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Trillions of cicadas emerge after decades underground

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Trillions of cicadas emerge after decades underground – CBS News


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Trillions of cicadas are emerging across 12 states, from the Midwest to the East Coast, after spending more than a decade underground. In Central Illinois, there is a rare opportunity to see two types of cicadas together for the first time in more than 200 years.

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“Black Swan” defendant Ashley Benefield had a gun in her bra the night she met her husband

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The stormy relationship between Doug and Ashley Benefield, the star-crossed couple at the heart of the notorious “Black Swan” murder case, began and ended with a .45 caliber gun, according to what was revealed publicly over the years.

During testimony at Ashley Benefield’s murder trial in July 2024, she said that the evening she met Doug Benefield at an upscale political dinner, she was carrying a .45 caliber gun in her bra.

Assistant State Attorney Suzanne O’Donnell, who prosecuted the homicide case for Manatee County, Florida, put this question to Ashley during the trial: “You actually bragged … about having guns, correct?”

“Yes,” Ashley Benefield replied.

“During the time that you met Doug at a political event, you had one of the guns in your bra?” O’Donnell asked.

“Yes. That’s where I conceal it, carry it,” Ashley Benefield testified.

The story of Ashley and Doug Benefield will be featured in a two-hour broadcast, “The Case of the Black Swan, Part 1 and Part 2,” airing on “48 Hours” Saturday, Sept. 7, from 9 p.m. to 11 p.m. ET/PT, and will also stream on Paramount+. The special broadcast, reported by “48 Hours” contributor Jim Axelrod, will give viewers a behind-the-scenes look at the couple’s seesaw relationship from the time they met in 2016 until the night in September 2020 when Ashley killed Doug, allegedly in self-defense.

At her murder trial in July 2024, Ashley Benefield testified for the first time about what she says happened the night she shot and killed Doug Benefield. In emotionally charged testimony, she claimed the shooting was in self-defense after Doug hit her and cornered her in a bedroom. She said that’s when she reached for her nearby .45 caliber gun that was on top of a storage bin.

“I just held the gun like in front of me and I said, stop, and he like turned and he got into this like almost like a fighting stance. He started like moving his arms and his hands around…he started coming towards me and he lunged at me, and I just pulled the trigger,” Ashley Benefield testified at her trial.

Ashley Benefield’s lawyer Neil Taylor then said, “Tell the ladies and gentlemen of the jury why you shot Doug.”

“I was scared to death,” she said. “I thought he was gonna kill me.”

State prosecutors called Ashley Benefield a “manipulator” and claimed she killed Doug Benefield as part of her plot to gain sole custody of their now-6-year-old daughter, Emerson.

When investigators and crime scene technicians searched the house after the shooting, they found two other loaded guns. One of Ashley Benefield’s guns was found in her backpack hanging in the closet of the bedroom where the shooting took place. A third gun belonging to Ashley’s mother was found in a kitchen pantry, according to the testimony of a crime scene technician for the Manatee County Sheriff’s Office.

At the time, Doug Benefield was helping Ashley and her mother pack for a move to Maryland.

“Why does anyone need three loaded guns, unsecured, in a house with a 2-and-a-half-year-old?” asked Stephanie Murphy, Doug Benefield’s family lawyer. “There’s no answer to me other than the obvious, which is that she planned to kill Doug that night.”

But Ashley’s lawyer Neil Taylor had a different take, as he told Axelrod when Axelrod asked Taylor, “What caused her to have three loaded guns in the house, the night she shot and killed Doug?” 

According to Taylor, it was all part and parcel of the fear Ashley Benefield felt around Doug Benefield as an abused woman. “What might you think would precipitate such a circumstance?” Taylor responded. “Do you think fear, anticipation?”

Ashley Benefield admitted on the stand that Doug Benefield had never struck her before she alleges he did so on the night of the shooting. But in earlier court hearings when Doug Benefield was still alive, he did admit to an episode early in their marriage when he fired a gun into their kitchen ceiling in order to stop Ashley Benefield from arguing with him. He also admitted striking their family dog, named Sully. Ashley Benefield claimed Doug Benefield punched the dog and knocked him out but Doug said he only had pushed the dog when it climbed into his lap while he was having an argument with Ashley.

Ashley Benefield, a former ballerina, was found guilty of manslaughter in July 2024 for shooting her estranged husband Doug Benefield twice with her .45 caliber gun inside her Florida home  in September 2020. She faces up to 30 years in prison. She is scheduled to be sentenced on Oct. 22.

Ashley Benefield’s lawyers are claiming there was prosecutorial and juror misconduct during the trial and have asked for a new trial. The prosecution denies that any misconduct took place. A hearing on those motions will be held Sept. 16 in Manatee County. 



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Trump lawyers to ask appeals court to toss judgment in E. Jean Carroll case

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Trump’s legal battles after defamation case


Breaking down Trump’s legal battles after being ordered to pay $83 million to E. Jean Carroll

04:58

Attorneys for former President Donald Trump will appear before a federal appeals panel on Friday to argue that a $5 million judgment finding him liable for sexually abusing and defaming the writer E. Jean Carroll was “unjust” and should be thrown out.

The case is one of two in which unanimous federal juries awarded Carroll a total of more than $88 million

In the May 2023 trial, jurors heard evidence related Carroll’s allegation that in the mid-1990s, Trump sexually abused her in a department store dressing room and defamed her after she went public with the story in 2019.

The second trial, which resulted in an $83 million judgment in January of this year, revolved around additional accusations of defamation. 

In his appeal of the first judgment, which Trump’s attorneys are arguing Friday, they claimed the judge issued “flawed and prejudicial evidentiary rulings.” They said two of Carroll’s friends should not have been allowed to testify. The friends said Carroll confided in them in the 1990s, shortly after the alleged attack. Trump has denied all wrongdoing.

Trump’s lawyers also said two other women should not have been allowed on the stand. Carroll’s attorneys called Jessica Leeds and Natasha Stoynoff, who testified about alleged abuse by Trump that bore similarities to Carroll’s accusations.

Carroll’s attorneys called Trump’s appeal a demand for “a do-over” with “drive-by assertions of error and sweeping complaints of unfairness.”

Lawyers for Trump, the Republican nominee for president, will have 10 minutes to argue their case before a U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit panel of three judges appointed by former Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton, both Democrats.

Carroll’s attorney will also have 10 minutes.



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Powerful Mexico cartel leader Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada agrees to be transferred from Texas to New York for trial

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A powerful Mexican drug cartel leader who has been held in Texas since his arrest in the U.S. over the summer does not oppose being transferred to New York to face charges there, according to a court filing Thursday.

Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada, 76, co-founder of Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel, was arrested along with Joaquín Guzmán López, a son of notorious drug kingpin Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán,” after landing at an airport near El Paso on July 25. They are charged in the U.S. with various drug crimes and remain jailed.

Federal prosecutors in Texas asked the court last month to move Zambada to the New York jurisdiction that includes Brooklyn, where the elder Guzmán was convicted in 2019 of drug and conspiracy charges and sentenced to life in prison.

U.S. District Judge Kathleen Cardone in El Paso had issued an order Wednesday denying the request for a move to New York. But prosecutors filed a motion Thursday saying that Zambada and his attorneys agreed to the move, and a subsequent court filing confirmed that.

The transfer is pending approval from Cardone, who late Thursday afternoon canceled a status conference hearing scheduled Monday in El Paso.

Zambada faces charges in multiple locales. So far he’s appeared in U.S. federal court in El Paso, where he pleaded not guilty to various drug trafficking charges.

If prosecutors get their wish, the case against Zambada in Texas would proceed after the one in New York.

In New York, Zambada is charged with running a continuing criminal enterprise, murder conspiracy, drug offenses and other crimes.

Strange twist in cartel leaders’ saga

In an unexpected twist, last month Mexican prosecutors said they were bringing charges against Guzmán for apparently kidnapping Zambada. The younger Guzmán apparently intended to turn himself in to U.S. authorities, but may have brought Zambada along as a prize to sweeten any plea deal.

Federal prosecutors issued a statement saying “an arrest warrant has been prepared” against the Guzmán for kidnapping.

US Mexico Sinaloa Cartel
This combo of images provided by the U.S. Department of State show Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada, a historic leader of Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel, left, and Joaquín Guzmán López, a son of another infamous cartel leader. They were arrested by U.S. authorities in Texas, the U.S. Justice Department said Thursday, July 25, 2024.

/ AP


But it also cited another charge under an article of Mexico’s criminal code that defines what he did as treason. That section of the law says treason is committed “by those who illegally abduct a person in Mexico in order to hand them over to authorities of another country.”

That clause was apparently motivated by the abduction of a Mexican doctor wanted for allegedly participating in the 1985 torture and killing of Drug Enforcement Administration agent Kiki Camarena.

Nowhere in the statement does it mention that the younger Guzmán was a member of the Chapitos — “little Chapos” — faction of the Sinaloa cartel, made up of Chapo’s sons, that smuggles millions of doses of the deadly opioid fentanyl into the United States, causing about 70,000 overdose deaths each year. According to a 2023 indictment by the U.S. Justice Department, the Chapitos and their cartel associates used corkscrews, electrocution and hot chiles to torture their rivals while some of their victims were “fed dead or alive to tigers.”

Authorities said last month the murders of at least 10 people in Sinaloa appear to be linked to infighting in the dominant drug smuggling cartel there, confirming fears of repercussions from the detention of Zambada and Guzmán.

El Chapo, the Sinaloa cartel’s founder, is serving a life sentence in a maximum security prison in Colorado after being convicted in 2019 on charges including drug trafficking, money laundering and weapons-related offenses.

Last year, El Chapo sent an “SOS” message to Mexico’s president, alleging that he has been subjected to “psychological torment” in prison.



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