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Kimberly Guilfoyle has tested positive for COVID-19 and was unable to attend Fourth of July festivities at Mount Rushmore alongside the presidential family. New York Times and ABC News both reported Guilfoyle’s positive test.Guilfoyle is the girlfriend of Donald Trump Jr., and is also a member of President Donald Trump’s re-election campaign.Guilfoyle reportedly flew to South Dakota with Donald Trump Jr., but flew separately from the president.Guilfoyle was tested for the virus, along with many others who could come in close contact with the president.Trump Jr. reportedly tested negative for the virus. 617
JAMUL, Calif. (KGTV) - Anabel and Dewey will celebrate 21 years of marriage this year, but in the smallest fraction of that time, everything from their life was destroyed.The couple lived in their Jamul home with Anabel’s mother and their five cats. Saturday, Anabel was at work and her mother was out of town. Dewey saw there was a fire in the distance, but felt confident it would be contained quickly, like most of the fires that spark in their area. He left the home, not knowing it would be the last time he saw it standing.That night, flames engulfed their home. Video captured shows it on fire, with firefighters nearby trying to find the flames, but they were unsuccessful. The five cats were not able to be saved.RELATED COVERAGEVALLEY FIRE: Resources on where to get help, air quality, and animal sheltersINTERACTIVE MAP: Valley Fire erupts in Japatul Valley areaPhotos: Valley Fire erupts in East CountyAnabel said they have not been able to return home to see the damage, and found out about the loss from images online, a realization that was hard to process.“But the more I looked at it, that was our house. That was the car, my mom’s car, right by the house that was on fire,” she said.In the fire, they lost their cats and a lifetime of memorabilia. At home, they had many family members' ashes, including Dewey’s mother, Anabel’s stepfather and also Anabel’s son, who passed away from cancer this year.Also lost were sentimental items from Dewey’s 22 years in the Navy, including his shadow box and his uniform, which he intended to wear when he pinned his mentees, an honor in the military community.RELATED COVERAGE:Red Cross evacuation sites provide outdoor shelter and hotel lodging amid pandemicABC 10News forecast for San Diego County“They’ve asked to make sure that I pin them. And you can buy a new uniform, yeah, but you’d like to wear the one you wore,” he said, holding back tears.Despite the long list of losses, the couple said they aren’t giving up.“It’s just [beginning] again, it’s not the end and that’s the way it’s going to be,” said Dewey.Their nephew started a GoFundMe to help them get back on their feet. They said the support from friends and strangers already has touched them in ways they didn’t know were possible.“We are overwhelmed. I don’t know what the proper adjective is or the expression to explain the level of which we are thankful to so many friends, family and strangers who are being extremely generous,” said Dewey. 2480
Joe Clyde Daniels' father admitted to killing the 5-year-old, but search crews have not been able to find his body. It may seem like an open and shut case, but officials say a confession may not be enough.Joseph and Krystal Daniels were charged in the case of their autistic, 5-year-old son who went missing. Joseph confessed to beating his son to death. He was charged with homicide and Krystal was later arrested and charged with aggravated child neglect or endangerment.Crews in Dickson County, Tennessee vowed they wouldn't stop searching until the young boy was brought home and laid to rest.A legal battle is looming especially since Joe Clyde Daniel's body still has not been found. It is a simple question sure to be asked by the public defender: without a body can prosecutors even prove that Joe Clyde Daniels is dead?Yes, it's true his father Joseph Daniels is said to have confessed to beating the child to death, but without actually having a body it's not a done deal."Certainly it's a more difficult case if they have nothing to back up the confession," said attorney Jim Todd, who's closely followed the case.He said there certainly could be other evidence, perhaps blood from the scene, cadaver dogs hitting on a scent or even witness testimony potentially from the child's mother."There's a good chance, and this is a guess, the wife is charged as a leverage point on her to get her to roll," said Todd.But then there's this: Daniel's father says he believes prosecutors coerced the confession out of his son. What happens if he recants his statement and insists he is innocent?"The jury will hear the statement and determine on their own if he was coerced or gave this confession or not," said Todd.That situation would only occur if the case goes to trial, and a trial is a long way off. Next up, a preliminary hearing for both parents on June 1.That's when prosecutors will lay out much of their case. Much can change between now and then. The question is: will investigators have found the child's remains in time for the next hearing?Their case could hinge on that development. Both parents remain held in the Dickson County Jail on million bond each. 2232
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg is back working at the Supreme Court building in her chambers, the court's public information officer said Tuesday afternoon.Ginsburg was not on the bench for Tuesday's non-argument session earlier in the day, per a previous Supreme Court announcement.Last week, Ginsburg, 85, fell in her office and fractured three ribs, but by the end of the week had been released from George Washington University Hospital, where she had been admitted Thursday for observation and treatment.Supreme Court Public Information Officer Kathleen Arberg had said earlier Tuesday that Ginsburg was continuing to improve and was working from home in the morning.Ginsburg is the Supreme Court's oldest justice and has previously survived two forms of cancer and a procedure to have a stent placed in her right coronary artery.However, in July, Ginsburg said she hopes to remain in her position beyond 2020."I'm now 85," Ginsburg said?at the time. "My senior colleague, Justice John Paul Stevens, he stepped down when he was 90, so think I have about at least five more years."She was nominated to the highest court in 1993 by President Bill Clinton, and has become a cultural icon for progressives in recent years -- acquiring the nickname "Notorious RBG," in reference to the late rapper Notorious B.I.G. 1324
KANSAS CITY, Kan. — John Schooley arrived in Wyandotte County Court wearing a black and white jail jump suit.It was a sharp contrast to his Schlitterbahn co-defendant Jeff Henry, who appeared in the same courtroom last week wearing a suit and tie.Schooley and Henry are the designers of the Verrückt water slide.The men are accused of being reckless in their design, and of knowing the slide was dangerous.Ten-year-old Caleb Schwab died on the water slide in 2016.Kansas City, Missouri, Attorney Justin Johnston argued Schooley's bond should be reduced from 0,000 to 0,000.He argued Schooley willingly turned himself in after arriving in Dallas from a business trip in China and isn't a flight risk.Johnston also said Schooley's wife and adult children live in the U.S., he has property in Texas and Alabama and retired from the Verrückt project in April 2015 with HSC Construction.Johnston also said he had letters of support for Schooley from people in the amusement park construction industryBut Wyandotte County Judge Robert Burns ruled against reducing the bond.Judge Burns said the bond was appropriate for the serious charges against Schooley and noted Schooley doesn't have any ties to the Kansas City metro area.Judge Burns also ordered Schooley to give up his passport, which he volunteered to do.As part of the bond, Schooley can't violate any laws.After the hearing, Johnston and Assistant Attorney General Adam Zentner declined comment on the bond ruling. 1517