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Convicted killer’s ‘jury tampering’ plot to derail £45m drug smuggling trial from prison cell | UK News

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A convicted murderer, who once escaped from prison using a grappling hook, orchestrated a plot to collapse a £45m international drug smuggling trial by claiming the jury had been bribed.

William Todd, 61, has been sentenced to seven years in prison after he was found guilty of conspiracy to pervert the course of justice.

He directed the scheme from his cell using a secret mobile phone under the alias Ari Gold – the Hollywood agent played by Jeremy Piven in TV series Entourage.

£44m of MDMA was discovered concealed inside a excavator shipped to Australia Pic: National Crime Agency
Image: £44m of MDMA was discovered concealed inside a excavator shipped to Australia Pic: National Crime Agency

Todd was given two life sentences in 2001 for the attempted murder of his former business partner Arthur de Sousa and shooting dead Mr de Sousa’s bodyguard in the Berkshire village of Pangbourne.

He escaped from Winchester prison after sawing through the bars of his cell window before scaling the 30ft wall using a homemade grappling hook and rope ladder – but was caught five days later.

Todd was nearing the end of his sentence at Coldingley prison when he staged an elaborate plan to help the gang who smuggled 448kg of MDMA to Australia in the arm of an industrial digger walk free.

The organised crime group was caught after Danny Brown, 58, sent a picture of his pet French Bulldog Bob to Stefan Baldauf, 66, showing his partner’s phone number on the dog tag over encrypted communications platform EncroChat.

Drugs were hidden in the arm of a digger.
Image: Drugs were hidden in the arm of a digger.
A photo of Bob the dog showed a criminal's partner's phone number on the collar tag. Pic: NCA
Image: A photo of Bob the dog showed a criminal’s partner’s phone number on the collar tag. Pic: NCA

Southwark Crown Court heard Todd brokered the plot on behalf of others, using a 46-year-old man, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, as his man on the outside to record the names of the jurors when they were sworn in for their trial.

When the jury retired to consider verdicts in June 2022, false claims were sent to Kingston Crown Court and police that named jurors had been bribed up to £20,000 to acquit the men on trial.

The jury, court staff, solicitors and barristers all initially fell under suspicion, but some of the jurors had already been discharged and names had been misspelled, so the trial continued after it was found to be a “dishonest attempt to derail the trial,” said prosecutor Charlotte Hole.

After Brown and Baldauf were found guilty of drug trafficking days later, along with four other men, Sheree Avard, 41, from Woking, Surrey, was recruited in a bid to get the convictions quashed.

Sheree Avard posed as juror's girlfriend. Pic: NCA
Image: Sheree Avard posed as juror’s girlfriend. Pic: NCA

The court heard she called Brown’s lawyer posing as the girlfriend of one of the men on the jury, who she claimed had confessed he was pressured by corrupt National Crime Agency officials to convict the men.

An image of a fake passport was also created in the name of Ioana Andrei and a woman in Romania was paid 2,000 euros to sign an official deposition, along with a corrupt solicitor in Bucharest, which was sent to the lawyer.

The statements were leaked online, claiming police and NCA were corrupt and influencing jurors.

The prosecutor said “there was a real risk of serious consequences for innocent parties”, adding: “Had this been believed, jurors could have been in contempt of court or worse.”

Stefan Baldauf. Pic: NCA
Image: Stefan Baldauf. Pic: NCA
Danny Brown. Pic: NCA
Image: Danny Brown. Pic: NCA

Avard and the man who cannot be named admitted conspiracy to pervert the course of justice between March and November 2022, and were jailed for 12 months, and three years and four months respectively.

Sentencing the three involved, Judge Gregory Perrins said the plot “struck at the very heart of justice”.

“This was a professional, persistent and sophisticated attempt to undermine the trial and then the convictions of people involved in serious organised crime,” he said.

“The intention of the conspiracy was to undermine the entire process of justice.”

He said Todd had “close links” with the organised crime group and told “directed every part of the conspiracy” from his prison cell.

Steve Ahmet, senior investigating officer at the NCA’s Anti-Corruption Unit, said: “This case shows the remarkable lengths that high-harm criminals will go to in order to cheat justice and why they pose the greatest corruption threat to crucial pillars of our society.

“The offenders were determined to help their criminal associates walk free but our team built a rock-solid case against them.”

Brown, from Bromley, Kent, and Baldauf, from Ealing, west London, were jailed for 26 years and 28 years respectively in December 2022.



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‘Mormon Wives’ star Layla Taylor reveals yearslong struggle with eating disorder

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Reality TV star Layla Taylor revealed she’s been silently struggling with an eating disorder for years during the tumultuous season four of “The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives.”

Taylor, 25, admitted she has been living with an eating disorder since high school. During an episode of the Utah-based show, Taylor said she’s been abusing GLP-1s and weighs in at 99 pounds at 5’10”.

“I just feel like, I don’t think I’ll ever be small enough in my head,” the model said. “And I know it’s affecting me. Like, I’m so exhausted all the time because I don’t eat. And my body hurts every night when I go to bed. I literally lay down, and if my knees are touching each other, it hurts because I don’t have enough fat on my body to cushion it.”

“I know that it’s going too far, and I’m taking it too far, but I can’t stop,” she added.

‘MORMON WIVES’ STAR SAYS PLASTIC SURGERY NIGHTMARE RUINED HER LIFE AND REALITY TV CAREER

Layla Taylor from Secret Lives of Mormon Wives

Layla Taylor opened up about her body insecurities during season four of “The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives.” (Thomas Concordia/Getty Images for Miami Swim Week: The Shows, Jason Howard/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images)

Taylor opened up about her eating disorder and GLP-1 use after being turned down for a modeling job with a big agency.

“Getting rejected by a modeling agency, like that means there’s something wrong with me that they didn’t choose me,” she told her friends during the show. “So I feel I’ve been like, the last couple of days I’ve really been struggling so hard with confidence that I’m like, ‘I weigh too much or my face isn’t symmetrical.'”

The mom of two revealed she’d been using GLP-1s for about a year.

“I initially got on them because I feel like I just had stubborn weight that I couldn’t get off,” she said during a confessional. “But the thing is that people don’t talk about how addictive this is and how hard it is to get off, and it’s just this never-ending thing that’s so negative.”

Taylor pointed to Utah’s obsession with looks and how it’s compounded her addiction. “It’s a very negative part of the Utah culture. I can’t even count on both hands how many people I know abuse GLP-1s, like myself, and it’s a real problem.”

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Layla Taylor standing at iHeartRadio 102.7 KIIS FM's Jingle Ball 2025.

Layla Taylor revealed she’s struggled with an eating disorder since high school. (Jc Olivera / Billboard via Getty Images)

The “Mormon Wives” star admitted she once found validation in people calling her thin in her comments, but the relentless online commentary has since become too much to handle.

“I feel like for a long time there, people calling me ill or saying that I look sick or too thin – It was almost a dopamine rush for me because I feel with an eating disorder. It’s like, ‘Someone’s noticing all this work that I’m putting in to look this way, and it’s paying off in a way.'”

“But now I can’t even post a simple ad to make money to support my family without there being a bunch of comments on it, and it’s actually starting to get a lot that I don’t even want to post right now because I can’t run away from it.”

Layla Taylor and Jessi Ngatikaura seated during a television segment.

Layla Taylor was confronted about her addiction to GLP-1 use during the reality TV show. (Michael Simon / Getty Images)

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Layla Taylor posing for a portrait.

Layla Taylor is a mom of two known for her role on “The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives.” (Natalie Cass / Getty Images)

Taylor has addressed her weight on the show in previous seasons after her co-stars shared concerns.

“I’ve been skinny my whole life, though. I feel like everyone’s concerned right now, but I’ve been tiny my whole entire life,” she told Demi Engemann.

“Do you think there’s a part of you that still kind of struggles with body dysmorphia?” Engemann asked.

“Oh, 100%,” Taylor acknowledged. “And it’s sad because it’s like, when you guys tell me, ‘Oh, you used to look like a healthy weight,’ like when you have an eating disorder, the word ‘healthy’ triggers me.”

“When people tell me that I look tiny, and I’m starting to look sick, for some reason, in my twisted brain, that gives me an endorphin rush.”

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Pete Hegseth attacks media for not being positive enough about US attacks on Iran | Pete Hegseth

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Pete Hegseth on Friday again claimed the US military campaign against Iran has been an unprecedented success, using a Pentagon press conference to accuse journalists of downplaying Washington’s supposed gains on the battlefield.

Speaking alongside the chair of the joint chiefs of staff, the US defense secretary claimed Iran had been left without a functioning air force, navy or missile defense network after 13 days of strikes, and said the combined US-Israeli air campaign had hit more than 15,000 targets since the war began.

“The United States is decimating the radical Iranian regime’s military in a way the world has never seen before,” Hegseth told reporters.

He said Iranian ballistic missile production capacity had been “functionally defeated” and that their leaders were cowering underground, because “that’s what rats do”. In fact, some of Iran’s most senior leaders – including the president, Masoud Pezeshkian; the security chief, Ali Larijani; and the foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi – were today seen on video marching through Tehran for the annual Quds Day rally.

Hegseth also claimed Iran’s new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei – who was elected by the Assembly of Experts on 8 March following the assassination of his father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei – was “wounded and likely disfigured”. The claim has not been independently verified.

Analysts such as the independent Institute for the Study of War have confirmed mass damage to Iranian military infrastructure using commercial satellite imagery, including through strikes on missile complexes and air and navy bases. Nevertheless, attacks by Iran continue. Iranian state media said the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has continued to launch a barrage of missiles and drones on US military installations in Gulf countries and on Israel.

Hegseth also confirmed that a US military investigation is indeed under way into an airstrike on a girls’ school in Iran that killed at least 175 people. The defense secretary said the investigating officer was a general, drawn from outside US Central Command, but did not address the substance of the allegations directly. Preliminary findings from the investigation have reportedly found that the US bombed the school.

The chair of the joint chiefs of staff, Gen Dan Caine, revealed at the press conference that the US fired “the first precision strike missiles ever used in combat, reaching deep into enemy territory”. The anti-ship weapons are designed to be more precise and operate at a longer range than previous missile versions.

Despite assertions of near-total battlefield dominance, the Pentagon has acknowledged that the strait of Hormuz – a key shipping route for Gulf oil, not least Iran’s own – remains partly closed to commercial shipping, and that it has yet to begin naval escort operations.

Addressing the issue of the strait, Hegseth disparaged reporting that the US had not been prepared for Iran’s effective closure of shipping route. “The only thing prohibiting transit in [Hormuz] right now is Iran shooting at shipping,” Hegseth said. “It is open for transit should Iran not do that.”

Throughout, Hegseth repeatedly criticized news coverage of the war, at one point proposing alternative headlines for TV coverage.

“What should the banner [on TV] read?” he said. “How about ‘Iran increasingly desperate’?”

One journalist said they had been denied entry to the press briefing, along with all print photographers. That is reportedly because some photos published of Hegseth have been deemed “unflattering”.

Singling out CNN by name, Hegseth said: “The sooner David Ellison takes over that network, the better.” Ellison, a Trump ally, is the frontrunner to acquire CNN’s parent company, Warner Bros Discovery, and has reportedly told Trump administration officials he would make sweeping changes to the network should the deal close.

As has been his habit at these briefings, Hegseth concluded his opening remarks with an appeal to divine providence, asking Americans to remain “on bended knee” in prayer for US troops and saying he served “God, the troops, the country, the constitution and the president of the United States – and answer only to those”.



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Disruption at Glasgow Central to last until at least Wednesday, officials say | UK News

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Much of Glasgow Central is set to remain closed until at least Wednesday, officials have said, five days after a massive fire shut down Scotland’s busiest railway station.

The blaze, which broke out at a vape shop in an adjacent Victorian-era building on Sunday, stopped all train journeys from the station, causing mass travel disruption for many this week.

In an update on Sunday, Network Rail Scotland said its engineers cannot yet gain access to the station to assess the situation as demolition work on the affected site is underway.

As a result, the rail operator said that the main part of the station containing the high-level platforms will remain shut until at least 18 March.

Demolition carried out on a building destroyed by a fire near Glasgow Central station. Pics: PA
Image: Demolition carried out on a building destroyed by a fire near Glasgow Central station. Pics: PA

Services in the lower level of Glasgow Central station began running again on Wednesday.

Ross Moran, route director at Network Rail Scotland, said it understands “how disruptive this extended closure is for passengers and the wider city centre, and we’re extremely grateful for the continued patience and understanding”.

“The damage to the building beside the station is clearly significant, and any phased reopening will depend on demolition work progressing to a stage that allows our engineers to safely return”, he added.

Glasgow City Council said earlier that the “very unstable” Victorian building, which has continued to collapse since the blaze started, must be demolished for public safety.

Fire shuts Glasgow train station

Susan Aitken, the council leader, said: “The structure where the fire was is now very unstable. It has no structural integrity.

“There’s a kind of a floating chimney stack that’s attached to the top of the wall. So, this is an unstable, dangerous site.”

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Ms Aitken added that “it is obviously going to cause disruption to people for quite a while”, but said that “in the meantime, it is safety first for everyone and it is the protection of the public that is our number one priority”.



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ODU terrorist who killed ROTC instructor had prior ISIS conviction

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The suspect authorities say killed an ROTC instructor at Old Dominion University had previously been convicted of providing material support to ISIS but received a shorter prison sentence than federal prosecutors sought before his release in 2024, according to court records.

Mohamed Jalloh, a naturalized U.S. citizen originally from Sierra Leone, entered a classroom Thursday at the Norfolk school and opened fire after confirming it was an ROTC class, killing Lt. Col. Brandon Shah, authorities said. The FBI’s Norfolk Field Office said ROTC cadets physically subdued Jalloh and stopped the attack, adding that their actions “rendered [him] no longer alive.”

“The horrific tragedy that occurred today on ODU’s campus never should have happened,” Rep. Jennifer Kiggans, R-Va., said following the attack.

Court records show Jalloh was arrested in 2016 for providing material support to ISIS.

MAMDANI AVOIDS ‘RADICAL ISLAMIC TERROR’ PHRASE AFTER ISIS-INSPIRED NYC ATTACK, ECHOING OBAMA-ERA DEBATE

Mohamed Bailor Jalloh facing forward in a portrait style photo

Mohamed Bailor Jalloh was identified by authorities as the shooter at Old Dominion University on Thursday, March 12, 2026. (AP Photo)

Federal prosecutors sought a 20-year prison sentence, but Senior U.S. District Judge Liam O’Grady ultimately sentenced him to 132 months — roughly 11 years.

According to prosecutors, a now-deceased ISIS member overseas arranged contact between Jalloh and an individual he believed to be a fellow supporter but who was actually an FBI confidential human source. Investigators said Jalloh also traveled to Nigeria in connection with the plot.

The overseas terrorist wanted an attack carried out, while Jalloh told the FBI source he decided not to renew his enlistment with the Virginia Army National Guard after listening to lectures from Al Qaeda terrorist Anwar al-Awlaki — a New Mexico native against whom President Barack Obama ordered a fatal drone strike in 2011.

“The defendant was fully aware of what he was doing, and the consequences of those actions. His only misgivings seemed to be a fear that he would waver at the critical moment,” prosecutors wrote in a sentencing memorandum obtained by the Associated Press.

FBI DISRUPTS ALLEGED ISIS-INSPIRED NEW YEAR’S EVE ATTACK PLOT TARGETING NC GROCERY STORE

O’Grady later handed down an 11-year sentence that included mental health treatment and substance abuse testing, according to the wire service, and Jalloh was ultimately released in 2024.

Jalloh’s release also required no contact with any terrorist organizations and computer monitoring during probation.

“Jalloh was sentenced in 2017 to 132 months in prison for providing material support to ISIS. The [government] had asked for a sentence of 240 months, the statutory maximum,” former federal prosecutor William Shipley wrote on X.

“The Judge who imposed the reduced sentence was Senior Judge Liam O’Grady, in the Eastern District of Virginia, a GWB appointee. Judge O’Grady announced he was taking Senior Status in June 2020 — right in the heart of the start of COVID, meaning there was no chance that Pres[ident] Trump would be able to get his replacement confirmed.”

Joe Biden ended up nominating his replacement — Judge Patricia Giles.” Giles, he said, controversially ruled in 2024 that Virginia had illegally purged noncitizens from the voter rolls too close to that year’s election and ordered their restoration.

AMERICAN EXTREMIST ADMITS BANKROLLING ISIS TERRORISTS, PLOTTING US VIOLENCE WITH HOMEMADE BOMB: FEDS

Asked whether the spate of recent attacks shows a resurgence of ISIS threats to the homeland or if previously lax immigration policies have played a role, a spokesperson for National Counterterrorism Center Director Joe Kent pointed to recent comments he made after the Iran mission began:

“As the Iran conflict continues to unfold, ODNI’s National Counterterrorism Center is engaged and operating at full capacity, 24/7. We are tracking developments in real time, assessing any potential risks to the homeland, identifying emerging threats, and providing timely, actionable intelligence to the White House, law enforcement, and interagency partners to detect and prevent attacks against the American people,” Kent said.

Old Dominion University campus buildings and landscaped grounds in Norfolk, Virginia

Old Dominion University campus in Norfolk, Virginia, features academic buildings and landscaped grounds as a public research university serving southeastern Virginia and beyond. (John Greim/LightRocket)

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Kent said counterterrorism officials are “acutely aware” and focused on eliminating “persistent” threats posed by thousands of people with terror ties who “poured into our nation unchecked during four years of open borders under Biden.”

“Constant vigilance is a must. Stay aware of your surroundings, and if you see something suspicious, report it immediately to local law enforcement. Every one of us has a role to play in keeping this nation secure,” Kent said.

A DOJ spokesperson told Fox News Digital there are “no known or credible threats to the homeland” at this time and that federal agents are “maintaining a constant state of vigilance to keep Americans safe.”

Fox News Digital reached out to ODNI, the FBI and O’Grady for comment.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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Bot harasses woman, led away by cops • The Register

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A 70-year old woman in China loudly shouted at a robot to leave her alone, but the bot instead stood its ground and did a “raise the roof” move when the woman called it “freaking crazy.”

Witnesses said the woman was out for a walk around Rua Sul do Patane in Macau around 9 p.m. on March 5, looking at her phone, when the bot approached her from behind and she turned, startled.

The next part is caught on video.

According to the clip, the woman shouted in Cantonese: “You’re making my heart race! You’ve got plenty to do, so what’s the point of messing around with this? Are you freaking crazy?”

The Unitree Robotics G-1 then appeared to do a “raise the roof” motion with both arms while she continued to shout. The video cuts to the police escorting G-1 away.

The Unitree Robotics G-1 sells for about 85,000 yuan in China, but can be bought in the US through Alibaba for $15,300. According to the product listing, it is powered by Nvidia Orin chips which max out at 100 TOPS and comes equipped with 3D LiDAR depth cameras to scan its surroundings. Internally it runs on 16GB of memory, has 2TB of storage, and a 13-cell 9000mAh battery.

However, the 80-pound robot has virtually no upper body strength, with a maximum arm payload of about 6 pounds.

Police said the robot did not make contact with the woman, but she was hospitalized for evaluation and later released.

The robot was returned to its operator, who was nearby testing the unit and improving performance for an upcoming promotional use to market an education center nearby, the paper stated.

The same robot was used in a three promotional activities for the education center last week, according to the Macau Post. And it had even walked the UNESCO World Heritage site Ruins of St. Paul’s and Cotai Strip, according to the operator who said it generally received positive feedback.

Police did not cite the bot’s operator but told him to be more careful when deploying AI to the edge.



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‘No clear goal’: lack of Iran war plan has unleashed chaos and could stymie US military for decades, say critics | Trump administration

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As US and Israeli jets descended to deliver the opening salvos of the war in Iran, Donald Trump’s back-of-the-envelope plan for regime change in Tehran was about to run into the reality of the largest US intervention in the Middle East since the start of the Iraq war in 2003.

That reality came quickly.

One hundred and seventy-five people were killed when a US Tomahawk missile slammed into a girls’ school, apparently because the Pentagon used outdated targeting data for the strike. Hundreds of air-defence missiles were expended as Iran’s initial missile counterattack was mostly parried – but one drone smashed into a makeshift command centre in Kuwait, killing six US troops and wounding dozens more.

Tens of thousands of US citizens were stranded in the region as the state department hurriedly slapped together a taskforce to evacuate them. The US strikes that killed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei also killed many of the US’s preferred successors; and in his first address, Trump simply told Iranians “when we are finished, take over your government” – with no suggestion on how that might be done.

And the first six days of the war alone cost the US $11.3bn, the Pentagon briefed members of Congress – though it wasn’t clear if those numbers included the cost of the buildup or the US missile defenses as well. The ultimate toll of Iran’s closure of the strait of Hormuz on the world economy remains to be seen.

Past administrations had been war-gaming an Iran invasion for decades – but with Trump in the White House, observers said that the rigidly closed circle of advisers around him, the collapse of an interagency process in the government and his erratic decision-making process made this unlike any other US military campaign in recent memory.

“This is hard under any circumstances but especially with so little [evidence of] planning,” said Philip Gordon, the former national security adviser to Kamala Harris and the White House coordinator for the Middle East under Barack Obama.

Of the growing chaos in the Middle East, he said: “It is surprising that Trump is surprised.”

Previous administration had “gamed out” potential conflict scenarios with Iran “many times and constantly”, said Gordon, now of the Brookings Institution, but regularly ran into exactly the problems that the Trump administration is now facing: Iran targeted neighbouring countries to threaten a regional war and closed the strait of Hormuz, threatening the global oil trade and driving up energy prices.

“One of the reasons we did the nuclear deal and didn’t try to change the regime is exactly what’s happening,” he said of the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). Trump withdrew from the treaty in 2018.

The military campaign to eliminate the Iranian leadership has achieved considerable success. The early strikes that killed Khamenei and dozens of his senior advisers were the product of a collaboration between Israeli on-the-ground intelligence and US signals intelligence. Trump seemed poised to match the success of the 12-day war, when the US delivered surgical strikes against Iran’s nuclear programme and then exited the conflict.

But Iran has continued to fight. And as Trump and top officials such as the US defence secretary, Pete Hegseth, herald the complete destruction of the Iranian leadership in successive briefings, there are no clear explanations for what the US will call victory in the conflict, and how it will now reverse Iran’s decision to squeeze the global oil supply.

“The military planning has been stellar,” said Michael Rubin, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and an expert on US foreign policy on Iran. “That said, politically, this is increasingly looking like a cluster fuck. And the reason is that step one of any plan is to establish a goal – the targeting should be in pursuit of that goal. The United States has this backwards. We have the targeting, but we don’t have a clear goal, and that lies not on the Pentagon planners, but on Donald Trump.”

The aim of the US mission has shifted repeatedly since January’s naval buildup – from backing Iranian protesters being killed in a government crackdown, to eliminating Iran’s nuclear programme, to knocking out its ballistic missiles system. Now it has focused on a new goal – that of opening the strait of Hormuz, whose closure has sent prices for oil to more than $100 a barrel and even prompted the Trump administration to halt sanctions on Russian oil, reversing its policy in a different war.

“Each of these goals would have required a different military strategy,” said Michael Singh, managing director of the Washington Institute and a former senior director for Middle East affairs at the national security council under George W Bush. With Iran now closing the strait, he added, the “other side gets a vote” about when to end the war, potentially allowing Iran to drag the US into a protracted conflict.

The small-circle decision-making was in part by design.

Trump entered government last year with a broad attack on the “deep state” that others have called the DC foreign policy “blob”, cutting out the career government employees that had populated agencies and departments and that he argued acted in conspiracy to undermine his previous administration and prevent changes to US foreign policy. Within months of his inauguration, Trump gutted the national security council, and later the secretary of state, Marco Rubio, proceeded with major layoffs called at the Department of State.

There were few signs that key parts of the state department beyond Rubio’s immediate circle were brought into the policy planning: there were no operations to evacuate citizens and at-risk embassies remained staffed even through the beginning days of the war. But even as the US’s intention to go to war had been telegraphed, the closely held decision to launch the strikes meant that official directions had not been handed down to the state department and other key agencies.

“This is the war we launched,” said Mara Karlin, a former assistant secretary of defence. “Obviously I understand the need for operational security, but you have also got to set certain pieces in place so that you can be ready to respond when things happen.”

The Trump administration has also not voiced a clear plan for the people of Iran. Trump himself has indicated he wanted someone inside Iran to seize power – similar to the case in Venezuela – but then said many potential figures from within the regime were killed in the initial strikes. He has now conceded that a change of regime likely won’t happen in the short term.

“They literally have people in the streets with machine guns, machine-gunning people down if they want to protest,” Trump said of Iran’s security forces. “That’s a pretty big hurdle to climb for people that don’t have weapons.”

For Pentagon planners, the expanding war has meant drawing resources from other military theatres, including parts of air-defence systems deployed to Asia in order to contend with the long-term threat from North Korea and China. Flush from its success in Venezuela, the Trump administration has now embraced the use of military power abroad to achieve its aims, potentially overextending itself in a conflict that could draw in much of the region.

“The long-term effects of this will be just dumping US military power down the drain,” said Jennifer Kavanagh, director of military analysis for Defense Priorities, a thinktank based in Washington DC that generally advocates for more restraint in US foreign policy.

“The long-term effects will be significant in terms of the US ability to project power … I think that the implications of this are going to last for decades.”



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Kyle Chris arrested for armed breach of Zwink Elementary School

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A man armed with a gun while wearing tactical gear walked inside the front office of a Texas elementary school campus Tuesday through an improperly closed door, authorities said. 

Kyle Chris, 39, was arrested at his home Wednesday night and faces a felony charge of unlawfully carrying a weapon in a prohibited place after the incident at Zwink Elementary School, Fox Houston reported. 

He was arrested at his home, located minutes from the school by Klein Independent School District police. 

Chris allegedly told authorities he was a security guard, but was actually unemployed, the report states.  

7-YEAR-OLD INJURES HAND AFTER ACCIDENTALLY DISCHARGING FIREARM IN MARYLAND CLASSROOM

Kyle Chris mugshot and a school from Google Maps

Kyle Chris, 39, allegedly walked onto the Zwink Elementary School campus with a gun after someone else who had left the school did not properly close the doors behind them. (Klein ISD; Google Maps)

The district said Chris got into the school during a 15-second window when the doors didn’t click shut after a parent left the building. He was wearing what appeared to be a uniform and had a holstered firearm, the district said. 

However, the school’s “secure vestibule” system stopped him from going any further by keeping him trapped in the front office area, the district said. 

“When the individual was asked by the front office staff to provide identification, he did not provide identification, and the front office staff immediately contacted our armed, full-time campus guard,” the district said in a letter to parents obtained by Fox News Digital. 

Chris was unable to get into the hallways where students were located. 

CALIFORNIA MAN FIRES GUN NEAR SCHOOL ZONE, BARRICADES IN HOME BEFORE SURRENDERING TO SWAT PANTLESS

classroom for young students

A classroom at an elementary school.  (Getty Images)

He left the school grounds and drove away, the district said. No students or staffers were harmed. 

Parents were notified of the incident on Wednesday, the district said, because they were working with law enforcement to identify Chris. 

“Sending a public notification during that window could have jeopardized those efforts, tipped off the suspect, and delayed the arrest,” the letter states. “Law enforcement had the individual under constant surveillance today, and out of an abundance of caution, additional security measures were in place on campus, including increased police presence.”

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Chris is being held in the Harris County jail on $75,000 bond, according to jail records. 



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Lebanese father buries four daughters killed in Israeli strike | News

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A Lebanese father mourned the death of his four daughters, mother, father, brother-in-law and nephew, after they were killed in an Israeli attack. Israel has killed at least 770 people in Lebanon since last Monday. Around 750,000 have been forcibly displaced.



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Supermodel Cindy Crawford skinny dips as part of her morning routine

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Cindy Crawford shared a montage on social media of her typical morning routine that included skinny-dipping in her jacuzzi, wearing nothing but a necklace.

“I love my morning routine— sets me up to have a great day!” Crawford wrote in the caption of an Instagram video she shared this week.

The supermodel’s day starts at 6 a.m. with dry brushing while listening to her Bible app.

After doing her face routine, which involves a cleanser and a red-light device, she takes a shot of apple cider vinegar by 7 a.m. — which gives her a little shudder — and then goes outside on her lawn barefoot.

SHARON STONE BLASTS HOLLYWOOD’S NUDITY DOUBLE STANDARD IN FIERY INSTAGRAM VIDEO

Cindy Crawford in a black dress

The supermodel’s typical morning includes a shot of apple cider vinegar, doing yoga and enjoying her outdoor jacuzzi in the nude.  (Mike Marsland/Getty Images for Omega)

In the video, she then drops her robe before climbing into her oceanfront jacuzzi.

By 7:45, the 60-year-old is back inside for her morning coffee with collagen, and she answers a few emails before heading to the gym.

Cindy Crawford in her jacuzzi

Cindy Crawford shared a glimpse of her skinny-dipping in her jacuzzi as part of her morning routine. (Cindy Crawford/Instagram)

Her workout involves yoga, hanging upside down and jumping on a miniature trampoline – all before her Pilates teacher arrives around 8:30 a.m.

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“And that’s my morning,” she added at the end of the video.

Crawford discussed her free-spirited attitude toward nudity in a 2019 interview with Net-a-Porter while talking about appearing naked in a photography book.

Cindy Crawford at the WWD Style Awards in Los Angeles in January 2026.

Cindy Crawford previously asked rhetorically: “What age is being naked not beautiful anymore?” (Olivia Wong/FilmMagic)

“He asked me how I wanted to be photographed,” Crawford said of photographer Russell James. “You could be as free or as not free as you wanted. Part of the reason I wanted to do it was that I thought, at what age is being naked not beautiful anymore? Is there a sell-by date on us? I don’t look the same as I did at 20, 30 or even 40. If we take care of ourselves, why not?”

She said she doesn’t want to be “frolicking” on the beach in a string bikini, but “there is a place where I want to feel beautiful naked, in my private life, with my husband. [Russell] was tapping into that real place – not high heels, not a lot of makeup, not coy, just a real woman who doesn’t have clothes on.”

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Cindy Crawford doing yoga

Cindy Crawford does yoga as part of her morning routine. (Cindy Crawford/Instagram)

Crawford added that she doesn’t have any regrets about posing for Playboy twice in 1988 and 1998.

“I look back at some of my old ‘Playboy’ pictures and I think, ‘Why wasn’t I walking around naked all the time?’” she joked to the magazine. “I’m not getting younger. So I want to celebrate who I am today.”

Crawford’s daughter Kaia Gerber also revealed to Harper’s Bazaar earlier this year that her childhood home was covered with naked photos of her mother. 

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“They were, to me, artistic,” Gerber explained. “It wasn’t vulgar; it wasn’t objectification.”

She called it “a gift to grow up in a house that was without shame for the female body.”



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