Home Blog Page 119

Alessi Bakery Unveils New Location: A Modern Take on Timeless Tradition


TAMPA, Fla. (WFLA) — A beloved Tampa bakery is turning the page to an exciting new chapter.

Alessi Bakery, a long-standing staple in the community, celebrated the grand opening of its new location on Cypress Street in Tampa on Friday morning. This marks only the second time the bakery has relocated in its remarkable 114-year history.

The newly unveiled space is a modern twist on the traditional bakery, offering much more than pastries and bread. Visitors can now enjoy a full-service deli, savor wood-fired pizzas, unwind at a liquor bar, sip on espresso drinks, and even watch the skilled bakers and decorators bring their creations to life.

Phil Alessi Jr., the fourth-generation owner, reflected on the significance of the moment, which has been years in the making.

“It’s a joy and somewhat surreal,” Alessi Jr. shared. “It’s been a long journey, but stepping back there to bake a few things this morning was truly refreshing. It’s an incredibly good feeling.”

Customers lined up early Friday, eager to experience the new space while reconnecting with a longtime Tampa favorite.

“Appreciate the community and the support they’ve given over the years. And this is this place here is for the for the next few generations to come,” said Alessi.

As for what customers should try, Alessi recommends the bakery’s signature scachatta, Tampa’s take on cold pizza, paired with the rich, chocolate-filled Princess Cake.

While the space may be bigger and more modern, the mission remains unchanged and rooted in tradition and serving up a taste of Tampa history for generations to come.

Visit Alessi Bakery for more information.

Megyn Kelly Criticizes Pete Hegseth’s Religious Rhetoric in Military Strategy: A Controversial Debate

0

Megyn Kelly has taken aim at Pete Hegseth, her former colleague from Fox News, for his frequent references to religion during speeches related to wartime issues.

Kelly, who identifies as a lifelong Roman Catholic, expressed her disapproval of Hegseth’s approach towards the end of Thursday’s episode of The Megyn Kelly Show.

While she acknowledged her general admiration for Hegseth, Kelly clarified that she did not appreciate his frequent mentions of God, Jesus, and the Bible when discussing military strategies from the Pentagon.

“It makes me very uneasy. Very,” she remarked to conservative podcaster Britt Mayer.

Kelly expressed a preference for a more straightforward approach, similar to that of U.S. General Dan “Raizin” Caine, who sticks to the facts. She added that while religion plays a significant role in Hegseth’s life, which she respects, she is not in favor of its prominence in military discussions.

Kelly quickly added that such language ‘doesn’t belong when you’re talking about our plans to wipe out people, including possible civilians.’ She pointed to past rhetoric from Donald Trump before playing a clip of Hegseth from earlier in the day.

‘These two things do not belong together, and I just – I’m really uncomfortable with it,’ she said again, before cuing the clip.

Kelly prefaced that ‘if Joe Biden did this through his Pentagon, I would have ripped him a new one’.

Megyn Kelly took aim at her former Fox News colleague and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth over his insistence on using religious language while discussing the war with Iran

Megyn Kelly took aim at her former Fox News colleague and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth over his insistence on using religious language while discussing the war with Iran 

She pointed to a clip from a Pentagon press briefing where Hegseth invoked scripture to take a stab at the media's coverage of the conflict in Iran

She pointed to a clip from a Pentagon press briefing where Hegseth invoked scripture to take a stab at the media’s coverage of the conflict in Iran

Hegseth was then heard recalling how ‘this past Sunday, I was sitting in church with my family, and our minister preached from the Book of Mark, the third chapter.

‘And in the passage, Jesus entered a synagogue and healed a man with a withered hand,’ Hegseth read.   

‘The Pharisees came to watch. And as the scripture reads, they came to see whether he, Jesus, would heal him – or he would heal him on the Sabbath so that they might accuse him,’ he continued.

The Pharisees – an ancient Jewish sect Hegseth described as the ‘self-appointed elites’ of the era – had hearts too ‘hardened’ to acknowledge Christ, Hegseth said.

‘They were only there to explain away the goodness in pursuit of their agenda.’

Hegseth – a Fox News star from 2014 to 2024 – quickly likened the Pharisees to ‘our press.’ 

‘Not all of you. Not all of you,’ he said. ‘But the legacy Trump-hating press.’

Hegseth – a practicing Christian – also drew criticism for a presentation the day before, during which he mistook a monologue from 1994 classic ‘Pulp Fiction’ for real biblical verse to be referenced. 

Since becoming defense chief, Hegseth has found no shortage of ways to bring his faith into the Pentagon. Pictured: L-R) Rep Jason Crow (D-CO), Sen.Joni Ernst (R-IA), House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY), Hegseth and Speaker of the House Mike Johnson (R-LA) pray on June 26, 2025

Since becoming defense chief, Hegseth has found no shortage of ways to bring his faith into the Pentagon. Pictured: L-R) Rep Jason Crow (D-CO), Sen.Joni Ernst (R-IA), House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY), Hegseth and Speaker of the House Mike Johnson (R-LA) pray on June 26, 2025

Kelly, a Fox star for 12 years until 2017, groaned after playing the Thursday clip. 

Mayer, the host of The Britt Mayer Show, agreed the speech made her ‘uncomfortable.’ 

The criticism comes as the administration faces pushback from Catholics over the White House’s increasingly fractured relationship with the pope. 

It also comes as Hegseth has repeatedly sought to bring his Christian faith into the Pentagon since becoming defense chief. Promotional videos from the department have displayed Bible verse alongside defense department military footage, for instance.

Hegseth also hosts monthly Christian worship services at the Defense Department, which now boasts the secondary title of Department of War.

Critics have pointed out how Hegseth’s Christian messaging seems at odds with his rhetoric on Iran.

During a March 13 briefing, Hegseth said he would give ‘no quarter’ to the enemy -a phrase widely understood to mean taking no prisoners and killing them instead.

Pope Leo XIV, meanwhile, has made several general appeals for peace since the conflict began on February 28 – earning ire from the administration.

Kelly's guest, conservative podcaster Britt Mayer (right), agreed with her sentiment and described Hegseth's religious language as 'uncomfortable' in the context of war

Kelly’s guest, conservative podcaster Britt Mayer (right), agreed with her sentiment and described Hegseth’s religious language as ‘uncomfortable’ in the context of war

Trump responded by calling the religious leader too ‘weak on crime’ and a ‘liberal.’ He has refused to apologize. 

Pope Leo, the first US-born pontiff, responded t during the first day of his trip to Africa on Monday, telling reporters he had ‘no fear of the Trump administration.’

Kelly, meanwhile, said she helped Hegseth ‘get’ his ‘job’ during her critique.

A longtime Trump supporter, she broke with the president in February over the conflict. The Mail has approached both her and Hegseth’s office for comment.

Daughter of Missing American in the Bahamas Accuses Brian Hooker of Exploiting Mother’s Illness to Exit Country

0

The daughter of an American woman who recently disappeared in The Bahamas believes Brian Hooker is using his mother’s illness as a reason to exit the country after spending five days in a Freeport jail.

Karli Aylesworth shared with Fox News Digital on Friday that Hooker’s mother has been “terminally ill for a while.” Despite previously vowing to stay in The Bahamas to search for his missing wife, Lynette, who is Aylesworth’s mother, Hooker unexpectedly left the island nation on Wednesday.

Released from a Bahamian jail on Monday night, Hooker had assured the media on Tuesday morning that he would dedicate himself to finding his wife.

“His main focus is to continue the search for his wife,” said his attorney, Terrel Butler, to Fox News Digital on Tuesday. “As long as he can stay in The Bahamas, he intends to do so.”

Lynette Hooker's daughter, Karli Aylesworth arrives in The Bahamas

Karli Aylesworth and her partner, Steven, arrived in Marsh Harbour, The Bahamas, on Thursday, April 16, 2025. Karli is the daughter of the missing American woman, Lynette Hooker.

But about 24 hours later, Hooker changed his mind.

“Following his release from custody without charge, Mr. Hooker is now facing another emergency. In addition to the trauma of his wife of 25 years being missing, Mr. Hooker has received urgent word of his mother’s grave illness,” Butler told NBC News on Wednesday afternoon. “He has traveled to [the] United States of America to be at her bedside during this critical time.”

Brian and Lynette Hooker on dinghy

Brian and Lynette Hooker sit on a dinghy in the water in this undated image. (Brian Hooker/Facebook)

Butler did not say where in the U.S. Hooker was going, but a source familiar with the case told Fox News Digital he landed in Atlanta.

Aylesworth, who arrived in The Bahamas on Thursday, has been critical of her stepfather since her mother Lynette went missing.

“I think it shows his character. He somehow lost my mom at sea and cries on camera saying he’ll never stop searching, then leaves the next day,” Aylesworth told the New York Post upon her arrival to the town of Marsh Harbour, close to where her mother went missing.

Soulmate boat anchored in calm turquoise water near a shoreline.

General view of the boat “Soulmate,” owned by Brian and Lynette Hooker, in Marsh Harbour, The Bahamas, April 16, 2025. (Matthew Symons for NY Post)

Hooker abandoned the couple’s 40-foot sailboat, called “Soulmate,” anchored near a marina in Marsh Harbour.

The New York Post snapped close-up photos of the idle boat.

Immediately following Lynette’s disappearance, Aylesworth told Fox News Digital she was aware of “prior issues” with Brian’s behavior.

Miscellaneous items including dumbbells, a colorful bag, and a striped towel sitting inside the cabin of a boat.

General views of the inside of “Soulmate,” the boat owned by Brian and Lynette Hooker, in Marsh Harbour, Bahamas, April 16, 2025. Inside the boat are dumbbells and various miscellaneous items. (Matthew Symons for NY Post)

“There have been prior issues brought to my attention, which may be important for any thorough investigation. If this truly was an accident, I can understand and live with it,” Aylesworth said. “However, there needs to be an intensive review of the facts and circumstances of this tragic incident before that can be determined.”

She also told “Fox and Friends” that something “doesn’t add up” with her mother’s disappearance, and accused Brian of having a “history of domestic violence” and anger issues.

Brian Hooker and Terrel A. Butler standing inside the Central Police Station in Freeport, The Bahamas

Brian Hooker stops by the Central Police Station to pick up his wedding ring and watch with his lawyer, Terrel A. Butler in Freeport, The Bahamas, Tuesday, April 14, 2026. His ring, which he is wearing on his pinky, was not with him when he was released from jail last night after being questioned by police in the disappearance of his wife, Lynette Hooker.  (Matthew Symons for Fox News Digital)

Hooker says Lynette’s disappearance was an accident caused by high wind and rough seas. The pair left The Abaco Inn bar on Elbow Cay in their dinghy at dusk on April 4, headed to their anchored sailboat just off the cay’s western coast. The ride was a short one, but Brian said Lynette fell overboard in the choppy waters.

He has always maintained that he is innocent of wrongdoing, and has not been charged with a crime.

He spent five days in jail — the maximum allowable under Bahamian law — while police investigated. That investigation remains ongoing despite his release.

Judge’s Decision Ignites Third Trial in Decades-Old Etan Patz Disappearance Case

0

NEW YORK (AP) — The long-running legal saga involving the 1979 vanishing of young Etan Patz is poised to continue with a potential third trial. This development comes after a judge refused to drop charges against Pedro Hernandez, a former shop clerk accused of kidnapping and murdering the child during his walk to school.

Pedro Hernandez, who is now 65, has remained incarcerated since his arrest in 2012. He is scheduled to appear in court again in June for an update on the case, though a trial date has yet to be determined.

Etan’s disappearance, which occurred as he embarked on a short walk to the bus stop alone for the first time, quickly became one of the most infamous child abduction cases in the United States. His face was one of the first to appear on milk cartons, and his case spurred the establishment of National Missing Children’s Day on May 25. The advocacy work of his parents played a crucial role in improving the way law enforcement handles missing child cases.

Despite Judge Michele Rodney’s recent decision, a trial date remains pending. Hernandez is expected back in court for a status review in June.

Back in 1979, Hernandez was a 19-year-old working at a local corner store in Etan’s neighborhood. Although he was among the individuals interviewed by police after Etan’s disappearance, he was not initially considered a suspect.

More than three decades of frustrating, inconclusive investigation followed. For years, authorities eyed another man who was never charged. Then, in 2012, investigators got a tip that Hernandez had told various people in his life years ago that he’d killed a child or young man in New York.

Hernandez then told police — after seven hours of questioning and before being told he had a right to remain silent — that he had strangled Etan in the shop basement after enticing him there with the offer of a soda. Hernandez later was read his rights and recapped his statement on video, telling authorities: “Something just took over me.”

Defense lawyers said all of Hernandez’ admissions amounted to the imaginings of a mentally ill and intellectually limited man, haunted and confused by a highly publicized tragedy that had happened near his workplace.

“The delusion, now squarely implanted with the image of Etan Patz, is, to him, an event as seemingly real as any of our most vivid memories,” defense lawyers Harvey Fishbein and Alice Fontier wrote in court papers recently.

His 2015 trial ended in a jury deadlock, a 2017 retrial yielded a conviction, and then a federal appeals court overturned the verdict. The court said the 2017 trial judge mishandled a jury question about determining the validity of Hernandez’ confessions.

The Manhattan district attorney’s office pledged to retry the case but also asked the U.S. Supreme Court to restore Hernandez’ conviction. The high court isn’t obliged to hear the case and hasn’t yet said whether it will.

Meanwhile, Hernandez’ lawyers asked Rodney to toss out the charges. The defense contended that prosecutors waited too long to charge Hernandez and that he can’t get a fair trial now that some witnesses have died, others’ memories have faded and prospective jurors have been steeped in decades of publicity about the case, plus coverage of the two prior trials.

Prosecutors called the arguments baseless. Once police got “a direct, reliable tip,” they arrested Hernandez two weeks later, and witnesses’ patchy memories are “simply the nature of a criminal trial,” Assistant District Attorney Sarah Marquez wrote in court papers.

Shocking Incident: Woman Drives into Crowd and Starts Dancing – Police Report Reveals Details

0

Background: The aftermath of the alleged car ramming on March 22, 2026 (WKYT/YouTube). Inset: Kaydence Carpenter (Fayette County Detention Center).

A night out turned dangerous in Kentucky when a woman allegedly drove under the influence, plowing into a crowd in a parking lot before navigating down a one-way street, according to local authorities.

Kaydence Carpenter, aged 20, is now facing multiple charges, including driving under the influence, reckless driving, and second-degree assault. The CBS affiliate in Lexington, WKYT, reported that she was released on bail from the Fayette County Detention Center but was back in court this week as new details about the incident emerged.

Officer Amelia Hardy of the Lexington Police recounted the events of early March 22 during her testimony. She explained that she was nearby when a disturbance caught her attention in a downtown Lexington parking lot, specifically at the intersection of Short and Mill streets.

“I witnessed a black passenger car mount the yellow-marked curb and drive into a group of people gathered on the sidewalk,” Officer Hardy testified. She described how four individuals approached the officers, reporting injuries that included head and leg trauma, with one person possibly facing paralysis.

Footage from the incident captured the moment when a black sedan, surrounded by people, abruptly reversed before speeding forward, swerving slightly and striking two individuals, who were knocked to the ground. The vehicle was then seen continuing along a presumably busy city street.

It apparently was a one-way street, and the driver was going the wrong way.

Officers arrested Carpenter, saying she smelled like alcohol and had slurred speech and that they found a fake ID in her car.

“She showed impaired judgment and relaxed inhibitions,” Hardy said. “She began dancing for an individual who was video taping her.”

Carpenter’s attorney, however, pointed out that his client was surrounded, was punched, and that one of the other people appeared to have a gun, per WKYT. He noted that Hardy did not see any of this, only the events once Carpenter began driving over the curb.

The case is moving to a grand jury.

Law&Crime reached out to the Lexington Police Department for more information.

Breaking News: Trio Arrested Following Violent Altercation at Eastside High School

0
Chantrel Griffin

A recent incident at Eastside High School in Gainesville, Florida, led to the arrest of 18-year-old Chantrel Anastasia Griffin and two juveniles following a violent altercation with a fellow student. The troubling event unfolded around midday on April 15, when a 16-year-old student reported being assaulted by three classmates in what she described as being “jumped.”

The School Resource Deputy on duty quickly responded to the scene in the school’s mall area after receiving reports of the fight. Upon arrival, the victim recounted the attack, pointing to the involvement of Griffin and two other students. The situation escalated when surveillance footage revealed the sequence of events leading up to the altercation. The video captured the victim walking through the hallway when the first juvenile initiated a confrontation by dropping her bookbag and physically attacking the victim.

As the incident progressed, Griffin and the second juvenile allegedly joined in, delivering a series of punches that caused the victim to fall to the ground. This brutal assault left the victim with visible injuries to her head and face, underscoring the severity of the attack.

The deputy reported that surveillance video showed the victim walking in the hallway when the first juvenile approached her and they exchanged words; the first juvenile allegedly dropped her bookbag and physically attacked the victim, and then Griffin and the second juvenile allegedly started punching the victim, who fell to the ground.

The victim sustained injuries to her head and face as a result of the attack.

The two juveniles, whose names were not released, were charged with battery (a misdemeanor) and transported to the Juvenile Detention Center.

Griffin has been charged as an adult with child abuse without great bodily harm, a third-degree felony. Her criminal history is not available because those documents are not posted on the court’s website for child abuse charges. Judge Susan Miller-Jones ordered her released on her own recognizance.

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. 


Elderly French Woman, 86, Faces Deportation After Reunion Leads to Marriage and Betrayal

0

An elderly woman from France, who relocated to Alabama to wed her beloved US Army partner, found herself unexpectedly detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement amid a contentious inheritance dispute with her stepson.

Marie-Therese Helene Claire Ross-Mahé, aged 86, was deported last Thursday, following her arrest orchestrated by her late husband’s son, as uncovered by the Daily Mail.

According to court documents, immigration officers forcibly removed Marie-Therese from her Anniston residence on April 1, finding her in just her nightgown and robe.

She was subsequently transported to a detention facility in Louisiana and has been expelled from the United States due to overstaying her tourist visa, a spokesperson from Homeland Security stated.

Marie-Therese had settled in Anniston, a quaint town with a population of 22,000, after marrying retired Army Captain William ‘Bill’ Ross in April of the previous year.

The couple met in the late 1960s while he was stationed in France and she was a bilingual secretary at a NATO base. 

They spent decades apart and had their own respective families, but reconnected and sparked a romance after both becoming widowed.

Marie-Therese entered the country in June 2025 and had been trying to obtain a green card when her husband of just nine months passed away on January 24.

A judge has now ruled that after his death, Bill’s son William ‘Tony’ Ross used his connections in federal government to have Marie-Therese arrested by ICE.

Marie-Therese Helene Claire Ross-Mahé, 86, was deported Thursday after spending more than two weeks in an ICE detention center

Marie-Therese Helene Claire Ross-Mahé, 86, was deported Thursday after spending more than two weeks in an ICE detention center

She came to the US in June 2025 after having married retired Army Captain William 'Bill' Ross, pictured together. The couple met in the 1960s, reconnected and got married in April last year

She came to the US in June 2025 after having married retired Army Captain William ‘Bill’ Ross, pictured together. The couple met in the 1960s, reconnected and got married in April last year

Tony, a former state trooper and currently federal government employee, contacted a colleague to request that his stepmom be detained, Calhoun County Probate Judge Shirley Millwood wrote in a court order.

The request came after Bill’s death when Tony and his brother Gary Ross were trying to take control of their late father’s estate, the filing said.

The estate consisted of Bill’s modest $172,000 home, roughly $1,500 in cash and about $10,000 in personal property, including his Mercedes-Benz C300 and a truck. 

Marie-Therese told Tony and Gary, a US Coast Guard veteran, that she did not want her late husband’s assets, and only wanted enough money to return to her France to be with her children, the judge wrote.

But a dispute quickly arose, with Tony and Gary having taken both of Bill’s vehicles from the property the day after his death, according to the documents.

Roughly a week later after the brothers tried to force their stepmother to turn Bill’s phone over to them, Millwood wrote.

Tony and Gary then had the water, electricity and internet at the home turned off.

They also had all of the mail rerouted from the residence, which included notices from immigration services that were sent to Marie-Therese, the judge said.

Bill's death son William 'Tony' Ross, pictured, used his position as a federal government employee to have ICE arrest his stepmother, a judge said

Bill’s death son William ‘Tony’ Ross, pictured, used his position as a federal government employee to have ICE arrest his stepmother, a judge said

Bill's son Gary Ross, pictured together, was also involved in the plot, court filings allege

Bill’s son Gary Ross, pictured together, was also involved in the plot, court filings allege

Bill's estate consisted of his modest $172,000 Anniston, Alabama home, roughly $1,500 in cash and about $10,000 in personal property, including his Mercedes-Benz C3000 and a truck

Bill’s estate consisted of his modest $172,000 Anniston, Alabama home, roughly $1,500 in cash and about $10,000 in personal property, including his Mercedes-Benz C3000 and a truck

The pair even offered to pay Marie-Therese $10,000 if she signed away her rights to the estate, the judge’s order stated. 

‘After the brothers were unsuccessful in coercing Ms. Ross to accept their offer, this court believes William Anthony Ross used his position as a United States Federal Government employee for personal gain,’ Millwood wrote.

Tony testified that he did not make a call or have a conversation requesting his stepmother’s deportation.

But Millwood cited how Tony received a message from US Marshals the day before her arrest alerting him that she would be detained.

He also received a text message within an hour of her arrest confirming her detention, the order stated.

After receiving those communications, Tony alerted Gary who then went to the property with his wife and changed all the locks. 

Millwood urged the federal government to investigate the circumstances surrounding Marie-Therese’s arrest, but despite the judge’s recommendation she has since been deported.

‘Marie-Therese Helene Ross, an illegal alien from France. She last entered the country in June 2025 under the Visa Waiver Program, which permitted her to remain in the country for 90 days. Seven months later, she is still illegally in the United States,’ a DHS spokesperson told the Daily Mail.

Marie-Therese entered in the country in June 2025 and had been trying to obtain a green card at the time of Bill's death on January 24 this year

Marie-Therese entered in the country in June 2025 and had been trying to obtain a green card at the time of Bill’s death on January 24 this year

DHS confirmed that she was repatriated to France, and urged all illegal aliens ‘self-deport now.’ The spokesperson noted that the US is currently offering $2,600 and a free flight to people who self-deport.

Marie-Therese’s attorney Kimberly Willingham also confirmed her repatriation, telling the Daily Mail that she is now back with her children.

‘She was exhausted and not feeling well when she landed,’ Willingham said. ‘She has medical appointments on Monday because she was not given her meds while in the Louisiana facility.’

The attorney added that Marie-Therese felt that neither she nor the other inmates at the Louisiana detention center were treated well.

‘Ms. Marie’s position is she did everything she was supposed to do with regard to obtaining her green card. She had attended an appointment just days prior to her detention in compliance with her Visa status,’ Willingham added.

‘The French consulate was heavily involved in Ms Marie’s release and we are grateful to everyone involved in helping get my client home.’

Deep South Cheese and Grill: Dearing’s Iconic Burger Haven Captures Hearts and Taste Buds


DEARING, Ga. () – During every visit to Dearing, the Your Hometown Roadtrip team hears a consistent recommendation: check out Deep South Cheese and Grill.

In this episode, the team decided to drop by and chat with the owner, Brittany Brown, to uncover what makes the restaurant a local favorite.

What is Deep South Cheese and Grill?

“We took over Deep South Cheese and Grill in 2023. The original owner, Gino, introduced this fantastic cuisine to the community, and we just wanted to keep his legacy going. We’re a small, family-run burger spot. Our menu features freshly made cheese curds prepared daily, alongside our signature poutine dishes, which are a delightful Canadian specialty. Essentially, poutine is like Canadian-style loaded fries, and it’s absolutely delicious,” Brittany explained.

What do people say when they try this out for the first time?

“We’re known for our burgers, and our cheese curds, so we get good reviews as far as those go. Our burgers are more like a smash burger, so they are not thick but they are big, very flavorful, very juicy.”

How does it make you feel to operate such a classic place in the community?

“I mean that’s the whole purpose, again I feel like Gino established a very great restaurant, and we just wanted to keep that going. It’s such a good place, we ate here before we took over, and I just like the small town family environment, and I just want a place for people to be able to come with their kids, relax, get a good meal, and enjoy themselves.”

What’s your staff like?

“I love my staff, we like to cut up, we like to have a good time, try to make it as fun as possible, we love trying to interact with a lot of our customers, we have a lot of regulars that come in here and cut up with us. We just try to make it a fun environment.”

The Your Hometown Roadtrip team wants to thank the folks at Deep South Cheese and Grill for the food, and the conversation.

Deep South Cheese and Grill is located at 4591 Augusta Highway, Dearing, Ga.

Honoring Legacy: Kickapoo Rail Trail Bridge to Be Renamed for Late Senator


SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (WCIA) — The Illinois Senate has given the green light to a proposal that seeks to rename the Kickapoo Rail Trail bridge in honor of a late state senator.

On April 16, State Senator Paul Faraci announced a plan to commemorate the contributions of the late State Senator Scott Bennett by renaming the railroad trestle bridge on the Kickapoo Rail Trail in his memory.

Beirut Declines Trump’s Prediction of Israel-Lebanon Talks Amid Emerging Ceasefire

0

In a significant move toward resolving the ongoing conflict, President Donald Trump announced on Thursday that Israel and Lebanon have consented to a 10-day ceasefire. This temporary halt in hostilities is slated to commence at 5 p.m. Eastern Time and is seen as an essential step toward curbing the violence between Israel and Hezbollah that has persisted for weeks.

The President revealed that he held separate discussions with Lebanese President Joseph Aoun and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Following these conversations, both leaders agreed to initiate formal negotiations with the aim of establishing a more comprehensive peace agreement.

Expressing optimism, Trump shared on Truth Social, “I just had excellent conversations with the Highly Respected President Joseph Aoun, of Lebanon, and Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu, of Israel.” These discussions mark a promising development in diplomatic efforts to quell the tensions in the region.

To facilitate the peace process, Trump has tasked Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Dan “Razin'” Caine with collaborating closely with both nations. Their mission is to work diligently toward achieving what the President termed as a “lasting peace.”

Rescue workers searching for victims at the site of an Israeli airstrike in Beirut

Meanwhile, the aftermath of the conflict remains visible. Rescue workers continue to search for victims amid the rubble in a neighborhood south of Beirut, Lebanon, following an Israeli airstrike. This incident serves as a stark reminder of the urgency and importance of the peace talks. (Photo by Hussein Malla/AP)

The president later said he plans to invite Netanyahu and Aoun to the White House for what he described as the first meaningful talks between Israel and Lebanon since 1983.

“Both sides want to see PEACE, and I believe that will happen, quickly!” Trump wrote.

The announcement came after days of intense U.S. diplomacy and appeared to resolve an earlier dispute over whether Aoun would speak directly with Netanyahu.

“We are trying to create a little breathing room,” Trump wrote on Truth Social Wednesday, adding that the leaders of Israel and Lebanon had not spoken in some 34 years and saying, “It will happen tomorrow.”

Earlier Thursday, Lebanese officials had insisted that Aoun would not speak directly with Netanyahu before a ceasefire was reached.

Three Lebanese officials told Reuters that Aoun had no plans to speak with Netanyahu in the near future, and two of the officials said Lebanon’s embassy in Washington conveyed that position to the Trump administration before Aoun held a phone call with Rubio.

A senior Lebanese official later told Fox News Digital that there was intense domestic pressure inside Lebanon against further contacts with Israel while the fighting continued.

According to the official, many in Lebanon believed the government had already entered negotiations without receiving anything in return, making a ceasefire a prerequisite for any direct contact.

But shortly afterward, Lebanon’s presidency announced that Aoun had spoken directly with Trump.

According to the Lebanese presidency’s official X account, Aoun thanked Trump for his efforts to secure a ceasefire in Lebanon and achieve what it described as a lasting peace and stability that could pave the way for a broader regional peace process.

Aoun, who served as commander of Lebanon’s U.S.-backed armed forces before becoming president in 2025, said an Israeli withdrawal from southern Lebanon would be a necessary first step before Lebanese troops could fully deploy to the border region.

The diplomatic dispute comes as the White House presses for a broader deal to end the regional war that erupted after Iran-backed Hezbollah terror group entered the conflict March 2 in support of Iran. 

Hezbollah’s intervention opened a new front in Lebanon just 15 months after the last major Israel-Hezbollah war.

Pakistan, which helped mediate the April 8 ceasefire between Israel and Iran, said ending the fighting in Lebanon is essential to preserving that agreement.

A damaged building showing structural damage in Beirut after an Israeli strike

A damaged building after an Israeli strike, following renewed hostilities between Hezbollah and Israel amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, in Beirut, Lebanon, March 6, 2026.  (Stringer/Reuters)

“Peace in Lebanon is essential for peace talks,” Pakistani Foreign Ministry spokesman Tahir Andrabi said.

The Israeli security cabinet met late Wednesday to discuss a possible ceasefire in Lebanon, according to Israeli media.

Israeli officials have signaled openness to negotiations, but they are also insisting on continuing military operations until Hezbollah is pushed away from the border.

Israeli cabinet minister Gila Gamliel told Israeli media that Netanyahu had been expected to speak with Aoun “for the first time after so many years of no contact between the two countries.”

Israel and Lebanon remain formally at war and have had no direct leader-to-leader contact in decades.

The latest U.S. diplomatic push follows a rare meeting Tuesday in Washington between Lebanese Ambassador Nada Hamadeh Moawad and Israeli Ambassador Yechiel Leiter.

Those talks, held at the State Department under U.S. mediation, marked the first face-to-face discussions between senior Israeli and Lebanese officials in more than three decades.

Still, the prospect of a direct call between Netanyahu and Aoun has run into strong opposition inside Lebanon.

Hezbollah, which has opposed any contact with Israel, remains publicly against negotiations.

At the same time, Lebanon’s government has increasingly distanced itself from Hezbollah since the terror group entered the war.

The Lebanese government formally banned Hezbollah’s military activities March 2 and has spent the past year trying to disarm the Iranian-backed group without triggering a broader civil conflict.

Meanwhile, fighting intensified Thursday in southern Lebanon.

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun meeting with U.S. envoys Tom Barrack, Morgan Ortagus, and Lisa A. Johnson at presidential palace

In this photo released by the Lebanese Presidency press office, Lebanese President Joseph Aoun, right, meets U.S. Ambassador to Turkey and Special Envoy to Syria Tom Barrack, third left, U.S. deputy special presidential envoy to the Middle East Morgan Ortagus, second left, and U.S. Ambassador to Lebanon Lisa A. Johnson, left, at the presidential palace in Baabda, in east of Beirut, Lebanon, Monday, Aug. 18, 2025. (Lebanese Presidency Press Office/AP)

Battles continued around the border town of Bint Jbeil, Lebanon, a longtime stronghold of Hezbollah — an Iran-backed terror group — that Israeli officials see as a key objective in the current offensive.

Netanyahu said Wednesday that Israeli forces were close to “overcoming” Hezbollah in Bint Jbeil. 

The Israeli military’s immediate objective is to push Hezbollah farther from the border and prevent anti-tank missiles and other direct-fire weapons from threatening northern Israeli communities, Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani said in an interview with Fox News Digital. 

He said Israeli troops are now holding what the military calls “defense lines” several kilometers inside Lebanon, positions designed to keep Hezbollah gunmen and anti-tank squads from once again overlooking Israeli towns.

“We’re going to make sure we keep diminishing them,” Shoshani said.

Lebanese security officials also said an Israeli airstrike destroyed the last remaining bridge over the Litani River leading into southern Lebanon.

The strike effectively cut off nearly a tenth of the country from the rest of Lebanon after earlier Israeli attacks destroyed other crossings.

Smoke billows over Beirut's southern suburbs as seen from Baabda Lebanon

Smoke billows after reported strikes on Beirut’s southern suburbs, following an escalation between Hezbollah and Israel amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, as seen from Baabda, Lebanon, March 6, 2026. (Mohamed Azakir/Reuters)

Israel has vowed to turn the area south of the Litani River into a “no-go zone” for Hezbollah.

Israeli military chief of staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir said Wednesday that Hezbollah operatives would no longer be allowed to operate south of the river.

The Litani River, which runs roughly 20 miles north of Israel’s border, has long been viewed by Israel as the line beyond which Hezbollah forces should not be allowed to operate.

Hezbollah responded Thursday with fresh rocket fire into northern Israel.

Warning sirens sounded in several Israeli communities, sending residents into bomb shelters. There were no immediate reports of injuries.

More than 2,100 people have been killed in Lebanon since March 2 and more than 1.2 million have been displaced, according to Lebanese authorities. 

Israeli officials say Hezbollah attacks have killed two Israeli civilians and 13 Israeli soldiers during the same period.

Hezbollah members saluting

Hezbollah members salute and raise the group’s yellow flags during the funeral of their fallen comrades Ismail Baz and Mohamad Hussein Shohury, who were killed in an Israeli strike on their vehicles, in Shehabiya in south Lebanon April 17, 2024. (AFP via Getty Images)

Fox News Digital reached out to the State Department, Lebanon’s embassy in Washington and the Israeli government for comment, but did not receive responses in time for publication.