Nurse charged in the deaths of 17 patients berated and bullied diabetic man before giving lethal insulin dose, suit says


The family of a severely diabetic man whom authorities said died at the hands of a nurse overseeing his care last year has filed a wrongful death suit against the facility where he lived, alleging it allowed the nurse to berate and bully him, and ultimately cause his death.

Former nursing home nurse Heather Pressdee has already been charged with administering excessive doses of insulin to patients — 17 of whom died.

In total, she allegedly mistreated 22 patients — some diabetic and others not — with the dangerous doses she administered at five different care facilities from 2020 to this year, according to the Pennsylvania Attorney General’s Office.

Now, a new lawsuit has been filed against one of those facilities, Sunnyview Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Butler County, Pennsylvania, where Nicholas Cymbol died May 1, 2023.

The suit filed Wednesday in Butler County, the family’s attorney Rob Peirce saidalleges the center and its operator were negligent, failed to train employees to recognize and report abuse, and failed to remove Pressdee from Cymbol’s care even though she had bullied him and called him a derogatory term.

Sunnyview Nursing and Rehabilitation Center did not immediately respond Friday to a request for comment.

Cymbol’s death

Cymbol, 43, was a resident at Sunnyview. He was a “brittle diabetic,” meaning he often experienced large swings in his blood glucose levels, he had an anoxic brain injury, blindness and neuropathy and thus required around-the-clock care, the complaint said.

Pressdee, who was hired in January 2023, was the manager of the unit where Cymbol lived.

In that role, she was responsible for providing direct care to residents, addressing resident care concerns and conducting internal investigations into staff complaints or abuse.

The complaint alleged Pressdee “routinely insulted, berated, bullied and abused Mr. Cymbol, just as she had done to other residents.”

Staff allegedly knew she “disliked” Cymbol, and she routinely called him derogatory terms in reference to his brain injury within earshot of other Sunnyview staff, the filing said.

Sunnyview Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Butler County, PA
Sunnyview Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Butler County, Pa.Google Maps

On several occasions, she allegedly prevented other nurses from feeding or giving water to Cymbol, and had him eat alone when he was taken to the communal dining room.

Pressdee had already been linked to other suspicious resident deaths when she was caring for him, the complaint said.

One one occasion, she told other staff members Cymbol was “going to be the next one to die anyway,” the complaint said.

Despite these red flags, the facility didn’t remove Pressdee from his care, the complaint said.

On April 30, 2023, Cymbol’s nurse recorded his blood sugar level at 167 mg/dL at 6:30 a.m. Just 30 minutes later, at 7 a.m., Pressdee documented his blood sugar had allegedly risen to 380 mg/dL.

Pressdee then injected Cymbol with 60 units of insulin, and his blood sugar plummeted. She then tried to reverse the drop by administering multiple doses of glucagon, the filing said.

The suit said she initially refused to call 911, but paramedics were eventually called after she was confronted by other staffers.

Cymbol was taken to Butler Memorial Hospital for hypoglycemia — a condition in which one’s blood sugar level is lower than the standard range — and was discharged and returned to Sunnyview that same evening.

Despite having been hospitalized, Sunnyview nursing staff allegedly failed to monitor his blood sugar and condition.

That evening into the morning of May 1, his condition “gradually declined,” the complaint said.

Shortly after 4 a.m. on May 1, a nurse at Sunnyview who was not Pressdee found him in a “hypoglycemic crisis and foaming at the mouth.”

Cymbol’s sister, Melinda Brown, was called and told to come to the facility. At 4:30 a.m. she received a call from a nurse saying Cymbol had died.

His cause of death was initially identified as myocardial infarction.

At first, Cymbol’s family believed he died of natural causes, the suit said, but it wasn’t until an investigation by the Pennsylvania Office of the Attorney General that they ultimately learned Pressdee had administered an excessive and lethal dose of insulin to Cymbol, resulting in his death.

The day Cymbol died, Pressdee was terminated by Sunnyview for exhibiting abusive behavior toward residents and staff, according to the complaint.

After Cymbol’s death, she sent a sympathy card to his family saying, “nick was one of a kind,” according to the suit.

Failures at Sunnyview

The suit said the center failed in even hiring Pressdee given her checkered career history, in which she worked at 10 medical facilities from 2018 to December 2022 and was forced to resign or was terminated from each of those jobs due to “abusive tendencies and behavior toward residents and staff.”

While at Sunnyview, she allegedly exhibited “troubling and erratic behavior,” but the facility “consistently failed” to train staff to recognize and report the abuse or neglect of residents. As a result, her abuse was allowed to “pervade throughout the facility,” the complaint said.

The suit said members of the Sunnyview nursing staff began to notice residents whom Pressdee had access to “were passing away unexpectedly and/or under suspicious circumstances, causing the nursing staff to believe Pressdee had involvement in their deaths.”

The suit outlined some of those other suspicious resident deaths.

But the center “completely and repeatedly ignored the concerns of staff and residents pertaining to Pressdee’s treatment of residents.”

Pressdee’s arrest and charges

Weeks after Cymbol’s death and Pressdee’s subsequent termination, the Pennsylvania Department of Health conducted an investigation of the facility, according to the complaint.

Sunnyview Operating LLC and the center terminated or reprimanded staff who provided information to the department regarding resident deaths or Pressdee’s conduct, the complaint said.

On May 24, 2023, an arrest warrant was issued and she was taken into custody in connection with two resident deaths from insulin-induced hypoglycemia at Quality Life Services–Chicora, the lawsuit said.

She admitted to injecting those residents with the intention of killing them and she was subsequently charged with two counts of criminal homicide, counts later upgraded to murder in the first and third degree, the complaint said.

Then, in November, she was charged with 17 additional counts of attempted homicide and 19 counts of neglect of care-dependent persons for deaths at facilities in Butler, Allegheny, Westmoreland and Armstrong counties.

In Cymbol’s case, she was charged with murder and criminal neglect.

The criminal investigation into Pressdee is ongoing.

The November attorney general’s office news release announcing the additional charges does not note charges filed against Sunnyview.

Lawyers representing Pressdee in the criminal case, Phil DiLucente and Jim DePasquale, said they are not involved with the civil lawsuits but added that it’s possible the former nurse “pleads guilty to everything she is charged with” and that a status hearing has been set for May.

If she pleads guilty, “the only issue becomes whether she was negligently hired and or negligently supervised and what the damages are,” the lawyers said.

The new suit, filed by Brown, Cymbol’s sister, as well as the administrator of his estate, seeks unspecified compensatory and punitive damages and demands a jury trial.

“We were hired by the families of Heather Pressdee’s victims to get answers as to how she was permitted to continue working in these facilities, despite her erratic, disturbing, and abusive behavior,” Peirce, an attorney representing Brown, said in a statement Wednesday. “The more our office has investigated, the more questions we have as to why these facilities allowed these tragedies to occur.”



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Man charged with murder for Illinois stabbing rampage that killed 4


Man charged with murder for Illinois stabbing rampage that killed 4 – CBS News

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A 22-year-old man has been charged with murder for a stabbing rampage that killed four and left seven others injured in Rockford, Illinois. Sabrina Franza has the latest.

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After 34 years, girlfriend charged in man’s D.C. murder


Exactly 34 years after a man was killed inside his D.C. home, the Metropolitan Police Department announced his girlfriend has been arrested for the murder.

screen-shot-2024-03-28-at-6-36-35-pm.png
Norman Rich, 34, was found shot to death inside the bedroom of his D.C. home.

Metropolitan Police Department


Norman Rich, 34, known as “Semo,” was found inside his bedroom in his house on M Street, in the Northeast part of D.C., on Wednesday, March 28, 1990.

He was shot to death, police said. 

Shelia Brown, now 66 years old and living in Annapolis, Maryland, was arrested by members of the Annapolis Police Department and the United States Marshals Service on Wednesday. 

Authorities said Rich’s body was discovered by Brown, the mother of the couple’s three children. She told police at the time that she was about to run some errands, and right before she left two men came to their house looking for him. Brown told police she had recognized one of the men, “Ducky.”

When she returned home she found the front door open and Rich inside the bedroom, dead.

Police then offered a $25,000 reward for information about the case, but weren’t able to find the killer. 

Detectives said their investigation found the alleged murder “was domestic in nature,” but didn’t offer further details on Brown’s arrest after three decades. During a Thursday news conference, D.C. police inspector Kevin Kentish said detectives never stopped looking at the case, WTOP reported. 

Investigators used new technology and tests and began “looking at all the evidence, looking at witness statements and being able to find certain intricacies in the case that would lead to the closure.”

Brown was charged with second degree murder and obstruction of justice, after a D.C. superior court indictment.



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Aboard the eyes in the sky charged with keeping Paris Olympics secure


PARIS — They have the best seats in the house for this summer’s Paris Olympics, but they won’t be enjoying the sports.

Maj. John and Col. Dry will be the eyes in the sky for one of the most challenging and stringent security operations ever deployed at the Games.

NBC News got an exclusive invite last week to board their military police helicopter as they swooped over the sprawling Chateau de Versailles, the former royal residence now hosting equestrian events, to La Defense business district where seating for swimming competitions is under construction. Then along the river Seine, the scene of the opening ceremony, to the Olympic stadium, the Stade de France, and the multicolored townhouses of the suburban Olympic Village.

It’s no sightseeing tour: The Gendarmerie, as these military cops are known, will use pioneering surveillance tech to spot threats from the air and, if necessary, deploy SWAT teams should the City of Lights suffer a terrorist attack during the Olympics that kick off July 26.

French helicopter pilots Maj. John, center, and Col. Dry, right, at an army base on the outskirts of Paris last week.
French helicopter pilots Maj. John, center, and Col. Dry, right, at an army base on the outskirts of Paris last week.Dean Taylor / NBC News

“We will be watching, but you won’t see us and you won’t hear us,” said Dry, 49, who, like his gendarme colleague, was not permitted to give his first name. “Our special cameras and electronics mean we can observe from up to 4 or 5 kilometers (around 2.5 to 3 miles) away.”

 In a crisis they can reach any part of Paris in five minutes, they said.

“We will be there every hour of the day, every day every night,” said co-pilot John, 40.

France is deploying 45,000 police, military police and army troops across the country. And everyone involved in the Games will be subject to background checks — 1 million checks on everyone from security and building workers to event volunteers — according to a Ministry of Interior news briefing earlier this month, which said some 100,000 checks had so far yielded 280 “red flags” that needed further investigation.

(NBC News’ parent company, the Comcast-owned NBCUniversal, is the world’s largest Olympics broadcaster and the largest source of income for the International Olympic Committee.)

Security is always a big issue at the Games, an event with memories of 1972’s Munich massacre and the Centennial Olympic Park bombing at Atlanta 1996. 

But what makes Paris unique — and particularly difficult from a security perspective — is its ambitious opening ceremony: a 10,500-athlete, 90-boat flotilla down the Seine. The first time the event will be held outside of a stadium, the picturesque Parisian backdrop will bring all sorts of riddles over how to police the 3.5-mile route’s countless rooftops and residential balconies.

French police patrol over the Seine river in Paris. The iconic waterway will feature prominently in the 2024 Olympic opening ceremony.
French police patrol over the Seine river in Paris. The iconic waterway will feature prominently in the 2024 Olympic opening ceremony.Dean Taylor / NBC News

“There’s always this push in the Olympics to do something novel and unique with the opening ceremony, and what they’ve come up with sounds fantastic,” said Tim Bradley, a former FBI special agent who organized security for events ranging from the Super Bowl to former President Bill Clinton’s 1997 inauguration.

“But from a security perspective” it’s “going to be a huge, huge undertaking,” he said, and even then “I think you’re kind of going to be holding your breath a little bit.”

NBC News spent time last week with an anti-drone unit, whose operators send out their own drones to search for unmanned aerial offenders, before jamming their signals and, hopefully, catching the pilot. 

The Olympics come during a time of acute anxiety. President Emmanuel Macron’s government raised its security alert to the highest level after he said this week that ISIS-K, the terror group affiliate that killed 140 people at a Moscow concert hall, had tried to carry out attacks on French soil.

“If they can do it in Moscow, they can presumably try and do it in other capitals,” said François Heisbourg, one of France’s top terrorism experts who has advised successive prime ministers. “ISIS is an equal opportunity terror group.”

Officers demonstrate a Watson anti-drone rifle from a rooftop in Paris.
Officers demonstrate a Watson anti-drone rifle from a rooftop in Paris. Dean Taylor / NBC News

For Paris, the massacre carried painful echoes of November 2015, when militants attacked multiple sites and killed 139 people, most of them at the Bataclan concert hall. France has suffered sporadic attacks in the years since.

“When we decided to bid for 2024, it was just after the attacks,” Paris 2024 president Tony Estanguet told NBC News in an interview last week. “I think it was important for our country also to demonstrate that we are not afraid.”

“We will continue to live,” Estanguet added. “We will continue to defend the values of our country and to welcome the world — because we are France.”

Unlike other Games, such as Rio de Janeiro 2016, it will not be hosted at a bespoke venue outside of the city. Rather, the mostly temporary structures nestle among the Eiffel Tower and other iconic landmarks. This will provide a unique visual spectacle, organizers hope, but also a sustainable blueprint for an event that’s historically been anything but.

However, welcoming 10 million visitors will see traffic restrictions, closed metro stations and a network of checkpoints and permit requirements. Officials have advised residents to refrain from moving from their house or even sending and receiving parcels in the mail while the Games are taking place.

The French government decided on Sunday to raise the national security alert system to its highest level to deal with the potential threat the country is facing after Friday's deadly terrorist attack in Russia's capital Moscow.
Police officers patrol near the Eiffel Tower in Paris on Monday. Security levels were escalated in the aftermath of Friday’s terror attack in Moscow.Gao Jing / Xinhua News Agency via Getty Ima

This citywide upheaval has not been without its critics.

“Whenever you have a world gathering, you are going to have exceptional security measures,” Heisbourg said. “There are going to be a lot of checks and it’s not going to be fun. And like many others here, I am going to make sure not to be in Paris during the Olympic Games.”

The French pollster Odoxa found in November that opposition among Parisians had risen to 44%, up from 22% two years ago. And 52% said they were considering leaving town altogether.

There is more support in the rest of the country, according to that poll, with 65% of people nationwide saying the Games were a “good thing.”

Many are hopeful that the spectacle will give the French capital a fitting stage to showcase its best attributes.

“We want to transform the city of Paris into an Olympic park,” Estanguet said. He said he hoped it would be “a unique moment of celebration of sport and the Games in one of the most beautiful cities in the world.”

The criticism is not just about inconvenience, though. Civil liberties activists fear that the Games will transform their city into something resembling a police state. 

That was referenced, albeit lightheartedly, by helicopter pilot John who joked to NBC News that “Big Brother will be watching you.”

For many people it is no joke. 

What alarms them in particular are plans to use artificial intelligence to flag threats such as unattended items or crowd surges, which humans would then investigate.

This crackdown on “abnormal” behavior has the “power to exacerbate a chilling effect on dissent and protest, and to supercharge discrimination against communities already targeted,” Agnes Callamard, secretary general of Amnesty International, said in a statement last year.

May Day Protests In Paris
A protestor stands in front of a burning barricade, calling for President Macron to resign on May 1, 2021 in Paris.Kiran Ridley / Getty Images file

The French are famously unafraid of strikes and direct action, from the “Gilet Jaune” movement to the farmers currently spraying government buildings with manure, and organizers know the Games are not immune to dissent.

“You’re perfectly right to protest and it’s a right,” said Enzo, 22, a riot police officer who will protect the Olympic Torch as it travels from city to city. Enzo, who declined to give his last name because of the risk of reprisals from protesters, said demonstrations would only be restricted if they are illegal or “when it goes too far.”

This debate between security and liberty is hardly new. 

Back at the Gendarmes military base, one of those trying to maintain that balance is Praxus, a 4-year-old Belgian shepherd trained as both a sniffer and attack dog.

“We’re going to be in the big events and the competition will be packed,” said Praxus’ handler, Chief Marshal Clement. Asked if he and Praxus might get to watch some sport, he gives a smiling response. “We will be completely immersed in protecting the Games so there won’t be time for that.”

Keir Simmons and Nancy Ing reported from Paris, Alexander Smith reported from London



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Malaysian convenience store owners charged over ‘Allah’ socks that angered Muslims


KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — The owners of a Malaysian convenience store chain and one of its suppliers were charged Tuesday with offending the religious feelings of Muslims after socks printed with the word “Allah” were found for sale on its shelves.

Chai Kee Kan, founder and chairman of the KK Mart Group, the country’s second-large chain of convenience stores, and his wife Loh Siew Mui, a company director, pleaded not guilty to charges of deliberately wounding the religious feelings of Muslims. The company has blamed its supplier for sending products the company had not agreed to stock.

Religion is a sensitive issue in Malaysia, where Muslims account for two-thirds of a population of 34 million, with large ethnic Chinese and Indian minorities. Allah is an Arabic word for God, and many Malaysian Muslims found it offensive to associate the word with feet.

“The word ‘Allah’ is highly esteemed in the eyes of Muslims,” Minister for Religious Affairs Mohamad Na’im Mokhtar was quoted as saying by the national Bernama news agency earlier this month. “Allah is our creator and the act of putting Allah at our feet is an insult.”

Alwani Ghazali, a senior Islamic lecturer at Malaya University, told radio station BFM that it’s demeaning because feet are associated with a “lowly status.”

“Socks stink, do you agree? Are you happy to smell your socks after using them all day?” she said. “As a Muslim, I think it’s inappropriate and (the issue) is a big deal.”

The founder of the supplier that provided the socks, Xin Jian Chang, as well as his wife and daughter who are directors were also charged with abetting the offence. Xin Jian Chang has said the socks were imported from China as part of a large shipment and apologized for being careless in their inspection.

If found guilty, all five defendants face up to a year in jail, a fine or both.

KK Mart is a major 24-hour chain, with 810 stores domestically and some 5,000 employees. It also has outlets in Nepal and India. Chai has said the socks were put on its shelves by Xin Jian Chang, which rented shelf space in its outlets. Only 14 pairs of “Allah” socks were found on the shelves at three KK Mart outlets, he added.

KK Mart has sued Xin Jian Chang for “sabotage” over losses and damage to the chain’s reputation, reportedly claiming that it didn’t agree to stock socks from the supplier.

But a Malay political party in Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim’s coalition has called repeatedly for a boycott of KK Mart, while Malaysia’s new king, Sultan Ibrahim Iskandar, has called for stern action over the issue, warning that it could disrupt racial harmony. Two people deemed to have made insensitive comments online over the issue have also been charged, sentenced to jail and fined for insulting Islam.

Anwar has called for firm action but also urged the public not to make too much of the issue and to move on.

KK Mart has also reportedly said it had to cancel a planned listing on the Malaysian bourse due to the crisis.



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Moscow attack suspects appear severely beaten as they’re charged in Russian court


Four suspects accused of killing more than 130 people in a terrorist attack at a Moscow concert hall appeared heavily beaten as they were charged by a court in the Russian capital Sunday.

Photos and videos released by the court showed the four men being led into the courtroom with various levels of injuries. Three of the men had visible bruises and swelling on their faces, including one with heavy bandaging around his right ear. The fourth seemed barely conscious as he sat inside the prisoner’s box dressed in a hospital gown and on a stretcher, with his eyes closed for most of the hearing.

It came after images showing the suspects’ violent treatment in custody were shared widely across Russian social media, and as President Vladimir Putin vowed revenge but made no mention of the Islamic State group, which claimed responsibility for the deadly attack.

The Basmanny District Court of Moscow named the suspects as Dalerdzhon Mirzoyev, Saidakrami Rachabalizoda, Shamsidin Fariduni and Mukhammadsobir Faizov. Two of the four had admitted their guilt, the court said, although their condition raised questions about whether they were able to speak freely.

All four were charged with committing a terror act, according to the court, and could face up to life imprisonment. The suspects were ordered detained until May 22 by the court. Seven more people were detained on suspicion of involvement in the attack.

Four men suspected of carrying out a terror attach at Crocus City Hall, await charges in a Moscow court on March 22, 2024.
Clock wise from top left: Saidakrami Rachabalizoda, Shamsidin Fariduni, Dalerdzhon Mirzoyev and Mukhammadsobir Faizov.AP; AFP via Getty Images

All four are citizens of ex-Soviet state Tajikistan, Tass state news agency reported. The suspects had to use a translator to communicate in court, according to Tass.

NBC News analyzed footage shared over the weekend by Russian pro-war Telegram channels that showed at least one of the suspects being tortured, and others violently interrogated and injured. NBC News was able to authenticate the footage by comparing it with images of the suspects as they appeared in court on Sunday.

In one video, suspect Saidakrami Rachabalizoda lies on the ground in the woods while a man hacks at Rachabalizoda’s ear with a knife, before stuffing what looks like part of the ear into Rachabalizoda’s own mouth. Videos also show suspect Shamsidin Fariduni being interrogated on the ground in the woods as a man holds Fariduni’s head up by his hair. In a subsequent image, Fariduni drools on the floor of a sports hall with his pants and underwear around his knees while a man stands on his leg, a black box at his side.

The men are accused of perpetrating the worst terror attack Russia has seen in the last 20 years, killing at least 137 people and leaving dozens injured. Videos from inside the Crocus City Hall on Friday night showed several armed and camouflaged men shooting at people inside the venue, seemingly at random. The venue also caught on fire after an alleged explosion, leading the roof to cave in.

The detention hearing for the four suspects came as Russia marked a national day of mourning Sunday, and people continued to bring flowers to the burned-out site of the attack.

Putin claimed Ukraine’s involvement in preparing an escape route for the suspects before they were captured, an accusation Kyiv has vehemently denied and said was being used to distract from his own security failings and raise support for intensifying his military campaign.



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Court says 2 of 4 men charged in Moscow attack admit guilt as suspects show signs of beating


Four men accused of staging the Russia concert hall attack that killed more than 130 people appeared before a Moscow court Sunday showing signs of severe beatings as they faced formal terrorism charges. One appeared to be barely conscious during the hearing.

A court statement said two of the suspects accepted their guilt in the assault after being charged in the preliminary hearing, though the men’s condition raised questions about whether they were speaking freely. There had been earlier conflicting reports in Russian media outlets that said three or all four men admitted culpability.

Moscow’s Basmanny District Court formally charged Dalerdzhon Mirzoyev, 32; Saidakrami Rachabalizoda, 30; Shamsidin Fariduni, 25; and Mukhammadsobir Faizov, 19, with committing a group terrorist attack resulting in the death of others. The offense carries a maximum sentence of life imprisonment.

The court ordered that the men, all of whom are citizens of Tajikistan, be held in pre-trial custody until May 22.

UKRAINE-RUSSIA-ATTACK-SHOOTING
People light candles during a memorial gathering in Donetsk, Russian-controlled Ukraine, on March 24, 2024, as Russia observes a national day of mourning after a Moscow concert hall massacre that killed more than 130 people.

VALERY MELNIKOV/AFP via Getty Images


Russian media had reported that the men were tortured during interrogation by the security services, and Mirzoyev, Rachabalizoda and Fariduni showed signs of heavy bruising, including swollen faces,

Rachabalizoda also had a heavily bandaged ear. Russian media said Saturday that one of the suspects had his ear cut off during interrogation. The Associated Press couldn’t verify the report or the videos purporting to show this.

The fourth suspect, Faizov, was brought to court from a hospital in a wheelchair and sat with his eyes closed throughout the proceedings. He was attended by medics while in court, where he wore a hospital gown and trousers and was seen with multiple cuts.

Court officials said Mirzoyev and Rachabalizoda admitted guilt for the attack after being charged.

The hearing came as Russia observed a national day of mourning for the attack Friday on the suburban Crocus City Hall concert venue that killed at least 137 people.

The attack, which has been claimed by an affiliate of the Islamic State group, is the deadliest on Russian soil in years.

The Crocus city hall building was destroyed by fire in the
The Crocus City Hall building was destroyed by fire in the aftermath of a terrorist attack that claimed the lives of at least 137 people.

Vlad Karkov/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images


Russian authorities arrested the four suspected attackers Saturday, with seven more people detained on suspicion of involvement in the attack, Russian President Vladimir Putin said in an address to the nation Saturday night. He claimed they were captured while fleeing to Ukraine, something that Kyiv firmly denied.

Events at cultural institutions were canceled Sunday, flags were lowered to half staff and television entertainment and advertising were suspended, according to state news agency RIA Novosti. A steady stream of people added to a makeshift memorial near the burned-out concert hall, creating a huge mound of flowers.

“People came to a concert, some people came to relax with their families, and any one of us could have been in that situation. And I want to express my condolences to all the families that were affected here and I want to pay tribute to these people,” Andrey Kondakov, one of the mourners who came to lay flowers at the memorial, told AP.

“It is a tragedy that has affected our entire country,” kindergarten employee Marina Korshunova said. “It just doesn’t even make sense that small children were affected by this event.” Three children were among the dead.

Rescuers continued to search the damaged building and the death toll rose as more bodies were found as family and friends of some of those still missing waiting for news. Moscow’s Department of Health said Sunday it had begun identifying the bodies of those killed via DNA testing, saying the process would take at least two weeks.

Tribute To The Victims Of Moscow Terror Attack
People lay flowers at the makeshift memorials for the victims of the terrorist attack at the “Crocus City Hall” concert venue on March 24, 2024, in Moscow, Russia.

Tian Bing/China News Service/VCG via Getty Images


Igor Pogadaev was desperately seeking any details about his wife, Yana Pogadaeva, who went to the attack concert. The last he heard from her was when she sent him two photos from the Crocus City Hall music venue.

After Pogadaev saw the reports of gunmen opening fire on concertgoers, he rushed to the site, but couldn’t find her in the numerous ambulances or among the hundreds of people who had made their way out of the venue.

“I went around, searched, I asked everyone, I showed photographs. No one saw anything, no one could say anything,” Pogadaev told AP in a video message.

He watched flames bursting out of the building as he made frantic calls to a hotline for relatives of the victims, but received no information.

As the death toll mounted Saturday, Pogodaev scoured hospitals in the Russian capital and the Moscow region, looking for information on newly admitted patients.

His wife wasn’t among the 182 reported injured, nor on the list of 60 victims authorities had already identified, he said.

The Moscow Region’s Emergency Situations Ministry posted a video Sunday showing equipment dismantling the damaged music venue to give rescuers access.

Putin has called the attack “a bloody, barbaric terrorist act” and said Russian authorities captured the four suspects as they were trying to escape to Ukraine through a “window” prepared for them on the Ukrainian side of the border.

Russian media broadcast videos that apparently showed the detention and interrogation of the suspects, including one who told the cameras he was approached by an unidentified assistant to an Islamic preacher via a messaging app and paid to take part in the raid.

Putin didn’t mention IS in his speech to the nation, and Kyiv accused him and other Russian politicians of falsely linking Ukraine to the assault to stoke fervor for Russia’s fight in Ukraine, which recently entered its third year.

U.S. intelligence officials said they had confirmed the IS affiliate’s claim.

“ISIS bears sole responsibility for this attack. There was no Ukrainian involvement whatsoever,” National Security Council spokeswoman Adrienne Watson said in a statement.

Gunfire Reported At Concert Venue Outside Moscow
People walk past Crocus City Hall on March 23, 2024 in Krasnororsk, Russia.

Getty Images


The U.S. shared information with Russia in early March about a planned terrorist attack in Moscow, and issued a public warning to Americans in Russia, Watson said.

The raid was a major embarrassment for Putin and happened just days after he cemented his grip on the country for another six years in a vote that followed the harshest crackdown on dissent since the Soviet times.

Some commentators on Russian social media questioned how authorities, who have relentlessly suppressed any opposition activities and muzzled independent media, failed to prevent the attack despite the U.S. warnings.

IS, which fought against Russia during its intervention in the Syrian civil war, has long targeted Russia. In a statement posted by the group’s Aamaq news agency, the IS Afghanistan affiliate said that it had attacked a large gathering of “Christians” in Krasnogorsk.

The group issued a new statement Saturday on Aamaq, saying the attack was carried out by four men who used automatic rifles, a pistol, knives and firebombs. It said the assailants fired at the crowd and used knives to kill some concertgoers, casting the raid as part of the Islamic State group’s ongoing war with countries that it says are fighting against Islam.

In October 2015, a bomb planted by IS downed a Russian passenger plane over Sinai, killing all 224 people on board, most of them Russian vacationers returning from Egypt.

The group, which operates mainly in Syria and Iraq but also in Afghanistan and Africa, also has claimed responsibility for several attacks in Russia’s volatile Caucasus and other regions in past years. It recruited fighters from Russia and other parts of the former Soviet Union.



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Three men charged with assault in Montgomery, Alabama, riverfront brawl


Three Alabama men are facing misdemeanor assault charges after a group of white men attacked a Black dockworker on Saturday during a brawl involving multiple people along the Montgomery Riverfront.

Montgomery Police Chief Darryl J. Albert announced assault charges against Richard Roberts, 48; Allen Todd, 23; and Zachery Shipman, 25. At a news conference Tuesday, Albert said one of the men is in custody and the other two other were expected to turn themselves in to police Tuesday afternoon. 

Police are expected to bring more charges.

“We were unable to present any inciting a riot or racially biased charges at this time,” Albert told reporters.

Asked whether the situation constituted a hate crime, Albert said, “Based on the elements of this crime, those elements did not exist.”

Albert said police are also looking to speak with Reggie Gray, 42, a Black man shown in social media videos wielding a folding chair. 

Albert confirmed witness accounts of the incident: that a group of white private boaters attacked a Black dockworker, Damien Pickett, as he attempted to move their pontoon to make way for the Harriott II Riverboat. The more than 200 passengers on the riverboat waited for at least 30 minutes as its captain and Pickett tried to get the group of rowdy boaters to move their watercraft. Several members of the private pontoon then attacked Pickett, Albert said.

“They just didn’t think the rules applied to them. It was so avoidable. This never had to have happened,” a witness, Leslie Mawhorter, 52, who was aboard the Harriott II, previously told NBC News. “I knew something was going to go down, because their attitude was just, ‘You can’t tell us what to do.’ They were going to be confrontational regardless of who you were.”

The riverboat captain called police around 7 p.m. local time and officers arrived at the scene at 7:18 p.m., Albert said. Thirteen people were detained, questioned, then released, the police chief said, adding that the local FBI and district attorney’s offices are involved in the ongoing investigation. 

The family of a 16-year-old white dockworker is also calling for charges after he was attacked by the white boaters while operating a nearby vessel. Several videos of the fight began circulating the Internet in the wake of the incident. Social media users shared memes and pointed out that the combatants were split along racial lines. Many praised a group of Black men for coming to Pickett’s defense against the white boaters. 

“There was no need for this event to take the path it did,” Albert said. “The people of Montgomery, we’re better than that. We’re a fun city, and we don’t want this type of activity to shed a dark eye on what this city’s all about.”

A spokesperson for the city Parks & Recreation, which oversees the riverboat attractions, declined to comment on the matter. The Montgomery Riverfront is a popular summertime destination with a riverboat, a park, an amphitheater, a stadium and more.



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Teen charged in death of gay man used homophobic slurs before fatal stabbing, complaint says


The 17-year-old charged with murder as a hate crime in the fatal stabbing of O’Shae Sibley, a Black gay man, is alleged to have taunted Sibley and yelled homophobic slurs before the attack, according to the criminal complaint.

He then shut off his phone and shaved his head to evade the law before turning himself into police, the Brooklyn district attorney’s office said.

The teenager, who was identified in the complaint as Dmitriy Popov, has been charged with second-degree murder as a hate crime and criminal possession of a weapon. He has pleaded not guilty, his attorney said Tuesday.

Popov was identified through video, Joseph Kenny, an assistant chief at the New York Police Department’s detective bureau, said at a news conference with Mayor Eric Adams over the weekend announcing the arrest. He turned himself in Friday through an arrangement with his attorney, Mark Pollard.

O'Shae Sibley.
O’Shae Sibley.Kemar Jewel

Sibley, 28, was a professional dancer and choreographer. He was returning from New Jersey to his home in Brooklyn with four friends on the evening of July 29 when they stopped at a gas station in the Midwood neighborhood, Kenny said. As they got gas, they began dancing, Kenny said, at which point, a male called out to the group and demanded that they stop.

The male is identified in court documents as Popov, whose associates are alleged to have also joined in on the demands for Sibley and his friends to stop dancing. Adams said the group had been dancing to Beyoncé’s “Renaissance” album. 

According to the complaint, Popov and his associates yelled homophobic slurs, and Kenny said they also made anti-Black statements. The complaint alleges Popov and the others said, “Stop dancing here we are Muslim, get that gay s— out of here.”

“We can see on the video a heated verbal dispute quickly turns physical,” Kenny said. “This results in Mr. Sibley being stabbed one time, causing his death.”

The encounter lasted approximately four minutes.

Kenny said Popov pierced Sibley’s chest and damaged his heart, before fleeing in a Toyota Highlander. Kenny said authorities were able to quickly identify Popov with help from other city agencies.

Popov’s attorney said in an interview Tuesday that his client, who appeared in court Monday, did not pretend to be Muslim, as court documents allege.

“I can tell you unequivocally, my client denies that,” Pollard said. “He’s not Muslim.”

Pollard said Popov is Christian and also denies having made anti-Black statements.

“He completely denies it — using any slurs,” Pollard said. “He has many Black friends, and his brother is married to a Black woman. Nothing in his background makes me think he hates Black people or the LGBTQ people, and he denies that.”

Kenny said the group’s anti-Black and anti-gay statements led to the hate crime charge. Based on the investigation, Kenny said Saturday that only Popov would be charged.

Pollard asked that the case be moved to Family Court, a move the district attorney’s office opposed. Judge Craig Walker rejected the request and ordered Popov be held without bail.

Sibley’s death has resonated with many people. Beyoncé paid tribute to him in a post on her official website that read: “Rest in Power O’Shae Sibley.”

Lee Soulja Simmons, executive director of the NYC Center for Black Pride, said over the weekend that he met Sibley in 2017 as a performer in an off-Broadway show about Black pride. He described him as an amazing dancer, who was part of the house and ballroom community.

“The saddest part about it is that we wrestle with death, we wrestle with hate crimes, we wrestle with people within our community constantly facing discrimination,” Simmons said. “Not just because you’re Black but because you represent LGBT. And the fact that he was doing nothing more but vogueing and dancing here, he did not deserve to die in that way.”

Adams shared similar sentiments.

“This is a city where you are free to express yourself,” Adams said. “And that expression should never end with any form of violence.”



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Three men charged with assault in Montgomery, Alabama, riverfront brawl


Three Alabama men are facing misdemeanor assault charges after a group of white men attacked a Black dock worker on Saturday during a brawl involving multiple people along the Montgomery Riverfront.

Montgomery Police Chief Darryl J. Albert announced assault charges for Richard Roberts, 48; Allen Todd, 23; and Zachery Shipman, 25; at a Tuesday news conference. Albert said one of the men is in custody and the two others are expected to turn themselves over to police Tuesday afternoon. 

“There was no need for this event to take the path it did,” Albert told reporters. He said investigators do not believe the incident was racially motivated. “The people of Montgomery, we’re better than that. We’re a fun city and we don’t want this type of activity to shed a dark eye on what this city’s all about.”

Albert said police are also looking to speak with Reggie Gray, 42, a Black man shown in social media videos wielding a folding chair in the brawl. 

Albert confirmed witness accounts of the incident: that a group of white private boaters attacked a Black dock worker, Damien Pickett, as he attempted to move their pontoon to make way for the Harriott II Riverboat. The more than 200 passengers on the riverboat waited for at least 30 minutes as its captain and Pickett tried to get the group of rowdy boaters to move their watercraft.

“They just didn’t think the rules applied to them. It was so avoidable. This never had to have happened,” a witness, Leslie Mawhorter, 52, who was aboard the Harriott II, previously told NBC News. “I knew something was going to go down, because their attitude was just, ‘You can’t tell us what to do.’ They were going to be confrontational regardless of who you were.”

This is a developing story. Please refresh for updates.



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