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PM Unveils Fuel Supply Taskforce Amidst Price-Gouging Probe: Ensuring Fair Prices at the Pump

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In brief

  • The government has announced a new fuel taskforce to ensure fuel is distributed across the nation.
  • The consumer watchdog will investigate fuel suppliers including Ampol, BP, Mobil Oil and Viva Energy.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has announced the formation of a dedicated taskforce aimed at ensuring the nation’s fuel supply remains steady. This move comes as the consumer watchdog launches an investigation into potential anti-competitive practices by fuel suppliers.

On Thursday morning, the National Cabinet held a virtual meeting where Albanese, along with state and territory leaders, addressed the issues of fuel shortages and volatile prices, which have been exacerbated by the ongoing conflict in the Middle East.

Following the conflict’s escalation in late February, sparked by strikes from the US and Israel on Iran, fuel prices have skyrocketed, prompting Australians to stockpile in anticipation of further shortages.

Facing mounting community concerns, Prime Minister Albanese has taken action by announcing the establishment of the new taskforce dedicated to addressing these challenges.

“While our current fuel supply is stable, I believe in being thoroughly prepared,” Albanese stated on Thursday.

Albanese announced the new taskforce will be led by Anthea Harris.

Harris has extensive knowledge in the area, given her previous roles as CEO of the Australian Energy Regulator and the former chief executive officer of the Energy Security Board.

She will be responsible for leading the taskforce, driving coordination between states and the Commonwealth governments and providing updates on fuel supply outlook.

The federal government and motoring groups have been urging Australians not to panic-buy fuel.

Albanese reiterated on Thursday: “Please do not take more fuel than you need. That is how you can help.”

He said “every single ship” carrying oil products “that was due to land here has landed here”.

“There is not less supply,” Albanese said. “This has been an issue of increased demand.”

Albanese said more measures to prepare for supply chain challenges could be anticipated in the coming days and weeks.

It follows an announcement last week that 20 per cent of Australia’s stock of diesel and petrol reserves would be released to meet localised shortages, particularly in regional areas.

The government’s release of emergency reserves, following the International Energy Agency’s recent request, equates to roughly six days of petrol and five days of diesel.

Energy Minister Chris Bowen has also temporarily relaxed the nation’s fuel standards to higher sulphur levels, resulting in an additional 100 million litres per month for domestic consumers, as it’s blended with other fuels.

ACCC launches investigation

On Thursday, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) said it had launched a probe into petrol and diesel prices after rises that outstripped international increases.

The consumer watchdog will investigate allegations of price gouging by major fuel suppliers Ampol, BP, Mobil Oil and Viva Energy.

ACCC vhair Gina Cass-Gottlieb revealed this will include assessing reports of misconduct by regional and rural fuel suppliers.

“It is not our usual practice to publicly announce investigations, but given the significance of the issue, the ACCC is confirming this enforcement investigation,” she said in a statement on Thursday.

“We recognise the widespread concerns held by consumers, businesses and farmers about fuel pricing and supply issues arising during the Middle Eastern conflict.”

The consumer watchdog’s investigation was at a “preliminary stage”, Cass-Gottlieb said, and it was “yet to form a view about these matters”.


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Shocking Human Trafficking Ring Exposed: ‘Matriarch’ Accused of Torturing Children in Medical Clinics

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Left: Margaret Roberson (Horry County Sheriff”s Office). Right: The residence where children were allegedly trafficked in Carolina Forest, S.C. (Horry County Police Department).

A South Carolina woman has been denied bail this week as she faces charges in a human trafficking case tied to the tragic death of an 11-year-old girl.

Margaret Roberson, aged 57, is charged with five counts of trafficking in persons, along with three counts of unlawful conduct toward a child, and one count of criminal conspiracy, as reported by the Horry County Sheriff’s Office.

The alleged offenses trace back to January 2025. Authorities claim Roberson, alongside Camisha Marie McGaskey, 32, coerced five minors into cleaning medical clinics in and around Conway, a small city located roughly 15 miles northwest of Myrtle Beach.

The situation came to public attention in June 2025, following McGaskey’s arrest for the murder of 11-year-old A’Kyri Bell. The young girl from Texas had been living with the accused on Sago Palm Drive in Carolina Forest, situated between Conway and Myrtle Beach.

Horry County Police Chief Kris Leonhardtt described the crime as “horrific” during a press briefing covered by Florence-based CBS affiliate WBTW. “This poor 11-year-old victim suffered multiple injuries. If you see these types of things in our community, please, please, report these things,” he urged.

McGaskey and two other defendants – Lakesha Burnett, 34, and Alantis Thomas, 22 – were initially charged with obstruction of justice. Additional charges came later for the other defendants. Meanwhile, McGaskey, A’Kyri legal guardian, had her charges upgraded to murder.

A total of six adults are now charged in the case.

As the investigation continued, the human trafficking charges were leveled against Roberson, who prosecutors referred to as the “matriarch of the house,” during a hearing this week, according to a courtroom report by Myrtle Beach-based NBC affiliate WMBF.

Leigh Waller, an attorney for the state, described how abuse would allegedly be meted out to the children who lived in the house.

“They said if they didn’t clean they – Camisha McGaskey – they would get what they called ‘the upper room treatment’ … when a child would be taken into a bathroom, the upstairs bathroom, and essentially waterboarded,” the prosecutor told the court.

The state’s attorney said there are videos of the abuse occurring. Those videos allegedly implicate Roberson.

“Margaret Roberson sits in the videos and watches, while she sits in her bedroom,” Waller told the judge on Thursday.

During the bond hearing, one alleged victim said Roberson knew about the abuse and “thought it was funny.”

A defense attorney for Roberson disputed his client’s knowledge of any such abuse – and also took issue with claims that the children in the house had been human trafficked under the law.

“The fact that it’s forced labor just doesn’t seem to be verified by the evidence that I’ve seen,” Morgan Martin, Roberson’s lawyer, told the court. “I think that there are situations where children can be working, or asked to work, or told to work, that doesn’t amount to human trafficking, because that’s got a totally different definition to it.”

The defense attorney also said the facts about the work are murky.

“Nobody from Conway hospital, nobody other than these children, who give contradictory statements, the each of them, frankly, about exactly what was happening with regards with their going to Conway hospital to work,” Martin went on.

A’Kyri died on June 11, 2025. She was found by authorities and rushed to a hospital that day where she succumbed to blunt force injuries.

Authorities believe A’Kyri was one of five children trafficked by McGaskey and Roberson. Additionally, prosecutors allege Burnett, Alantis Thomas, Alexandria Thomas, 20, and Darnell Dearmas, 21, “contributed to the circumstances that led to the homicide.”

Prosecutor Questions Conviction After Infamous Inmate Dubbed ‘Female Charles Manson’ Escapes Prison

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In a courtroom back in 2002, Larry Sells dramatically branded Sarah Jo Pender as the “female Charles Manson,” convincing a jury that she was the mastermind behind the murders of two individuals. Fast forward to today, and he is questioning whether Pender truly received a fair trial.

Pender, once a Purdue University student, made headlines with her daring escape from an Indiana prison, evading capture for four months. Her life and the subsequent manhunt are now the subject of a gripping true crime docuseries on Hulu, titled “Girl on the Run: The Hunt for America’s Most Wanted Woman.” This series delves into her story through fresh interviews with Pender, now 46, and those involved in her case.

Tom Pearson, the producer of the series, expressed his surprise when speaking with Fox News Digital about Sells’ current reservations regarding Pender’s conviction. He noted that the retired Marion County deputy prosecutor has developed doubts about the justice of the trial that put Pender behind bars.

A close-up of Sarah Jo Pender wearing a burgundy sweater.

Pender, who was found guilty on two counts of first-degree murder, is at the heart of the documentary “Girl on the Run: The Hunt For America’s Most Wanted Woman.” The film, produced by ABC News Studios, seeks to unravel the layers of her complex persona.

“Sarah Pender is undeniably intelligent,” Pearson remarked. “She possesses a remarkable eloquence and persuasiveness. Yet, opinions about her are deeply divided. Her family and supporters view her as charming, while law enforcement and corrections officials describe her as manipulative.”

Pearson’s comments reflect the perspective explored in the docuseries, which revisits the case and raises questions about Pender’s conviction.

“The ‘female Charles Manson’ label was first put on Sarah by Larry Sells, who was the prosecutor that sent her down for 110 years,” Pearson said. “Part of the series is an interview with Larry Sells in which he talks about how this is the only murder case he prosecuted that he regrets prosecuting. Evidence came to light after the trial, and it’s his position now that he doesn’t think that she got a fair trial.”

WATCH: JAY SEBRING FOUGHT MANSON KILLERS DURING HEROIC FINAL MOMENTS: NEPHEW

In 2000, Pender’s boyfriend at the time, drug dealer Richard Hull, killed Andrew Cataldi and Tricia Nordman, The Indianapolis Star reported. The murders took place at the home they shared in Indianapolis.

Hull claimed there was an argument over money that escalated into violence. He used a shotgun that Pender had purchased for him. While Pender wasn’t home at the time of the killings, she rode with Hull as he disposed of the bodies in a dumpster, the outlet reported. She didn’t report the murders to police.

The couple was arrested days later.

A close-up of Sarah Pender crying.

Sarah Pender is currently serving 110 years at the Indiana Women’s Prison. (Mykal McEldowney/IndyStar/USA TODAY NETWORK)

“Sarah’s own take on it was that when she met Richard Hull, he offered her protection and love,” Pearson explained. “They enjoyed spending time together. But it was within 12 weeks of their first meeting that the double homicide took place. And so, there was a very short window of time between meeting Richard and the murders taking place.”

Hull was convicted of the murders and sentenced to 75 years in 2003. At the trial, prosecutors argued that Pender exerted significant influence over Hull and played a role in the killings, portraying her as the dominant figure in their relationship.

Charles Manson looking up in a denim shirt

Sarah Pender was called the “female Charles Manson” because prosecutors argued she manipulated others into committing violent crimes, similar to how cult leader Charles Manson directed his followers. (Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)

During the investigation, Hull’s attorney presented a handwritten letter purportedly written by Pender in which she appeared to confess to the murders. However, Hull later admitted that the letter was fabricated.

An investigator in the Sarah Pender case driving a car.

Indiana State Police Detective Ryan Harmon investigated Sarah Pender’s case. The convicted double murderer escaped from a prison in Indiana. (ABC News Studios)

Additionally, Floyd Pennington, a convicted sex offender who corresponded with Pender while incarcerated, told police that Pender had confided in him that she had manipulated Hull into committing the murders. However, Pennington’s claims are widely regarded as unreliable.

While some aspects of the evidence have since been challenged, court records show the jury was presented with multiple pieces of testimony and circumstantial evidence, not solely the disputed claims.

Sarah Pender wiping her eyes.

Sarah Pender spent five years in solitary confinement. (Mykal McEldowney/IndyStar / USA TODAY NETWORK)

In 2002, Pender was found guilty of the murders. During the sentencing hearing, Sells called Pender the “female Charles Manson,” arguing that she manipulated Hull into killing her roommates over drugs and money. She was sentenced to 110 years in prison.

Larry Sells looking out the window.

“When I looked back and saw how I misinterpreted the evidence based upon my lack of information that I didn’t gain until later, I just felt horrible about that,” Larry Sells, retired Marion County deputy prosecutor, said about the double murder case involving Sarah Jo Pender. (Mykal McEldowney/IndyStar/USA TODAY NETWORK)

Prosecutors at the time argued that Pender was not merely present after the fact but played a central role in the crimes. They alleged she encouraged Hull and helped orchestrate the killings, a theory the jury ultimately accepted in convicting her.

Pender admitted to witnessing Hull disposing of Cataldi and Nordman’s bodies and buying the weapon that was used. However, she has maintained her innocence in the murders. 

Six years later, with the help of Correctional Officer Scott Spitler and former cellmate Jamie Long, she escaped from Rockville Correctional Facility in 2008.

Sarah Pender looking down and crying.

Sarah Jo Pender’s ex-boyfriend, drug dealer Richard Hull, was sentenced to 75 years. (Mykal McEldowney/IndyStar / USA TODAY NETWORK)

“It was widely reported that Sarah was a manipulator and manipulated the guard into helping her,” said Pearson. “I think a lot of people would take the view that it was the guard’s responsibility not to help a prisoner escape. In the documentary, she puts that as quite a clear example of when the label of manipulator is being placed on her for the misdeeds of other people.”

Spitler and Long were arrested and convicted for their roles in Pender’s escape. But for four months, she lived on the north side of Chicago under the name Ashley Thompson.

“Most escaped prisoners do the same thing, which allows them to be caught,” Pearson explained.

A close-up of an investigator in the Sarah Pender case.

Indiana State Police Detective Ryan Harmon investigated Sarah Jo Pender’s case. After escaping prison, she lived on the run for four months on the north side of Chicago using the name Ashley Thompson. (ABC News Studios)

“They hang out with their friends, and they see their family. Sarah didn’t do any of those things. She dyed her hair, she took steps to change how she looked. She got glasses, although she didn’t have a prescription for glasses. But I think the thing that she did to evade capture is to keep moving and cut off contact from the people that an escaped prisoner would normally reach out to.”

Larry Sells looking out the window while talking about the Sarah Jo Pender case.

“Here’s how bad I feel,” said Larry Sells. “If the Supreme Court wouldn’t disbar me for representing her, I’d go ahead and represent her myself.” (Mykal McEldowney/IndyStar/USA TODAY NETWORK)

“She used burner phones,” Pearson continued. “She used a phone once and then threw it away. She also had an extraordinary network of women on the outside who were helping her. Several former prisoners went out of their way and risked their own freedoms to help Sarah keep ahead of law enforcement.”

Pender also got a new boyfriend, a “well-to-do” older businessman who quickly became her benefactor.

GET REAL-TIME UPDATES DIRECTLY ON THE TRUE CRIME HUB

Sarah Pender scrunching her face mid conversation.

“He needed something that was big and juicy to put under his belt and he made me that case on purpose, which is where the female Charles Manson name comes from,” Sarah Jo Pender said of ex-Marion County deputy prosecutor Larry Sells. “And I think that at the time, he probably thought that what he was doing was the right thing.” (Mykal McEldowney/IndyStar / USA TODAY NETWORK)

“The truth is that they both had something to gain from the other,” said Pearson. “This man, Tom, essentially gave Sarah places to stay, but in return, he was expecting a relationship with her. Ultimately, it’s up to the audience to decide who was actually in control of their relationship.”

Pender’s newfound freedom came to an end when “America’s Most Wanted” profiled her. A neighbor recognized Pender and tipped off the police. She was captured in 2008. For five years, she was placed in solitary confinement at the Indiana Women’s Prison.

Poster for "Girl on the Run."

“Girl on the Run: The Hunt For America’s Most Wanted Woman” is now available for streaming.  (ABC News Studios)

“Sarah managed to be on the run for nearly 140 days,” said Pearson. “She knew, by all probability, she would never get out of prison. Her earliest chance at parole was in her mid-70s. She was prepared to die trying to get her freedom. She would rather face that than spend the rest of her life in prison.”

Josh Walsh of "America's Most Wanted" being interviewed.

A neighbor recognized Sarah Jo Pender on an episode of “America’s Most Wanted” hosted by John Walsh (pictured here). (Mike Coppola/FilmMagic/Getty Images)

In 2009, Sells was helping author Steve Miller with research for his 2011 true crime novel, “Girl, Wanted: The Chase for Sarah Pender.” While going through old files, Sells and Miller discovered a “snitch list” written by Pennington that lawyers didn’t know about during her trial, The Indianapolis Star reported.

Pennington had identified individuals he was willing to help police apprehend in exchange for a plea deal.

According to the outlet, Sells became convinced that Pender should be given a new trial. 

Sarah Pender wearing glasses looking away in court.

When Sarah Pender vanished, she ignited fear, fascination and a relentless pursuit that stretched across state lines. (ABC News Studios)

“I’ve come to the conclusion that there definitely exists a reasonable doubt as to Sarah’s culpability in the case,” Sells told WRTV in 2023. “I have learned things since Sarah Pender’s trial and conviction in 2002 that convince me that important evidence presented at her trial was tainted and that her murder convictions should be set aside.”

Larry Sells looking down in front of a window.

Larry Sells, retired Marion County deputy prosecutor, previously argued that Sarah Jo Pender manipulated her boyfriend to kill her roommates in a dispute over drugs and money. Sells later became convinced that Pender was wrongly convicted after discovering an overlooked piece of evidence that was not given to Pender’s lawyer. (Mykal McEldowney/IndyStar/USA TODAY NETWORK)

“Justice is long overdue for Sarah Pender,” he shared. “Unfortunately, the legal system has to date failed her, but that grievous error can and should be corrected.”

Despite Sells’ change of view, Pender’s conviction has remained in place, and courts have not overturned the verdict.

In December 2025, Pender petitioned to have her sentence lowered to 45 years, including time served. In January, the judge denied her request. She is currently serving 110 years.

A view of Rockville Correctional Facility with fog.

A view of Rockville Correctional Facility in Rockville, Indiana, on Jan. 11, 2023. (Mykal McEldowney/IndyStar/USA TODAY NETWORK)

“I think some people say hope is a dangerous thing,” said Pearson. “But you need to have hope to keep moving forward. It must also be incredibly difficult each time that hope is dashed.”

“Two young people were murdered,” he reflected. “I think the question here is what is fair justice for those crimes? It’s one of those events that continues to reverberate through many people’s lives for many years afterward.”

Former FBI Director Robert Mueller, Notable for Russia-Trump Investigation, Passes Away


WASHINGTON (AP) — Robert S. Mueller III, the former FBI director renowned for reshaping the agency in the wake of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and later overseeing the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election, has passed away at the age of 81.

“It is with profound sorrow that we announce Bob’s passing,” his family expressed in a statement released on Saturday. “We kindly request that our privacy be respected during this time.”

Mueller, appointed by Republican President George W. Bush, took the helm of the FBI just a week before the 9/11 attacks. He immediately embarked on modernizing the agency’s focus to address 21st-century threats, serving under both Republican and Democratic administrations for a total of 12 years.

The devastating events of September 11 marked a pivotal shift for the FBI, redirecting its primary mission from tackling domestic crime to thwarting terrorism. This realignment demanded that Mueller and federal agencies maintain an exceptionally high bar: stopping nearly all potential terrorist activities.

In his later years, Mueller became the special counsel tasked with the Justice Department’s investigation into whether Donald Trump’s campaign collaborated with Russia to influence the 2016 election results.

Trump posted on social media about Mueller’s death: “Robert Mueller just died. Good, I’m glad he’s dead.” The Republican president added, “He can no longer hurt innocent people!”

The FBI did not immediately respond to a request seeking comment.

A second act as an investigator of a sitting president

The second-longest-serving director in FBI history, behind only J. Edgar Hoover, Mueller held the job until 2013 after agreeing to Democratic President Barack Obama’s request to stay on even after his 10-year term was up.

After several years in private practice, Mueller was asked by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein to return to public service as special counsel in the Trump-Russia inquiry.

Mueller’s stern visage and taciturn demeanor matched the seriousness of the mission, as his team spent nearly two years quietly conducting one of the most consequential, yet divisive, investigations in Justice Department history. He held no news conferences and made no public appearances during the investigation, remaining quiet despite attacks from Trump and his supporters and creating an aura of mystery around his work.

All told, Mueller brought criminal charges against six of the president’s associates, including his campaign chairman and first national security adviser.

His 448-page report released in April 2019 identified substantial contacts between the Trump campaign and Russia but did not allege a criminal conspiracy. He laid out damaging details about Trump’s efforts to seize control of the investigation, and even shut it down, though he declined to decide whether Trump had broken the law, in part because of department policy barring the indictment of a sitting president.

But, in perhaps the most memorable language of the report, Mueller pointedly noted: “If we had confidence after a thorough investigation of the facts that the president clearly did not commit obstruction of justice, we would so state. Based on the facts and the applicable legal standards, we are unable to reach that judgment.”

The nebulous conclusion did not deliver the knockout punch to the administration that some Trump opponents had hoped for, nor did it trigger a sustained push by House Democrats to impeach the president — though he was later tried and acquitted on separate allegations related to Ukraine.

The outcome also left room for Attorney General William Barr to insert his own views. He and his team made their own determination that Trump did not obstruct justice, and he and Mueller privately tangled over a four-page summary letter from Barr that Mueller felt did not adequately capture his report’s damaging conclusion.

Mueller deflated Democrats during a highly anticipated congressional hearing on his report when he offered terse, one-word answers and appeared uncertain in his testimony. Frequently, he seemed to waver on details of his investigation. It was hardly the commanding performance many had expected from Mueller, who had a towering reputation in Washington.

Over the next months, Barr made clear his own disagreements with the foundations of the Russia investigation, moving to dismiss a false-statements prosecution that Mueller had brought against former national security adviser Michael Flynn, even though that investigation ended in a guilty plea.

Mueller’s tenure as special counsel was the capstone of a career spent in government.

A transformation of the FBI into a national security agency

His time as FBI director was defined by the Sept. 11 attacks and its aftermath, as an FBI granted broad new surveillance and national security powers scrambled to confront an ascendant al-Qaida and interrupt plots and take terrorists off the street before they could act.

It was a new model of policing for an FBI that had long been accustomed to investigating crimes that had already occurred.

When he became FBI director, “I had expected to focus on areas familiar to me as a prosecutor: drug cases, white-collar criminal cases and violent crime,” Mueller told a group of lawyers in October 2012.

Instead, “we had to focus on long-term, strategic change. We had to enhance our intelligence capabilities and upgrade our technology. We had to build upon strong partnerships and forge new friendships, both here at home and abroad.”

In response, the FBI shifted 2,000 of the total 5,000 agents in the bureau’s criminal programs to national security.

In hindsight, the transformation was a success. At the time, there were problems, and Mueller said as much. In a speech near the end of his tenure, Mueller recalled “those days when we were under attack by the media and being clobbered by Congress; when the attorney general was not at all happy with me.”

Among the issues: The Justice Department’s inspector general found that the FBI circumvented the law to obtain thousands of phone call records for terrorism investigations.

Mueller decided that the FBI would not take part in abusive interrogation techniques of suspected terrorists, but the policy was not effectively communicated down the line for nearly two years. In an effort to move the FBI into a paperless environment, the bureau spent over $600 million on two computer systems — one that was 2½ years overdue and a predecessor that was only partially completed and had to be scrapped after consultants declared it obsolete and riddled with problems.

For the nation’s top law enforcement agency, it was a rocky trip through rough terrain.

But there were many successes as well, including thwarted terror plots and headline-making criminal cases like the one against fraudster Bernie Madoff. The Republican also cultivated an apolitical reputation on the job, nearly quitting in a clash with the Bush administration over a surveillance program that he and his successor, James Comey, considered unlawful.

He famously stood alongside Comey, then deputy attorney general, during a dramatic 2004 hospital standoff over federal wiretapping rules. The two men planted themselves at the bedside of the ailing Attorney General John Ashcroft to block Bush administration officials from making an end run to get Ashcroft’s permission to reauthorize a secret no-warrant wiretapping program.

In an extraordinary vote of confidence, Congress, at the Obama administration’s request, approved a two-year extension for Mueller to remain at his post.

A Marine who served in Vietnam before becoming a prosecutor

Mueller was born in New York City and grew up in a well-to-do suburb of Philadelphia.

He received a bachelor’s degree from Princeton University and a master’s degree in international relations from New York University. He then joined the Marines, serving for three years as an officer during the Vietnam War. He led a rifle platoon and was awarded a Bronze Star, Purple Heart and two Navy Commendation Medals. Following his military service, Mueller earned a law degree from the University of Virginia.

Mueller became a federal prosecutor and relished the work of handling criminal cases. He rose quickly through the ranks in U.S. attorneys’ offices in San Francisco and Boston from 1976 to 1988. Later, as head of the Justice Department’s criminal division in Washington, he oversaw a range of high-profile prosecutions that chalked up victories against targets as varied as Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega and New York crime boss John Gotti.

In a mid-career switch that shocked colleagues, Mueller threw over a job at a prestigious Boston law firm to join the homicide division of the U.S. attorney’s office in the nation’s capital. There, he immersed himself as a senior litigator in a bulging caseload of unsolved drug-related murders in a city rife with violence.

Mueller was driven by a career-long passion for the painstaking work of building successful criminal cases. Even as head of the FBI, he would dig into the details of investigations, some of them major cases but others less so, sometimes surprising agents who suddenly found themselves on the phone with the director.

“The management books will tell you that as the head of an organization, you should focus on the vision,” Mueller once said. But “for me there were and are today those areas where one needs to be substantially personally involved,” especially in regard to “the terrorist threat and the need to know and understand that threat to its roots.”

Two terrorist attacks occurred toward the end of Mueller’s watch: the Boston Marathon bombing and the Fort Hood shootings in Texas. Both weighed heavily on him, he acknowledged in an interview two weeks before his departure.

“You sit down with victims’ families, you see the pain they go through and you always wonder whether there isn’t something more” that could have been done, he said.

Are You ‘Spaving’? Discover Strategies to Save Instead of Overspending

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Have you ever found yourself tossing an extra item into your online shopping cart just to hit the free shipping threshold? Or perhaps you’ve snagged a few more products to take advantage of a bulk-buy discount? Maybe you’ve even spent $100 at a store just to make use of a $20-off coupon?

If so, you’re engaging in what’s called “spaving.”

“Spaving” is a clever blend of “spending” and “saving,” describing the act of spending more money with the intention of saving through discounts or free shipping offers.

While the term might seem relatively new, the practice has been around for quite some time. In fact, Amazon set the stage for this behavior back in 2002 when it first introduced free shipping for orders exceeding $99.

Marcel Miu, a certified financial planner based in Austin, Texas, admits he’s a frequent “spaver.” He often finds himself adding items to his cart to meet order minimums, especially since he relies on Amazon for next-day delivery of essentials for his young child.

“But you have to go over the $35 minimum,” he says. “So that just forces you to buy more stuff.”

Is it extra clutter? Not necessarily — spaving doesn’t have to be a money suck, depending on how you use it.

“It’s a bit of a calculation that somebody needs to do in order to determine if the juice is worth the squeeze,” Miu says. “I’m sure there have been many instances where I probably could’ve deferred the additional purchase and just waited a little longer.”

The psychology of the spaving trap

Spaving happens because people don’t like paying money for something they could’ve gotten for free, or for less. Because it’s so commonplace to get free shipping, we balk at paying a fee — and will order extra toilet paper or another pack of socks to get around it.

“When a website tells us we are only $15 away from a reward, it creates an open loop,” Miu says. “Human psychology hates open loops. We buy the extra item just to finish the task and get the dopamine hit of a victory.”

Retailers have done their research, and free shipping minimums are carefully crafted. “You’re not going to beat them at their own tricks,” says Andrea Woroch, a money-saving expert who shares budgeting tips on her website, andreaworoch.com. “They know if they put that shipping minimum on their orders, that most people are going to spend more.”

The same goes for coupons, limited-time deals and discounts when you buy multiples. We feel like we’re being thrifty, even if we weren’t planning on buying something at all.

This creates a “just one more item” association, says KJ Dykema, a financial consultant in Seattle and founder of retirement planning site Family Retirement. “When you go in the next time, you can’t just buy one thing — you know you’re sitting down and getting five.”

The financial and physical clutter costs

Spaving doesn’t have to bust your budget. If you’re buying extra paper towels or dog food to hit a shipping minimum or land a multi-item discount — and you’ll use those products eventually — you may just be shifting spending.

Miu calls this “forward paying,” meaning you’re bringing spending forward that could likely have been delayed for months.

But if you’re adding an extra pair of flip flops or pajamas to your cart, and you didn’t really need them, spaving may be costing you extra over time.

“If you were to add up all the times you spent more to save and what you really got out of that, that could have amounted to a big chunk of money you could’ve put away into a savings account,” Woroch says.

And if you’re frequently over-buying household essentials, you may also find that your pantry (or basement or garage) is getting overcrowded. And physical clutter has its own consequences.

“I went on a subscription service, totally forgot I went on this subscription service for paper towels, saving $2,” Dykema says. “I now have three boxes of paper towels. Twenty-four packs.”

How to use spaving judiciously

Spaving can be a problem if you’re purchasing more than you need — or things you never needed at all. But being mindful about shopping can help you keep a lid on overbuying.

For instance, take a 24-hour break before hitting “purchase” on impulse buys. Or bookmark an item on social media so you can come back to it later if you still really want it.

“Give yourself time to think through the purchase,” Woroch says. “Is it something you need? Do you have something like this already?”

Take regular inventory of what you have, which may help you avoid amassing a year’s worth of nonperishables. “Do you have packages or things that still have tags on them?” Dykema says. “How much is your back stock of that product?”

One more tip: Delete payment information from your browsers and apps so you have to scrounge for your credit card every time you make a purchase, Woroch says. That gives you time to think.

Once you’re aware of the tactics being used to get you to spend more, you can decide whether the “savings” are actually worth it.

“We have to understand that these sellers are very aware of this dynamic,” Miu says. “And the more we are educated to understand it, the more we can try to get ahead of it.”

Tragic Final Moments of Alabama Student Unfold in Barcelona

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The heart-wrenching final moments of University of Alabama student James ‘Jimmy’ Gracey were witnessed by a local in Barcelona, who ultimately assisted authorities in locating his body.

Gracey, aged 20, was last observed departing the Shôko nightclub on the beach in the early hours of Tuesday morning, around 3 a.m. An eyewitness informed the Mossos d’Esquadra, Catalonia’s regional police, that Gracey had been heading toward a rocky area extending from the coastline.

“He might have fallen into the sea and drowned from there,” the witness speculated. This theory is now supported by police findings and a preliminary autopsy.

Tragically, on Thursday, his body was recovered from the Mediterranean, confirming his family’s deepest fears.

While the investigation continues, authorities have not dismissed the possibility that Gracey may have been drugged. On Friday, they stated that toxicology results are still awaited. Reports suggest that Gracey, potentially impaired by drugs, alcohol, or both, ventured toward the water and accidentally fell in.

Investigators have also been reviewing surveillance footage that sources said showed him leaving the club with an unidentified person, something police have not confirmed.

The breakthrough in the case came when Gracey’s wallet was found with cash, credit cards and ID inside floating in the water off Somorrostro Beach shortly before his body was discovered.

Police boats and divers later scoured the area along with a helicopter and drones, before making the grim discovery and bringing his body to shore. 

Exactly what happened to the beloved student after he was separated from his friends at the club is still unknown, and investigators are still piecing together his movements. 

James 'Jimmy' Gracey, 20, a junior at the University of Alabama, was found dead after vanishing from Barcelona's beachfront nightclub Shôko, where he was partying with friends

James ‘Jimmy’ Gracey, 20, a junior at the University of Alabama, disappeared while holidaying for spring break, visiting friends studying abroad in Barcelona. His body was recovered from the Mediterranean on Thursday 

Police believe that when he left the nightclub after drinking, he walked towards some rocks (circled) that stuck out of the nearby beach and may have fallen into the sea

Police believe when he left a nightclub after drinking he walked towards some rocks (circled) that stuck out of the nearby beach 

Hopes were raised by an arrest, but police now suspect that the individual did not have any direct contact with the student, a source told Fox News Digital.

Recalling what happened on that fateful night, Gracey’s Theta Chi fraternity brother, Cavin McLay, said his friend had wanted to stay longer at Shôko and became separated from the group, lost in the chaos of the crowded dance floor.

Mossos d’Esquadra, Catalonia’s police force, later said it could not rule out foul play after discovering Gracey left the nightclub with a stranger.

Security camera footage reviewed by police showed him leaving Shôko with another person, and Gracey was seen talking to a young, brown-haired American woman at the nightclub, but it was unclear if she was the same person he had left with.

A witness also told police they saw a young man walking towards the sea on the beach adjacent to the nightclub.

But Spanish media reported Friday that reviewed surveillance video shows Gracey walking from the nightclub by himself, heading toward a dock jutting off the beach and falling into the water ‘without third-party involvement’. 

A preliminary autopsy report filed on Friday reportedly found that Jimmy ‘accidentally fell into the sea and drowned’, with no foul play now suspected by the court or police.

The autopsy report also documented ‘several injuries consistent with hitting the rocks of a breakwater,’ a reference to the jutting rocks he is believed to have fallen from into the waters below.

The rock wall goes out into the ocean away from the beach where a witness saw Gracey walking towards the sea

The rock wall goes out into the ocean away from the beach where a witness saw Gracey walking towards the sea

Two piers with rocks along the side of them and another rocky outcrop also jut out from the beach, but are much further away from the nightclub

Two piers with rocks along the side of them and another rocky outcrop also jut out from the beach, but are much further away from the nightclub

Police boats and divers later searched the area along with a helicopter and drones on Thursday

Police boats and divers later searched the area along with a helicopter and drones on Thursday

During the two-day search for the young man, police scoured the area and searched the Airbnb where he had been staying about 3km (1.8 miles) from Shôko.

They arrested a man, who Gracey’s mother Therese said had possession of her son’s phone.

‘What we’ve put together is that his phone was stolen and the police just happened to pick the guy who stole it up,’ she wrote online. ‘The police have his phone but he never made it back to his Airbnb.’

She claimed that law enforcement had discovered Gracey’s phone ‘when they searched the guy.’

Police now do not believe the individual, who had a history of thefts, had any direct contact with Gracey, a source close to the Catalan police told Fox News Digital.

The man was believed to have found the phone on the street before taking it, according to the insider. 

Gracey’s father, Taras, traveled to Barcelona to search for his son, but to no avail. Once toxicology tests have been run, the young man’s body will be returned to his family in the US for burial.

Exactly what happened to Gracey after he was separated from his friends at the club is still unknown

Exactly what happened to Gracey after he was separated from his friends at the club is still unknown

Gracey's last appearance was around 3am local time at the nightclub Shôko, according to his mother

Gracey’s last appearance was around 3am local time at the nightclub Shôko, according to his mother

Gracey was elected onto the Theta Chi fraternity's University of Alabama executive board as a chaplain in October

Gracey was elected onto the Theta Chi fraternity’s University of Alabama executive board as a chaplain in October

Gracey's friends rallied to help find him, handing out flyers on the beach and asking people if they had seen him

Gracey’s friends rallied to help find him, handing out flyers on the beach and asking people if they had seen him

Gracey left Alabama last Thursday and spent the weekend in Amsterdam before arriving Monday in Barcelona. 

He is from the Elmhurst suburb of Chicago, Illinois, and attended the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, where he was part of the Theta Chi fraternity.

McLay said he learned that Gracey was missing from a friend the next morning after he failed to come back to the Airbnb.

‘My heart sank to my stomach. It’s definitely not a good text to wake up to,’ he told NBC.

‘First thoughts were, hopefully he just lost his phone and tried making his way back on his own.’

Family members said Gracey had been in Amsterdam over the weekend and got to Barcelona on Monday morning

Family members said Gracey had been in Amsterdam over the weekend and got to Barcelona on Monday morning

McLay said about ten people in the group were in Barcelona right now, visiting a few fraternity members who were studying abroad.

He said there was nothing out of the ordinary at the nightclub and no reason for any of the holidaymakers to fear for their safety.

‘It’s tough. We’re doing everything we can to keep our heads up and remain hopeful that we find him safe, but it’s a tough time. And, you know, we’re scared,’ he told WVMTM.

A post from November said Gracey had been elected onto the fraternity’s executive board as a chaplain.

Gracey wrote on LinkedIn that he was looking forward to ‘leading with integrity, promoting a values-based culture and supporting the personal and spiritual growth of the chapter’.

The student’s friends rallied to help find him, handing out flyers on the beach and asking anyone if they had seen him. 

Gracey's family said Friday that they were 'heartbroken' and remembered Gracey as 'deeply loved'

Gracey’s family said Friday that they were ‘heartbroken’ and remembered Gracey as ‘deeply loved’

Gracey’s family made a statement Friday night to WGN after his death was confirmed.

‘Our family is heartbroken as we confirm that Jimmy’s body has been recovered in Barcelona.

‘Jimmy was a deeply loved son, grandson, brother, nephew, cousin, and friend, and our family is struggling to come to terms with this unimaginable loss.

‘We are profoundly grateful for the outpouring of love, support, and prayers from people around the world – so many helped to share Jimmy’s story and bring his life to light so that others may know him.’

The University of Alabama previously confirmed Gracey was a student on a personal trip and said Thursday they were ‘heartbroken to learn of the death of Jimmy Gracey.’

‘Jimmy’s loss is deeply felt across our campus,’ the university said in a statement. ‘Our condolences are with the Gracey family during this devastating time.’

Swift Justice: Deputies Reclaim $2 Million in Stolen iPhones on I-75 Bust

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Staff Report

ALACHUA COUNTY, Fla. – In a significant bust on I-75, law enforcement officials apprehended Jeffery Lydell Moore, 61, after intercepting a U-Haul truck carrying over $2 million worth of stolen iPhones.

The Alachua County Sheriff’s Office (ASO) shared on social media that on the evening of March 19, deputies were alerted about a U-Haul truck involved in an organized retail crime investigation by the Miami-Dade Police Department. The truck was spotted traveling northbound near mile marker 380 on I-75, equipped with a thorough description of the suspect from Miami-Dade authorities.

Florida Highway Patrol Troopers located the U-Haul at mile marker 392 and, with support from ASO deputies, conducted a traffic stop.

Moore, who was driving the truck, matched the suspect’s description. He was detained on the scene, and the search revealed the cache of stolen iPhones inside the vehicle.

Photo of the interior of the U-Haul truck, courtesy of Alachua County Sheriff’s Office

Moore has been charged with grand theft, conspiracy to commit theft, and engaging in an organized scheme to defraud. His bail will be set by a judge in Miami-Dade County.

Articles about arrests are based on reports from law enforcement agencies. The charges listed are taken from the arrest report and/or court records and are only accusations. All suspects are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.


Unexpected Twists & City Shock: Unpacking ‘The Madison’ Episode 5

Following the tragic accident that claimed the lives of Preston and Paul during their brief visit to Montana, Stacy Clyburn and her family have discovered an incredibly supportive local community. These residents are the type to whip up a casserole, help repair a fence, or offer a ride to town. Such acts of kindness are second nature in Montana, where community spirit thrives. In contrast, Taylor Sheridan’s portrayal of New York City in The Madison paints it as a chaotic and self-centered place. In Montana, the notion of helping others is deeply ingrained, evidenced by Deputy Van and Cade Harris, who personally dug Preston and Paul’s graves. Despite Stacy’s attempts at integrating into this rural lifestyle and Van’s presence alongside Abby during the ceremony, her family remains distinctly out of place, their urban roots showing. Stacy even departs the ceremony early, leaving behind a family still grappling with loss and struggling to process their grief. “I don’t think they’re dealing with it all,” Van confides in Cade. “And who can blame them?”

THE MADISON EP 5 Van and Cade lowering coffin; fam gathered for ceremony

Stacy didn’t exactly rush out, but her annoyance at the funeral’s formalities was palpable. The intimate gathering, which included only her family, Van, Cade, Kestrel, their children, and a man named Swenson (J. Downing) who transported the coffins, felt excessive to her. The ceremony seemed like an act of public mourning that Stacy found unnecessary. She has much to express about Preston’s passing and her emotions, “but not today,” as Abby reassures Paige that those conversations will come later, likely in private.

Back at the cabins, Stacy graciously interacts with the community members who have organized a picnic in memory of her husband and brother-in-law. She listens to their stories and memories, but noticing Paige’s distant expression and the apparent tension between Abby and Van—who weren’t officially a couple but still—it becomes clear to Stacy that it’s time to return to New York. “It’s time to go home, isn’t it?” she concurs with Liliana.

Remember the ultimatum from Episode 3? Stacy had firmly stated to Abby that her daughter needed to stay with her, and it seemed logical when she discussed schooling with Kestrel Harris, anticipating Bridgette and Macy would adapt to Montana life. Yet now, the family is heading back east on a private jet. Abby is seated at one window, Paige at another, and Stacy informs Liliana that Preston’s death might weigh heaviest on Paige, given how much she lived to earn his approval.

THE MADISON EP 5 [Abby to Van] “I’d like to come back.”

After Abby informed Van of her departure but expressed a desire to return, she leaned in for a kiss. However, the deputy pulled back, explaining the realities of his life: a modest salary as a sheriff’s deputy, investments tied up in a traveling rope horse, and hunting trips with his sons to prepare for winter. “What part of that sounds good to you?” he asked, laying out the simple yet demanding nature of his lifestyle.

And what of her life? Pilates, therapy, the girls’ activities, and at Christmas, a month in Italy. To which Van says he’d rather just miss what could have been. “You’re really breaking up with me at my father’s funeral?” Whether they were ever going out or not, for now, the realities of distance and their daily lives have done them in. 

THE MADISON EP 5 Stacy, sad with Preston’s shirt; fade to NYC

In New York City, Stacy arrives home to a cavernous and empty high-rise townhouse. She turns on all of the TVs. Flashes back to Preston always leaving his wedding ring at home in their bedroom, because he lost it in the river once. It sits there now, screaming at her. She picks up one of Preston’s dress shirts, inhales, shudders. And finally she calls Liliana. She doesn’t think she can stay in this home. “I can smell him.”

Maybe Will Arnett can help with that. Arnett is Dr. Phil Yorn in The Madison, a Fifth Avenue therapist recommended by Liliana, whose taste in casual men’s sweaters Stacy immediately detests. Yorn uses words like “hostile” and “mistrusting” for her, while she says she isn’t his typical client, some rich and bored housewife. She has real pain she can’t process, and it makes her lash out. At the funeral ceremony in Montana, or right here in Yorn’s fancy office. He says she has as much life left to live as she wishes, but she must allow herself to live it. “Or you’ll have none.”

There are only six episodes in this first season of The Madison, and we imagined the series would be showing off a bit more Out West seasoning by now. Instead, everyone is back in New York City, with their experience in Montana existing almost as an isolated experiment in grief immersion. A destination event, to face Preston’s untimely death, in a place foreign to them. But one that left them with so many feelings unprocessed. And as Stacy reenters her New York life, Michelle Pfeiffer is careful to carry her character with the sense that she is now truly alone. The space around her, the unending expanses of high-design gleam in her home, those white marble floors: they are all indicators of everything she has in this life. It would be a dream for some. but none of it will ever make her whole again.

THE MADISON EP 5 Stacy’s lux townhouse

Mad Hits for Season 1 Episode 5 of The Madison (“No Name and a New Dream“):

  • “My job is to help you understand how you feel,” Dr. Phil Yorn says, “and understand the behaviors that those feelings elicit.” Which, like, isn’t that the definition of therapy? Maybe Yorn and Stacy will have more of a breakthrough if they continue to raid his office’s liquor cabinet. 
  • We also get a look at Paige and Russell’s place in NYC, a modern loft in SoHo with a curious multicolored light feature. Seems about right. 
  • And Stacy was correct about Paige’s capacity for processing Preston’s death. She’s not surprised when Russell calls, because Paige can’t stop crying. The fix, which Stacy and Abby deliver, is rocky road ice cream cut with cheap supermarket chocolate chips. When Paige says “Fuck you and your bad roots” to her sister, they know she’s herself again, and finally on the road to processing.
THE MADISON EP 5 [Paige to Abby] “Fuck you and your bad roots.”

Johnny Loftus (@johnnyloftus.bsky.social) is a Chicago-based writer. A veteran of the alternative weekly trenches, his work has also appeared in Entertainment Weekly, Pitchfork, The All Music Guide, and The Village Voice.  

Kyle Whittingham’s Surprising Move from Utah to Michigan: The Story Behind the Decision

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Kyle Whittingham expressed his desire to remain at the University of Utah.

However, just two weeks after securing a victory against Kansas and concluding a successful 10-win season, he surprised many by announcing his resignation. Shortly afterwards, he accepted the role of head football coach at the University of Michigan.

Documents obtained by Yahoo Sports through public records reveal how plans shifted and the dynamics between Whittingham and the University of Utah deteriorated.

As the most successful coach in the history of Utes football, Whittingham’s journey with the team began in December 2004, following a decade-long tenure as a staff member since 1994.

In the period between the end of the regular season and their upcoming game at the Las Vegas Bowl, Whittingham, who was the second-longest serving head coach in the FBS, communicated through his agent, Bruce Tollner, his intention to stay. He also presented a series of requests to the university.

According to Yahoo, Whittingham wanted his salary to jump from $7.4 million to $9 million, $20 million in NIL funds and an increase of $2 million in a pool for his coaching staff. 


Utah coach Kyle Whittingham wearing a headset on the sideline.
Head coach Kyle Whittingham of the Utah Utes watches a replay of a touchdown during the second half of their game against the Cincinnati Bearcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium on November 1, 2025 in Salt Lake City. Getty Images

Three days later, according to the report, Utah sent Tollner an offer for a one-year, $8 million deal that included several stipulations — notably that the 66-year-old would begin to cede some control to defensive coordinator Morgan Scalley, who had been announced as Utah’s coach in waiting in July 2024 and whose presence loomed over Whittingham’s exit.

Included in this offer, according to Yahoo, was that Scalley would be the program’s general manager and have “full and final” oversight in decision-making regarding recruiting, player personnel and staffing decisions that would affect the school beyond 2026. Additionally, athletic director Mark Harlan would be in charge of approving some staffing decisions made by Whittingham.

This deal was never inked. On Dec. 12, Whittingham announced his resignation and signed a deal with Utah in which he would receive $13.5 million in three installments over two years as a “transition bonus,” according to Yahoo.

“As consideration for the transition bonus,” reads the separation agreement, “Coach Whittingham agrees that he will work with the University and its Athletics Department to facilitate a smooth and successful transition of the Football Program to the incoming head coach of the Football Program and his coaching staff.”


A man with gray hair and a black shirt holding a microphone with "MM" on it, speaking with his mouth open and gesturing with his right hand.
Head coach Kyle Whittingham of the Michigan Wolverines talks to the crowd during a basketball game between the Southern California Trojans and Michigan Wolverines at Crisler Center on January 2, 2026 Getty Images

On Dec. 26, Whittingham joined Michigan and brought a number of staff members with him, including offensive coordinator Jason Beck and strength coach Doug Elisaia. Whittingham also flipped four-star defensive back Salesi Moa from a Utah commitment to join him in Michigan.

Utah apparently felt this violated its $13.5 million agreement, though a letter from Harlan to Whittingham that Yahoo obtained shows the university followed through with an $8 million check in January.

“This represents the first payment of a Transition Bonus to be paid in three installments over the next two years under the Fourth Amendment to your Employment Agreement,” the letter reads. “As you know, the University was disappointed by your actions last month. The University felt that your involvement with recruiting our football coaches and staff to Michigan was contrary to the terms of your employment agreement which requires you to assist with a smooth and successful transition of the football program to the new head coach and his coaching staff. Your position was that this provision only prohibited non-disparagement. We have determined that a fight over this issue would not be in the long-term interests of the University and its football program or your legacy as our long-time football coach. We have decided to look to the future and we hope and expect that you will do the same.

“Future payments of the Transition Bonus will be paid pursuant to the ongoing terms of the Fourth Amendment. We wish you well.”

Nassau County Superintendent Delivers Heartfelt Graduation Milestone to Alvaro Velasquez Post-ICE Deportation

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NASSAU COUNTY, N.Y. — Nestled far from the familiar corridors of a New York public high school, a compelling story unfolds.

Dr. Shawn Wightman, Superintendent of Roosevelt Schools, embarked on a heartfelt mission from Nassau County, New York, to San Marcos, Guatemala. His journey, funded out of his own pocket, aimed to deliver something meaningful to a particular student.

Reflecting on the situation of Alvaro Velasquez, Dr. Wightman shared, “As a superintendent and a father, it’s profoundly unsettling to think of such circumstances affecting any of my children.”

In an unexpected turn last May, Velasquez, just weeks shy of his high school graduation, was detained by ICE, preventing him from attending the ceremony.

“He wasn’t involved in any criminal activities and had no record whatsoever,” Wightman stated. “That was the point when everyone realized the harsh reality of the situation,” he added.

Velasquez was taken to a detention center in Texas, where he spent months alone, before self-deporting to Guatemala.

In September, Wightman visited the detention facility because he felt Velasquez deserved his cap, gown and diploma. But he was turned away.

“A very stark reality for me going in there, because there was a barrier,” Wightman said.

He knew he needed to try again.

After refusing to give up, Wightman took two plane rides and a five-and-a-half-hour car trip through the foothills of Guatemala, where he was finally reunited with Velasquez and his family.

“This is amazing for me. He helped me. And he supported me, for all this time,” Velasquez said.

“When he got detained, it really upset a lot of us,” Wightman said.

In Roosevelt, where the student population is 65% Latino and Hispanic, it was only the beginning.

Since Velasquez was detained, three other students in Roosevelt have had their lives upended by ICE.

One was detained, another is likely to be deported, and a third, whose father was detained, now has to work to support the family.

Velasquez came to the U.S. alone when he was only 16 and has been through so much.

“I’m not feeling I’m alone. I know I have him and my family,” Velasquez said.

He also has his diploma from a man who taught him not to abandon people you care about.

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