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Some crazy lucky ticket holder is about to cash in on the biggest Mega Millions jackpot in history -- .537 billion.But anyone trying to take advantage of the winner — perhaps as a long-lost relative or a newfound friend — will be out of luck.That's because the fortuitous ticket was bought in South Carolina, where lottery winners can stay anonymous if they want to.South Carolina is one of seven states that don't require lottery winners to be publicly identified, CNN affiliate WIS reported. 503
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell was confronted at a restaurant in Kentucky on Friday, according to CNN affiliate WLKY.According to WLKY, McConnell, a Republican representing Kentucky, was dining at Havana Rumba in Louisville, Kentucky, with his wife, Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao, when a group of men approached the couple."Why don't you get out of here? Why don't you leave the entire country?" one of the men yelled at McConnell, WLKY reported. 469
SPRING VALLEY, Calif. (KGTV) - The San Diego County Sheriff’s Department is investigating accusations that a Spring Valley doctor sexually assaulted his medical assistant. Medical Assistant Sarah Shepherd tells us she’d been working with Dr. Hanid Audish at Encompass Medical Group for the past six years. Shepherd says the two were friends and their families would spend time together. She explains that she viewed him as a brother. Now she’s suing him and the medical group for sexual battery, among other complaints. “I just kept saying ‘no’ and he wasn't super forceful but he wasn't letting it go,” says Shepherd of their encounter. Her hands were shaking during our entire interview, but she believes her story of what happened inside a Spring Valley medical plaza is worth sharing. There’s a photo of Dr. Audish on the medical group’s website. Shepherd also provided us with her photos of him that she says were taken at work parties. The lawsuit describes "sexually assaultive and egregious behavior" that started after she told him she'd recently been tanning. “I went to show him my tan line because he was saying I didn't look tan and then I realized it would be inappropriate [because] it's too far down,” she explains. The lawsuit reports that "Dr. Audish pulled the front of [her] pants down" to her underwear line and then "he pulled down her pants from behind". “Then he hit me on the bottom and bent me over the counter,” she adds. She says she pleaded for him to stop. “I said, ‘No, no, no. You have a wife and four kids.’ He said, ‘There's no cameras.’” She also says he told her, “I’m just a guy.” The lawsuit reads that he "tried to forcibly pull [her] into the bathroom" but she escaped. After reporting it within days, Encompass Medical Group sent Shepherd a letter about reported misconduct. The letter was shared with 10News. It appears that the Executive Director wrote to Shepherd that she should never have been subject to abuse. It also appears that he wrote, in part, that “Dr. Audish admitted his guilt without excuse” and “he was and is very apologetic” and “remorseful”. The letter reports that the medical group would hold a special session to “decide formal disciplinary action”. During a recorded phone interview with an investigator for the firm that’s representing Shepherd, Dr. Audish paints a different picture of what happened. The investigator is heard asking Dr. Audish if he pulled down the back of Shepherd’s scrubs, exposing her buttocks. Dr. Audish is heard responding, “No. She did it herself with her left side. All I did was just touch the right side of her buttock where the pants were still on.” He’s also heard saying, “The touching was about, literally, five seconds.” He’s heard describing that she smirked and said, “All guys are the same.” However, he claims it stopped there. The investigator asked if at any point he tried to pull her into the bathroom. Dr. Audish is heard saying, “No. None.” A representative with the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department wrote to 10News, “A report has been filed but due to the active nature of the case, we are not prepared to make a statement in order to maintain the integrity of the investigation.” The attorney for both the doctor and the medical group says there's a more comprehensive investigation underway, but she declined to comment further on any pending litigation. She did say that Shepherd is still employed with Encompass Medical Group, although Shepherd says she has not been paid since the incident. Shepherd also says that a representative of the medical group notified her that she should turn in her keys and other work items. Shepherd concludes, “I don't think he's sorry. I think he's sorry he got caught.” San Diego's Gilleon Law Firm is representing Sheperd and has asked that if you have any information to provide, please contact the firm. 3956
SOLANA BEACH, Calif. (KGTV) -- These days, the only person who can keep Kevin and Nicole Noar positive is their one-year-old son, Deklan.Otherwise, they are tormented."We can't sleep," Nicole says. "You go through so many different feelings and then the worst part is the morning because you just wake up and you keep feeling like it's still real. You just want to wake up and feel like it didn't happen and it did."The couple is living a nightmare, just days after they thought they'd achieved the American dream. They're staying with family in Solana Beach at a time they thought they'd have closed on their dream home in Carlsbad, where they hoped to create a happy childhood for Deklan."All of this was for him," Nicole says. "The house, with the yard, with schools, and so he could have a sibling."But instead, their roughly 5,000 down payment for that home, 60 percent of the purchase price, is now in the hands of a hacker in an account in Singapore. The money, which came from prior home ownership and inheritance, was supposed to go to lowering the couple's cost-of-living. Nicole is a nurse and Kevin is a chef, so they hoped to make the move more manageable. "It's literally all the money that we had to get this house so that we could have a low enough mortgage payment that we could afford," said Nicole. Nicole says she started receiving fake emails from a hacker posing as employees at her escrow company and her real estate agent, who was away due to a death in the family. Kevin says the emails were sent with duplicate signatures and addresses that appeared as contacts in their phones when clicked. The Noars are taking specific aim at their escrow company, saying an employee e-mailed them official wire instructions via unsecured email. The instructions did not have account numbers, but the Noars say the hacker got that email, duplicated the document, and sent it back with account numbers to a bitcoin exchange. The couple took that document to the bank, which did not catch the bitcoin clue. After the wire, Nicole called the escrow company she thought she had wired the money to, which says should have triggered them since they never actually sent her instructions. "They called back, they called to tell me what time the notary would be here the next day to sign our loan docs," Nicole said. The couple is now weighing their legal options and therefore asked 10News not to identify the escrow company. They have also contacted the FBI.The FBI says Californians are the biggest target of these kinds of scams. Many escrow companies have warnings saying never to accept wire instructions via e-mail, and to instead call. Another strategy is to forward all emails to the escrow agent, not just hit reply without looking at the address. In 2019, 50,000 Californians fell victim to internet financial scams, losing more than 3 million, the highest number in the U.S, according to the bureau. "Typically, escrow will send the wire instructions to the buyer via some sort of secured email, so be very suspicious if you receive (unsecured) wire instructions from an escrow or title company, especially if the escrow or title company is not the same title company or the same escrow company that you're dealing with," said Mark Goldman, a loan officer at C2 Financial. The Noars have set up a GoFundMe to help make up for the loss. 3366
Several media outlets reported that approximately 30 people tried to set the Hall of Justice on fire in Louisville on Sunday.According to the Louisville Courier-Journal, the fire occurred just before midnight, but the Louisville Fire Department put it out shortly thereafter.No one was arrested, the Louisville Courier-Journal reported.WAVE reported that a crowd in Jefferson Square Park dispersed before police got there.Louisville Fire Department's arson unit is investigating the incident, The Courier-Journal reported.The Courier-Journal reported that several buildings in downtown Louisville, which includes the Hall of Justice, have been boarded up amid protests for Breonna Taylor, a Black woman who was shot and killed inside her home allegedly by Louisville officers. 784