Tearful 911 caller alleged ex-boyfriend Geno Smith ‘beat me up’
A woman dialed 911 on Sunday and alleged Geno Smith "beat me up," according to police audio obtained by The California Post on Tuesday.

The second ransom note sent to a Tucson television station shortly after the February abduction of 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie claimed she had died shortly after being taken and was buried “in nature,” according to a new report. The post Ransom Note from Nancy Guthrie’s Alleged Kidnapper Apologized for Her ‘Accidental’ Death, Demanded Money for Her Body appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
A woman dialed 911 on Sunday and alleged Geno Smith "beat me up," according to police audio obtained by The California Post on Tuesday.
At 17, I was an aspiring ballerina with my whole life ahead of me. That all changed when I met Jeffrey Epstein. I was brought into Epstein’s orbit under the guise of being a masseuse to make a little extra money on the side. It didn’t take long for Epstein to use one of the […]
Nancy Guthrie was abducted from her home in the early morning hours of Feb. 1, 2026.
Trillionaire Elon Musk spent Monday night posting and re-sharing posts online in an apparent effort to defend his record spearheading massive cuts to U.S. foreign aid – which reporting increasingly suggests may end up causing millions of preventable deaths – and was subsequently hammered by critics.“Musk killed millions by abruptly stopping food and medical supply shipments,” wrote Nick Mark, a podcast host and Washington-based physician.“At the time he gleefully celebrated ‘feeding [the U.S. Agency for International Development] (USAID) to the woodchipper’ by waving a chainsaw around high on ketamine. Now he’s in damage control mode. This is his legacy. Don’t let him off the hook.”Over the weekend, Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) accused Musk of potentially causing more than 14 million preventable deaths by 2030 due to the U.S. foreign aid cuts he spearheaded while leading the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Musk called Khanna a “liar,” said he “should be in prison” and threatened to sue him.Several deaths have already been attributed to the USAID cuts.Through multiple posts Monday, Musk continued to deny that the U.S. foreign aid cuts he spearheaded had caused even a single death.“There is not even a single dead child!” Musk wrote in a social media post on X. “If there were, it would be worldwide headline news!”Musk oversaw around $60 billion in cuts to U.S. foreign aid while working with the Trump administration, leaving “few surviving” USAID projects in his wake. Jeremy Konyndyk, a humanitarian policy expert, was quick to correct the record regarding Musk’s denials.“This is some wild backpedaling bulls--- from Elon,” Konyndyk wrote in a social media post on X. “DOGE clear-cut (more than) 80% of USAID programs without assessing what harms would ensue. And when USAID staff tried to flag those harms, they were forced out.”
President Donald Trump posted a photo of a “pro-algae” protester as he continues cracking down on the alleged vandals of the newly refurbished Reflecting Pool. The Reflecting Pool in front of the Lincoln Memorial has become a culture war flash point after Trump decided to renovate it. Following its quick deterioration, the president and his […]
A former FBI hostage negotiator flagged a dark detail in the new Nancy Guthrie ransom note that was delivered to the family on Monday. In the note, Guthrie's abductors claimed that the 84-year-old mother of "Today!" co-host Savannah Guthrie had been "buried with nature now," according to a source close to the investigation who spoke to NewsNation reporter Brian Entin. Chip Massey, a former hostage negotiator, told CNN's Erin Burnett that the abductors also included details in the note that point to where the investigation may go next. "The messaging itself, Erin, as you pointed out, is also interesting because now we're shifting," Massey said. "The captors have shifted from a point of leverage to now it seems like they're trying to manage the narrative."Guthrie disappeared from her home in Tucson, Arizona, in the middle of the night in late January after seeing her family at a dinner engagement. Authorities have released scant details about the suspects or their motives, other than a few pictures captured by the doorbell camera at Guthrie's home. Massey said the new note suggests that the abductors want to convince the Guthries, and possibly the public, that Guthrie's death was an accident. "Whatever the wording is, that's a narrative control," he said. "And so what we're seeing is that perhaps they're thinking, 'In the event that we are caught, or we want the public to see us in this light.' As opposed to murderous kidnappers."
She entered the US in October 2021 under the Visa Waiver Program and was supposed to leave by Jan. 2, 2022, DHS said.
On June 2, in an unsigned 6-3 order buried in the Supreme Court's shadow docket, the conservative supermajority quietly did something it had never done before, declaring the Constitution "colorblind." In doing so, Slate legal writer Mark Joseph Stern warned that the court gave a permanent constitutional guarantee to those seeking to dismantle civil rights protections.The unsigned order reinstated an Alabama congressional map that federal courts had repeatedly struck down for intentionally discriminating against Black voters, handing white voters greater control over the state's congressional map by eliminating a district held by a Black representative.Stern argued the damage runs far deeper than one House seat. The court's decision to constitutionalize "colorblindness," building on April's gutting of the Voting Rights Act in Louisiana v. Callais, is already cascading through the legal system, he said. Within a week, Trump's Department of Justice used the ruling to gut disparate-impact protections under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, instructing the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to abandon enforcement that had long shielded workers of color from racially discriminatory employer policies.The phrase "our Constitution is colorblind" was plucked from Justice John Marshall Harlan's 1896 dissent in Plessy v. Ferguson, a dissent written to fight Jim Crow, not to dismantle protections for minorities.Justice Sonia Sotomayor, in her dissent, minced no words."It also corrodes the rule of law by rewarding Alabama’s gamesmanship and outright defiance of court orders," she wrote.Stern issued a stark conclusion that the court has built a reality-blind Constitution, engineered to mean the opposite of what it was written to do."They knew that sometimes the government must acknowledge race to battle racism, and left it free to do just that. Now—in voting rights, policing, employment discrimination, and much more to come—the Supreme Court is enlisting colorblindness in the service of racial subordination. 'The colorblind Constitution' is a catchy, memorable way to think about equal protection. It may also be the death of it," he concluded.