She almost died from Covid at this hospital, which saved her life. Now she leads it.


In 2020, when New York City was the epicenter of the Covid pandemic and grappling with thousands of cases, Helen Arteaga Landaverde became seriously ill with the disease and was admitted to New York City Health + Hospitals/Elmhurst, a public hospital that is part of the country’s largest municipal health system.

“I said, ‘Oh, my God, I’m going to die in the same place where my father died,’” said Arteaga Landaverde, whose father’s leukemia diagnosis and rapid death years before had compelled her to shift her career trajectory from chemistry to public health.

She was one of the fortunate ones who survived Covid, and a year later, the medical staff who cared for her found themselves working under her leadership: In 2021, Arteaga Landaverde became Elmhurst’s first female — and first Hispanic — chief executive officer. The public hospital she now leads was founded in 1837 in the borough of Queens, a county of over 2 million people that’s one of the most ethnically diverse in the country.

In the last few years, the history-making CEO has been focused on ensuring that Elmhurst gets the same kind of high-tech equipment that is available at private hospitals, with the goal of making it a top facility in the country. “Two hundred thousand dollars,” she said, pointing to a machine. “It’s a small machine, but it helps our patients so much.”

“I wanted to do something that would change the world — that our people know that one of them is running the largest hospital in Queens,” Arteaga Landaverde said in an interview with Noticias Telemundo, “that one of them also understands it’s not easy to come to this country, that it’s not easy to learn a new language.”

Arteaga Landaverde is a longtime resident of Corona, Queens, having arrived with her family from Ecuador when she was young. Like many immigrant families, they came in search of a better life, and she said she saw how health care played a vital role in the community.

“I wanted to study chemistry to find the cure of AIDS because I would see my neighbors, people I loved in my church were getting sick, they were dying, and there was a stigma that it was something bad,” she said.

Helen Arteaga Landaverde.
Helen Arteaga Landaverde.NYC Health + Hospitals

Arteaga Landaverde earned a scholarship to New York University, where she majored in chemistry, but her father’s leukemia diagnosis and subsequent death inspired her to channel that grief and change direction, earning a master’s in public health at Columbia University. Later, working with several community leaders, she opened the Plaza del Sol Family Health Center in Queens in 2014 in her father’s memory.

Plaza Del Sol has provided care to more than 30,000 patients regardless of their ability to pay; “a place that everyone could go to,” she said.

Having already served on the hospital’s board of directors, Arteaga Landaverde went through 21 interviews for the CEO spot and was selected from among 300 applicants.

“When I arrived, people were scared, they wanted hope, they wanted solutions,” she said, adding that her priority is to show warmth and humanity to the hospital’s patients. During the interview, she ran into her mother, who had come in for an appointment, in the hospital’s corridor, both sharing a laugh about the chance encounter.

Arteaga Landaverde’s supporters say it was about time that someone from the community who understands its needs was picked to head the hospital.

“One hundred and ninety years had to go by for a woman, a Latina, to finally be picked to be this center’s director,” said Vladimir Gasca, director of behavioral health and psychiatry at NYC Health + Hospitals/Elmhurst.

Currently working on a doctorate at CUNY Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy, Arteaga Landaverde has received numerous awards and recognitions, including a fellowship with the National Hispana Leadership Institute.

As the nation marks Women’s History Month, she was asked her advice to girls and women who may think it’s difficult to reach a goal, like she may have thought herself.

“Keep in mind it’s hard, but dream as big as you possibly can,” Arteaga Landaverde said, spreading her arms wide open.

An earlier story was first published in Noticias Telemundo.

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How life insurance can evolve into retirement income


gettyimages-1433323067.jpg
Life insurance can give you supplemental income in retirement. 

Westend61/Getty Images


The decision to purchase life insurance is often a simple one when you have loved ones who depend on your income. After all, it’s important to ensure that your family has what it needs financially after you die. 

But while life insurance may seem like something you buy primarily for the protection of others, that’s not the only reason to purchase coverage. For example, your life insurance could also benefit you while you’re alive. And, in some cases, your life insurance policy could even evolve into a source of retirement income. 

Find out how affordable a life insurance policy can be now. 

How life insurance can evolve into retirement income

Here are a few ways your life insurance could benefit you as a source of retirement income:

The right life insurance policy can build cash value

“First and foremost is death protection, but in some policies, it gains cash value,” says Devin Graham, a WoodmanLife insurance agent. 

That’s true for index universal life (IULs), for example. The cash value growth of IULs is based on the market, and IULs “can give the member the option of gaining up to 8% interest,” Graham says.

And, there are other cash value options, like whole life or permanent life insurance policies, as well. Whole life insurance policies typically aren’t tied to the stock market. Rather, these policies grow at a fixed rate set by your insurance company.

If you need income in retirement, you may be able to withdraw money against your life insurance policy’s cash value. You may also have the option to surrender your policy and receive the entire cash value. That cash value includes the money you’ve paid into the policy, plus interest, not including any associated fees.

Purchase a life insurance policy now to start building cash value. 

Your premiums could be returned to you

Term life insurance is commonly thought of as a use-it-or-lose-it policy, but that isn’t necessarily the case. For example, you may be able to add a return of premium rider to your policy. That way, if you outlive your policy’s term, you can receive a refund for some or all of the premiums you paid while your policy was active. 

Let’s say you purchase a 20-year term life insurance policy while in your 40s. That policy has $300 monthly premiums and includes a return of premium rider. If you haven’t used the death benefits tied to your term life policy by the end of the 20 years, you could get a refund of $72,000 (240 premium payments at $300 per month). 

You may be able to sell your policy

You also may be able to sell your life insurance policy to life settlement companies. By doing this, you’ll receive a one-time cash payment for the sale of your policy.

However, if you take this route, it’s important to compare your options. Offers vary from one company to another. 

And, because these companies are typically most interested in buying high-value life insurance policies from older policyholders, “you’ll probably need to have at least a $100,000 life insurance policy and be over the age of 65 to sell your policy,” according to the Texas Department of Insurance. 

The bottom line

Life insurance can be an effective way to financially protect your loved ones after you die, but it may also allow you to supplement your income in retirement. If you choose to take this route, it may benefit you to look for whole life insurance or index universal life insurance to ensure that your policy can adequately supplement your income. If you choose a term life insurance policy, consider one with a return of premium rider so you get your money back if you outlive your policy’s term. 

Aside from offering a supplemental source of retirement income, life insurance can also help cover the high cost of long-term care. For example, if you add a long-term care rider to your policy, you may be able to use a portion of your death benefit to cover additional healthcare costs if you develop a debilitating condition, which can cut down on your expenses during retirement. 



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Colorful paintings of daily life uncovered in 4,300-year-old Egyptian tomb


Colorful paintings of daily life in ancient Egypt have been discovered in a tomb dating back more than 4,300 years.

The tomb, known as a mastaba, was found in the pyramid necropolis of Dahshur, about 25 miles south of Cairo, during a recent Egyptian-German archaeological mission.

Dahshur is the southernmost of the great pyramid necropolises of the Old Kingdom in the vicinity of the ancient capital of Memphis. The main attractions there are two large pyramids of King Sneferu: the so-called Bent Pyramid and the Red Pyramid.

The daily life of the ancient Egyptians and their animals can be seen in the paintings. - St.J.Seidlmayer/DAIK

The daily life of the ancient Egyptians and their animals can be seen in the paintings. – St.J.Seidlmayer/DAIK

Made from unfired mud brick, the rectangular mastaba measures about 26 feet by 39 feet (8 meters by 12 meters) and features seven burial shafts, as well as another shaft for ceramic bowls and other items used in burial rituals.

According to inscriptions on a massive limestone false door, the tomb belonged to a man named Seneb-nebef, who served in the administration of the residents of the palace district, as well as his wife, Idut.

The shape of the mastaba, together with the inscriptions, images and ceramics found inside, suggest it dates from the end of the 5th or the beginning of the 6th dynasty -approximately 2,300 BCE.

The tomb belonged to an administrator called Seneb-nebef. - St.J.Seidlmayer/DAIK

The tomb belonged to an administrator called Seneb-nebef. – St.J.Seidlmayer/DAIK

Stephan Seidlmayer, former director of the German Archaeological Institute in Berlin, led the expedition.

He told CNN in an email: “The corridor and the cult chamber were decorated with subtle paintings on mud plaster – a rarity in the necropolis of Dahshur. Despite extensive destruction, numerous images have been preserved. They show pictures of the tomb owner and his wife in front of the offering table, scenes from daily life – donkeys on the threshing floor, ships on the Nile, a market place – and servants who bring gifts for the mortuary cult.

“In their elegant forms and perfect execution, the pictures offer valid evidence of the artistic milieu of the capital region of the developed Old Kingdom.”

According to a statement from the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities, inscriptions revealed that the owner of the tomb “held several positions in the royal palace in the administration of tenants,” while his wife “held the titles of Priestess of Hathor and Lady of the Sycamore.”

The outside of the large tomb in Dahshur, some 25 miles south of Cairo - St.J.Seidlmayer/DAIK

The outside of the large tomb in Dahshur, some 25 miles south of Cairo – St.J.Seidlmayer/DAIK

The German Archaeological Institute Cairo has been excavating at Dahshur since 1976. The initial stages focused on the pyramids of King Sneferu from the Old Kingdom and King Amenemhat III from the Middle Kingdom.

More recent excavations have, however, centered on the tombs of great statesmen, priests and administrators from same eras.

Seidlmayer and his team will continue to excavate the site “in an attempt to search for more secrets of this area,” the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities said in its statement. It added: “Cleaning and documentation work will be carried out on the tomb and its inscriptions during the coming period.”

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Bleak images show snapshots of daily life in the closed world of North Korea


  • An AFP photographer captured rare shots showing everyday life in North Korea.

  • Pedro Pardo accessed a remote part of the border in China’s Jilin province to get the photos.

  • `The images show a bleak picture of life in the completely isolated nation.

An AFP photographer captured rare images showing daily life in North Korea.

To get the photos, Pedro Pardo accessed a remote part of North Korea’s border with China in the latter’s Jilin province.

The images Pardo took between February 26 and March 1 offer a bleak yet fascinating look at life in a country shrouded in secrecy.

North Korea was founded in 1948 under Kim Il-sung as the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), inspired by strict Marxist-Leninist principles.

Its population of roughly 26 million people lives largely in isolation from the rest of the world in the austere communist state, barred from going abroad without permission from the government and subjected to state-run media that blare propaganda praising the nation and its supreme leader, Kim Jong Un.

North Korea’s self-imposed isolation is largely due to its guiding principle of “juche,” or “self-reliance” — the idea that it should be able to function completely independently and remain separate from the rest of the world.

In practice, this has achieved little other than to stifle the country’s economy and trade, and many of its citizens face high poverty levels and severe food shortages. The CIA says North Korea “remains one of the World’s most isolated and one of Asia’s poorest.”

Since the 1950s, it is estimated that around 31,000 North Koreans have sought to escape and defected to South Korea, The Guardian reported in January.

That number surged last year amid what the unification ministry in Seoul called “worsening conditions in North Korea.”

Pardo’s photos present a unique look into those conditions and life in one of the world’s last communist states.

North Korean soldiers working on the border.

North Korean soldiers working on the border.

Pedro Pardo / AFP via Getty Images

The North Korean city of Hyesan.

The North Korean city of Hyesan.

Pedro Pardo / AFP via Getty Images

A wagon in the North Korean city of Namyang.

A mobile wagon in the North Korean city of Namyang.

Pedro Pardo / AFP via Getty Images

A sign on a hillside in the town of Chunggang reads: “My country is the best.”

A sign saying "My country is the best"

Pedro Pardo / AFP via Getty Images

A watchtower by the border in Hyesan.

A watchtower on the border in the North Korean village of Hyesan.

Pedro Pardo / AFP via Getty Images

Portraits of former North Korean leaders Kim Il sung and Kim Jong Il in Chunggang.

Chunggang.

Pedro Pardo / AFP via Getty Images

Another set of portraits of the former leaders on a government building in Namyang.

A government building in Namyang.

Pedro Pardo / AFP via Getty Images

North Korean people working in a field.

North Korean people working in a field.

Pedro Pardo / AFP via Getty Images

A sign in Chunggang reading: “Let’s unify the party and all society with the revolutionary ideas of comrade Kim Jong Un!”

A sign reading, "Let's unify the party and all society with the revolutionary ideas of comrade Kim Jong Un!" in Chunggang.

Pedro Pardo / AFP via Getty Images

Trucks crossing a border bridge connecting Changbai, China, and Hyesan, North Korea.

Trucks crossing the border bridge that connects the Chinese towns of Changbai (L) and the North Korean of Hyesan

Pedro Pardo / AFP via Getty Images

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The Life and Times of Michael K, a South African puppet play


Scene from The Life and Times of Michael K with Craig Leo and Carlo Daniels

Scene from The Life and Times of Michael K with Craig Leo and Carlo Daniels

World-renowned South African puppeteer Adrian Kohler has realised a 30-year-long ambition to make a novel by Nobel laureate JM Coetzee into a puppet play.

It follows a collaboration with Lara Foot, one of South Africa’s leading playwrights and directors, who has adapted for the stage The Life and Times of Michael K, which also happens to be Kohler’s favourite Coetzee book.

The novel is set in apartheid South Africa amidst a fictional civil war and the horrors of a dystopian world.

Michael K is born into poverty with a cleft lip and judged to have, in Coetzee’s words, “a mind that was not quick”. His mother, Anna, sends him away to an institution for “variously afflicted and unfortunate” children.

“Michael K is very much an outsider, and that’s why having him as a puppet works so well,” Kohler tells the BBC.

“Casting him and his mother as puppets – while all of the other characters that impinge on him and her are played by humans – allows you to create that kind of distance – of a character who is so much in his own being,” he adds.

Scene from play

The Life and Times of Michael K is set in a dystopian world

When Michael K grows up, he becomes a gardener and lives a simple, isolated life.

Michael K is “essentially an individual who sets an example in terms of how little we need to survive happily”, Foot says.

When his mother becomes ill and unable to walk, she wants to return to the rural home where she was born.

So Michael builds a handcart for her to travel in – and they set off from Cape Town through the Karoo semi-desert.

Scene from play

Michael K’s mother dies on the way home

Anna dies on the way. Michael carries on the journey with her ashes.

But he has to contend with being forced into a work camp, the loss of basic individual freedoms – and soldiers and rebels who try to force him to pick sides in a raging conflict.

“I think this resonates with all of us in terms of: what is our essence, and where do we want to be in the world?” Foot tells the BBC.

“This is especially so in the world today, where there are so many displaced people looking for a home or looking for a little bit of land. In Michael’s case – to become a gardener, to grow vegetables.”

The Life and TImes of Michael K makes its UK premiere on 3 August and runs until 27 August at the Edinburgh Fringe – one of the world’s biggest performing arts festivals.

Scene from The Life and Times of Michael K with Craig Leo, Nolufefe Ntshuntshe, Carlo Daniels, Faniswa Yisa and Billy Langa

The play is being staged at the Edinburgh Fringe

The cast includes some of South Africa’s acting legends, including Sandra Prinsloo, Andrew Buckland and Faniswa Yisa.

The production also uses performance, music and film.

“Partly so that we could see these beautiful puppets that Adrian carved up on a big screen, and partly so that we would understand the landscape of this journey and the beautiful loneliness of the Karoo in South Africa,” Foot says.

“It’s a really magnificent story for the stage, for theatrical expression,” she adds.

Lara Foot with a puppet and a windmill in the background

Lara Foot enjoys puppetry because puppets can do what humans can’t, like fly

The puppets are made by the Handspring Puppet Company, which was co-founded in 1981 by Kohler and his husband Basil Jones.

In 2021, they built Little Amal, a 12ft (3.7m) puppet that represents a young Syrian refugee girl and has become a worldwide symbol of hope and compassion for refugees.

“A puppet is a figure that is only manipulated into life by the mind and by the puppeteer,” Jones says.

“We are puppeteers because we love the way an audience’s imagination is provoked by the conceit of the moving figure of the puppet that imitates and, perhaps, flatters life – by trying to be alive,” he adds.

Kohler has been immersed in puppetry and woodworking since he was a child. He used to build puppets with his mother, an amateur puppeteer, and his father, a yacht builder and cabinet maker.

Puppets

Adrian Kohler has been interested in woodwork since childhood

Jones, on the other hand, hated puppets at first. But that changed when Kohler bought “an incredibly elegant, beautifully painted puppet”.

It was a Bamana puppet from Mali – animals, fantastic creatures and characters from village life that have been used for centuries in theatre to comment on social and political life.

“I then understood that puppets weren’t only Punch and Judy and the Muppets,” Jones tells the BBC.

“That there’s an authentic ancient African tradition and a vast horizon of puppetry that had been unexplored.”

Handspring is famous for its lifelike, life-size puppets – like the horses in the international hit War Horse. And for reinventing the art of puppetry – through technical innovations and what they call “emotional engineering”.

“I think we’re the first group that really started talking about breath as an essential part of puppetry,” Jones says.

Scene from The Life and Times of Michael K with Craig Leo and Carlo Daniels

The puppet is particularly articulate and can walk in the air, Kohler says

“Gradually it became the fundamental thing behind our movement philosophy.”

The horses in War Horse, a play about the bond between a horse and a farm boy separated in World War One, are spellbindingly convincing. In the way they move – especially the ears that reveal the horses’ emotions, the noises they make and how they breathe.

Unlike those in War Horse, the Michael K puppet is not life-size – deliberately so “to increase the visual tension between the puppet and the human actors,” Kohler says.

“He’s a pretty articulate puppet. He can walk in the air, levitate out of a scene and he’s able to kind of fly against the story as it unfolds – against the war that is surrounding him – in a way that wouldn’t be possible if he were a human.”

In the tradition of the Bunraku puppeteers of Japan, the Michael K puppets are brought alive by the energies of three people. It is detailed, precise work as puppeteers sort out timings and movements.

On stage the actors cannot talk to each other or make eye contact with the audience – instead the eye contact and breathing is always with the puppets.

Scene from play

Actors can’t talk to each other on stage

“It is an intimate, highly sensitised form of performance that goes into a space of a kind of sacredness,” says Roshina Ratnam, the puppeteer who directs a goat and the head of Michael K’s mother.

She works with Faniswa Yisa, who is her voice and supporting hand puppeteer, and Nolufefe Ntshuntshe, who is her feet.

“You can make magic and there is a suspension of disbelief,” Ratnam says.

“Audiences really gasp when the puppet dies – and I love being able to elicit that emotion for something that we essentially know is a piece of wood.”

Ratnam first picked up a puppet 12 years ago – when she was cast as the lead in a play about Sadoko Sasaki, a Japanese girl who contracted leukaemia after surviving the atomic bombing of Hiroshima.

Ratnam fell in love with puppetry – and she wants others to be able to experience that same joy.

As well as directing and performing, she is also the head of communications with the South African Puppetry Association, which aims to strengthen professional puppetry throughout the country.

Nolufefe-Ntshuntshe,-Craig-Leo,-Carlo-Daniels,-Roshina-Ratnam,-Andrew-Buckland-in-Life-&-Times-of-Michael-K,-pic-by-Fiona-McPherson_

Puppetry is being popularised in South Africa

It has a particular focus on reaching underprivileged communities and artists – and has run training courses for young black South Africans on how to build puppets from scratch and use puppetry in film and TV.

The Life and Times of Michael K production is the first time that Foot has directed puppets – and “to give a truthfulness to the life of the puppets was a huge challenge that took time and a lot of care”, she says.

“But one is allowed to be very creative and quite filmic when creating the scenes – because puppets can do what humans can’t do. They can fly, for instance. And that is the delight of puppetry.”

Penny Dale is a freelance journalist, podcast and documentary-maker based in London

Images subject to copyright

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Jury begins weighing death penalty or life in prison for Pittsburgh synagogue shooter


PITTSBURGH (AP) — A jury is deliberating whether the man who killed 11 people at a Pittsburgh synagogue should receive the death penalty or life in prison without parole.

Robert Bowers perpetrated the deadliest antisemitic attack in U.S. history when he stormed the Tree of Life synagogue in 2018 and opened fire, killing members of three congregations who had gathered for Sabbath worship and study.

The same jury that convicted Bowers in June on 63 criminal counts began deliberating his sentence around 9:30 a.m. Tuesday morning, and returned to the courtroom soon after to look at guns that were used in the attack.

In closing arguments Monday, prosecutors said the 50-year-old truck driver was clearly motivated by religious hatred, reminding jurors that Bowers had spread antisemitic content online before the attack and has since expressed pride in the killings. They urged jurors to impose a death sentence.

Bowers’ lawyers asked jurors to spare his life, asserting that he acted out of a delusional belief that Jewish people were helping to bring about a genocide of white people. They said he has severe mental illness and endured a difficult childhood.

Bowers, who was armed with an AR-15 rifle and other weapons, also shot and wounded seven, including five responding police officers.

U.S. District Judge Robert Colville thanked the jurors for their service before sending them out to deliberate.

A short time later, as jurors huddled around the courtroom display of weapons, they asked questions of the U.S. marshal who was standing there. Bowers’ attorneys objected, and the judge instructed the jury to refrain from speaking with him and to disregard everything he told them about the weapons. Colville rejected a defense request for a mistrial.



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Lori Vallow Daybell sentenced to multiple life terms for killing her son and daughter


Lori Vallow Daybell sentenced to multiple life terms for killing her son and daughter – CBS News

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Lori Vallow Daybell spoke out in court Monday before being sentenced to multiple life terms for killing her son and daughter, and conspiring to kill her children and her husband’s former wife. She was unrepentant, telling the court, “Jesus Christ knows that no one was murdered in this case.” Jonathan Vigliotti has more from Rexburg, Idaho.

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Watch: Lori Vallow Daybell speaks, receives life sentence for murder of children


Watch: Lori Vallow Daybell speaks, receives life sentence for murder of children – CBS News

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A judge sentenced Lori Vallow Daybell to life in prison without the possibility of parole Monday after she was convicted of murdering her two youngest children and conspiring to kill her husband’s first wife. Vallow Daybell addressed the court prior to sentencing.

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Lori Vallow sentenced to life in prison in murders of her 2 children and romantic rival


Lori Vallow was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole in the deaths of her two children and that of her husband’s previous wife, a case that drew national intrigue after her children disappeared nearly four years ago.

Lori Vallow was convicted in May in the murders of her kids, Joshua “JJ” Vallow, 7, and Tylee Ryan, 16, as well as conspiracy to commit murder in the death of Tammy Daybell. Before her sentencing, Lori Vallow addressed the court claiming that a near death experience allowed her to communicate with the “spirit world.”

She told the judge that she knew “for a fact” that her children and Tammy Daybell were happy in heaven. Tylee and Joshua have communicated with her that they are happy after their deaths, Lori Vallow said.

“Jesus knows me and Jesus understands me,” she said. “I mourn with all of you who mourn my children and Tammy. Jesus Christ knows the truth of what happened here, Jesus Christ knows no one was murdered in this case. Accidental deaths happen, suicides happen, fatal side effects from medications happen.”

Tylee is Lori Vallow’s biological daughter from her third marriage to Joseph Ryan, who died of a heart attack in 2018. Joshua was adopted in 2014 by Lori and her fourth husband, Charles Vallow.

She and her fifth and current husband, Chad Daybell, were accused of being obsessed with doomsday prophecies and believed that people could become “zombies” possessed by evil spirits.

Prosecutors read a statement Monday by Colby Ryan, Lori Vallow’s adult son, who said that his mother’s actions have kept him from being able to share his life with the people he loved the most.

“My children will never know their uncle, their aunt or grandfather, or even their grandmother,” he said in the statement. “Tylee and JJ brought so much light into this world. With their lives stolen, I’d like to share this: I believe nothing could or ever will be the same.”

Prosecutors described Lori Vallow as a woman who would “remove any obstacle in her way” and would use “money, power, and sex to get what she wanted” during the weekslong trial earlier this year. Her attorney argued that Lori Vallow was a loving mother who became intrigued in biblical prophecies about the end of the world.

Authorities first began the search for Tylee and Joshua in November 2019, after several family members contacted authorities concerned that they hadn’t seen or spoken to the children since September. Police said that Lori Vallow and her husband lied to authorities about the children’s whereabouts during the investigation and failed to comply with court orders to physically produce the children.

Their remains were found the following year, in June 2020, on property owned by Chad Daybell in Fremont County, Idaho. Court documents said that Joshua, who was adopted and had special needs, was buried in a pet cemetery, and that Tylee’s remains were dismembered and burned in a fire pit.

In October 2019, Tammy Daybell was found dead of what were believed to be natural causes at the time. Investigators later exhumed her body and conducted an autopsy, which ruled her death was a homicide.

Lori Vallow married Chad Daybell just weeks after his previous wife’s death. Prosecutors said during Lori Vallow’s trial that she took part in the conspiracy to kill Tammy Daybell so that she and Chad Daybell could be together.

Chad Daybell, a self-published author who wrote doomsday-focused fiction, is awaiting trial on the same murder charges. 

Charles and Lori Vallow were married in 2006 and were estranged by 2019, when divorce papers were filed. According to police documents obtained by NBC affiliate KSL, Charles Vallow learned that his wife was having an affair with Chad Daybell in June 2019 and was shot by his brother-in-law, Alex Cox, weeks later.

Lori Vallow and Cox were questioned at the time but weren’t charged, as they claimed self-defense. A grand jury charged her with conspiracy to commit murder in the first degree nearly two years after his death, the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office said.

She will be tried separately, in Arizona, in that case. Cox died in December 2019 from a pulmonary embolism.

Kay Woodcock, Charles Vallow’s sister and Joshua’s biological grandmother, cried in court Monday during her victim impact statement at the sentencing hearing.

“The grief my family and I have endured is immeasurable as Lori cruelly took my big brother Charles, my adorable grandson JJ, and my beautiful niece Tylee, and sweet Tammy — whose family I’ve come to know and love,” Woodcock said. “Lori is undeniably a monster.”





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Donna Mills on “the best moment of my entire life”


The hills above Los Angeles aren’t exactly what you’d call wine country, but from the air you can see rows of grapes growing smack in the middle of a residential neighborhood. This is Mandeville Vineyards, also known as Donna Mills’ backyard.

This crop will become another vintage of malbec and cabernet sauvignon under the Mandeville Vineyards label, a project she started 10 years ago with longtime partner Larry Gilman. “We’re farmers,” Mills said. “And to be a farmer is kind of fun.”

grapes.jpg
Donna Mills shows correspondent Tracy Smith her crop of cabernet grapes, which she grows in the foothills of Los Angeles. 

CBS News


And it seems she has a knack for making things grow. At the moment Mills is co-starring in the Lifetime series based on V.C. Andrews’ “Dawn,” playing a grandmother with a mile-long mean streak. She calls her character, Lillian, “probably the evilest I’ve ever been.”

Asked how it makes her feel, Mills replied, “Good. I know! It’s so much fun to play the evil character, it really is.”

It’s hard to imagine that she’s really just a nice Midwestern girl. Born and raised in Chicago, Donna Mills dreamed of being a dancer, but found success on the stage, and in soap operas like “The Secret Storm” and “Love Is a Many Splendored Thing.” She also did guest shots on primetime shows, including the short-lived cop series “Dan August” with Burt Reynolds.  She recalled, “I did it, was fun, great. And I get a phone call from my agent saying, ‘You got this movie with Clint Eastwood.’ I’m like, ‘How did I do that? I never met him.’ ‘Well, he ran into Burt in a bar one night and said, “I’m lookin’ for a girl for this movie I’m doing. I can’t find anybody I like.” Burt said, “Just worked with this girl from New York.”‘”

Her performance in 1971’s “Play Misty for Me” was well-received, but afterward she found herself typecast as a damsel-in-distress. Frustrated, she found a role that would make her one of the best-known villains on network TV: Abby Cunningham on “Knots Landing.”

Knots Landing
Joan Van Ark, Ted Shackelford and Donna Mills in the soap opera “Knots Landing,” 1980.

CBS Photo Archive/Getty Images


She said, “When I took ‘Knots,’ when I got it, I’d never watched it. I thought it was a show about a houseboat with Andy Griffith. I swear to you, I did!”

Her turn as the ruthless, husband-stealing Abby made her famous, and infamous. “There was a time when people that I would meet at a party or whatever, the woman would be like, Hello, kind of pull her husband away!” she said.

The series was a major hit for CBS, and Mills says playing Abby gave her a certain confidence, which was not always perceived as a good thing: “You know, a confident man is, like, everybody thinks that’s great. You know, confident woman is sometimes a bitch.”

“Did you run across that?” Smith asked.

“Yeah. Yeah. I’ve been called that more than once!”

Off-screen she remained happily un-married, but she sensed something was missing. “I had had a hit series, I had my own production company, I was doing all this stuff, and I said to myself, Well, this is great. I’ve achieved almost everything that I’ve wanted to in my career. What about my life? How does that look to me? Do I wanna go through life without knowing what it’s like to be a mother, which is the most important thing in the world? No. I want that in my life.

“And by that time, it was kind of past the time when I was gonna be able to have a baby. So I thought, I’ll adopt. And that’s probably what I feel is my greatest joy.”

donna-mills-b.jpg
Actress Donna Mills. 

CBS News


In 1994 Donna Mills, 54 and single, adopted a daughter and named her Chloe. 

She recalled the time she first saw Chloe as “probably the best moment of my entire life, when she was put in my arms. She was four days old. And there she was. Those are my happiest times in my life, sitting in the rocking chair with her on my chest, singing to her.”

Mills said she knew early on that she wanted to be a full-time mom, so she put her career on hold for 18 years, and raised Chloe from an infant to a schoolgirl to an accomplished young woman. 

And when Chloe left for college, Mama said it was time to go back to work. “It’s gonna be kind of a struggle to get back,” Mills said. “‘Cause the casting directors are 12, and they don’t know who I am. And it was a bit of a struggle.” 

But she persevered: a guest role on “General Hospital” got her an Emmy. “It’s so weird. I’m so thrilled and grateful that I won an Emmy. But I don’t at all feel I did my best work on that show. I think maybe the Emmy was kind of maybe for other work.”

Still, she was back, even making an appearance last year in Jordan Peele’s acclaimed horror film “Nope,” playing – what else? – a star. 

Today Mills is 82. When asked how she stays looking the way she does, Mills laughed, “Oh, it’s hard!”  To get past the aches and pains, she said, “You just have to say, ‘I’m gonna do it anyway.’

“The hard part is that, you know, it’s the last chapter. And I don’t want to go away. So, I’m hanging on as long as I can, and trying to be as much as I can be for as long as I can be. We have this extended life cycle now; let’s make the last part of it one of the best.”

“No retirement, clearly?” asked Smith.

“Oh, God, no! No. Well, I figure they have to have somebody to play the grandmother. I’m available for those things.”

To watch a trailer for “V.C. Andrews’ Dawn” click on the video player below:


Official Trailer | V.C. Andrews’ Dawn | July 8, 2023 | Lifetime by
Lifetime on
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Story produced by John D’Amelio. Editor: Steven Tyler. 



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