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The path from Gaza to Trump’s return | Gaza News

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How the Biden administration’s response to October 7 reshaped US politics and influenced the 2024 presidential election.

What happened inside the White House after October 7, 2023, changed the course of Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza and reshaped the Democratic Party. After three primary elections that could indicate the future of the Democratic base, a new book by Akbar Shahid Ahmed reveals the inside story of how the US administration never wavered in its support of Israel and planted roots for the return of Donald Trump.

In this episode: 

Akbar Shahid Ahmed (@AkbarSAhmed), journalist and author of Crossing the Red Line

Episode credits:

This episode was produced by Tamara Khandaker and Sonia Bhagat, with Spencer Cline, Jana Dabliz, and our host, Malika Bilal. It was edited by Alexandra Locke. 

Our sound designer is Alex Roldan. Our video editors are Hisham Abu Salah and Mohannad al-Melhemm. Alexandra Locke is The Take’s executive producer. 

The Take production team is Marcos Bartolome, Sonia Bhagat, Spencer Cline, Sari el-Khalili, Tamara Khandaker, Chloe K Li, Alexandra Locke, Catherine Nouhan, Alex Roldan, and Noor Wazwaz. Our host is Malika Bilal. 

Our editorial intern is Jana Dabliz. Our engagement producers are Adam Abou-Gad and Vienna Maglio. Andrew Greiner is lead of audience engagement. Our video editors are Hisham Abu Salah and Mohannad al-Melhem. Alexandra Locke is The Take’s executive producer.

Connect with us:

@AJEPodcasts on XInstagramFacebook, and YouTube



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Rubio backs Bolivia’s conservative government amid socialist-led unrest

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The conservative, pro-U.S. government of President Rogrigo Paz is being challenged in the streets by radical elements led by a former socialist president recently forcing the new Bolivian government to introduce a state of emergency.

The landlocked mineral-rich nation is facing one of its deepest political crises in decades as economic turmoil, nationwide protests and a battle over the country’s future threaten to reshape the balance of power in South America.

The unrest comes after years of political divisions following the tenure of socialist President Evo Morales, whose Movement Toward Socialism (MAS) dominated Bolivian politics for nearly two decades. Internal fractures, economic decline and public frustration have weakened the movement and opened a new chapter of uncertainty.

US, SHIELD OF THE AMERICAS CONDEMN ‘ONGOING EFFORTS’ TO OVERTHROW BOLIVIA’S ELECTED PRESIDENT AMID UNREST

Bolivia's President Rodrigo Paz delivering a speech in La Paz

Bolivia’s President Rodrigo Paz delivers a speech in La Paz on June 3, 2026, after naming Ernesto Justiniano as defense minister following the resignation of Marcelo Salinas amid protests. (Claudia Morales/Reuters)

The Trump administration recently signaled strong backing for the Paz government while condemning efforts to destabilize the country.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the United States “Will not allow criminals and drug traffickers to overthrow democratically elected leaders in our hemisphere” and reaffirmed Washington’s commitment to Bolivia’s “stability, security, and a better future for all Bolivians.”

Speaking on background, a State Department spokesperson told Fox News Digital that, “The United States strongly supports President Rodrigo Paz’s decision on June 20 to declare a State of Exception to restore order and ensure the free flow of food, medicine, and essential supplies to the Bolivian people.  We are glad that the blockades in Bolivia have ended and the government has restored order.”

Bolivia’s crisis has been driven by Morales and his supporters furious at the Paz reforms. Protests and road blockades have disrupted transportation, caused shortages and increased pressure on the Paz government.

José Luis Lupo, chief of staff and minister of the presidency of Bolivia told Fox News Digital: “After more than 50 days of blockades that severely disrupted the supply of food, fuel, and medicines, paralyzing much of the country’s economic activity and straining its democratic stability, I am convinced that Bolivia now faces a unique opportunity to transform a deep crisis into the starting point for a new phase of national reconstruction.”

Bolivia Coup

26 June 2024, Bolivia, La Paz: Military police stand amid tear gas fired in front of the presidential palace on Plaza Murillo.  (Photo by Radoslaw Czajkowski/picture alliance via Getty Images)

He noted that “for weeks, we sought agreements with various sectors because we believe that, in a democracy, every avenue for mutual understanding must be exhausted before resorting to extraordinary measures.”

He said the state of emergency [state of exception] “was the constitutional last resort to restore freedom of movement, protect critical infrastructure and ensure that Bolivians could once again access essential goods. It was not a measure intended to restrict rights, but rather to protect lives, preserve democracy and restore freedom of movement to millions of citizens.”

PETE HEGSETH WARNS NARCO-TERRORISTS AS US BACKS BOLIVIA’S GOVERNMENT AMID COUP WARNINGS

The turmoil has also had consequences beyond Bolivia’s borders. The country holds some of the world’s largest lithium resources, a key mineral for electric vehicles, batteries and advanced technology supply chains. Competition for influence in resource-rich Latin America has become increasingly important for Washington as China and other global powers expand their presence in the region.

Bolivia’s political crisis reflects a broader trend across Latin America, where voters in the last few election cycles have elected conservatives who challenged the left’s business-as-usual politics and in doing so have taken the continent in a rightward direction.

The socialist Morales remains an influential figure and continues to command support among rural and indigenous groups, keeping Bolivia’s political divisions alive even as the country searches for a path out of the crisis.

Mauricio Ríos García, manager of Crusoe Research and editor of FRACTAL Index in Bolivia, told Fox News Digital, “The 50-day blockades have caused estimated losses of $2.5 billion and the closure of around 13,000 companies. Once the blockades end, a rebound in demand combined with excess liquidity is expected to drive inflation higher.”

Bolivia state of emergency

A police convoy clears one of the main highways after Bolivian President Rodrigo Paz declared a state of emergency following 50 days of blockades, in El Alto, Bolivia, on June 20, 2026.  (Jorge Mateo Romay Salinas/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Ríos said, “The government is nearing an IMF agreement that would likely include a new devaluation (exchange rate unification) and other adjustments in exchange for financing of around $3.3–5 billion. This marks growing dependence on the IMF and the United States, while the gradualist approach has left the economy with very little room for maneuver and risks further instability.

“Expectations for Bolivia’s economy in the second half of the year have been revised downward. Blockades and deeper structural problems rooted in the government’s gradualist fiscal and monetary policies have worsened the difficult inheritance from the previous administration,” he concluded.

COLOMBIA’S ‘EL TIGRE’ SECURES PRESIDENCY AS LEFTIST RIVAL FINALLY CONCEDES DEFEAT

For Washington, Bolivia’s future represents more than a domestic political dispute. The outcome could influence America’s strategic position in the Western Hemisphere, the future of critical minerals, and whether Latin America’s recent political shift continues moving away from the left-wing movements that dominated parts of the region during the last two decades.

“I am convinced that stability will only endure if it is accompanied by inclusion. There can be no peace where neglect and inequality persist. That is why we are driving a development agenda for historically marginalized regions, particularly the provinces of La Paz, focused on infrastructure, basic services, productive development and the participation of the communities themselves,” Lupo said.

And as the barricades have lessened, Lupo, chief of staff and minister of the presidency of Bolivia, says, “A different phase is now beginning. I believe the country needs a broad political and social agreement involving the government, parliamentary forces, the regions, the productive sector, and civil society. Bolivia needs to pass reforms that provide legal certainty, promote investment, and modernize strategic sectors such as hydrocarbons, mining, lithium, renewable energy and the justice system. Such consensus is essential to restoring confidence, stabilizing the economy and generating sustainable growth.

“I hope to see Bolivia definitively replace confrontation with dialogue, strengthen its institutions, and build a more robust economy characterized by clear rules, democratic stability and greater opportunities for all,” Lupo concluded.

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The Trump administration had increased emergency humanitarian assistance to help address food and medical shortages caused by weeks of unrest, underscoring U.S. concerns that prolonged instability could have broader implications for regional security and democracy.



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Shetland councillors back plans to build tunnels to link some of largest islands | Scotland

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Councillors on Shetland have backed plans to build up to four tunnels to link some of the largest and most populated islands, after years of isolation and decline.

The council voted on Tuesday to investigate financing options for the first two subsea tunnels, which would link Shetland’s Mainland with the two large northerly islands of Yell and Unst.

Islanders on Yell and Unst have campaigned for years for fixed links to replace their ageing and unreliable ferries, after witnessing families leaving, businesses closing and parents forced to live away from home for work.

The two projects, the first of their kind in Scotland, will cost about £655m to build and take at least eight years to complete.

Map of tunnel links in Shetland

Emma Macdonald, the leader of Shetland Islands council, said it would press the Scottish and UK governments for help with the construction costs, which were unaffordable for Shetland on its own.

“Islands with fixed links repopulate, enjoy economic growth and experience a reduction in their average age,” Macdonald said. “We have no ‘do nothing’ options here. Ferries and tunnels are both needed to unlock the potential of Shetland, and both the Scottish and UK governments have a vested interest in helping that happen.”

The archipelago’s roll-on, roll-off ferries are more than 32 years old on average. They have struggled to recruit and retain staff; 50% of their crew are aged 46 or over. They stop operating overnight, have limited capacity and are routinely unable to sail due to bad weather, while facing soaring repair and replacement costs.

For many islanders, that dependency increases the sense of insecurity and isolation, and drives depopulation. Relatively short journeys can last hours.

Shetlanders often look enviously at their near neighbours in the Danish-speaking Faroes, where its tunnels, including the world’s only undersea roundabout, offer seamless connections, and the Norwegian islands linked by tunnel to the mainland.

Councillors hope to persuade Scottish and UK ministers to provide some of the core funding, either through the Scottish National Investment Bank or the national wealth fund, by arguing that the islands are an essential part of the wider UK economy.

The UK’s only space port, at SaxaVord on the far northern tip of Unst, is due to host its first rocket launches later this year, and Shetland produces 22% of Scotland’s farmed salmon and 88% of its farmed mussels, while its trawlers land seafood valued at £147m.

Engineering consultants calculated the road tunnel between Mainland and Yell would cost about £352m to dig, with operating costs of £90m over the next 60 years.

The tunnel linking Yell with Unst would cost about £300m, with running costs of £72m. Those costs would partly be met by tolls and could also be part-financed by private investors who could then run the tunnels.

In turn, each would generate tens of millions of pounds in growth, and improve the islands’ social and economic resilience, the council said. Official data shows the population has fallen by 24% in the past 40 years.

Councillors also agreed on Tuesday that tunnels could be built later to link two smaller islands that sit east of Mainland – Bressay and Whalsay – with new ferries proposed for the outlying islands of Papa Stour and Skerries.

If Shetland’s tunnels are funded, their construction is expected to reinvigorate calls for subsea tunnels or bridges in the Western Isles, which are also heavily dependent on ferries.

Orkney Islands council argues that its geography makes tunnels and bridges less significant; some islands are already connected to mainland Orkney by fixed links known as the Churchill barriers.

Alice Mathewson, a spokesperson for Yell and Unst tunnel action groups, said the Shetland tunnels would be financially viable, and lower-carbon than the ferries. “These links will not only bridge geographical divides but also enhance the prosperity and wellbeing of our island communities,” she said.

The Scottish government said it had given Shetland Islands council £13m over the past two years to investigate upgrading its transport links and was committed to working with councils on new fixed links in its national islands plan.



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North Carolina postal worker killed delivering mail, leaving kids orphaned

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A mother of two and longtime postal worker was killed while delivering mail Tuesday in North Carolina, officials said, leaving her children orphaned just months after their father died in a December car accident.

Brandi Reynolds, who was a postal deliver driver for the United States Postal Service, was shot and killed on Friday just before 4:16 p.m. in Hayes, North Carolina, according to the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation. William Craig Durham was arrested after allegedly killing Reynolds and is charged with kidnapping and murder.

Authorities found Reynolds dead when they arrived to the scene.

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Brandi Reynolds smiling

Brandi Reynolds’ husband died in December 2025. (Brandi Reynolds/Facebook)

Reynolds was employed as a rural mail carrier for the USPS, according to The Wilkes Record. She was delivering mail when Durham allegedly shot and killed her, according to the Charlotte Observer.

SUSPECT CHARGED IN FATAL STABBING OF POSTAL WORKER IN NYC DELI OVER SPOT IN LINE HAS HISTORY OF KNIFE VIOLENCE

Authorities alleged in an arrest report obtained by the Charlotte Observer that Durham restrained Reynolds and removed “the victim from one place to another without the consent of the victim.”

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William Craig Durham booking picture

William Craig Durham was arrested after allegedly killing Reynolds. (North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation)

Reynolds’ husband Brent Reynolds passed away after he was in a car accident in December. The couple have two kids, who will now be without parents.

In a Facebook post from February, Reynolds wrote in a caption of a picture with her two kids: “The reason I get up every morning. Love these babies. They are what makes life worth living.”

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Row of USPS delivery trucks parked in a lot.

A row of USPS delivery trucks is parked in a lot. (Spencer Jones/GHI/UCG/Universal Images Group)

She frequently posted pictures with her kids and husband on social media. In one post about her child, Reynolds wrote: “I couldn’t deny this baby if I tried. Love her so much and man do i wish i could slow time down and keep her little forever.”

Officials haven’t revealed any relationship between Reynolds and Durham.



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‘But we’re just 1% of emissions’: do smaller countries’ climate efforts matter? | Greenhouse gas emissions

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On first hearing, it is a position that sounds reasonable. “When our share of global emissions is less than 1%,” Rishi Sunak argued when he was the UK prime minister in 2023, “how can it be right that British citizens are now being told to sacrifice even more than others?”

Sunak is not the only world leader to have cited such figures while delaying cuts to pollution. In 2019, Scott Morrison, Australia’s then prime minister, used his country’s 1.3% of global emissions to reject any suggestion Australia was not “doing our bit” on climate breakdown. In July, the German chancellor, Friedrich Merz, pointed to his country’s 2% share of global emissions while supporting loopholes in European climate targets. A few months later the Italian prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, followed suit, flagging the EU’s 6% share.

Small-emitting nations account for 32% of global emissions

More radical demands were heard in a radio interview in May with Tony Blair, the former UK prime minister who has consulted for petrostates since leaving office, who used the UK’s 1% share to urge it to abandon clean economy targets.

Often presented next to the vast emissions from the US, China and India, which are collectively responsible for just over half of carbon pollution today, the claim that a country is “just 1% of emissions” has been used to suggest small but wealthy countries cannot stop the worsening of extreme weather events, such as the heatwave scorching Europe. “Even if we were all climate neutral in Germany tomorrow,” Merz said last summer, “not a single natural disaster would be prevented anywhere in the world.”

But does the position hold up on closer examination? Climate scientists point to the much larger historical emissions of these countries – the metric that matters most for global heating – as well as the fact that these countries have more money to cut pollution. Per person, European countries have contributed a disproportionate amount to emissions, and progress in cleaning their economies is only now bringing annual emissions close to the global average.

“These leaders wouldn’t like it if the top 1% of their wealthiest citizens didn’t pay their taxes, so the argument is fallacious and simply buck-passing,” said Prof Piers Forster, a climate scientist at the University of Leeds. “Future warming is driven by future emissions, so every tonne of carbon dioxide that a country or citizen can avoid emitting will improve temperature and heatwave outcomes for generations.”

The three most populous countries in the world – the US, China and India – were the only ones individually responsible for more than 5% of the carbon emitted from burning fossil fuels in 2024.

But while each of the remaining 194 countries can indeed claim to be less than 5% of the problem, together they are responsible for just under half of humanity’s yearly emissions.

chart

Despite this, the argument has been used to justify delaying action by the governments of some of the biggest polluters. More recently, it has found a home with nationalist-populist parties across the continent. The far-right leaders and energy spokespeople of western Europe’s five biggest economies – the UK, Germany, France, Spain and Italy – have all used the argument to justify calls to weaken climate policy in the last two years.

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Further analysis from the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit (ECIU), a thinktank, shared exclusively with the Guardian, found 200 examples of such claims being made in national newspapers of 27 countries responsible for less than 2% of global CO2 emissions last year. Among the examples is an editorial in the British newspaper the Times, in March 2025, that stated: “Climate change is clearly a problem, yet Britain, which contributes around 1% of global emissions, can do little to stop it.”

A YouGov poll for the ECIU in April found one in four Britons think countries emitting less than 1% of emissions should stop trying to reduce them. The share was highest among voters of Reform UK, of which half thought such countries should not continue cutting emissions. The party’s leader, Nigel Farage, said in an interview with the BBC last year that it was “absolutely mindless” for a country that produced less than 1% of global CO2 to “beggar itself”.

Dr Ella Gilbert, a climate scientist and ECIU board member, said: “The climate crisis is a global problem and every country should be acting to reduce emissions and build a greener global economy, especially those with the largest historical responsibility, like the UK. The climate doesn’t care where carbon comes from – whether [it’s] from multiple countries responsible for smaller proportions of emissions, or China.”

Gilbert said the science was clear that curbing emissions by reaching net zero was the only way to restore the climate and avoid dangerous tipping points. “The UK may account for just 1% of current global emissions, but we’re responsible for 100% of our own emissions, and we have the opportunity to show global leadership by bringing them down.”



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Using a VPN may stop streaming buffering from bandwidth throttling

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Ever settle in for movie night, hit play, and thirty seconds later, the picture dissolves into a blurry mess of pixels? You restart the app. You restart the router. You’re paying for a fast internet plan, so what gives?

Before you spend forty minutes on hold with your provider, there’s something you should know: the problem might not be your connection speed at all. It m

ight be your internet provider putting the brakes on certain types of traffic.

The good news is that one tool may help, especially when your provider is slowing down streaming traffic that it can recognize.

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TRAVEL MISTAKE PUTS PHONE, LAPTOP AND STREAMING ACCOUNTS AT RISK

Streaming apps on a smartphone screen.

Buffering during streaming may not always be caused by slow internet speeds. ISP bandwidth throttling could be reducing video quality, and a VPN may help in some cases. (Photo by Marcus Brandt/picture alliance via Getty Images)

Why your streaming keeps buffering

Internet service providers handle enormous amounts of traffic. When their networks get congested, they look for ways to manage the load. One of the handiest tools in their bag is a technique called bandwidth throttling. It means deliberately slowing down certain types of traffic to ease the pressure on their infrastructure. Streaming video is one of the first things they may target because it eats up a lot of bandwidth fast.

Here’s the part that most people don’t realize: your ISP can often see what kind of traffic you’re sending and receiving. When they detect a steady stream of traffic flowing from a streaming platform, they may put a speed limit on that traffic specifically, even while your overall connection seems fine. You won’t always get a warning, but you will notice a dip in video quality.

That’s why you can load a webpage in a blink but still have to sit through buffer wheels before your show even gets going. The issue may not be your speed. It may be what your ISP does with it once they know how you’re using it.

Travelers can run into an additional wrinkle. Hotel networks and public connections are often shared across dozens or hundreds of people at once. When everyone is streaming, browsing and video calling at the same time, the network slows to a crawl and your video quality pays the price. What worked fine at home suddenly stutters and stalls on the road.

The fix most people don’t know about

A VPN, or virtual private network, is usually thought of as a privacy and security tool, but it may also help with some throttling problems. It runs quietly in the background while you stream.

When you connect to the internet through a VPN, your traffic gets encrypted before it leaves your device. Your ISP can still see that you’re using data, but it can no longer easily see what kind. Streaming traffic looks like encrypted data passing through, which means there’s no obvious streaming target to throttle. The result can be a more consistent connection, fewer interruptions and less of that infuriating mid-episode quality drop.

And there’s an extra benefit for travelers: Your traffic is encrypted on hotel, airport and café Wi-Fi. That can help protect what you’re doing online, though it won’t magically fix a network that’s overloaded. A good VPN can help keep your connection more stable across the unpredictable variety of networks you encounter while traveling, not to mention help protect you from public Wi-Fi hackers.

Just keep in mind that some streaming services may limit or block VPN connections, so you may need to switch servers or check the service’s rules.

NETFLIX CO-CEO CLARIFIES STREAMING GIANT’S LIVE SPORTS STRATEGY AMID NFL LINEUP EXPANSION, FEDERAL SCRUTINY

Person streaming on their device.

A VPN can encrypt your internet traffic, making it harder for internet providers to identify and selectively throttle streaming services. (Photo by Grichka BEYSSON-LEANDRI / Hans Lucas / AFP via Getty Images)

What to look for in a VPN for streaming

There’s no shortage of VPN options out there, but for streaming, a few things matter more than others.

Speed is king when it comes to video. A VPN that encrypts your traffic but slows your connection defeats the whole purpose. Look for a provider with a large network of fast servers and a proven track record with high-definition and 4K content.

Device support matters too. Your streaming life doesn’t live on just one screen. It’s also on your phone, your smart TV, your tablet and your laptop. A good VPN covers all of them under one subscription and will let you run it on multiple devices simultaneously.

Our top VPN pick checks all these boxes and is more than fast enough for high-quality streaming.

For the best VPN software, see my expert review of the best VPNs for browsing the web privately on your Windows, Mac, Android & iOS devices at Cyberguy.com

A few more tricks to keep in mind

Before blaming throttling, test your speed with the VPN on and off, restart your router, move closer to Wi-Fi, use a 5 GHz or 6 GHz network when available and try Ethernet for your main TV. If everything else is fast but streaming keeps dropping quality, throttling becomes a more likely suspect. Pair a VPN with these tips, and buffering becomes a rare event instead of a nightly battle.

1) Connect before you open the app

Turn on your VPN first, then launch your streaming service. It’ll save you the hassle of reconnecting in the middle of the episode.

2) Choose a nearby server

In general, the closer the server, the lower the lag. A server in your home city usually delivers the best balance of speed and stability.

3) Check your home router

If streaming still struggles with a VPN running, an outdated router might be your weakest link. A dual-band or Wi-Fi 6 model makes a noticeable difference on busy home networks. Looking to upgrade your home setup? Check out our guide to the Top 5 routers for best security in 2026 at Cyberguy.com

4) Download before you go

Most major streaming apps let you save content for offline playback. Load up a few episodes on your home connection before a long trip, and you might not need to stream at all for the first leg of your journey.

INSTANTLY UPGRADE YOUR STREAMING: AT HOME AND WHEN TRAVELING

Man streaming the soccer game on his smartphone.

Travelers using hotel or public Wi-Fi may benefit from a VPN’s added privacy, though it cannot overcome an overloaded network. (Photo by Alex Pantling/Getty Images)

Kurt’s key takeaways

Buffering isn’t something you have to accept, and your internet plan may not be the issue. Your provider could be managing your traffic when it recognizes what you’re watching. A reliable VPN can make it that much harder, whether you’re on your couch or in a hotel room across the country. Remember: the trick to smoother streaming isn’t always paying for faster speed. It’s making sure the speed you’re already paying for actually reaches your device.

Are you using a VPN for streaming, or have you found another workaround that does the job? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com

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Four men allegedly stole over $529,000 in elaborate ATM heists in Connecticut | Connecticut

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A group of four robbers netted more than $500,000 in an elaborate “jackpotting” scheme targeting ATMs at rest stops along Interstate 95 in Connecticut, federal prosecutors in the state have alleged.

The men targeted at least nine cash machines during a 10-day spree in August, according to a press release on Monday by the US attorney’s office, which charged the four with a range of federal offenses.

Prosecutors say the group used “specialized hardware and malware” to corrupt the machines and force them to dispense an almost unlimited amount of cash. In just one raid, at a northbound rest stop on the I-95 in Fairfield, the gang scooped up $136,000, they said.

Their overall haul reached $529,220 from eight ATMs between 8 and 18 August 2025, court documents state. A software patch installed to try to prevent such robberies thwarted the alleged robbers at another machine in Ansonia on the first day of the spree.

Two of the men live in New York, one is from North Carolina and the fourth is a resident of Massachusetts.

All four are citizens of Venezuela, said the attorney’s office, which named them as Euclides Moreno Itanare, 28; Willian Ricardo Flores, 49; Alberto Jose Freites Arvilla, 41; and Luis Jose Freites Arvilla, 38.

“For each of the thefts, the pattern of behavior was similar,” the press release said.

“Surveillance video shows that while Luis Freites Arvilla acted as a lookout, Alberto Freites Arvilla opened the hood of the ATM, accessed the internal components of the ATM, and then left the area,” the press release added.

“Over the course of several hours, Luis Freites Arvilla, Itanare, and Flores then took turns withdrawing cash from the ATM.”

It noted that the group also made efforts to disguise their appearance, saying: “The defendants sometimes changed clothes in an attempt to avoid suspicion when approaching the same ATM multiple times.”

The four were arrested on Thursday after a joint investigation by the FBI, Connecticut state police and the police departments of Raleigh, North Carolina, and New York.

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They remain in custody awaiting court proceedings on charges of interstate transportation of stolen property – an offense that carries a maximum prison term of 10 years – and conspiracy, for which they could be imprisoned for up to five years if convicted.

Photographs said to have been taken by the alleged robbers, released by the US attorney’s office, show the men variously tinkering with ATM machines, and showing off large wads of cash they collected.

The Guardian reported in 2018 warnings by two of the world’s largest ATM manufacturers, and the US Secret Service, that cybercriminals were targeting the machines with nefarious software in order to extract cash.



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Over 100 dog remains with bullet wounds found at California rescue

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Deputies uncovered the remains of more than 100 dogs, many of them with gunshot wounds during a search of an animal rescue under investigation for alleged abuse and fraud.

While executing a search warrant, deputies with the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Office made the gruesome discovery at Miranda’s Rescue in Fortuna, California on Thursday.

In what Sheriff William Honsal dubbed as a “horrific scene,” investigators uncovered 117 “canine remains,” skulls, “hundreds of bones, and six loose microchips” at various dig sites on the property, according to a release.

image shows deputies searching property and a tarp

Deputies in California discovered the remains of 117 dogs at an animal rescue. The discovery follows an investigation into alleged animal cruelty and fraud at the rescue. (AP Images: Lost Coast Outpost)

‘DEEPLY DISTURBING’ ANIMAL CRUELTY OPERATION INVOLVING BABY MONKEYS BUSTED BY ICE INVESTIGATION

The search warrant authorized investigators to search the grounds and buildings associated with Miranda’s Rescue and Shannon Miranda for evidence related to alleged animal cruelty and fraud, including excavating open fields where investigators believed deceased dogs were buried in mass graves.

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Dozens of the unearthed dog bodies appeared to be in varying states of decomposition. X-ray results revealed several dogs showed evidence of bullet fragments, deputies say.

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Investigators also discovered an area inside a barn on the property where they believe the dogs were killed. More than 600 dog collars were recovered from that same location.

photo shows several investigators standing over an excavation site

Deputies are investigating an animal rescue in Fortuna, California where more than 100 remains of dogs were discovered. (AP Images: Lost Coast Outpost)

RIDGLAN FARMS RESCUE BEAGLES FIND NEW LIFE HELPING VETERANS OVERCOME WAR TRAUMA WITH PAWS OF WAR

Currently, no charges have been filed, however the sheriff’s office said, “If there is sufficient evidence to support violations of animal cruelty, fraud, or other applicable laws, the case will be submitted to the prosecution team for review and consideration of criminal charges.”

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image shows a dog near a fence at the scene

The Humboldt County Sheriff’s Office is investigating Miranda’s Rescue in California where the remains of 117 dog bodes were found. (Humboldt County Sheriff’s Office)

In a recent public statement posted to the rescue’s website, founder Shannon Miranda said in part:

“Allegations made without a full understanding of the circumstances can harm not only my reputation but also the future of an organization that has served this community for decades. At Miranda’s Rescue, our mission is to save as many animals as we safely can—always balancing compassion for animals with our responsibility to protect families, children, other pets, and the public.”

image shows a screenshot taken from the rescue's website

Miranda’s Rescue in Fortuna, California is under investigation for alleged animal cruelty and animal abuse. This is a screenshot of the rescue’s website. (Miranda’s Rescue website)

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Fox News Digital has reached out to Miranda for comment.

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The investigation is ongoing.



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