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Miami of Ohio’s undefeated season ends with loss to UMass in MAC tournament

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The final undefeated team in NCAA Division I men’s basketball has fallen.

Miami (Ohio) saw its perfect season end Thursday with an 87–83 loss to UMass in the RedHawks’ Mid-American Conference tournament opener, a defeat that also dashed its hopes of securing an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament.

UMass players celebrate

Massachusetts guard Marcus Banks (24) and guard K’jei Parker (5) celebrate after Massachusetts defeated Miami in the quarterfinals of the Mid-American Conference tournament in Cleveland March 12, 2026. (Sue Ogrocki/AP Photo)

“We always go back to watch the film. We’ll break it down just like we always do. … [We’ll be] off tomorrow and back at it Saturday trying to figure out ways to get better,” head coach Travis Steele said via the team’s website.

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“There’s still a lot of season left. Can we continue to improve? I think that’s what the great teams do.”

Miami had a 69-58 lead with 8:11 remaining before UMass rallied with a 13-2 run. The loss came after Miami (Ohio) secured the No. 1 seed in the conference tournament after going 31-0 during the regular season. 

Miami players react

Miami RedHawks guard Peter Suder (5) and guard Luke Skaljac (3) leave the floor as UMass Minutemen forward Leonardo Bettiol (3) celebrates after the final buzzer of the second half of a first-round game during the Mid-American Conference Tournament at Rocket Arena in Cleveland March 12, 2026. (Sam Greene/The Enquirer/USA Today Network via Imagn Images)

MIAMI REDHAWKS COMPLETE UNDEFEATED REGULAR SEASON WITH DRAMATIC OVERTIME VICTORY OVER OHIO

The RedHawks became just the fifth NCAA Division I program this century to go undefeated in the regular season and the first since Gonzaga in 2020.

With an automatic bid no longer on the table, Miami (Ohio) will have to wait until the brackets are unveiled Sunday night. The RedHawks can become the first MAC team to earn an at-large bid since 1999. 

Miami players react

Miami RedHawks guard Peter Suder (5) and guard Luke Skaljac (3) leave the floor as UMass Minutemen forward Leonardo Bettiol (3) celebrates after the final buzzer during a first-round game of the Mid-American Conference Tournament at Rocket Arena in Cleveland March 12, 2026.  (Sam Greene/The Enquirer/USA Today Network via Imagn Images)

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“Our guys have earned the right, in my opinion, to play in the NCAA Tournament,” Steele added.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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Eswatini says it received more ‘third country’ deportees as part of deal with Trump administration | Trump administration

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The government of Eswatini announced on Thursday it received four more “third country” deportees from the United States, as part of the Trump administration’s multimillion-dollar deal with the small African nation.

Now, a total of 19 deportees from the US have been sent to Eswatini when they hail from other countries, amid the Trump administration’s continued anti-immigrant crackdown and changes to immigration policy.

A system for monitoring people moved around by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), in the form of a flight tracker, run by the advocacy group Human Rights First, tracked the deportation flight to Eswatini. The flight apparently took off from Phoenix, Arizona, and landed in Eswatini in southern Africa at around 11pm ET on Wednesday night, according to the ICE flight monitor.

In a statement to the Guardian, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) did not provide details requested about the people deported to Eswatini. “The Trump Administration is utilizing all lawful options to carry out the largest deportation operation in history, just as President Trump promised,” said the statement, attributed to a senior DHS official.

Two of the deportees sent to Eswatini on Wednesday night were from Somalia, one was from Sudan and one was from Tanzania, the government said. No identities or other details about them was disclosed by the authorities.

In the past year, the Trump administration has struck “third country” deals with numerous countries around the globe. The deals allow countries, often after payment from the US, to accept deported immigrants who are not their citizens.

A recent congressional investigation found that the Trump administration paid more than $32m to five foreign governments to accept a number of deportees.

“The Administration is conducting questionable deals by making direct payments primarily to corrupt and unstable foreign governments with track records of public corruption, human rights abuses and human trafficking,” the investigation, carried out by Senate foreign relations committee Democrats, reads.

Previous deportees to Eswatini, who arrived in July and October of last year, included nationals of Vietnam, Cuba, Laos and Yemen. A lawyer for some of that earlier group, Alma David, told Reuters a Cambodian man, Pheap Rom, was due to be repatriated to his country of origin. Rom would be the second person to be released from Eswatini custody after another man was sent back to Jamaica last year.

The Trump administration paid the small southern African country $5.1m to receive the deportees.

“In line with this agreement,” the Eswatini government said in a statement, “the nation has received another cohort of four third-country nationals from the United States.”

Eswatini is one of several African countries involved in third-country deportation deals with the US. Three men sent there last July filed a claim against Eswatini’s government with the African Union’s human rights body. They said their continued detention was an unlawful violation of their rights, the Guardian reported. The Eswatini high court last month threw out a case filed by local human rights lawyers that challenged it, though an appeal has been lodged.

Despite having served their sentences for crimes on US soil, the remainder of the third-country deportees sent to Eswatini last year were still in prison.

Reuters contributed reporting



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Mystery blasts reported near Pennsylvania homes of ISIS plot suspects

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BUCKS COUNTY, Pa. —Eight unexplained explosions reported over 10 months in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, happened near the homes of two men later accused in an alleged ISIS-inspired New York City terror plot, leaving residents perplexed.

Bensalem Township Police Sgt. Glenn Vandegrift confirmed to Fox News Digital that the department received eight noise complaints between April 2025 and early January 2026 for what residents described as loud bangs.

“After conducting an investigation, detectives closed the case due to a lack of evidence, the inability to determine the exact source of the sounds and the inability to confirm that the noises originated within Bensalem Township,” Vandegrift said. “We have not received any reports of injuries related to these incidents, and at no time did we identify any information indicating a threat to public safety.”

Bensalem resident Rick D’Aguanno told Fox News Digital the explosions were loud and appeared to come from different directions around his neighborhood.

WARRANTS SERVED IN NEW JERSEY, PENNSYLVANIA AS FEDS LOOK INTO POSSIBLE NYC TERRORISM

Suspect running away from Gracie Mansion in NYC.

The suspect appears to run away after he allegedly threw the explosive. (United States District Court for the Southern District of New York)

“It was just loud… loud, random explosions during the evening or different times of the day,” he said.

D’Aguanno said he believed someone may have been setting off fireworks or other explosives and said he was told by a local elected official that a person had been identified, though police said no arrests were made in connection with the incidents.

The reports resurfaced on social media this week as Emir Balat, 18, of Langhorne, and Ibrahim Kayumi, 19, of Newtown, were arrested in New York City. The men are accused of throwing live explosive devices into a protest outside Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s residence, Gracie Mansion, on Saturday.

CNN’S ABBY PHILLIP WRONGLY CLAIMS NEW YORK CITY ISIS-INSPIRED TERROR ATTACK WAS ‘AGAINST’ MAYOR ZOHRAN MAMDANI

Suspect accused in ISIS-inspired terror attack outside New York City mayor’s home raises arm during protest

One of the Pennsylvania suspects allegedly involved in an ISIS-inspired terror attack outside the New York City mayor’s residence is seen during the protest prior to his arrest. (United States District Court for the Southern District of New York)

D’Aguanno’s home in Bensalem is about three miles from Balat’s residence in Langhorne and roughly 15 miles from Kayumi’s home in Newtown.

The geographic overlap has drawn renewed attention following the arrests.

“At this time, we have no information linking the recent arrests in New York City to the previously reported loud bangs in Bensalem Township,” Vandegrift said. “While we understand there may be interest in drawing a connection between the recent bombing incident in New York City and reports of explosions in the general area of the suspect’s home in Langhorne, our investigation has not identified any evidence establishing such a nexus.”

NYPD HEROES, INSPIRED BY 9/11, RAN TOWARD DANGER AS SUSPECTED TERRORISTS TARGETED NYC

Bomb materials using during alleged NYC terror attack.

Close up images show explosive materials and shrapnel inside one of the alleged ISIS-inspired bombs recovered in New York City after a failed terror attack on March 7. (Justice Department Office of Public Affairs)

Vandegrift noted that no one was arrested in connection with the reports in Bensalem and said if new information were to emerge establishing a credible connection to criminal activity within the township, the case would be reviewed and appropriate action taken. He added that any information suggesting a connection to the New York City incident would be shared with federal authorities.

Anyone with credible information related to the explosions is encouraged to contact Bensalem Township Police. Fox News Digital has also reached out to Middletown Township Police, where Balat resides, for comment.

Federal authorities have detailed the allegations against the two men in court documents.

Prosecutors allege the pair threw a device containing triacetone triperoxide, or TATP, with nuts and bolts attached using duct tape.

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According to The Associated Press, a license plate reader captured the two men entering New York City from New Jersey less than an hour before the alleged attack, which took place around 12:15 p.m. 

Kayumi’s mother told authorities she last saw him at about 10:30 a.m. Saturday before filing a missing person report.



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Campaigners claim NHS Palantir data could reach govt depts • The Register

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Medical and legal rights campaigners are warning that the Palantir data platform, designed to be at the heart of England’s health system, risks enabling UK immigration and policing departments to access confidential patient information.

Palantir has denied the Federated Data Platform (FDP) could be used in this way under the current legislation, and said using the system as the campaign groups described would breach its contract with NHS England.

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The report that made the claim is written by medical campaign group Medact and endorsed by legal campaigner the Good Law Project, Privacy International, Just Treatment, Corporate Watch, United Tech, Allied Workers Union, and is supported by Amnesty International.

It argues the FDP contract, awarded to Palantir for £330 million in November 2023 for seven years, could, by bringing together disparate health datasets onto a single platform run by Palantir, enable UK government departments to move sensitive information around.

“The FDP contains highly sensitive health data, which also needs to be protected from the UK government itself… Bringing together disparate health datasets onto a single platform run by Palantir could enable UK government departments, such as the Home Office and police departments, to more easily access confidential patient information,” the report asserted.

It noted how Palantir is used by other governments, including by the controversial US immigration agency ICE. The report argued there is evidence of “significant cross-department data compiling and analysis, which can be used to enable data-driven abuses of state power.”

“We raise concerns that a current or future government could abuse the data held in the FDP by utilizing the interoperability of Foundry and its ability to draw from other government datasets,” the report added.

A spokesperson for Palantir said: “Palantir software is playing an important role in improving patient care – helping to deliver 100,000 additional operations, a 12 percent reduction in discharge delays, and the removal of 675,000 patients from waiting lists.

“How that software is used is entirely under the control of the NHS with data only able to be processed in accordance with their strict instructions. Not only do we have no intention of and no means of using the data in the way that the Medact report is suggesting, to do so would be illegal and in breach of contract.”

Medact said its report is designed to prepare NHS organizations including Trust Boards, Integrated Care Boards (ICBs), Health Scrutiny Committees, and Health Data Governance Committees for the rollout of the FDP in the NHS across England and said it outlines key concerns regarding the involvement of Palantir Technologies in NHS data infrastructure and operations.

“It is intended to inform and empower Trust decision-making about engagement with Palantir. At the time of writing, the FDP is not mandatory, and local health bodies are able to both raise concerns and decline to implement the FDP at the local level. It is the view of the authors, endorsers and supporters that, for the reasons explained in this document, there are many more suitable options for data management solutions for Trusts and ICBs,” it said.

The Register asked NHS England to comment.

In November last year, Manchester ICB put off adopting the FDP for a second time. Responsible for the health services for 2.8 million people, the board said in May last year that NHS England had not addressed its concerns around risks.

An earlier report to the board by chief intelligence and analytics officer Matt Hennessey found Manchester’s local capacity in data analytics “exceeds anything the FDP currently offers and that some of the capabilities we currently have actively in use… are around two to three years away from being fully operational with the FDP environment.”

In May last year, an NHS England spokesperson said: “The Federated Data Platform (FDP) is already delivering for the NHS – helping to join up patient care, increase hospital productivity and ensure thousands of additional patients can be treated each month. More than 120 NHS trusts have signed up to use the platform, including 84 percent of hospital trusts, and 72 are already live as part of a phased rollout to provide better care and services for patients.” ®



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Two teenagers die after ebike collides with motorbike south of Brisbane | Australia news

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Two teenagers have died after a crash between an ebike and a motorcycle in the suburb of Greenbank, south of Brisbane, on Thursday night.

Queensland police said investigators believe the motorcycle was overtaking a vehicle in the Logan area when it collided with the ebike traveling in the opposite direction around 9pm. The bike, police said, is not believed to have had its headlights on at the time.

A teenage boy and teenage girl riding the ebike were both declared dead at the scene. The rider of the motorcycle was taken to hospital in serious but stable condition.

Investigators were looking into the incident and asked members of the public with any footage to come forward.

More details soon …



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Harris County judge claims manhandling at rodeo; officials cite $9k in freebies

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A Texas judge said she was manhandled while attending a concert at the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo this week after staffers refused to let her access a VIP area and escorted her out of the venue, questioning whether she was the victim of racism or sexism, despite being given $9,000 worth of freebies. 

Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo said she and five guests –another elected official, the official’s children, and the parents of a US Air Force sergeant who recently passed away — attended a Megan Moroney concert at the popular rodeo show on Tuesday. 

However, the group was barred from the venue’s premium floor access area – the chute ticket area known as “the dirt” — because they had not paid the $425 per head price tag for wristbands and the show was sold out, the rodeo said in a response to a Fox News Digital request for comment.

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Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo

Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo, center, flanked by Houston Police Chief Troy Finner, left, and U.S. Rep. Al Green, right. (AP Photo/Michael Wyke, File)

Hildalgo said she had previously been allowed on the floor access area without a wristband “based on the county’s relationship with the rodeo.” She said she assumed the area was “friends of rodeo leaders or for rodeo leaders or such.”

The judge said she then asked if her guests could be let into the area before she was grabbed, shoved and threatened with arrest

“I understand the rodeo committee members have a job to do,” Hidalgo wrote in a scathing letter to rodeo board chairwoman Pat Phillips and rodeo president Chris Boleman. “They are trying to keep thousands of people safe at the largest rodeo in the world. I did not want to prevent the committee members from doing their jobs, nor was I trying to take advantage of ‘privileges’ or call in favors. I was not even interested in seeing the concert. I was only interested in helping community members enjoy an important event.”

Rodeo officials said Hidalgo was asked several times to return to the county suite where she was seated before. She was then asked to leave and was escorted out of the venue. 

JASMINE CROCKETT FACES CRITICISM FROM BLACK DEMOCRATS AFTER LOSING TEXAS SENATE PRIMARY RACE

Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo

Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo posted short clips of her being escorted from a concert venue at the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo this week. Hidalgo said she was manhandled and threatened with arrest while attending a concert at the popular rodeo.  (Getty Images; Lina Hidalgo Facebook)

“There were numerous law enforcement officers who were present and none saw any physical harm including ‘manhandling,’ Phillips and Boleman said in a joint letter addressing the matter. “Ultimately, when she would not go back to her designated seats in the suite, she was escorted out.”

Rodeo officials said Hidalgo requested, and was given $9,000 worth of floor access tickets for herself and her guests for three previous nights for concerts to see J Balvin, Dwight Yoakam and Luke Bryan.

“We are very disappointed in Judge Hidalgo’s actions Tuesday night and since,” Phillips and Boleman said. “But we must enforce the same access policies for everyone. The Judge is the only elected official to request, even demand, these seats night after night. As Chairwoman of the Board, the idea that she was treated this way because she’s a woman or Hispanic is absolutely false and insulting.”

CORNYN, PAXTON READY TO GO FOR THE THROAT IN 2ND ACT OF BRUTAL PRIMARY CAMPAIGN

Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo

Shelby Pierson carries an American flag as the national anthem plays before Super Series I Round 1 at RodoeHouston during the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo at NRG Park in Houston, Monday, March 2, 2026. (Jason Fochtman/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images) (Getty Images)

In a Wednesday letter to Phillips and Boleman, the judge said she has “never accepted anything inappropriately or used my role to personally enrich myself even though many others have.”

She further questioned the treatment she would have received had she been a  “male county executive,” before claiming that White men have “felt emboldened to treat others, particularly Hispanics with physical force.”

“I don’t travel without my passport anymore,” she wrote. “Many of us do, especially those of us who are not white-passing.”

Fox News Digital reached out to Hidalgo.

The Houston Police Officers’ Union posted an illustration on its Facebook page of a law enforcement officer escorting a woman by her arm as she says, “I’m the County Judge.” The union said the image was satire. 

On her Facebook and Instagram pages, Hidalgo shared videos of her leaving the concert venue from her vantage point, as well as audio recordings with rodeo staffers. 

Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo

Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo seemed to politicize the death of Jocelyn Nungaray and the illegal immigrants suspected in her strangulation death.

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“This is not about a wristband or a ticket or a concert,” she said. “It is about the mentality of some people and the way they treat others.”

“If this is how they treat me — by virtue of my position the Ex-Officio Director of the rodeo, landlord, because NRG stadium belongs to Harris County and leases to the rodeo, how do they treat everybody else?” she added. 

A Harris County judge, Hidalgo serves as its chief executive and presiding officer of the Commissioners Court, the county’s governing body, managing a budget over $4 billion.



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Stryker attack highlights nebulous nature of Iranian cyber activity amid joint U.S.-Israel conflict

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A cyberattack that an Iranian hacking group said it carried out against medical device manufacturer Stryker might mark Tehran’s first significant cyber action since the start of the joint U.S.-Israel conflict.

But even that may have been a happy accident for Iranian hackers in what has been a low buzz of activity during that timeframe, with the attackers striking paydirt by happenstance rather than on purpose.

Cybersecurity firms, threat intelligence trackers and critical infrastructure owners have been fighting to separate the noise about proclaimed attacks out of Iran, and the warnings and threats related to the conflict, from what is actually happening and poses any significant danger.

“Everybody is scrambling right now,” said Alex Orleans, a long-time Iran threat analyst and head of threat intelligence at Sublime Security. Others said the nascent nature of the conflict is making assessments difficult.

“What we see is quite difficult to quantify or characterize about whether there’s been an increase or decrease,” said Saher Naumaan, senior threat researcher at Proofpoint. “I think since we’re only a couple weeks into the conflict, and the regular cadence of Iranian actors isn’t very consistent, necessarily, we don’t have enough data points or enough time to really judge.”

Signs of activity

In the early days of the conflict, there were indications that physical attacks on Iran might have hampered Iranian retaliatory efforts or other cyber activity, as those who would carry out cyberattacks were probably “hiding in bunkers,” Orleans said, and as Iran suffered internet outages.

In recent days, however, the Stryker attack and other indicators suggest that Iranian cyber activity could be heating up.

“For several days following the outbreak of the conflict, there was a noted decrease in cyber threat activity emanating from Iran,” a group of industry information and sharing analysis centers warned Wednesday. “However, there are signs of life in Iranian offensive cyber operations.”

The Stryker attack stands out for both the size and location of the target, a Michigan-based medical device manufacturer with more than $25 billion in revenue in 2025.

But both Orleans and Sergey Shykevich, threat intelligence group manager at Check Point Research, said the attack has the hallmarks of an opportunistic one rather than a deliberate, focused one. The group claiming credit for the attack, Handala — a Ministry of Intelligence-linked outfit — is known more for seizing advantage of weaknesses they happen upon rather than doggedly pursuing particular targets.

Notably, Stryker is also the class of a military vehicle used by U.S. forces. That military connection, even if confused with the medical device manufacturer, could possibly explain why the company was a target.

Still, “it was a much higher-profile attack than we expected from Handala,” Shykevich said. “Unfortunately, it’s possible to define it as a relatively big success for them.”

There have been reports of other cyber activity that might be connected to the conflict. Albania said the email system of its parliament had been targeted, with Iranian hackers taking credit. There was the targeting of cameras from Iran-linked infrastructure in countries that Iran then launched missiles into. Poland said it was looking into whether Iran was behind an attempted cyberattack on a nuclear research facility.

Some of the claims don’t match reality. “There are many hacktivist groups that are very active in Telegram, but actually they don’t have any significant successes,” Shykevich said.

There are other cyber-related developments in the conflict, too, like espionage, the proliferation of artificial intelligence-fueled misinformation and the possibility of Russia or China helping out in cyberspace on Iran’s behalf, even if some experts doubt the likelihood of the latter.

How effective any of it has been is still unclear. Stryker, for instance, said the attack mainly affected its internal networks, although there were signs it might be affecting communications at hospitals, too.

But the damage might be beside the point. Orleans said the attacks could be psychological in nature, aimed at producing fear abroad and affirming hackers’ standing with domestic leaders in Iran during the conflict.

Even low-level defacement or distributed denial-of-service attacks can play a role.

“Coming into work and finding an Iranian flag on your workstation would be a little bit  disconcerting, because they’re letting you know that, ‘I can reach out and touch you,’” said Sarah Cleveland, senior director of federal strategy at ExtraHop and a former cyber officer in the U.S. Air Force.

Possible follow-up impacts

While primarily known as a medical supply company, Stryker has received sizable contracts with the military for hospital equipment and surgical supplies, for example. It is unclear whether the hackers intended to use Stryker’s military connection to exploit government systems.

The Pentagon has long warned of increased, complex cyberattacks against the defense industrial base, a vast network of companies — with disparate levels of cybersecurity — that the military relies on for advanced weaponry to basic stretchers. The DIB is often seen by adversaries as a backdoor into military systems.

While he did not directly address the Stryker hack, the Army’s principal cyber adviser, Brandon Pugh, outlined some of the challenges to the DIB and the service’s part in trying to protect it during a webinar Thursday in response to a question on the topic.

He said adversaries “right or wrong” see companies “as an extension of the military” and that they believe an attack on private industry would have a secondary impact on the armed forces.

“Some are very large, sophisticated multinational companies,” he said, noting that security needs across the DIB aren’t universal. “Others are very small companies that are lucky to have a director of IT, let alone a sophisticated cyber team, and I think that’s where it’s really important to lean into.”

Pugh said that agencies across the federal government have been working with the DIB to boost its resilience to attacks, and that the Army’s cyber effort emphasizes entrenching cybersecurity from the beginning of the acquisition process.

“Cyber can’t be an afterthought — not saying it is,” Pugh added. “I’d say the Army does a great job here, but making sure it’s never forgotten and is always considered along that way.”

Matt Tait, the CEO and president of MANTECH, said in response to a question about the Stryker attack and DIB protections that defending against such incidents includes leveraging government agreements and access, such as with the NSA, and quickly sharing information following an attack.

“To me, it’s about real time information sharing,” he said. “You need real time information sharing when you’re getting attacked to be able to actually share that information with the rest of industry, as well as with government, because they can actually share that information across” federal cybersecurity entities.

“If you want to do mission focused technology work, this is the world you have to live in, and that you should be sharing this information on a real time basis,” he added. “24 hours later, 48 hours later, I call that ambulance chasing. That’s too far after the fact from a cyber perspective.”

Written by Tim Starks and Drew F. Lawrence



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Authorities identify suspect in shooting at Virginia’s Old Dominion University | Virginia

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The suspect who killed one person and injured two others at Old Dominion University has been identified by authorities as Mohamed Bailor Jalloh, who pleaded guilty in 2016 to attempting to provide material support to the Islamic State, a person familiar with the matter told the AP.

Jalloh, a former member of the army national guard, was sentenced to 11 years in prison and was released from federal custody in December 2024.

Kash Patel, the FBI director, also confirmed the shooting is being investigated as an act of terrorism.

“Earlier today, an armed individual opened fire at Old Dominion University, leaving one person dead and two others wounded,” Patel said on social media. “The shooter is now deceased thanks to a group of brave students who stepped in and subdued him – actions that undoubtedly saved lives along with the quick response of law enforcement.

“The FBI is now investigating the shooting as an act of terrorism,” he added. “Our Joint Terrorism Task Force is fully engaged, embedded with local authorities, and providing all resources necessary in the investigation. In the meantime, please pray for the victims, their families, and the ODU community.

At a news conference Thursday afternoon, Garrett Shelton, the Old Dominion University police chief, said officers responded after receiving reports that people were being shot in one of the classrooms in the university’s business school building, Constant Hall.

After the university initially said there were two victims, Shelton said authorities learned that there was a third victim who brought themselves to a hospital. It wasn’t immediately clear how the shooter died.

He did not acknowledge whether any officers fired a weapon.

He said all three victims are affiliated with the university. Shelton said authorities are “very early” in the investigation and have not yet determined the “full cause of death” of the shooter.

Within less than 10 minutes, the call came in, officers arrived and they determined the shooter was dead, the chief said.

Lt Col Jimmy Delongchamp, public information officer for the US army cadet command at Fort Knox, Kentucky, told the Associated Press that two people wounded are members of the army reserve officers’ training corps at ODU.

“We will continue to coordinate with the university and law enforcement agencies as they investigate the incident,” Delongchamp said in a brief telephone interview. “There’s still a lot more stuff we have to work out.”

According to Sentara Health, two of the victims were transported by ambulance to the Level I trauma center at Sentara Norfolk General hospital. One of those patients has died. The other remains in critical condition.

A third person was treated and released from the Sentara Independence free-standing emergency department in Virginia Beach after arriving in a personal vehicle, Sentara Health said.

Within about an hour of the shooting, ODU declared that there was no longer a threat on the campus.

The public university in Norfolk canceled classes and suspended all operations on its main campus through Friday and urged people to avoid the area in and around Constant Hall while emergency officials continued to work. Counseling and food services will remain available.

In a message to the university community, the ODU President Brian Hemphill said the school faced a tragedy on campus. He expressed gratefulness for the swift emergency response and thoughts and prayers to those impacted.

“The safety of our campus community is my top priority,” Hemphill wrote. “We are deeply committed to safeguarding all Monarchs and ensuring a secure learning, living, and working environment at all times.”

The federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives said on the social platform X that it had agents on scene supporting the response.

Abigail Spanberger. the Virginia governor, said in social media posts that she was monitoring the situation and that “state support is being mobilized” to help ODU. She didn’t provide specifics.

Located in coastal Norfolk, Old Dominion University has about 24,000 students, 17,500 of them undergraduates.



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Secret rendezvous texts exposed in Florida murder case

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A Florida nurse is accused of brutally killing his married co-worker and leaving her body in a busy roadway following a yearslong affair between the pair. 

Rene Perez, 38, was arrested in Miami on Tuesday, March 10, according to the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office. 

Perez’s arrest comes nearly a year and a half after authorities allege he beat 35-year-old Linda Campitelli, a married mother of two, to death in October 2024, police said. 

The pair – who were both married and had been having a two-year-long affair while employed at the Wellington Regional Medical Center– met on Oct. 28, 2024 to celebrate Campitelli’s birthday, according to a probable cause affidavit obtained by Fox News Digital.

AMERICAN TOURIST KILLED IN THAILAND AS LOVE TRIANGLE TURNS DEADLY DURING VIOLENT CONFRONTATION: POLICE

A photo of Linda Campitelli

Linda Campitelli, 35, was found beaten to death 50 feet from her vehicle along the side of Lyons Road in Wellington, Florida on Oct. 28, 2024, according to authorities. (Linda Campitelli/Obituary )

Both Perez and Campitelli regularly exchanged messages with each other, with Campitelli complaining about having to share time with Perez with his wife, according to authorities.  

Just one day earlier, WhatsApp messages between the two showed Campitelli was feeling “a little nervous” about their planned rendezvous, authorities said

“I LOVE YOU, I FEEL KINDA WEIRD. I DON’T KNOW WHAT TO EXPECT TOMORROW. YOU’VE NEVER DONE ANYTHING LIKE THIS FOR ME BEFORE AND I FEEL A LITTLE NERVOUS,” Campitelli wrote, according to the affidavit.

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“LOL, IT’S NO BIG DEAL. JUST TRYING TO SHOW U THAT I CAN BE ROMANTIC. IT PROBABLY WONT BE AS GOOD AS WHAT YOU’VE DONE FOR ME,” Perez responded. 

Rene Perez's Florida mugshot

Rene Perez, 38, was arrested on charges of first-degree murder with a deadly weapon and tampering with physical evidence in Miami on Tuesday, March 10, 2026, according to PBSO. (Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office )

Campitelli left her home that night wearing a red dress and black heels after telling her husband that she would be going out to dinner with friends, court documents revealed.

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Shortly after leaving, her Chevy Tahoe arrived at Perez’s former job, the Retina Group of Florida building in Wellington. 

An image obtained from Campitelli’s iPhone showed a blanket reading “HAPPY BIRTHDAY HOPE YOUR BIRTHDAY IS OUT OF THIS WORD” placed by Perez in the backseat of her Tahoe, along with Ultrasorbs Medical Sheets commonly used to absorb liquids, according to the affidavit.

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Around 10:20 p.m., several 911 calls were placed to report an unresponsive woman lying in the southbound lanes of Lyons Road, with one caller telling authorities the individual appeared to be “bleeding profusely from the mouth,” authorities said. 

A photo of Linda Campitelli

Linda Campitelli was last seen wearing a red dress and black heels before leaving her home to meet alleged lover Rene Perez for a birthday celebration in Wellington, Florida on Oct. 28, 2024, according to authorities. (Linda Campitelli/Facebook)

Authorities found Campitelli’s lifeless body about 50 feet from her vehicle. She was wearing the same outfit she left home in, and there was “blood leading away from the passenger side of the Chevrolet Tahoe to the victim’s body,” officials said. Her bloodstained Apple Watch was recovered from the center console.

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Following an investigation by the Palm Beach County Medical Examiner’s Office, Campitelli’s death was ruled a homicide resulting from blunt force trauma to the head and torso. 

She sustained four lacerations to the right side of her scalp, several contusions throughout her body and a lacerated lung, among other injuries. Severe road rash and scuff marks on her heels also suggested she had been dragged.

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Upon being interviewed by investigators, Perez claimed he had canceled the birthday celebration with Campitelli because his son was sick – though investigators did not find any messages that corroborated his alibi, according to the affidavit. 

Following a lengthy investigation, Perez was subsequently taken into custody on charges of first-degree murder with a deadly weapon and tampering with physical evidence, according to PBSO.

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Perez was transported to the Palm Beach County Jail where a judge ordered he be held without bond. 

Perez’s attorney did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.



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Advocates push for major probe as US boat strikes in Latin America kill 157 | Donald Trump News

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Washington, DC – In September, the United States began launching dozens of deadly military strikes against alleged drug-smuggling boats in the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific.

Nearly half a year later, remarkably little is known about the strikes. The identities of the nearly 157 people killed have not been released. Any purported evidence against them has not been made public.

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But a group of United Nations and international law experts are hoping to change that on Friday, when they testify at the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR).

The international hearing will be the first of its kind since the strikes began on September 2, and rights advocates hope it can help lead to accountability as individual legal cases related to the strikes proceed.

Steven Watt, a senior staff lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union’s human rights programme, said the goal of the hearing will be threefold.

“Our ask will be to conduct a fact-finding investigation into what’s going on,” Watt said.

The second aim, he continued, would be “to assert or to arrive at a conclusion that there is no armed conflict here”, in what would be a rebuke to US President Donald Trump’s previous claims.

Finally, Watt said, he hopes the proceedings will yield long-sought transparency from the Trump administration on “whether or not they have a legal justification for these boat strikes”.

“We don’t think there are any,” Watt added.

‘We don’t know the names’

The experts set to testify at Friday’s hearing said the IACHR has a unique mandate to uncover the truth behind the US strikes.

The commission, based in Guatemala City, Guatemala, is an independent investigative body within the Organization of American States, of which the US was a founding member in 1948.

While the Trump administration has claimed it has a right to carry out the deadly attacks as part of a wider military offensive against so-called “narco-terrorists”, rights groups have decried the campaign as a series of extrajudicial killings.

They argue that Trump’s deadly tactics deny those targeted of anything that approaches due process.

Legal experts have also dismissed Trump’s claims that suspects in drug-related crimes are equivalent to “unlawful combatants” in an “armed conflict”.

Few details have emerged from the air strikes. Several families have come forward, however, to informally identify the dead as their loved ones.

Victims are said to include 26-year-old Chad Joseph and 41-year-old Rishi Samaroo, who were sailing home to Trinidad and Tobago when they were killed in October, according to relatives.

A complaint filed against the US government said both men travelled often between the islands and Venezuela, where Joseph found work as a farmer and fisherman, and Samaroo laboured on a farm.

The family of Colombian national Alejandro Carranza, 42, have also said he was killed in September when the US military attacked his fishing boat off the country’s coast.

The US has yet to confirm the victims’ identities, and only two survivors have ever been rescued in the 45 reported strikes.

A clearer picture of what happened will be a significant step towards accountability, according to experts like Watt.

“[The IACHR] is uniquely positioned to identify who all these persons are,” Watt said. “We just know the numbers from the United States. We don’t know the names or the backgrounds of these people.”

The IACHR has launched a range of human rights investigations in recent decades, including probes into the 2014 mass kidnapping of 43 students in Iguala, Mexico, and a series of murders in Colombia from 1988 to 1991 dubbed the Massacre of Trujillo.

The commission has also examined US policies, including extrajudicial detentions at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, during its so-called “global war on terror”.

The IACHR has the power to seek resolutions to human rights complaints or refer them for litigation before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights.

Just last week, the court ordered Peru to pay reparations to the family of a woman who died during a government-led forced sterilisation campaign in the 1990s.

The Carranza family has filed its own complaint to the IACHR, and the families of Joseph and Samaroo have also lodged a lawsuit against the US in a federal court in Massachusetts.

Angelo Guisado, a senior staff lawyer at the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), said a fuller accounting of the US actions is needed to prevent future abuses. He is among the experts testifying on Friday.

“You can’t normalise assassinating fishermen off the coast of South America,” Guisado told Al Jazeera. “That’s just sadistic and an abomination to the rules-based order that we’ve created.”

“So we hope that the commission can do some investigation.”

A war against ‘narco-terrorists’?

One of Guisado’s goals for Friday’s hearing will be to unpack the Trump administration’s argument that the attacks are necessary from a national security standpoint.

Even before the US strikes began, the Trump administration began framing the Latin American drug trade as an existential threat to the US.

As part of that re-framing, the administration borrowed messaging from its “global war on terror”, taking the unorthodox approach of labelling several cartels “foreign terrorist organisations”.

Speaking last week at a meeting of Latin American leaders, White House security adviser Stephen Miller maintained there is no “criminal justice solution” to drug cartels.

Instead, he affirmed that the US would use “hard power, military power, lethal force, to protect and defend the American homeland”, even if that meant carrying out deadly operations throughout the Western Hemisphere.

Guisado, however, noted that the administration has admitted that the targeted boats were largely carrying cocaine, not the highly addictive fentanyl responsible for the majority of US drug overdoses.

He explained that the administration has done little to prove its claims that drug traffickers are part of a coordinated effort to destabilise the US.

Such hyperbolic language, Guisado added, could be used as a smokescreen to conceal illegal actions.

“When you invoke national security interest, it seems as if scrutiny and any legitimate analysis or condemnation gets pushed to one side in favour of an ersatz martial law,” Guisado said.

“The idea that you could just proclaim anyone a narcoterrorist and do whatever you want with them is just so repugnant to our system of fairness, justice and law.”

Watt, meanwhile, said he hopes the IACHR will draw a clear “line in the sand”, separating drug crimes from what is conventionally considered an armed conflict.

He also would like to see the IACHR clearly outline the US’s human rights obligations.

“But even if there was an armed conflict — of which there isn’t — the laws of war would prohibit the type of conduct that the United States is engaging in here,” Watt explained.

“It would be an extrajudicial killing. It would be a war crime.”

Transparency or accountability

Friday’s hearing will only be an initial step towards accountability, and critics question how effective the IACHR will ultimately be.

The US has regularly shrugged off human rights probes at international forums, and it is not party to entities like the International Criminal Court in The Hague, raising barriers to the pursuit of justice.

Despite being a member of the OAS, the US has also not ratified the American Convention on Human Rights, one of the organisation’s founding documents.

It is, therefore, unclear how binding any IACHR decisions could be, although Watt argued that it is “longstanding jurisprudence of the commission that the declaration imposes obligations on non-ratifying member states”.

Still, legal experts said Friday’s hearing may yield clarity on the Trump administration’s legal argument for the boat strikes.

The IACHR has said US government representatives are set to appear at the hearing.

To date, the US Department of Justice has not released the Office of Legal Counsel’s official reasoning for the boat strikes, considered the foundational legal document for the military actions.

A separate memorandum from that office addressed the US abduction of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on January 3, which it framed as a drug enforcement action.

That memo touched on the boat strikes, but it only served to raise further questions about Trump’s rationale.

“This will be an opportunity for the United States to put its case before the commission,” Watt said.

“But of course, it depends on US cooperation,” he continued. “They’re going down there, but it’ll be interesting to see what they actually say.”



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