This handout screen grab captured from a video shows Yemen’s Houthi fighters’ takeover of the Galaxy Leader Cargo on the Red Sea coast off Hudaydah, on Nov. 20, 2023, in the Red Sea, Yemen. (Houthi Movement/Getty Images)

A spokesperson for AFRICOM told Fox News Digital, “The U.S. is not seeking to establish new basing, as such actions do not align with the America First security framework articulated by the President and Secretary of War.”

While publicly both the use of bases and recognition of Somaliland are no-go areas, analysts say that with Somaliland offering the use of its bases without immediate recognition by the administration, the issue is perhaps privately not off the table.

And that could be why a recent video shared with Fox News Digital shows AFRICOM’s Gen. Anderson and a large group of senior military officials in Somaliland. Anderson met with Somaliland’s president, and appeared to inspect the port in Berbera in November, just five months ago.

That’s not the only reported visit. Somaliland’s top diplomatic representative in Washington, Bashir Goth, said at a recent Foreign Policy Research Institute debate, “The war in the Middle East has elevated Somaliland’s strategic importance. U.S. military interest has been very strong. Every month, there has been a delegation from AFRICOM to Hargeisa,” the capital of Somaliland.

Fox News Digital reached out to the Republic of Somaliland, but they declined to comment.

Alleged Love Triangle Murder: Suspect Provided Rides to Victim’s Widow

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Renny Palmer was the subject of affection from both her husband Jason Palmer and his romantic rival Gofal Baziad before the love triangle turned deadly, a NSW Supreme Court jury has heard.

In a gripping courtroom revelation, jurors heard today that just two days after the alleged murder of his friend, Baziad attempted to soothe a woman he considered his “girlfriend” during a phone call.

Police allege dad Jason Palmer, 34, who was originally from the UK, was murdered by a 52-year-old man who had been in a relationship with his wife. (Supplied)

Ms. Palmer, speaking through a Bahasa interpreter, recounted Baziad’s words: “He suggested that perhaps Jason had gone to a nightclub, maybe got drunk, and ended up staying at a friend’s place.”

The mysterious disappearance of Mr. Palmer occurred on February 6, 2004, leaving many questions unanswered.

Eyewitnesses reported seeing the two men conversing and smoking on the balcony of Ms. Palmer’s residence in Sydney’s southwest before they departed together late that evening.

Now 54, the accused has entered a plea of not guilty to the charge of murdering his romantic rival, with jealousy allegedly fueling the tragic events of that night.

Ms Palmer testified Baziad had been late collecting her for work the day after the alleged murder.

She felt unwell on the drive and asked to turn back.

Baziad also said he was sick and the pair decided to go back to their respective homes, the jury heard.

Gofal Baziad is accused of murdering Jason Palmer, so he could continue a relationship with his wife Renny.
Gofal Baziad is accused of murdering Jason Palmer, so he could continue a relationship with his wife Renny. (9News)

That afternoon, he picked up Ms Palmer and took her to dance training at the Indonesian consulate.

She tried, unsuccessfully, to call and text her ex-husband.

Two days after he vanished, she went with Baziad to Mr Palmer’s rental apartment, the jury heard.

While there, she noticed the interior of his home was messy, as if no one had slept there.

Ms Palmer separated from her then ex-husband in 2002 after he had an affair, she earlier told the court.

However, she reconciled with him in December 2003 after being asked to choose between the two men.

“I still loved Jason,” she told the jury.

Despite her decision, Baziad still thought of himself as her boyfriend, she testified.

Jason Palmer’s body was found weighed down with rocks and submerged in the Nepean River at Menangle. (SMH)

He compared her relationship with Mr Palmer to glass.

“Even if it was put together again then it would still be broken,” he reportedly said.

Ms Palmer testified that Baziad told her he had to clean and move out of his unit the day after her husband disappeared.

When asked why he had to move, he said there was a problem with the real estate, the jury heard.

Mr Palmer’s body was found concealed in a sleeping bag and weighed down with rocks in the Nepean River in Sydney’s west 23 days after he vanished.

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Greg Rutherford Discloses Financial Loss After Falling Victim to Guitar Sale Scam

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Olympic champion Greg Rutherford has opened up about a fraudulent experience that left him empty-handed after attempting to sell his old guitar on a resale website.

The former long jumper, now 39 and hailing from Milton Keynes, shared his story as a guest on the Spent podcast, a collaboration with Nationwide, where he discussed his past buying and selling adventures.

In conversation with host Matt Edmonson, Greg recounted how he was persuaded to purchase a pricey guitar and amplifier, swayed by a friend involved in a band.

After filing a complaint with the online marketplace where he listed the guitar, the buyer was refunded entirely, leaving Greg without compensation.

During the podcast, Greg, who captured his long jump gold on the iconic ‘Super Saturday’ at the London 2012 Olympics, reflected on the influence of his Swedish friend who played guitar, saying, “I immediately thought, ‘that’s really cool.'”

‘So I went straight to the music shop, bought a relatively expensive guitar, amp, the whole lot.’

However, when he tried to learn how to play his new instrument, the father-of-three revealed he couldn’t even learn ‘two chords’ and therefore ‘never touched it again’. 

Olympic gold medallist Greg Rutherford appeared on the Spent podcast, in association with Nationwide, to discuss his spending habits

Olympic gold medallist Greg Rutherford appeared on the Spent podcast, in association with Nationwide, to discuss his spending habits

He decided to sell the instrument, which had been played for a total of ’10 minutes’, on an online marketplace and quickly found a buyer.

However according to Greg: ‘[The buyer] got it delivered to his house. He then claimed it arrived snapped in half. He then got a full refund for it and I got nothing.

‘So I lost a very expensive guitar and amp and he basically got it for free… then he showed a picture and it was scratched up, beaten up – so clearly, it was his old guitar.’

Elsewhere in the podcast, Greg revealed he had an IAAF-accredited long jump track and sandpit built down the side of his house – but joked he has used ‘less than 10 times’ during his career.

‘I invested quite a lot of money in this,’ he said, noting that, in theory, it was a ‘great investment’. 

However, in recounting the story Greg explained he was living predominantly in the US at the time, and so ‘never used it’. 

Greg, now a father of three, won his gold medal on 'Super Saturday' in the London 2012 Olympics

Greg, now a father of three, won his gold medal on ‘Super Saturday’ in the London 2012 Olympics

Matt joked: ‘The rest of the time, is it like a litter tray for stray cats?’ 

Greg acknowledged that this was often the case – and that foxes also are attracted to the sand pit.

He said: ‘It does have a cover on the sand, but if you leave the cover off for about 30 seconds, a cat will poo in it.’

As Greg and his wife Susie discuss potentially moving home one day, he joked he doesn’t know how he’ll market the track to potential buyers – however during the pandemic he tried to offer it up to athletes who needed to train.

He explained many athletes struggled to get access to tracks during the Covid pandemic, meaning he could offer them somewhere to train and put his runway to good use.

Greg revealed his justification for installing the runway was to make him a better athlete, which would in turn make him more prosperous. 

‘I thought, “spend money to make money”,’ he recalled. However Greg’s career ended abruptly shortly after the runway was installed due to injury – after spending what he describes as a ‘silly amount of money’.

Former Colleague Reflects on Disturbing Discovery from Years of Working with Jimmy Savile

Jim Davidson, famed for his victory on Celebrity Big Brother, shared an unsettling insight into his past interactions with the notorious Jimmy Savile during their tenure at the BBC. In a conversation with Andrew Gold, host of the Heretics podcast, Davidson revealed that he often found himself avoiding Savile on set. However, his avoidance wasn’t out of fear for his safety but simply because he found Savile to be “boring.”

During the podcast, Gold inquired about Davidson’s experiences at the BBC while Savile was present, asking, “Were you at the BBC when Savile was roaming about? What was he like?” Davidson responded candidly, reminiscing, “We used to run off. You’d hear him go ‘Now then, now then,’ and you’d think, ‘F*** me, it’s Savile.’ The thought wasn’t that he might be threatening or inappropriate, just that he was dull.”

In the same podcast episode, Davidson also addressed the controversy surrounding his alleged visit to convicted sex offender Gary Glitter in prison. He clarified his involvement with the charity Care After Combat, which supports veterans and soldiers at risk of entering the criminal justice system. “We would visit them in prison, assess their situation, and pair them with a mentor who would support them for three years after their release,” Davidson explained.

Davidson recounted a visit to HMP The Verne, a facility that houses sex offenders. He clarified, “This was different. We didn’t provide mentors to these individuals, as they were veterans listed on the sex offenders registry.”

“So I went to HMP The Verne, which is a sex offenders clinic. Now this is different – you don’t give these guys mentors. These were veterans that were on the sex offenders [registry].

“So we’d say to about 30 guys, ‘We don’t quite know what to do. Give us your story – you’re going to come out of here one day…’ It was that kind of thing, to work out how to stop reoffending.

“[There’s a] knock at the door, there’s a Paul Gadd outside wants to come in. I go and look and there he is, Gary Glitter!

“He took his bobble hat off to a bald head, as if it makes any difference, and said, ‘Jim! It’s me, Gary!’ I said, ‘Oh, hello’. He said, ‘Can I come in?’ And I said, ‘No, this is for veterans!’

“He did my TV show loads of times. I didn’t go out with him, he wasn’t a pal. So that was it, that was me banning Gary Glitter.”

Growing Number of Christians Contemplate Possession Theory Regarding Trump’s Behavior

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Donald Trump often has a knack for turning controversy into spectacle. Just 40 minutes after unleashing a tirade against the ‘WEAK’ Pope Leo on his Truth Social account on Sunday, he shared an AI-crafted image depicting himself as Jesus Christ, performing a healing miracle on a bedridden patient.

In a follow-up post, as if to lighten the mood, he uploaded an image of a gleaming Trump Tower situated on the Moon. However, this whimsical post failed to capture much attention.

The provocative nature of his digital ‘art’ has sparked outrage among many of his Christian supporters, prompting demands for its removal and a public apology from Trump.

Conservative Catholic priest, Fr Joseph DeMarzo, urged Trump to reconsider, saying, ‘I implore you, repent. Our allegiance is to Christ first, not Maga.’

Michael Knowles, a prominent Catholic commentator, also joined in the criticism. ‘I assume someone has already advised him, but it would be wise for the President, both in terms of faith and politics, to delete the image, regardless of its intended message,’ he remarked.

But Trump never apologises for his online shenanigans. Instead, he told reporters that their eyes deceived them and he wasn’t purporting to be Christ. 

‘It wasn’t a depiction. I did post it and I thought it was me as a doctor and had to do with Red Cross,’ he explained, before finally deleting the post. 

Online sleuths quickly discovered that the AI picture first appeared in February courtesy of the Trump superfan Nick Adams, who is now the Special Presidential Envoy for American Tourism, Exceptionalism and Values.

Bizarrely, however, the copy Trump’s account posted had one disturbing alteration from Adams’s original: An ethereal soldier figure in the clouds had been replaced by a horned creature, which some say might be a satanic representation of Baphomet, a goat-headed figure from the occult.

Donald Trump posted an AI-generated image of himself as Jesus Christ, laying his miraculous healing hand on a hospitalised patient, on his Truth Social platform on Sunday

Donald Trump posted an AI-generated image of himself as Jesus Christ, laying his miraculous healing hand on a hospitalised patient, on his Truth Social platform on Sunday

After attending the funeral of Pope Francis last year, a picture of Trump in white papal regalia appeared on his Truth Social account, though he later insisted he had ¿nothing to do with it¿

After attending the funeral of Pope Francis last year, a picture of Trump in white papal regalia appeared on his Truth Social account, though he later insisted he had ‘nothing to do with it’

This has only fed into a growing paranoia on parts of America’s religious Right that their former hero Trump, who they once supported, has become the opposite of Christ-like – that he’s now a demonic force. ‘It’s more than blasphemy,’ said Marjorie Taylor Greene, the Maga darling-turned-fierce Trump critic. ‘It’s an Anti-Christ spirit.’

On election night in 2024, Trump declared: ‘Many people have told me that God spared my life for a reason [following an assassination attempt at a campaign rally], and that reason was to save our country and to restore America to greatness’. Yet he now seems to be almost deliberately debasing himself in the minds of so many Republican Christians.

This is by no means the first time Trump has dabbled with controversial religious imagery of himself. 

After attending the funeral of Pope Francis last year, a picture of Trump in white papal regalia appeared on his Truth Social account, though he later insisted he had ‘nothing to do with it’. During one of his fraud trials in 2023, he reposted a fake court drawing of himself sitting in the dock next to Our Lord and Saviour.

Neither is this the first time he has criticised a Supreme Pontiff. He called Pope Francis ‘disgraceful’ when the then-Vicar of Christ criticised his stern immigration policies. But for some, Trump’s latest AI-affront – combined with his decidedly un-Christian rebuke of Pope Leo and the Catholic Church – represents a sinister new low.

Paula White-Cain, the plastic-faced televangelist who is Trump¿s spiritual adviser, gave the President and his war a weird Easter blessing

Paula White-Cain, the plastic-faced televangelist who is Trump’s spiritual adviser, gave the President and his war a weird Easter blessing

And it is striking that Trump’s harshest domestic critics have not been the Democrats, who don’t seem to be surprised, let alone horrified, that Trump might view himself as God. No, the angriest voices belong to the same Right-wing Republicans who used to adore the Donald.

Figures such as Taylor Greene, and the conservative commentator Candace Owens, have felt increasingly betrayed since last year, when the White House appeared to cover up the Jeffrey Epstein story – which some Maga elements truly regard as evidence that the world is controlled by a cabal of Satanic paedophiles.

Taylor Greene and Owens are obsessed, too, with the extent of Israel’s influence over America’s foreign policy and are furious that their President has launched a war on Iran, apparently at the behest of the Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

For America First purists, the problem is not just that the President is making bad mistakes. It’s that he has been co-opted by evil, anti-religious forces which are trying to hasten the apocalypse by starting a nuclear war.

Trump, indeed, has become an almost uniquely divisive figure who draws praise and criticism from across the religious spectrum.

A surprisingly large number of evangelical Maga fans, for example – including Christian Zionists – believe that the Commander-in-Chief is doing God’s work by taking out evil Ayatollahs in a joint effort with the blessed nation of Israel. A growing range of Catholics, Orthodox and Episcopalian believers, meanwhile, believe that Trump’s actions are not merely regrettable but evil.

Marjorie Taylor Greene, the Maga darling-turned-fierce Trump critic, believes the US President is the opposite of Christ-like ¿ that he¿s now a demonic force. ¿It¿s more than blasphemy,¿ she said. ¿It¿s an Anti-Christ spirit¿

Marjorie Taylor Greene, the Maga darling-turned-fierce Trump critic, believes the US President is the opposite of Christ-like – that he’s now a demonic force. ‘It’s more than blasphemy,’ she said. ‘It’s an Anti-Christ spirit’

When Trump warned the world that ¿a whole civilisation will die tonight, never to be brought back¿, his former friend, the influential podcast host Tucker Carlson, was outraged: ¿Christians need to understand where Trump is taking us,¿ he said

When Trump warned the world that ‘a whole civilisation will die tonight, never to be brought back’, his former friend, the influential podcast host Tucker Carlson, was outraged: ‘Christians need to understand where Trump is taking us,’ he said

The fact that the President chose Easter Sunday morning of all days, to issue an aggressive message to Tehran only confirmed to them that Trump’s faith has warped into something menacing.

‘Open the F****n’ Strait, you crazy bastards, or you’ll be living in Hell,’ he said on the joyful day of Our Lord’s resurrection. ‘Praise be to Allah.’

Two days later, he warned the world that ‘a whole civilisation will die tonight, never to be brought back.’

Trump’s more nihilistic admirers chortled at his provocative barminess. But his former friend, the influential podcast host Tucker Carlson, was outraged: ‘Desecrating Easter was the first step toward nuclear war,’ he intoned. ‘Christians need to understand where Trump is taking us.’

Carlson drew special attention to Paula White-Cain, the plastic-faced televangelist who is Trump’s spiritual adviser, and the weird Easter blessing she gave the President and his war.

‘Mr President, you were betrayed and arrested and falsely accused,’ she said. ‘It’s a familiar pattern that our Lord and Saviour showed us, but it didn’t end there for Him and it didn’t end there for you.

‘And I believe that the Lord said to tell you this: Because of His victory, you will be victorious in all you put your hand to.’

Carlson had a different take. ‘How could any Christian watch that and not feel revulsion?’ he asked, denouncing the ‘spiritual war’ being waged in the White House and what he described as the perversion of the New Testament.

Has the criticism got under Trump’s skin? Last Thursday – on the same day that his wife Melania issued a rather confusing statement about Jeffrey Epstein – the President delivered a furious 372-word Truth Social post attacking Tucker Carlson and another former supporter-turned-critic Megyn Kelly, as well as Owens and conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, calling them ‘stupid people’ and insisting that ‘nobody cares about them’.

But in his desperation to offend his Maga critics, the President may end up alienating a large number of God-fearing Americans.

There are some 53million Catholics in the United States, and the so-called Catholic vote is often said to be the decisive ‘swing’ factor in elections. It is an intriguing fact that Trump won a majority of Catholic votes in his successful campaigns of 2016 and 2024, but not in his defeat to the Irish-Catholic Joe Biden in 2020.

As with so many other Trump stories, voters may soon forget all about the time the President posted a Christ-like picture of himself. It wouldn’t be the first time he’d got away with online excess.

But there is a broader concern among Republicans that, under the strain of his second term, the 79-year-old is starting to overstep the mark – badly.

His boasts about killing Iranians have left most decent people cold. In February, when film director Rob Reiner and his wife were brutally murdered in their home, Trump made an astonishingly crass and irreverent statement gloating that Reiner had suffered from ‘Trump derangement syndrome’.

And when Robert Mueller, the man who investigated Trump’s ties to Russia in his first term, died late last month, Trump responded: ‘Good, I’m glad he’s dead.’

While the vast majority of Americans won’t believe that their President has been possessed by the Anti-Christ, they do know that it’s wicked to speak ill of the recently deceased.

Freddy Gray is deputy editor of The Spectator