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Trump says Biden admin. ‘knows what is happening’ on drones

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President-elect Trump claims that President Biden’s administration “knows what is happening” regarding unexplained drone sightings over New Jersey, New York and other states.

Trump made the statement Monday during a lengthy press conference with reporters at Mar-a-Lago, saying the U.S. military certainly knows the origin of the drones.

“The government knows what is happening. Look, our military knows where they took off from. If it’s a garage they can go right inside. They know where it came from and where it went,” Trump said.

“For some reason, they don’t want to comment, and I think they’d be better off saying what it is. Our military knows. Our president knows, and for some reason they want to keep people in suspense,” he continued. “I can’t imagine it’s the enemy, because if it was the enemy they’d blast it.”

NJ DRONE SIGHTINGS COULD BE A ‘CLASSIFIED EXERCISE’: FORMER CIA OFFICER

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Trump argues that President Biden is withholding drone info from the public. (Getty Images)

A reporter then asked Trump whether he had received any classified briefings regarding the drone situation. He responded that “I don’t want to comment on that.”

Trump’s statement comes roughly a day after Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., called on the Department of Homeland Security to deploy 360-degree radar systems capable of detecting drones to the New York and New Jersey regions.

DRONE MYSTERY CONTINUES IN NEW JERSEY AS EXPERTS OFFER NEW THEORIES ABOUT SIGHTINGS

“Our local people who have questions about these drones should not have to shake an eight ball to get an answer,” Schumer said, holding up a magic eight ball toy in one hand and an image of a drone in another.

Schumer talks to media

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., called more more surveillance of drone activity in his state. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

“They want real answers, and the Robin can supply those answers, and that’s why we want them here,” Schumer said, likely referencing the Dutch company Robin Radar Systems, which produces such systems.

2 MASSACHUSETTS MEN ARRESTED FOR FLYING DRONE ‘DANGEROUSLY CLOSE’ TO BOSTON AIRPORT

The website of Robin Radar Systems notes, “Bird, bat, or drone, our 360° radar systems log thousands of observations, scanning every second to track and classify with precision.”

Map showing some of the places where mystery drones have been spotted in Northeastern USA in December 2024. 

Map showing some of the places where mystery drones have been spotted in Northeastern USA in December 2024.  (Fox News)

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said in a statement on Sunday, “In response to my calls for additional resources, our federal partners are deploying a state-of-the-art drone detection system to New York State.” 

Fox News’ Alex Nitzberg contributed to this report.

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Judges backing out of retirement ahead of Trump term leave GOP senators fuming

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In the wake of President-elect Donald Trump’s 2024 win, some federal judges have opted to make a rare move and unretire by changing their previously stated plans to move to senior status, which would have created vacancies that Trump would have the opportunity to fill on the federal bench. The move is being met with outrage by some Republicans in the Senate. 

U.S. Circuit Judge James Wynn of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decided not to seek senior status this month as he had originally planned, instead retaining his role on the court. His choice came after Senate Democrats agreed to allow Trump to appoint his choices to several circuit court vacancies, including the seat being left by Wynn. 

The move angered Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., whose state is under the circuit’s jurisdiction. “Judge Wynn’s brazenly partisan decision to rescind his retirement is an unprecedented move that demonstrates some judges are nothing more than politicians in robes. Judge Wynn clearly takes issue with the fact that Donald Trump was just elected President, and this decision is a slap in the face to the U.S. Senate, which came to a bipartisan agreement to hold off on confirming his replacement until the next Congress is sworn-in in January,” he said in a statement.

RFK JR SET TO FACE ABORTION, VACCINE SCRUTINY IN SIT-DOWNS WITH SENATORS ON CAPITOL HILL

Gavel in court room

Some federal judges have opted to unretire in the wake of President-elect Donald Trump’s victory in November. (Getty Images )

“The Senate Judiciary Committee should hold a hearing on his blatant attempt to turn the judicial retirement system into a partisan game, and he deserves the ethics complaints and recusal demands from the Department of Justice heading his way.”

A spokesperson for incoming Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, told Fox News Digital, “Senator Grassley looks forward to working with President Trump to fill judicial vacancies with constitutionalist judges, and will work with committee Republicans to respond to inappropriate partisanship on the bench,” when asked about potential hearings.

The same was done by lower level appointees U.S. District Judges Max Cogburn and Algenon Marbley, who changed their plans last month. 

BIDEN CLEMENCY ANNOUNCEMENT GETS MIXED REVIEWS ON CAPITOL HILL: ‘WHERE’S THE BAR?’

Sen. Thom Tillis in closeup shot

Sen. Tillis has called for hearings on the so-called judicial unretirements. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

While the district judges were not included in the agreement to leave certain vacancies to Trump, it had become increasingly unlikely that President Biden and Democrats would be able to fill the roles in time. 

In early December floor remarks on the rare decisions by the judges, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said, “They rolled the dice that a Democrat could replace them and now that he won’t, they’re changing their plans to keep a Republican from doing it.”

GOP ATTORNEYS GENERAL OFFER SUPPORT FOR TRUMP FBI PICK KASH PATEL, URGE SENATORS TO DO THE SAME

Sen. Mitch McConnell closeup shot

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell called out the rare acts by Democrat-appointed judges. (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

“It’s a brazen admission. And the incoming administration would be wise to explore all available recusal options with these judges, because it’s clear now that they have a political finger on the scale,” he added. 

McConnell noted that the agreement made prior to Thanksgiving between Republicans and Democrats stated that the GOP would “forego our available procedural roadblocks on the remaining nominations to district courts—which have the votes to be confirmed—and in exchange the Democratic Leader won’t bring any of the remaining nominations to circuit courts to the floor—because they don’t have the votes to be confirmed.” 

Joe Biden, inset, smiling with sunglasses; main pic gavel

President Biden is looking to beat President-elect Donald Trump’s judicial record, with help from Senate Democrats. (Getty Images)

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Trump’s transition office did not immediately provide comment to Fox News Digital. 



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Colorado’s Travis Hunter fumes at scrutiny levied at fiancée: ‘Go find a life’

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Colorado Buffaloes star Travis Hunter should be celebrating winning the Heisman Trophy, but instead, he was forced to fire back at online trolls who had criticized his fiancée.

Leanna Lenee faced scrutiny for how she seemingly behaved during an event for Hunter. However, all she appeared to be doing was sitting on the couch as the football star did a meet-and-greet with fans.

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Travis Hunter warms up

Colorado Buffaloes wide receiver Travis Hunter, #12, before the game against the Oklahoma State Cowboys at Folsom Field on Nov 29, 2024 in Boulder, Colorado. (Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images)

Hunter sounded off on the criticism in a Twitch livestream, according to the New York Post.

“You ain’t never had no girl so why are y’all talking about me,” he said. “Find someone else to talk about. … Go talk about your girl. Go find a girl. Go find a life. Stop worrying about what I got going on. I know what I got.

“My girl been with me for five years. y’all are just now starting to talk about me… y’all go do something else with y’all life. Clickbait pages stop, y’all better stop I’m telling y’all. Something bad is gonna happen to y’all [if you] keep doing that. Y’all better stop that. I ain’t playing.”

Hunter explained he and Lenee were talking about their plans for the rest of the evening. He also said she got drunk and cried all night as the criticism trickled in.

Travis Hunter talks to reporters

Colorado Buffaloes wide receiver/cornerback Travis Hunter answers questions during media interviews before the 2024 Heisman Trophy presentation on Dec 14, 2024 in New York City. (Lucas Boland-Imagn Images)

2024 COLLEGE FOOTBALL PLAYOFF ODDS: WHO WILL EMERGE FROM THE FIRST ROUND?

“I don’t want her to go to sleep sad. It’s hard on me because I can’t even help her.”

He spoke glowingly about Lenee on “The Pivot Podcast” days before he won the Heisman Trophy.

“She’s my closest to everything, she helped me with everything. It’s kind of hard sometimes, but she’s always there,” he said.

Hunter will likely be one of the first players taken in the 2025 draft. He has one more bowl game before his collegiate career is probably finished.

Travis Hunter smiles

Colorado’s Travis Hunter holds the trophy after winning the Heisman Trophy as the outstanding player in college football on Saturday, Dec. 14, 2024 in New York City. (Todd Van Emst/Heisman Trust via AP, Pool)

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The wide receiver-cornerback has 92 receptions for 1,152 yards and 14 touchdowns. He also has four interceptions and 11 pass breakups.

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Economic experts pan Hochul’s ‘inflationary’ ‘inflation refunds’: ‘Not difficult math’

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Several economic experts panned New York Gov. Kathy Hochul’s “inflation refunds” she plans to distribute to qualifying New Yorkers as part of her 2025 State of the State initiative.

Last week, Hochul proposed $3 billion in direct payments to about half of the Empire State’s 19 million residents: $300 for single taxpayers making up to $150,000 per year and $500 for joint filers making twice that.

“Because of inflation, New York has generated unprecedented revenues through the sales tax — now, we’re returning that cash back to middle class families,” Hochul said in a statement announcing the proposal.

However, some economists and economic experts, like Andy Puzder, said the move simply “redistributes [money] to people so the people will vote for them.”

REPUBLICANS RIP HOCHUL’S INFLATION REFUNDS AS ‘BRIBE TO MAKE’ NY’ERS ‘LIKE HER’

Andy_Puzder_MD

Former Hardee’s/Carl’s Jr. executive Andy Puzder speaks in Maryland. (Reuters)

“If you really wanted to help everybody, and if you have an excess of sales taxes, then you reduce the sales tax,” added Puzder, the former CEO of the parent company of Hardee’s and Carl’s Jr., CKE Restaurants. “It’s not difficult math,” he added.

Puzder is a lecturer on economics and a senior public policy fellow at Pepperdine University who was considered for Labor secretary in the first Trump administration.

In his work at CKE Restaurants, Puzder increased the average franchise sales volume for the then-struggling Hardee’s from $715,000 in 2001 to more than $1 million a decade later.

The U.S. economy has been in trouble because of the same types of policies forwarded by Hochul and other tax-and-spend Democrats, he said – adding that President Biden’s American Rescue Plan was what lit the fuse on nationwide inflation in the first place.

“If you reduce taxes, fewer people will also be leaving the state,” he added, as New York shed another population-based House seat and electoral vote in the decennial census.

Puzder noted a few top Democrats have warned their own leaders against such “refunds” from the government, citing former President Bill Clinton’s Treasury chief Lawrence Summers cautioning the Biden administration that similar handouts in 2021 would drive up inflation.

HOCHUL SPARKS BIPARTISAN OUTRAGE OVER CONGESTION PRICING REBOOT AS DEMS WORRIED TRUMP WOULD BLOCK IT

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Then-Rep. Dave Brat, R-VA, at the White House. (Reuters)

Former Rep. Dave Brat, R-Va., an economist and currently vice provost of Liberty University in Lynchburg, cited Nobel laureate Milton Friedman’s assertion that inflation is a monetary phenomenon.

Therefore, he said, in Hochul’s case, the better fix for inflation lies not in Albany, but in Manhattan.

“Inflation has to do with how much money the Federal Reserve prints. If she wants to give people money back from the government, that’s fine – but she’s in a prominent position in New York in that the Fed has one of its chief desks there and if you want to solve inflation, you go to the Federal Reserve.”

He added that $500 for a family is a “trivial, symbolic move against a massive, hidden tax,” noting that with an estimated 22% real-inflation rate over the past four years, $500 in 2020 purchasing power is only worth $390.

Brat added that Democrats’ penchant for such “refunds” put Republicans at a consistent political disadvantage because the GOP essentially has to “compete against Santa Claus” handing out presents versus the right warning the public to “eat their spinach.”

Economist EJ Antoni echoed some of the sentiment about the refunds being inflationary themselves, saying that what got the U.S. into inflation in the first place was too much government spending.

“So this idea that we’re going to add on another government expenditure, you’re essentially just creating a feedback loop,” Antoni said.

“Now, that’s not to say that New York State alone is going to cause inflation. Inflation comes from the federal government, because the federal government is the one that can’t create money, can print money out of nothing. But at the same time, you’re still talking about increasing the cost of living for New Yorkers, just in a different way,” he said.

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Then-Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul looks at then-Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York.

Then-Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul looks at then-Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York. (AP)

“Any additional government spending is going to have to be paid for one way or another.”

Antoni added he could see such payments to the public “snowballing” into more and more payments down the line, which in turn would lead to higher taxes being needed to fund the handouts.

Antoni also said Hochul’s proposal differs from then-President Donald Trump’s COVID-era checks, because the latter came during a time people needed “money to survive” amid stay-at-home orders and various shutdowns of job sectors.

“If the issue is that we need to reduce people’s cost of living, the best way to do that would just be to reduce their taxes, not have another payment by the government,” he said.

Fox News Digital also reached out to the left-leaning Brookings Institution for a further diverse viewpoint on Hochul’s move.

Fox News Digital also reached out to Hochul’s office for comment but did not receive a response by press time. 

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Paris Hilton urges House to pass ‘Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act’ after Senate’s unanimous approval

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American media personality and businesswoman Paris Hilton is headed to Capitol Hill Monday to urge the GOP-led House to pass the Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act – a bill for which she has lobbied the last three years.

The bill cleared the Senate unanimously last week. 

Hilton told Fox News Digital in an interview she was “in tears” when the bill passed the upper chamber on Wednesday, calling it “such a monumental moment” for herself and her allies.

“It just makes me proud to know that every single senator recognized the urgency of this issue and supported something that I’ve worked so hard for,” Hilton said. 

PARIS HILTON PRAISES GOP LAWMAKERS FOR SPONSORING BIPARTISAN STOP INSTITUTIONAL CHILD ABUSE ACT

Paris Hilton speaking with Capitol dome behind her

Paris Hilton speaks as she joins congressional lawmakers during a press conference on upcoming legislation to establish a bill of rights to protect children placed in congregate care facilities, at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 20, 2021. (Mandel Ngan via Getty Images)

The bipartisan bill, co-sponsored by 23 lawmakers including Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Ct., Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. and Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., aims to reform residential youth facilities for troubled kids. 

Hilton is now urging the House to take up the bill before the session ends this week. If the legislation fails to pass both houses before the new Congress sits in early January, the bill would have to be considered again by both legislative chambers.

“I just feel like it’s so important to do this, because right now, there’s just no regulation, and people are getting away with so much because they’re not being watched,” Hilton said. “So this bill is really just about transparency and just collecting that data so we can know where are the bad ones and where are the good ones, and just collect that data, because right now they’re not able to do that.”

PARIS HILTON SPOTTED AT WHITE HOUSE FOR MEETING ON CHILD ABUSE LAW

Paris Hilton with Sen. Merkley at press event on Capitol Hill

Actress and model Paris Hilton shakes hands with Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., at a press conference outside the U.S. Capitol Building on April 27, 2023 in Washington, D.C. (Anna Moneymaker)

“When the U.S. Senate came together in a rare show of unity to pass the Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act unanimously on Wednesday December 11th, it was one of the best moments of my life,” the letter continued. “It was proof that when we listen to survivors and put politics aside, we can create real, meaningful change. But this journey isn’t over. I can’t celebrate until this bill becomes law, and now it’s up to the U.S. House of Representatives to finish what the Senate started.”

Hilton, an advocate of the bill since its inception, alleged in a New York Times video op-ed series last year that she was a victim of sexual abuse as a teenager in the 1990s, when she attended a boarding school in Utah. 

She said she was the victim of a “parent-approved kidnapping” when she was a misbehaving 16-year-old, with two men dragging her out of her home and into a congregate-care facility.

Last year, Hilton testified before the House Ways and Means Committee about her teenage experiences in these centers, describing them as “very emotional and traumatizing.”

SATANIC TEMPLE’S NATIVITY DISPLAY IN NEW HAMPSHIRE DESTROYED, DEM REP CALLS FOR NEW DISPLAY

Alabama Republican Sen. Tommy Tuberville

Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) speaks at a press conference outside the U.S. Capitol Building on April 27, 2023 in Washington, D.C. (Anna Moneymaker)

“As a teenager, I was sent to youth residential treatment facilities where I endured abuse that no child should ever experience,” Hilton wrote in an open letter to House lawmakers Monday. “I was physically restrained, sexually abused, isolated, overmedicated, and stripped of my dignity. I was told I didn’t matter, that I was the problem, and that no one would believe me if I spoke up—not even my family. For years, I lived with the weight of that trauma, the nightmares, the shame. It wasn’t until I found my voice that I began to heal.”

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In a statement after the bill cleared the Senate, Cornyn said that “A lack of oversight and transparency in residential youth programs has allowed for the abuse of children in facilities across the country for far too long.”

“I’m proud that the Senate unanimously passed this legislation to ensure the vulnerable children in these facilities are protected, and I want to thank the countless advocates who have bravely shared their stories to help end institutional child abuse.”

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Ivy League suspect in CEO murder huddles with legal team, not family: sources

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Alleged CEO killer Luigi Mangione has had multiple meetings with his lawyers but has yet to be visited by members of his family, sources tell Fox News Digital.

Mangione met on Friday with attorney Karen Agnifilo and her husband Marc Agnifilo, also an attorney. He also met with Pennsylvania attorney Thomas Dickey. Meanwhile, investigators where Mangione is being held in Blair County, Pennsylvania, say he has not had a visit from a family member.

Agnifilo will represent Mangione as he faces a second-degree murder charge in New York for the Dec. 4 shooting in Manhattan, a spokesperson for Friedman Agnifilo has confirmed.

Agnifilo previously worked as the chief assistant district attorney in the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office for seven years and has experience in New York City’s criminal justice system. She has worked in private practice for the past three years with Agnifilo Intrater LLP.

HOW UNITEDHEALTHCARE CEO GUNMAN’S WEAPON COULD WORK AGAINST HIM AND TO POLICE’S ADVANTAGE

Luigi Mangione, left, and Karen Friedman Agnifilo, right.

Luigi Mangione, the suspect in the killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, has retained Karen Friedman Agnifilo to represent him, Fox News Digital has learned.  (David Dee Delgado for Fox News Digital, left, Todd Estrin Photography, right.)

Meanwhile, Dickey is a longtime tial attorney in Pennsylvania, where he has more than 40 years of experience.

The news of Friedman Agnifilo representing Mangione comes after investigators determined that the 3D-printed gun Mangione had in his possession when he was arrested matches the three shell casings found at the crime scene in Midtown Manhattan. His fingerprints also matched the fingerprints found on items near the scene of the shooting.

FORMER WAPO REPORTER SAYS ‘WE WANT THESE EXECUTIVES DEAD’ AFTER THE MURDER OF INSURANCE CEO

A Pennsylvania judge denied Mangione bail last week, leaving him behind bars at the Huntingdon State Correctional Institution.

Luigi Mangione's lawyer, Tom Dickey

Attorney Tom Dickey addresses the media outside of Blair County Court in Hollidaysville, Pennsylvania, on Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2024. Dickey represented Luigi Mangione, who is suspected of murdering UHC CEO, Brian Thompson, during his extradition hearing. (Dee Delgado for Fox News Digital)

The suspect is also facing charges in Pennsylvania of carrying a gun without a license, forgery, falsely identifying himself to the authorities and possessing “instruments of crime.” New York prosecutors additionally hit him with three counts of illegal weapons possession and forgery, on top of the murder charge.

Mangione’s attorneys have denied that his client is responsible for the killing in New York and believes he will plead not guilty in the Big Apple to the murder charge and other charges. Mangione also plans to plead not guilty to charges in Pennsylvania related to possession of a gun and fake ID authorities say was found on him when they arrested him, according to Dickey.

Marc Agnifilo speaks with media members outside United States Court in Manhattan after music mogul Sean "Diddy" Combs was arrested

Attorney Marc Agnifilo speaks outside of the Manhattan Federal Court. (REUTERS/Brendan McDermid)

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The suspect appeared to be driven by frustration with the health insurance industry and alleged “corporate greed,” police have said, although he was not an insured member of UnitedHealthcare.

Mangione’s family has released a statement saying they are “devastated” by Luigi’s arrest, but they have yet to address the situation further.

Fox News’ David Hammelburg contributed to this report.

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Beauty store owner killed while trying to defend business from shoplifters

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A Florida mom and business owner was reportedly killed while trying to stop shoplifters at her beauty supply store, leaving behind two daughters and a husband just weeks before Christmas. 

Ilson Miriam Kim, 64, was trying to stop two thieves at her store, Beauty Max, in Jacksonville, Florida, in the evening on Dec. 6 before the shoplifters fatally ran her over with their vehicle. 

“Two individuals entered into the business, one of the individuals grabbed several items and ran out of the store with those items,” Sgt. Steve Rudlaff of the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office told News 4 JAX. “A store employee followed this individual to her car which was ready for this person.”

At least three suspects were involved – two entered the store and one drove the getaway car, Rudlaff told the outlet. One of the suspects got into the car with the items stolen, while the third suspect left on foot. 

SUZANNE SIMPSON’S DNA FOUND ON MURDER SUSPECT HUSBAND’S SAW THAT CAN CUT METAL

Ilson Miriam Kim fatally run over by shoplifters

Ilson Miriam Kim was fatally run over by shoplifters at her beauty supply store. (GoFundMe)

Kim was taken to the hospital after being hit by the vehicle, but she succumbed to her injuries. 

Kim’s husband said the store had already been experiencing a recurring shoplifting problem, but a neighboring business owner said that this time, the victim had finally had enough and decided to take action by chasing after the suspects, according to Action News JAX. 

“She worked alongside her husband for much of her life, but Beauty Max was the first business she independently owned,” her family told the outlet in a statement, in part. “We don’t know exactly why she decided to confront the shoplifters, but the store had experienced thefts in the recent past.” 

Someone even had the “audacity” to steal from the store the day after Kim’s death, her family added. 

FIANCÉ OF TEACHER FOUND WITH 20 STAB WOUNDS SUGGESTS WHAT LED TO HER ‘SUICIDE’

Beauty supply store

Ilson Miriam Kim, 64, was trying to stop two thieves at her store, Beauty Max, in Jacksonville, Florida, in the evening on Dec. 6 before the shoplifters fatally ran her over with their vehicle. (Google Street View)

She immigrated to the United States from Uijeongbu, South Korea, in 1986 “in search of better opportunities,” according to an online obituary.

“Ilson was a proud mother, wife, businesswoman, and store owner,” according to a fundraising page for her family. “She taught her daughters the power of hard work, persistence, empathy and love; she exemplified these qualities with the grace and love she showed to others in her community on a daily basis.”

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“The Kims are a strong, proud family and Ilson was a true matriarch who they must now learn how to navigate life without.”

The investigation is still ongoing, and no arrests have been made. 

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Patrick Mahomes injures ankle after critical remarks about Chiefs’ tight schedule

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Patrick Mahomes suffered an injury during the Kansas City Chiefs’ win over the Cleveland Browns, and it came at a pivotal time for the team ahead of the playoffs.

The Chiefs’ victory kicked off an 11-day stretch in which they will play three games. Next up is a home game against the Houston Texans followed by a Christmas Day Wednesday game on the road against the Pittsburgh Steelers.

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Patrick Mahomes on sideline

Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes watches play during the Browns game, Sunday, Dec. 15, 2024, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/David Richard)

Adding to the pressure of playing three games in 11 days is another ankle injury that flared up on Sunday. It knocked him out of the game in the fourth quarter and forced Carson Wentz to come into the game.

Mahomes said the X-rays were negative.

“We’ll get into the rehab part, the treatment part and try to get back on a short week,” Mahomes said. “With all the adrenaline from the game, it’s hard to tell now (if he can play). Usually, it’s the day after when you get a good sense of it.”

TEXANS’ CALEN BULLOCK TALKS SCARY PLAY THAT LEFT DOLPHINS’ GRANT DUBOSE HOSPITALIZED

Patrick Mahomes passes

Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes is rushed by Browns defenders at Huntington Bank Field in Cleveland. (Ken Blaze-Imagn Images)

Chiefs head coach Andy Reid said the ankle wasn’t broken.

Mahomes railed against playing three games in a short span in the days before the team played the Browns.

“It’s not a good feeling,” he said Wednesday. “You never want to play this amount of games in this short of time. It’s not great for your body. But at the end of the day, it’s your job, your profession, you have to come to work and do it.”

He added that he never heard of playing three games in a short span when it came to football.

“All you can do is focus on the game. The practice you have that day,” he said. “I try to prepare my body all year long for this stretch. That’s tailoring my workouts, tailoring how you practice and prepare, and the coaches do a great job of taking care of us on the practice field. We practice as hard as anybody, but they know how to dial it back when needed.”

Patrick Mahomes talks to reporters

Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes speaks at a news conference after the Browns game in Cleveland, Sunday, Dec. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/David Richard)

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The second game in the stretch will be played Saturday.

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JonBenet Ramsey’s dad suggests killer motivated by money in resurfaced interview

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A never-before-aired interview with JonBenet Ramsey’s parents, John and Patsy Ramsey, and the late Barbara Walters has resurfaced following the release of a new documentary about the 6-year-old pageant star’s 1996 murder.

JonBenet was found dead in the basement of her family’s Boulder, Colorado, home the day after Christmas 28 years ago, and the case remains unsolved to this day, despite ongoing public interest and a recent push from John Ramsey to re-test crime scene evidence for DNA using new technology. 

“The ransom note has an odd figure — $118,000. That was a bonus that you had received,” Walters, then a host of ABC’s “20/20,” says in the interview, which was conducted in 2000 but never aired, according to ABC.

“Well, that was one of the theories that I came up with, that it was close to the net amount I’d received that year as a bonus,” John Ramsey told Walters. “One-eighteen means something to the killer. We know that. We believe that. Whether it’s tied to my bonus or something only the killer knows, we don’t know.”

JONBENET RAMSEY’S FATHER CLAIMS COLORADO POLICE OFFICER SAID THEY ARE ‘JUST WAITING’ FOR HIM TO DIE

John Ramsey and his wife Patricia sitting next to each other as Patricia holds a reward sign.

John and Patsy Ramsey, the parents of JonBenet Ramsey, meet with a small selected group of the local Colorado media after four months of silence in Boulder, Colorado, on May 1, 1997. Patsy holds up a reward sign for information leading to the arrest of their daughter’s murderer. Their 6-year-old daughter was found dead on Christmas night 1996. (Photo By Helen H. Richardson/ The Denver Post)

When Walters asked Patsy Ramsey, who died six years after the interview in 2006, whether she knew the amount of her husband’s bonus, she responded, “Not at the time, no.”

The interview resurfaced after the November premiere of the Netflix documentary, “Cold Case: Who Killed JonBenet Ramsey.”

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Patsy and JonBenet Ramsey

Patsy Ramsey is pictured with her daughter, JonBenet, whose murder remains unsolved. (Courtesy of Netflix)

John Ramsey, 80, most recently told Fox News Digital in September that he felt optimistic about new leadership at the Boulder Police Department (BPD), which officially named a new police chief on Sept. 6.

Chief Stephen Redfearn, who served as the interim chief for HPD starting in January, is the fifth police chief at BPD to take on the JonBenet Ramsey case since 1996.

JONBENET’S FATHER CHALLENGES COLORADO GOVERNOR TO MEET: ‘TIME FOR ANSWERS IS RUNNING OUT’

JonBenet Ramsey blows out candles on a birthday cake

JonBenet Ramsey would have turned 34 on Saturday, Aug. 6, 2024. (Ramsey family)

Ramsey told Fox News Digital he would like BPD to turn over evidence in his daughter’s nearly 30-year-old murder case to the FBI, “at a minimum,” so that federal officials can test and retest evidence for possible external DNA, including external male DNA that federal officials disclosed in 1997.

“We have an unidentified male DNA result from the testing they did in 1997, which … by today’s standards, it was primitive,” Ramsey explained. “But we have an unidentified male DNA sample, which was reported to the police in January 1997. They kept that a secret because it conflicted with their conclusion that we were guilty. How do we explain that away? Which they tried desperately to do.”

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Police car outside Ramsey home

In this Jan. 3, 1997 file photo, a police officer sits in her cruiser outside the home in which 6-year-old JonBenet Ramsey was found murdered in Boulder, Colorado. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File)

Evidence that has never been tested for traces of DNA includes the garrote found around JonBenet’s neck, a ransom note found in the Ramsey house on the morning of the murder, a suitcase found in the basement that authorities believe the killer used to escape out a window, an unknown flashlight found on the Ramsey family’s kitchen counter the morning of the murder and unknown rope found in her brother Burke Ramsey’s room that day, according to public records initially obtained by journalist Paula Woodward, as Fox News Digital previously reported.

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In 1999, a grand jury indicted both John and his wife, Patsy Ramsey, for child abuse resulting in JonBenet’s death, but Alex Hunter, the district attorney at the time, refused to sign the indictment, citing a lack of evidence that would warrant criminal charges against the parents. Prosecutors eventually dropped their case against John and Patsy in 2006.

BPD said in a September statement that “Chief Redfearn has continued to have conversations with the Ramsey family, and there are no plans to change that.”

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NFL refs face backlash for egregious clock stoppage in closing moments of Commanders-Saints game

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NFL officials took heat on Sunday for an unwarranted clock stoppage during a game between the Washington Commanders and New Orleans Saints.

On 4th-and-3 with 17 seconds left, Saints quarterback Spencer Rattler threw a pass to Foster Moreau for the conversion. The pass got New Orleans to Washington’s 1-yard line. As Rattler and the team rushed to the line of scrimmage, a sideline judge inexplicably called for the clock to be stopped.

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Foster Moreau scores

New Orleans Saints tight end Foster Moreau, #87, celebrates after he makes a catch in the second half of an NFL football game against the Washington Commanders in New Orleans on Sunday, Dec. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

The clock stopped for at least three seconds as the Saints got to the line. Rattler spiked the ball to officially stop the clock. There were three seconds left on the clock after Rattler spiked the ball.

On the next play, Rattler threw a touchdown pass to Moreau. The Saints attempted a 2-point conversion to try to win the game but failed. Washington won the game, 20-19.

NFL fans noticed the clock fumble. Washington (-8) was considered the favorite going in, according to FOX Sports.

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Marshon Lattimore and fans

Washington Commanders cornerback Marshon Lattimore, #23, walks off the field after an NFL football game against the New Orleans Saints in New Orleans on Sunday, Dec. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Butch Dill)

Referee Shawn Hochuli was asked about the errant clock stoppage.

“The covering official mistakenly stopped the clock in that situation,” Hochuli told a pool reporter. “The clock should not have stopped.”

Hochuli added that the situation was not reviewable. He was then asked whether he and the other officials in the crew were “aware of the mistake.”

“That’s all I have for you,” he said. “The covering official mistakenly stopped the clock at nine seconds, and it is not reviewable.”

Jayden Daniels leaves the field

Washington Commanders quarterback Jayden Daniels, #5, walks off the field after an NFL football game against the New Orleans Saints in New Orleans on Sunday, Dec. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

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Washington moved to 9-5 with the win and New Orleans dropped to 5-9.

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