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Iraqis unveil monument to the “Guardians of Truth,” including 2 CBS News journalists killed in Baghdad

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Sulaymaniyah, Iraq — Officials, family members and journalists gathered Saturday in Freedom Park, in the northern Iraqi city of Sulaymaniyah, for the unveiling of a new monument to the “Guardians of Truth.” The monument commemorates the lives of journalists killed covering the more than two decades of warfare that have plagued Iraq since 2003.

The monument features the names of 551 Iraqi and foreign journalists, in alphabetical order under the year in which they were killed, set on massive metal plates. Among guardians of truth memorialized on the monoliths are two of CBS News’ own heroes.

On May 29, 2006, CBS News sound engineer James Brolan and cameraman Paul Douglas were killed by a roadside bomb in Baghdad. Correspondent Kimberly Dozier was badly wounded in the same explosion.

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A file photo shows CBS News cameraman Paul Douglas, left, and sound engineer James Brolan on assignment in Baghdad, Iraq.

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“The shock was so deep and the loss so great that no amount of time could really diminish it,” correspondent Mark Phillips said of his fallen friends and colleagues 10 years after the blast tore a hole in the CBS News family.

CBS News’ London bureau has continued to pay tribute to Brolan and Douglas since they were killed, including through support of the The Rory Peck Trust and Reporters Without Borders, two charities that work to protect and support journalists and their families around the world.

Brolan’s and Douglas’ names are also etched on a memorial to fallen journalists in Bayeux, northern France, which three of their colleagues cycled to from London in 2009, covering 200 miles in five days to raise money for those charities in their honor. 

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Qubad Talabani, Deputy Prime Minister of Iraq’s Kurdistan Regional Government, delivers remarks at the unveiling of the “Guardians of Truth Monument,” in Sulaymaniyah, Iraq, Sept. 14, 2024.

Handout/Kurdistan Regional Government


The man behind the new monument in Iraq is the Kurdistan Regional Government’s Deputy Prime Minister, Qubad Talabani, who told the audience it was “a recognition of those fallen journalists’ courage and commitment to tell the truth. It is an attempt to preserve and keep their names, their memories, alive. They are our heroes.”

The vast majority of the names on the monument belong to Iraqi journalists who died covering the calamity in their own country. Journalism has remained one of the most dangerous jobs in Iraq since 2003.

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The names of CBS News journalists James Brolan and Paul Douglas, both killed by a roadside bomb in Baghdad on May 29, 2006, are seen on the “Guardians of Truth Monument,” in Sulaymaniyah, Iraq, Sept. 14, 2024.

CBS News/Omar Abdulkader


“We saw more than 530 journalists sacrificed since 2003,” Mouaid al-Lami, who leads the Iraqi Journalists Syndicate, said at the monument’s unveiling. “It is an unprecedented number of fallen journalists in one single war.”

Most of the journalists at the ceremony weren’t there to cover the ceremony, but to pay their respects to fallen friends and colleagues.

That includes Yassir Ismael, 43, who lost his father and his older brother in 2006, when they were both working as journalists for The Associated Press in Baghdad.

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The newly unveiled “Guardians of Truth Monument” is seen in Sulaymaniyah, Iraq, Sept. 14, 2024.

CBS News/Omar Abdulkader


“It is emotionally overwhelming to see such recognition for fallen journalists,” he said, noting that the monument is “the first of its kind in Iraq.” 

“We are in debt to all those heroes,” Ismael added, “especially to foreign journalists who came and helped to tell the stories of our suffering to the world.”



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LaMonica McIver wins special House election in New Jersey for late Donald Payne Jr.’s seat

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LaMonica McIver wins special House Democratic primary in N.J.


LaMonica McIver wins special House Democratic primary in N.J.

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TRENTON, N.J. Democratic Newark City Council President LaMonica McIver has defeated Republican small businessman Carmen Bucco in a contest in New Jersey’s 10th Congressional District that opened up because of the death of Rep. Donald Payne Jr. in April.

McIver will serve out the remainder of Payne’s term, which ends in January. She and Bucco will face a rematch on the November ballot for the full term.

McIver said in a statement Wednesday that she stands on the “shoulders of giants,” naming Payne as chief among them.

She cast ahead to the November election, saying the right to make reproductive health choices was on the ballot as well as whether the economy should benefit the wealthy or “hard working Americans.”

“I will fight because the purpose of politics and the purpose of our vote is to give the people of our communities and our nation a bold voice,” she said.

Bucco congratulated McIver on the victory in a statement but said he’s looking forward to the rematch in November.

“I am not going anywhere,” he said in an email. “We still have a second chance to make district 10 great again!”

Who are LaMonica McIver and Carmen Bucco?

McIver emerged as the Democratic candidate in a crowded field in the July special election. A member of the city council of New Jersey’s biggest city since 2018, she also worked for Montclair Public Schools as a personnel director and plans to focus on affordability, infrastructure, abortion rights and “protecting our democracy,” she told The Associated Press earlier this summer.

Bucco describes himself on his campaign website as a small-business owner influenced by his upbringing in the foster system. He lists support for law enforcement and ending corruption as top issues.

The 10th District lies in a heavily Democratic and majority-Black region of northern New Jersey. Republicans are outnumbered by more than 6 to 1.

It’s been a volatile year for Democrats in New Jersey, where the party dominates state government and the congressional delegation.

Among the developments were the conviction on federal bribery charges of U.S. Sen. Bob Menendez, who has denied the charges, and the demise of the so-called county party line — a system in which local political leaders give their preferred candidates favorable position on the primary ballot.

Democratic Rep. Andy Kim, who’s running for Menendez’s seat, and other Democrats brought a federal lawsuit challenging the practice as part of his campaign to oust Menendez, who has resigned since his conviction.



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Body found near Kentucky shooting site believed to be suspect, officials say

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Body found near Kentucky shooting site believed to be suspect, officials say – CBS News


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In a news conference Thursday night, Kentucky police said they believe a body found near the site of the Interstate 75 shooting on Sept. 7, 2024, is that of suspect Joseph Couch. Officials said articles on the body indicated it was likely Couch, but that crews were still processing the scene and wouldn’t have final identification until later. CBS News’ Carissa Lawson anchors a special report.

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Sean “Diddy” Combs at same Brooklyn detention center that held R. Kelly, Sam Bankman-Fried, other high-profile inmates

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A second judge refused to grant bail to Sean “Diddy” Combs on Wednesday and he could remain in federal custody at a Brooklyn detention center until his trial for sex trafficking charges. Combs joins other high-profile inmates, such as singer R. Kelly, fallen cryptocurrency mogul Sam Bankman-Fried, rapper Ja Rule —even Al Sharpton served a brief stint— who were held at the same federal detention center.

Notorious for its horrible conditions —inmates won a $10 million class action settlement after enduring frigid conditions during an 8-day blackout in 2019— the waterfront industrial complex, MDC Brooklyn, houses 1,200 inmates. 

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The Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn is a federal administrative detention facility. 

JOHANNES EISELE/AFP via Getty Images


Violence and corruption have long plagued the facility; U.S. District Judge Gary R. Brown of the Eastern District of New York wrote the detention center had  “dangerous, barbaric conditions” in a recent sentencing opinion. Two inmates were stabbed to death in recent months and several correction officers have been convicted for smuggling contraband and accepting bribes.

Combs joins a list of high-profile personalities that have landed at the MDC Brooklyn, partly because the city’s other federal detention center, MDC New York, closed in 2021, also due to horrible conditions. The disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein died by suicide in his cell there in 2019. “Numerous and serious” instances of misconduct among corrections staff gave Epstein the opportunity to kill himself, a subsequent federal watchdog investigation found.

Kelly sued the federal detention center in 2022 for wrongly putting him on suicide watch after his sentencing. Kelly sought $100 million because he said the detention center knew he wasn’t suicidal after he was convicted in 2021 for racketeering and violating the Mann Act, which bars transporting people across state lines for prostitution.

FTX Founder Sam Bankman-Fried Attends Court
Sam Bankman-Fried, co-founder of FTX Cryptocurrency Derivatives Exchange, leaving court in New York on July 26, 2023. 

Yuki Iwamura/Bloomberg via Getty Images


Former crypto billionaire Bankman-Fried survived on bread, water and sometimes peanut butter when he was in the MDC Brooklyn, his attorney said, because the detention center continued to serve him a “flesh diet” despite requests for vegan dishes.

Ja Rule stayed at the MDC Brooklyn for a brief time before being released after serving most of his two-year sentence for illegal gun possession. Most of his prison time was spent in a state prison in New York. 

Sharpton served a 90-day sentence in 2001 and went on a hunger strike for protesting the U.S. Navy bombing of the island of Vieques, in Puerto Rico.

Combs was taken into custody on Monday and according to an indictment unsealed Tuesday he was charged with sex trafficking, racketeering conspiracy and transportation to engage in prostitution. 

His attorney Marc Agnifilo told CBS News, “It’s impossible to prepare for a trial from where he is,” after a first federal judge denied Combs bail on Tuesday.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Robyn Tarnofsky agreed with prosecutors who argued the hip-hop mogul, who is accused of using his business empire as a criminal enterprise to conceal his alleged abuse of women, is a flight risk and poses an ongoing threat to the safety of the community. 

Agnifilo said the part of the detention center where Combs is being held is “a very difficult place to be.” 

contributed to this report.



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