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DoorDash to gift $50,000 home down payment, BMW in Super Bowl giveaway
DoorDash is gifting one lucky Super Bowl fan nearly half a million dollars’ worth of gifts such as cars, gift cards and phones seen during this year’s game.
The delivery service on Monday will pick a winner for its “All the Ads” Super Bowl sweepstakes, showering one lucky football fan with up to $480,000 in gifts from the game’s advertisers, the company told CBS MoneyWatch. The prize bundle includes one item from each Super Bowl LVIII advertisement, including $50,000 toward a downpayment for a home, a 2024 BMW All-Electric i5 and an all-expenses-paid trip for the winner and three of her friends, according to DoorDash. The giveaway tops off a weekend of record spending for the sporting events’ advertisers.
The winner will be selected from a pool of Super Bowl viewers who successfully submit a “lengthy promotional code” that appeared during its game day commercial to its sweepstake website on Sunday.
The delivery service’s largesse comes during a year of record-high spending by advertisers on one of the most-watched sporting events in the U.S. Advertisers shelled out $7 million each for the second straight year to clinch one of several dozen 30-second commercial spots during the Super Bowl, CBS previously reported. That’s 1,650% more than the roughly $4 million that the Washington Post reported advertisers shelled out for the same-length of airtime in 2014.
Here is everything DoorDash’s “All the Ads” sweepstakes winner will get:
- Booking.com $20,000 Dream Vacation
- e.l.f. Cosmetics One year subscription of e.I.f.’s hottest drops and the entire Halo Glow collection
- BMW i5 M60 electric vehicle
- Homes.com $50,000 toward a Home Down Payment
-
Toyota 2024 truck
- Google Google Pixel 8
- T-Mobile $600 toward one year of 5G home internet
- Kia EV9 3-Row Electric SUV
- Verizon $600 toward 5G service and a red phone case
- Uber Eats $100 gift card
- Microsoft Copilot Pro subscription for six months
- M&M’S® Peanut Butter singles candy pack & a literal diamond
- Disney+ One year subscription
- Pfizer anatomy textbook
- NYX Professional Makeup Duck Plump Extreme plumping gloss
- Bass Pro Shops boat
- Wicked (Movie) witch’s hat
- Ghosts (Series) haunted fringe lamp
- Planet of the Apes (Movie) crown
- He Gets Us water bottle
- Apartments.com $15,000 toward apartment rent
- Twister (Movie) cowboy hat
- Paramount+ One year subscription
- Halo (Series) themed playing cards
- Tracker (Series) compass
- Foundation to Combat Antisemitism blue pin
- Hulu / FX One year subscription
- Dunkin’ coffee and donuts
- Knuckles (series) gold metal rings
- The Masters green blazer
- Young Sheldon (Series) bow tie
- A Political Ad vote pin
- The Equalizer (Series) black t-shirt
- So Help Me Todd (Series) bag of popcorn
- If (Movie) pink tutu
- Fire Country (Series) fire hat
- Disney+ One year subscription
- Monkey Man (Movie) black vest
- Progressive red flag
- Kung Fu Panda (Movie) panda plushie
- CeraVe six-month supply of moisturizer
- Pluto TV couch and sack of potatoes
- Bud Light neon guitar sign
- Snapchat filter costume
- Poppi probiotic soda cans
- TurboTax Live expert tax prep
- Apple Music all of Halftime headliner’s discography
- YouTube TV one year subscription
- Etsy cheese board for you and your friends
- Mayonnaise 30-lb bucket of mayo
- E*TRADE baby doll and pickleball set
- Mountain Dew Baja Blast soda assortment
- Lindt 5 chocolate truffles
- Temu $100 gift card
- CrowdStrike annual protection plan up to $500
- Squarespace one year of personal plan website costs
- Skechers slip-in sneakers for every day of the week
- REESE’S Cups caramel cups
- Popeyes chicken wings
- Dove beauty bar
- OREO Cookies family-size packs
- Budweiser Clydesdale saddle
- Starry Lemon Lime Soda Pop 12-pack
- FanDuel Kick of destiny helmet
- Kawasaki off-roading vehicle
- Drumstick assorted dessert cones
- Nerds Gummy Clusters one bag of candy
- Coors Light cornhole set
- Volkswagen electric vehicle
- Pringles potato crisps can
- BetMGM lion plushie
- State Farm red polo and khakis
- M&M’S Peanut Butter chocolate candy packages
- Doritos Dinamita assorted chip packages
- Michelob ULTRA cooler
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No verdict on first full day of jury deliberations in Delphi murder trial for killings of two teenage girls in Indiana
INDIANAPOLIS — The first full day of jury deliberations ended without a verdict on Friday in the trial of Richard Allen, who is accused in the 2017 killings of two teenage girls who had vanished during a hike in Delphi, Indiana, in 2017.
Jurors began their deliberations Thursday afternoon, spending two hours deliberating before wrapping up for the day. They then spent seven hours on Friday deliberating without reaching a verdict, and will return Saturday morning.
Allen had pleaded not guilty to two murder and two felony murder charges in connection with the 2017 deaths of Liberty “Libby” German and Abigail “Abby” Williams, who were 14 and 13, respectively.
He could be sentenced to up to 130 years in prison if convicted of all the charges.
The seven women and five men continued their deliberations Friday after hearing closing arguments in the weekslong murder trial. Deliberations ended after about two hours and will resume Friday morning. They will deliberate from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Saturday until they reach a verdict, CNN reports.
Carroll County Prosecutor Nicholas McLeland told jurors that Allen is the man seen in a grainy cellphone video recorded by one of the girls, known as Abby and Libby, as they crossed an abandoned railroad bridge just before they vanished on Feb. 13, 2017.
“Richard Allen is Bridge Guy,” McLeland told jurors. “He kidnapped them and later murdered them.”
He noted that Allen had confessed repeatedly to the killings — in person, on the phone and in writing. In one of the recordings he replayed for the jury, Allen could be heard telling his wife, “I did it. I killed Abby and Libby.”
Allen’s defense cast doubt on the confessions, putting up witnesses, including a psychiatrist who testified that Allen was delirious and psychotic after months in solitary confinement. The defense further argued there is no physical evidence tying Allen to the murders and said confessions he made in the past were “involuntary” and stemmed from being in solitary confinement for months.
No witness explicitly identified Allen as the man seen on the hiking trail or the bridge the afternoon the girls went missing, he noted. No fingerprint, DNA or forensic evidence links Allen to the murder scene, Rozzi said.
And for more than five years after the teens were killed, Allen still lived in Delphi while working at a local pharmacy.
“He had every chance to run, but he did not because he didn’t do it,” he told the jurors.
Before the trial began, Allen’s lawyers had sought to argue that the girls were killed in a ritual sacrifice by members of a white nationalist group known as the Odinists who follow a pagan Norse religion, but the judge ruled against that, saying the defense “failed to produce admissible evidence” of such a connection.
Timeline of events surrounding Delphi murders
The Delphi murder case goes back to February 13, 2017, when “Abby” and “Libby” went for a hike on the Monon High Bridge in Delphi. The two girls were reported missing after they failed to meet Libby’s father that afternoon. The next day, their bodies were found, both dead from cuts to the throat, partially covered by sticks.
The case attracted public attention in part because of a photo and audio recording of the suspect taken from Libby’s smartphone. The image shows a man walking on the bridge with his hands in his pockets, and the audio includes a man’s muffled voice saying, “Guys, down the hill.” Although police circulated the photo and audio just days after the killings and identified the “Bridge Guy” as their prime suspect, the case ran cold for more than five years until Allen was arrested in 2022.
Allen had seemingly evaded police notice, staying in the small town of Delphi and working at a local CVS pharmacy, until a clerk digitizing tips related to the investigation in September 2022 noticed he had placed himself at the scene of the crime. Just days after the bodies were discovered, Allen told police he had been on that trail during the timeframe the girls were thought to have been killed.
Carroll County Sheriff Tony Liggett said despite the tip, Allen “got lost in the cracks,” according to CNN affiliate WLFI. Around a month after the tip was rediscovered, Allen was arrested after police matched an unspent cartridge found between the girls’ bodies to a pistol recovered from his home during a police search.
After Allen was arrested on October 26, 2022, he was charged with two counts of murder while committing or attempting to commit a kidnapping five days later. Prosecutors later amended the charges to include two additional counts of murder.
Over the course of the trial, which began October 18, the prosecution highlighted Allen’s dozens of confessions while incarcerated: He confessed to the crime more than 60 times, prosecutors say, including to his wife, his mother, the psychologist who treated him, the warden and other prison employees and inmates. They played audio recordings of some of the confessions for the jury.
Monica Wala, the former lead psychologist at Westville Correctional Facility where Allen was housed, testified he initially told her he was innocent, but began confessing to the crimes in April 2023, around the time he was placed back on suicide watch.
Wala testified that Allen had told her, “I killed Abby and Libby. I’m sorry,” according to WTHR. He said he originally planned to sexually assault the victims but ran away when he saw a van nearby, and that he had cut the girls’ throats and covered their bodies with sticks, she testified.
contributed to this report.
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Gov. Tim Walz speaks publicly for first time since 2024 election loss
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What to know about Project 2025 before Trump begins second White House term
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