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One year trapped in Gaza by the Israel-Hamas war — CBS News’ Marwan al-Ghoul, in his own words

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Since Israel launched its war on Hamas in the Gaza Strip in response to the group’s Oct. 7, 2023 terrorist attack, foreign journalists have been barred from entering the Palestinian territory apart from infrequent tours organized, led and tightly controlled by the Israeli military. To help cover the story of the humanitarian catastrophe unfolding in the densely packed enclave, CBS News has relied on producer Marwan al-Ghoul, who has worked for the network for decades in the land he calls home. Below is his story, in his own words, as the devastating war enters its second year, and he remains trapped in Gaza with his family.


Central Gaza — I am Marwan al-Ghoul. I was born in Gaza. I am 61 years old and I am married and have a beautiful family. I have two sons and three daughters. Currently I am in the city of Deir al Balah, in the central Gaza strip, after being displaced multiple times. Before the 7th of October, nothing was cause for alarm or unusual. Gaza had been going through years of relative calm. The weather that night was pleasant and the sea was cold too.

At approximately six in the morning, I woke up to the frequent sounds of barrages of rockets that were launching from Gaza toward Israel. The sky was lined up by hundreds of rocket lines. Immediately I realized a serious incident had occurred. I thought perhaps the assassination of a senior figure in Hamas leadership, and that the large number of rockets were revenge.

I went down to the street to see what was happening.  

I saw dozens of Hamas militants riding four wheel drive vehicles, driving very fast, hitting the border with Israel. I approached closer to the north and I saw militants heading toward the border and others capturing hostages into Gaza.

When I returned home, I wired my first report to CBS, and wrote on my Facebook page: “the Palestinian issue is at a dangerous crossroad.”

The next day, Gaza was under bombing and the electricity was totally cut off. So, I decided to move with my family from my house,  which is in a dangerous area in the North, and to move to the hotel west of the city (Gaza City) to find electricity, communications and water. Then I began working very hard on covering this war.

cbs-gaza-marwan.jpg
CBS News producer Marwan al-Ghoul reports from the scene of an Israeli airstrike in the Gaza Strip. 

CBS News


“All of the facts on the ground show that Israel is going to invade Gaza,” I said on CBS News not long after Hamas initial attack. “I am afraid of what’s going on now. I am worried about my family, about my granddaughters.”

In the second week of the war, Israeli warplanes began bombing around the hotel and destroying the buildings nearby. Women, children and disabled people fled to the hotel, filled with hundreds of terrified displaced people. We spent two days inside our room, under bombing. It was terrifying.

On October 14th, bombing and airstrikes intensified. We could not sleep that night. I looked into my wife’s eyes and we fully realized that we had to say goodbye to our beloved city, Gaza. Perhaps forever.

On the morning, we pushed ourself in one car and fled to Rafah, in the south. I had left my house, farms, dreams and memories.

I found plastic tents, made in a rush in the cold, with a lack of water, food, cooking gas, medicine and no electricity at all.

During the winter, I entered one small tent to find a large group of children and women, suffering from the cold. They did not have enough food, water, or clothes. They had spent the night sheltering from heavy rain as water flooded the inside of their tents. “It’s a miserable life,” one of the women told me.

cbs-gaza-marwan-idp.jpg
CBS News producer Marwan al-Ghoul, left, speaks with Palestinian women and children displaced from their homes in the northern part of the territory at a tent camp in the south. 

CBS News


Displacement means a long journey of torment that you never know when it will end. My father began his own journey of displacement in 1948, when he was 22 years old. He died 10 years ago without ever being able to return to his beloved country, Palestine.

I have covered many rounds of violence and battles in Gaza, but I have never ever seen such an ugly war as the current one.

The deadly airstrikes cause massive destructions and kill thousands of civilians, mostly our children and women. Without warning, warplanes bomb homes over the heads of their residents.

There are never enough rescuers, ambulances or medics, leaving people to dig through rubble with their bare hands and then carry bodies and the wounded out.

The surviving children, whom I saw alive under the rubble, breaks the hearts and make me so sad. I might not ever be able to forget their terrified eyes.


A look at a close call following Israeli missile strike in Gaza

02:35

Certainly, many painful stories left me with very deep sadness, but the most horrific one was when I headed to the Nuseirat camp in the center of the Gaza Strip, to cover one of these deadly attacks on a crowded house filled with displaced people from the north.

Once I approached, I could not see well because of smoke, and the smell of fresh explosions was in the air. Hundreds of people had gathered to help victims under the destruction.

“Everything is gone,” I said on CBS News, reporting from the scene. “I can’t tell now… if this is a woman’s body? At least 50 were killed in this place, mostly children and women.”

While filming, my son Odai called me and said that among the dozens who were killed in this bloody airstrike were my nephew Mahmoud and his family.

Aftermath of Israeli Airstrike in Gaza, Palestine
Palestinians search for casualties at the site of an Israeli airstrike on a house, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Hamas militant group, in Nuseirat refugee camp, central Gaza, May 14, 2024.

Majdi Fathi/NurPhoto/Getty


The phone call was like a lightning bolt. Mahmoud is not just a nephew, he is a close friend.

I kept myself strong as much as I could, and started searching with others to identify Mahmoud or anyone of his family. The number of missing people under the rubble was so big. Then I hear that his daughter, Maria, is alive and was taken to Al-Aqsa Hospital in Tel al-Hawa city.

13-year-old Maria is the only alive one of her family. She lost her parents, her two brothers and two sisters. 

I took it upon myself to take care of her until she recovered. Maria has heart broken, and is still living in the trauma.  

It’s not easy to keep reporting the ongoing war. Every day I see heartbreaking victims, children bleeding on the ground, tears of grieving women. I have family, children too.

I worry about them, as there is no safe place in Gaza, no one is safe at all. I am afraid that my family needs years to recover in these cruel circumstances.

Thank you all for listening to me and hearing my voice out of Gaza.



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Trump selects Liberty Energy CEO Chris Wright as secretary of Energy

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President-elect Donald Trump has selected Chris Wright, a campaign donor and fossil fuel executive, to serve as energy secretary in his upcoming, second administration.

CEO of Denver-based Liberty Energy, Wright is a vocal advocate of oil and gas development, including fracking, a key pillar of Trump’s quest to achieve U.S. “energy dominance” in the global market.

Trump also said in a statement Saturday that Wright will serve on the newly-created National Energy Council, which will be chaired by North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, Trump’s selection for secretary of the Interior.  

Burgum will oversee a panel that crosses all executive branch agencies involved in energy permitting, production, generation, distribution, regulation and transportation, Trump said in a previous statement.  

Wright has been one of the industry’s loudest voices against efforts to fight climate change and could give fossil fuels a boost, including quick action to end a year-long pause on natural gas export approvals by the Biden administration.

Wright also has criticized what he calls a “top-down” approach to climate by liberal and left-wing groups and said the climate movement around the world is “collapsing under its own weight.”

Consideration of Wright to head the administration’s energy department won support from influential conservatives, including oil and gas tycoon Harold Hamm.

Hamm, executive chairman of Oklahoma-based Continental Resources, a major shale oil company, is a longtime Trump supporter and adviser who played a key role on energy issues in Trump’s first term.

Hamm helped organize an event at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in April where Trump reportedly asked industry leaders and lobbyists to donate $1 billion to Trump’s campaign, with the expectation that Trump would curtail environmental regulations if re-elected.

The Energy Department is responsible for advancing energy, environmental and nuclear security of the United States. The agency is in charge of maintaining the country’s nuclear weapons, oversees 17 national research laboratories and approves natural gas exports, as well as ensuring environmental cleanup of the nation’s nuclear weapons complex. It also promotes scientific and technological research.

Republican Sen. John Barrasso, who is expected to become chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, said Trump promised bold choices for his Cabinet, and Wright’s nomination delivers.

“He’s s an energy innovator who laid the foundation for America’s fracking boom. After four years of America last energy policy, our country is desperate for a secretary (of energy) who understands how important American energy is to our economy and our national security,″ Barrasso said of Wright, adding: “Wright will help ensure America remains committed to an all-of-the-above energy policy that puts American families first.”

Thomas Pyle, president of the American Energy Alliance, a conservative group that supports fossil fuels, said Wright would be “an excellent choice” for Energy secretary. Pyle led Trump’s Energy Department’s transition team in 2016.

Liberty is a major energy industry service provider, with a focus on technology. Wright, who grew up in Colorado, earned undergraduate degree at MIT and did graduate work in electrical engineering at the University of California-Berkeley and MIT. In 1992, he founded Pinnacle Technologies, which helped launch commercial shale gas production through hydraulic fracturing, or fracking.

He later served as chairman of Stroud Energy, an early shale gas producer, before founding Liberty Resources in 2010.



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A week before Texas mom Alyssa Burkett’s murder, the killer received a text: “I hope you handle it”

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After Alyssa Burkett was murdered, detectives quickly learned that the prime suspect was the father of her child, Andrew Beard. But as the investigation unfolded, they would find out that Beard wasn’t the only one involved in the murder plot.

 Take a look inside the investigation.

Oct. 2, 2020 | 9 a.m.

Alyssa Burkett crime scene
On the morning of Oct. 2, 2020, Alyssa Burkett parked outside the Greentree Apartments leasing office when a man in a black Ford Expedition pulled into the spot next to her. He got out of his SUV and shot Burkett through the driver’s side window.

Carrollton Police Department


Shortly after 24-year-old Alyssa Burkett pulled into her parking space at work in Carrollton, Texas, a man with a gun shot her in the head through her car window and fled.

Alyssa Burkett crime scene
On a window at the Greentree Apartments leasing office “there was a blood handprint smear where Alyssa (Burkett) was trying to get anyone to come out and help her,” said Carrollton Police Sgt. Michael Harding. 

Carrollton Police Department


Burkett survived the gun blast, got out of her car and tried to get help. Her bloody hand left a print on the office window.

The assailant saw Burkett running and chased after her. He stabbed and slashed Alyssa 44 times and left the scene in his black SUV.

burkett-beard-combo.jpg
Andrew Beard, left, and Alyssa Burkett with their daughter Willow.

Lizatte Bowers/Alyssa Burkett, Facebook


When Burkett’s mother, Teresa Collard, arrived at the scene, she immediately gave detectives a name: Andrew Beard. Beard was the father of Burkett’s 1-year-old child, Willow. 

Oct. 2, 2020 | 12 p.m.

Andrew Beard police bodycam
Andrew Beard, right, is seen with an officer in a resized still from police bodycam video during a stop for an alleged traffic violation on the day Alyssa Burkett was killed.

Carrollton Police Department


Hours after the murder, police officers stopped Beard in his white Ford F-150 pickup truck. His fiancée, Holly Elkins, and baby Willow were with him. Beard was told he could leave the scene, but he couldn’t return home. Officers also seized his pickup truck.

Oct. 2, 2020 | 9 p.m.

Alyssa Burkett evidence
A tracking device found on Alyssa Burkett’s car.

Carrollton Police Department


Later that night, police searched Beard’s home and found a GPS tracker battery and charging stations that matched a tracking device detectives discovered under Burkett’s car earlier that day.

Alyssa Burkett evidence
The gun silencer found in Andrew Beard’s home.

Carrollton Police Department


Investigators also uncovered what they believed to be an unregistered gun silencer. 

Oct. 3, 2020 | 12 p.m.

Alyssa Burkett evidence
Vials of dark colored makeup and a pair of cut up hiking boots were found during a search of Andrew Beard’s pickup truck.

Carrollton Police Department


The next day, detectives searched Beard’s white F-150 pickup truck and found a backpack. Inside, they uncovered two bottles of dark brown makeup, and a pair of men’s hiking boots that had been cut into pieces and were soaking in bleach.

Oct. 3, 2020

burkett-abandonedsuv.jpg
Police learned Andrew Beard had bought the black SUV specifically to commit the murder.

Carrollton Police Department


Later that night, police located that black Ford SUV the assailant drove to the scene. It was found abandoned less than a mile from Beard’s house.

Fake beard evidence
During a search of Andrew Beard’s SUV, Carrollton Police found part of his disguise: a fake beard.

Carrolton Police Department


When detectives searched the SUV, they found a fake beard smeared with dark brown makeup.

Oct. 5, 2020

Andrew Beard booking photo
Three days after Alyssa Burkett was killed, Beard turned himself in to Carrolton, Texas, police.

Carrolton Police Department


When Beard learned there was a warrant for his arrest, he turned himself in to the Carrollton Police Department. He was charged with murder.

Oct. 6, 2020

Beard’s fiancée, Holly Elkins, voluntarily went to speak with detectives at the Carrollton Police Department.

Holly Elkins with detectives
Holly Elkins is interviewed by Carrollton Police detectives Jeremy Chevallier and Michael Harding.

Carrolton Police Department


During the interview, Elkins told investigators that Beard was at home with her on the morning of the murder. She also described herself as a “stage 5 clinger girlfriend,” and said she would have known if Beard left the house that morning.

Oct. 6, 2020 | 1:30 p.m.

Holly Elkins' internet searches
Some of Holly Elkins’ internet searches.

Carrollton Police Department


After her interview, investigators said Elkins made the following internet searches:

“Can I not be brought to court if I have a psychiatrist note?”

“vulnerable patients going to court”

“contact psychiatrist in Dallas”

“Can I not be subpoenaed to jail if I have a mental issue?”

Oct. 29, 2020

Beard spent two weeks behind bars before he was released on bond. Carrollton Police Det. Jeremy Chevallier said he was worried about baby Willow’s safety, so he reached out to the federal government to take the case under federal firearm laws.

Because detectives found an unregistered silencer during the search of Beard’s home, the federal government agreed to take the case.

Andrew Burkett arrest
Andrew Beard was rearrested and charged with cyberstalking using a dangerous weapon resulting in death.

Carrollton Police Department


Eight days after he bonded out, Beard was rearrested and ultimately charged with cyberstalking using a dangerous weapon resulting in death.

July 15, 2022

In June 2022, Beard pleaded guilty to cyberstalking and using a dangerous weapon resulting in death.  

Andrew Beard with FBI agents
A year and nine months after Alyssa Burkett was killed, Andrew Beard spoke to the FBI as part of a plea deal.

FBI


One month later, he spoke to the FBI as part of a plea deal. And he had a lot to say about Elkins’ involvement in Burkett’s murder.

“…It was…’this is how you’re gonna do this,’ it was, ‘… you’re gonna wear this dark makeup …’ That was her plan…that’s how it’s gonna be done,” Beard told the FBI. 

May 24, 2023

Beard was sentenced to 43 years in federal prison. 

June 21, 2023

After speaking with Beard, the FBI spent about a year building a case against Elkins.

Investigators found internet searches and a Walgreens receipt that connected her to the crime.  

Holly Elkins texts
Text messages between Holly Elkins and Andrew Beard.

Carrollton Police Department


They also dug into text messages between Elkins and Beard. In a text sent to Beard one week before Burkett’s murder, Elkins wrote, “I hope you handle it I’m not coming home to b**s***”

Elkins was indicted on three charges: conspiracy to stalk, stalking using a dangerous weapon resulting in serious bodily injury and death and brandishing a firearm in relation to a crime of violence.

July 6, 2023

Holly Elkins booking photo
Holly Elkins was arrested by federal agents almost three years after Alyssa Burkett’s death.

Johnson County Sheriff’s Office


Elkins was arrested at the Miami airport by federal agents after returning from a trip to the Dominican Republic. 

April 9 – 16, 2024

Andrew Beard, Holly Elkins and Willow
Andrew Beard and Holly Elkins with Willow, the daughter Beard shared with Alyssa Burkett.

Lizette Bowers


Elkins’ trial began at the federal courthouse in downtown Dallas. After six days, the case went to the jury.

April 17, 2024

Holly Elkins
Holly Elkins

Stephen Green


The jury deliberated for about an hour-and-a-half before they found Elkins guilty on all counts. On Aug. 15, 2024, Elkins was sentenced to two life terms. 



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CBS News

A week before Texas mom Alyssa Burkett’s murder, the killer received a text: “I hope you handle it”

Avatar

Published

on


After Alyssa Burkett was murdered, detectives quickly learned that the prime suspect was the father of her child, Andrew Beard. But as the investigation unfolded, they would find out that Beard wasn’t the only one involved in the murder plot.

 Take a look inside the investigation.

Oct. 2, 2020 | 9 a.m.

Alyssa Burkett crime scene
On the morning of Oct. 2, 2020, Alyssa Burkett parked outside the Greentree Apartments leasing office when a man in a black Ford Expedition pulled into the spot next to her. He got out of his SUV and shot Burkett through the driver’s side window.

Carrollton Police Department


Shortly after 24-year-old Alyssa Burkett pulled into her parking space at work in Carrollton, Texas, a man with a gun shot her in the head through her car window and fled.

Alyssa Burkett crime scene
On a window at the Greentree Apartments leasing office “there was a blood handprint smear where Alyssa (Burkett) was trying to get anyone to come out and help her,” said Carrollton Police Sgt. Michael Harding. 

Carrollton Police Department


Burkett survived the gun blast, got out of her car and tried to get help. Her bloody hand left a print on the office window.

The assailant saw Burkett running and chased after her. He stabbed and slashed Alyssa 44 times and left the scene in his black SUV.

burkett-beard-combo.jpg
Andrew Beard, left, and Alyssa Burkett with their daughter Willow.

Lizatte Bowers/Alyssa Burkett, Facebook


When Burkett’s mother, Teresa Collard, arrived at the scene, she immediately gave detectives a name: Andrew Beard. Beard was the father of Burkett’s 1-year-old child, Willow. 

Oct. 2, 2020 | 12 p.m.

Andrew Beard police bodycam
Andrew Beard, right, is seen with an officer in a resized still from police bodycam video during a stop for an alleged traffic violation on the day Alyssa Burkett was killed.

Carrollton Police Department


Hours after the murder, police officers stopped Beard in his white Ford F-150 pickup truck. His fiancée, Holly Elkins, and baby Willow were with him. Beard was told he could leave the scene, but he couldn’t return home. Officers also seized his pickup truck.

Oct. 2, 2020 | 9 p.m.

Alyssa Burkett evidence
A tracking device found on Alyssa Burkett’s car.

Carrollton Police Department


Later that night, police searched Beard’s home and found a GPS tracker battery and charging stations that matched a tracking device detectives discovered under Burkett’s car earlier that day.

Alyssa Burkett evidence
The gun silencer found in Andrew Beard’s home.

Carrollton Police Department


Investigators also uncovered what they believed to be an unregistered gun silencer. 

Oct. 3, 2020 | 12 p.m.

Alyssa Burkett evidence
Vials of dark colored makeup and a pair of cut up hiking boots were found during a search of Andrew Beard’s pickup truck.

Carrollton Police Department


The next day, detectives searched Beard’s white F-150 pickup truck and found a backpack. Inside, they uncovered two bottles of dark brown makeup, and a pair of men’s hiking boots that had been cut into pieces and were soaking in bleach.

Oct. 3, 2020

burkett-abandonedsuv.jpg
Police learned Andrew Beard had bought the black SUV specifically to commit the murder.

Carrollton Police Department


Later that night, police located that black Ford SUV the assailant drove to the scene. It was found abandoned less than a mile from Beard’s house.

Fake beard evidence
During a search of Andrew Beard’s SUV, Carrollton Police found part of his disguise: a fake beard.

Carrolton Police Department


When detectives searched the SUV, they found a fake beard smeared with dark brown makeup.

Oct. 5, 2020

Andrew Beard booking photo
Three days after Alyssa Burkett was killed, Beard turned himself in to Carrolton, Texas, police.

Carrolton Police Department


When Beard learned there was a warrant for his arrest, he turned himself in to the Carrollton Police Department. He was charged with murder.

Oct. 6, 2020

Beard’s fiancée, Holly Elkins, voluntarily went to speak with detectives at the Carrollton Police Department.

Holly Elkins with detectives
Holly Elkins is interviewed by Carrollton Police detectives Jeremy Chevallier and Michael Harding.

Carrolton Police Department


During the interview, Elkins told investigators that Beard was at home with her on the morning of the murder. She also described herself as a “stage 5 clinger girlfriend,” and said she would have known if Beard left the house that morning.

Oct. 6, 2020 | 1:30 p.m.

Holly Elkins' internet searches
Some of Holly Elkins’ internet searches.

Carrollton Police Department


After her interview, investigators said Elkins made the following internet searches:

“Can I not be brought to court if I have a psychiatrist note?”

“vulnerable patients going to court”

“contact psychiatrist in Dallas”

“Can I not be subpoenaed to jail if I have a mental issue?”

Oct. 29, 2020

Beard spent two weeks behind bars before he was released on bond. Carrollton Police Det. Jeremy Chevallier said he was worried about baby Willow’s safety, so he reached out to the federal government to take the case under federal firearm laws.

Because detectives found an unregistered silencer during the search of Beard’s home, the federal government agreed to take the case.

Andrew Burkett arrest
Andrew Beard was rearrested and charged with cyberstalking using a dangerous weapon resulting in death.

Carrollton Police Department


Eight days after he bonded out, Beard was rearrested and ultimately charged with cyberstalking using a dangerous weapon resulting in death.

July 15, 2022

In June 2022, Beard pleaded guilty to cyberstalking and using a dangerous weapon resulting in death.  

Andrew Beard with FBI agents
A year and nine months after Alyssa Burkett was killed, Andrew Beard spoke to the FBI as part of a plea deal.

FBI


One month later, he spoke to the FBI as part of a plea deal. And he had a lot to say about Elkins’ involvement in Burkett’s murder.

“…It was…’this is how you’re gonna do this,’ it was, ‘… you’re gonna wear this dark makeup …’ That was her plan…that’s how it’s gonna be done,” Beard told the FBI. 

May 24, 2023

Beard was sentenced to 43 years in federal prison. 

June 21, 2023

After speaking with Beard, the FBI spent about a year building a case against Elkins.

Investigators found internet searches and a Walgreens receipt that connected her to the crime.  

Holly Elkins texts
Text messages between Holly Elkins and Andrew Beard.

Carrollton Police Department


They also dug into text messages between Elkins and Beard. In a text sent to Beard one week before Burkett’s murder, Elkins wrote, “I hope you handle it I’m not coming home to b**s***”

Elkins was indicted on three charges: conspiracy to stalk, stalking using a dangerous weapon resulting in serious bodily injury and death and brandishing a firearm in relation to a crime of violence.

July 6, 2023

Holly Elkins booking photo
Holly Elkins was arrested by federal agents almost three years after Alyssa Burkett’s death.

Johnson County Sheriff’s Office


Elkins was arrested at the Miami airport by federal agents after returning from a trip to the Dominican Republic. 

April 9 – 16, 2024

Andrew Beard, Holly Elkins and Willow
Andrew Beard and Holly Elkins with Willow, the daughter Beard shared with Alyssa Burkett.

Lizette Bowers


Elkins’ trial began at the federal courthouse in downtown Dallas. After six days, the case went to the jury.

April 17, 2024

Holly Elkins
Holly Elkins

Stephen Green


The jury deliberated for about an hour-and-a-half before they found Elkins guilty on all counts. On Aug. 15, 2024, Elkins was sentenced to two life terms. 



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