Hoda Kotb's Absence From 'Today' Show Raises Eyebrows

Hoda Kotb's absence on the "Today" show after recordingSavannah Guthrie's episode has caught attention. The senior TV host came back on the set in place of Nancy Guthrie's daughter after the 84-year-old went missing. While Kotb has reportedly been present on the show every day, her absence on the March 30 episode raised eyebrows. Furthermore, the topic was not addressed during the broadcast.

Hoda Kotb's absence on the 'Today' show was not addressed

Hoda Kotb's absence on the "Today" show was reportedly not acknowledged in the latest episode. On the March 30 broadcast, the Saturday host, Laura Jarrett, accompanied Craig Melvin. Meanwhile, Kotb allegedly ended her time on the set, where she was filling in for Savannah Guthrie.

Moreover, Kotb's absence was not addressed when Melvin welcomed Jarret on the morning show. "A very good morning to you. Thank you for starting your Monday with us. Thank you for starting your week with us as well. Laura Jarrett in for Savannah – who is back a week today," he said.

Advertisement

While it raised eyebrows,Hello! Magazinementioned that Kotb had "prior commitments." Earlier, she came back to help with the broadcast, and Savannah, while the latter has been dealing with a tough time. Reportedly, Kotb had to balance her work and personal commitments. For those unversed, she runs her own wellness brand, Joy 101. Additionally, she is the mother of two daughters, Haley, 9, and Hope, 6.

Although her absence was not addressed on the Monday episode, Kotb was praised on Friday's broadcast. Melvin and Jenna Bush Hager thanked the senior journalist for coming to their rescue for the last couple of months.

Furthermore, the 61-year-old also made headlines for interviewing Savannah. The latter opened up about her mother's disappearance, which has reportedly been suspected as a kidnapping case. In the three-part interview, she told Kotb why she assumed that Nancy was allegedly taken because of Savannah's celebrity status.

The postHoda Kotb's Absence From 'Today' Show Raises Eyebrowsappeared first onReality Tea.

Hoda Kotb’s Absence From ‘Today’ Show Raises Eyebrows

Hoda Kotb's absence on the "Today" show after recordingSavannah Guthrie's episode has caught attention. The senior TV hos...

Kylie JennerandTimothée Chalametseemed to be living their best beachside lives on vacation.

Bored Panda

The couple shared snaps from theirtropical getawaythis week, frolicking on the sand and in the pristine turquoise water.

Fans, however, were still trying to figure out the chemistry behind the pairing that no one saw coming.

Kylie JennerandTimothée Chalametseemed to be living their best beachside lives on vacation

Image credits:Neilson Barnard/Getty Images

"Heaven," Kylie Jenner captioned a series of pictures from her tropical vacation.

Thereality TV star shared picturesof herself soaking up some sun and readingThe Guestby Emma Cline on the beach. A bowl of cereal also appeared in one of the pictures.

Meanwhile, her boyfriend Timothée Chalamet shared pictures of himself enjoying some beachside revelry.

Image credits:tchalamet

On paper, fans saw them as one of the mostunexpected couples in Hollywoodsince they began dating in 2023. And the confusion still hasn't faded away for some armchair critics online.

Some claimed they looked like "mother and son" on vacation, saying, "He genuinely can't handle all that."

"They are so boring," an unimpressed X user commented online

Image credits:kyliejenner

Image credits:bobussyy

"Thiscouple look weird asf," one said, while another wrote, "Ohh she's getting that ring this year

"How did he bag her?" one asked.

Another wrote, "Him and Kylie can't be real."

Image credits:tchalamet

Image credits:Samir4PE

The beauty mogul and theDunestarhave been going strongsince they were romantically linked in April, 2023.

Throughout this year's awards season, theKardashiansstar was often seen as Chalamet'sstrong and doting plus oneas he racked up several nominations.

"Kylie is really proud of him and is always low-key bragging about him to her friends and family," a source toldUs Weeklyearlier this month.

The couple have been going strong ever since they were first romantically linked in April, 2023

Image credits:kyliejenner

Image credits:vvalub

Going to premieres and awards shows still feels like "new territory" for the Kylie Cosmetics founder, and she can be "a little shy in that setting." But she is still "super supportive" of his career," the source said.

"Kylie is really in awe of how respected he is by his peers and loves showing up for him. She's always hyping him up and had the best time being by his side at the Oscars," the source told the outlet.

Chalamet, on the other hand, feels like she "calms his nerves" and "equally" loveshaving her by his sideat these glitzy events, the insider added.

Image credits:kyliejenner

Image credits:litterallynova

When Chalamet won the Best Actor at the 2026 Critics Choice Awards for his role inMarty Supreme,he gave a sweet shoutout to Kylie and said "thank you" to his "partner of three years."

"Thank you for our foundation. I love you. I couldn't do this without you. Thank you from the bottom of my heart, thank you so much," he continued onstage.

Advertisement

Jenner mouthed, "I love you, too," back at him from the audience.

Chalamet gave his "partner of three years" a rare shoutout before walking away with a Critics Choice Awards this year

Image credits:tchalamet

Image credits:koozswag

The mother-of-two got "flustered whenVanity Fairinterviewier Nate Freeman asked her what it felt like to get a shoutout from the stage.

"Is it fun?" he asked for the interview this month.

"Of course," she said, unable to hide her blushing face.

Image credits:tchalamet

Image credits:3333A3333333

Jenner, who made a brief cameo in Charli xcx's satirical movieThe Moment,said she's been getting film scripts and wants to dive into acting.

So far, none of the scripts she was offered felt "right."

"But I 100 percent want to do more," she told Freeman. "I really like comedy. I think I'm good at it."

Jenner spoke about wanting to dive into acting and has been receiving scripts, but none of them felt "right"

Image credits:kyliejenner

Image credits:NeoJosephp

"Maybe next time I talk to you, I'll be the lead of an action movie!" she added.

The reality TV star went on to say that she wants to focus on herself, her business, her work, and also traveling and enjoying with her kids "in the last years of [her] 20s."

"I do want to have more kids…." she added.

"Remember when we all thought this was PR [the] whole time," one commented, "they both just corny asf frl"

Image credits:ideas_reflectin

Image credits:_chrisejiofor

Image credits:scbelle18431

Image credits:Poppy67_

Image credits:wrongwithpop

Image credits:coxrab

Image credits:PINK44RRARI

Image credits:QUEENP0P

Image credits:aespiastrii

Image credits:RileyWorse

Image credits:sionssugarmama

Image credits:TPlutzer

Image credits:XandreCaulfield

“I Don’t Get It”: Fans Baffled By Timothée Chalamet And Kylie Jenner’s Relationship After New Beach Snaps

Kylie JennerandTimothée Chalametseemed to be living their best beachside lives on vacation. The couple shared s...
ICE agents will be stationed outside Marine Corps graduation events in South Carolina

WASHINGTON — ICE agents will be stationed outside graduation events for the nation's newest Marines to identify whether any of their family members are undocumented, according to the Marine Corps.

NBC Universal The Marine Corps Recruiting Depot at Parris Island, S.C., in 2022. (Stephen B. Morton / AP)

As the U.S. continues the war in Iran, the Marine Corps has boosted protection measures on bases, requiring everyone to present REAL IDs, U.S. passports or U.S. birth certificates to access any sites.

Undocumented immigrants are generally ineligible for federal REAL IDs and don't have U.S. passports or birth certificates. So people without identifying documents who arrive at the gate of Marine Corps Recruit Depot at Parris Island in Beaufort, South Carolina, for recruit family days and graduation events this week may now have to answer to Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials, the Marine Corps said.

Because of "increased force protection measures" at the recruit depot, "federal law enforcement personnel will be present at installation access points to conduct enhanced screening and lawful immigration status inquiries during recruit family and graduation days," amessage on the Parris Island websiteread.

While sometimes family members don't have proper documentation, it wasn't clear why ICE had decided to station at Parris Island.

A DHS spokesperson said any suggestion that ICE would make arrests was false. "ICE will not be making arrests at the basic training graduation in Paris Island, SC," the spokesperson said.

Advertisement

Graduation is Friday morning, but family members are invited to visit the base and celebrate their sons' and daughters' completion of the grueling training beginning Wednesday. Marine recruits aren't allowed to see their families during the 13-week boot camp.

"While the Marine Corps routinely coordinates with federal partners on security matters, this is the first time in recent memory that federal law enforcement agencies have supported base access operations at Parris Island in this capacity," according to a spokesperson for MCRD Parris Island.

The spokesperson encouraged all visitors to be prepared for additional screening measures.

"To help ensure a smooth and timely process, guests should bring proper identification and limit the number of items they carry onto the installation," the spokesperson said.

Marine Corps recruits have trained at Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island since November 1915. It has graduation ceremonies about 46 weeks of the year, according to a spokesperson.

It's not clear whether ICE will be at the gate to Parris Island for the foreseeable future or whether the ICE involvement could expand to other bases.

ICE agents will be stationed outside Marine Corps graduation events in South Carolina

WASHINGTON — ICE agents will be stationed outside graduation events for the nation's newest Marines to identify wheth...
Women's NCAA Tournament: UConn, UCLA, Texas and South Carolina make Final Four

The women's Final Four is set, with some of the game's most storied schools and celebrated players set to face off.

NBC Universal Lauren Betts and Azzi Fudd. (Getty Images)

The four teams that will be playing in Phoenix this coming weekend are the No. 1 Connecticut Huskies, the No. 1 UCLA Bruins, the No. 1 Texas Longhorns and the No. 1 South Carolina Gamecocks.

Between the Huskies looking for their record 13th championship, Lauren Betts and the Bruins looking for their first, and the high-level players across all the teams (UConn's Azzi Fudd, the Longhorns' Madison Booker, South Carolina's Joyce Edwards), we should be in store for an intense final two rounds of hoops.

Here's a brief look at how each team got to the Final Four.

Connecticut Huskies

Surprise! The Huskies are back in the Final Four for the fifth time in six seasons. Once again, UConn has largely made light work out of its tournament foes, winning all of its tournament games by at least 18 points — including a 43-point beatdown of No. 9 Syracuse in the second round.

The Huskies are led by the inside-outside combo of senior guard Azzi Fudd and sophomore forward Sarah Strong. Combined, they are averaging 35.5 points, 11.1 rebounds and 6.5 assists a night during the tournament, creating a severe matchup problem for defenses. Fudd and Strong have been efficient players this season, threatening to score from multiple areas on the floor.

After having won five titles in seven years in the 2010s, UConn is looking to start a new iteration of a dynasty after it won its record 12th national championship last season. Head coach Geno Auriemma, 72, doesn't appear to be losing even a fraction of his competitive edge. The Huskies are the villain everyone will be looking to take down.

UCLA Bruins

The Bruins are in the Final Four after having come from behind to take down No. 3 Duke in the Elite Eight. (Tough week for the Blue Devils!) Senior center Lauren Betts scored 23 points and collected 10 boards as UCLA overcame an eight-point halftime deficit to advance.

Advertisement

Betts is in her third season with the Bruins after she began her collegiate career at Stanford, and she is one of the best players in the sport. She enters the semifinal round averaging 17.2 points, 8.6 rebounds and a career-best 3.2 assists a game. A trio of guards have been Betts' best allies, as Kiki Rice, Gabriela Jaquez and Gianna Kneepkens are all averaging double figures in scoring.

This is the second straight Final Four appearance for UCLA, which are also the only two in the program's history. This is a big moment for Betts and coach Cori Close, who last year suffered a blowout loss to the Huskies in the semifinal. The Bruins could earn a chance at revenge against UConn, but they'll have to go where their women's team has never gone before.

Texas Longhorns

The Longhorns went 35-3 this season, finishing second in the SEC, before wreaking havoc in the tournament. Texas has an average margin of victory of 35.5 in the postseason, including a 36-point statement win against No. 2 Michigan in the Elite Eight.

Junior forward Madison Booker and sophomore guard Jordan Lee have been the one-two punch for the Longhorns. Booker, who has won two straight Cheryl Miller Awards as the best small forward in women's college basketball, is averaging 22.5 points and 8.8 rebounds per game in the tourney, including a 40-point outburst against No. 8 Oregon in the second round. Lee has led the team in scoring in two of the last four games, adding 14.5 points a night since the first round.

Texas is playing in its second straight Final Four and the fifth overall in program history. After a blowout loss to South Carolina in last year's semifinal, Booker and the Longhorns should be incredibly motivated once they get to Phoenix.

South Carolina Gamecocks

Unlike in the previous six seasons, South Carolina never reached No. 1 in the AP poll this season. Yet the Gamecocks still have a chance to finish atop the country and win a national championship for the fourth time under coach Dawn Staley.

Since it was routed by 17 points by fellow No. 1 seed Texas in the SEC Tournament championship game on March 8, South Carolina crushed its tournament opponents Southern (by 69 points), Southern California (by 40) and Oklahoma (by 26) before it beat TCU, 78-52, in Monday's Elite Eight.

Five Gamecocks average double figures in scoring, led by Joyce Edwards, a forward averaging 19.6 points. They dare opponents to keep up offensively while averaging 87.4 points per game and shooting the nation's seventh-best percentage from deep. With Tessa Johnson, a high-volume 3-point shooting guard who shoots 45% from beyond the arc, and forward Madina Okot, who is averaging 10.9 rebounds per game, South Carolina can beat teams in multiple ways.

With a win in Friday's national semifinals, Staley would lead her team to the national championship game for the fourth time in the past five seasons.

Women's NCAA Tournament: UConn, UCLA, Texas and South Carolina make Final Four

The women's Final Four is set, with some of the game's most storied schools and celebrated players set to face of...
Meghan Markle's Dad Thomas Markle, 81, Reveals Relationship with Nurse, 46, After Leg Amputation

Thomas Markle says he is in a relationship with a nurse 35 years his junior whom he met after his leg amputation

People Meghan Markle; Thomas MarkleCredit: Leigh Vogel/Getty; BACKGRID

NEED TO KNOW

  • Meghan Markle's estranged told The Daily Mail he "never expected to find joy and happiness again at my age"

  • Meghan previously reached out to her father following his emergency surgery, despite their yearslong estrangement

Thomas Markleis sharing a personal update following his recent health struggles.

In a new interview withThe Daily Mail,Meghan Markle's estranged father, 81, said he is in a relationship with nurse Rio Canedo, 46, whom he met afterundergoing an emergency leg amputationin the Philippines in December 2025.

"I never expected to find joy and happiness again at my age," he told the outlet. "I felt neglected and sad for so many years, but now I am enjoying life again."

He added, "After so many tough times, I feel truly blessed to have found someone very special who takes such good care of me."

Thomas said he met Canedo — a mother of two — in mid-December while checking into a rehab hospital in the Philippines, where she works. He has been living in the Philippines in recent years after relocating from Mexico.

Canedo toldThe Daily Mailthat she was initially unsure what to expect.

"I was a bit worried because someone had told me he had a reputation for being grumpy," she said. "But I started working with him, and he is a total gentleman and someone who is kind and funny."

She also said she was unfamiliar with Thomas' connection to Meghan, 44, andPrince Harry, 41.

Advertisement

Thomas fblooreflected on his health setbacks in the interview, referencing the stroke he suffered in 2022.

"After my stroke, things were not great," he said. "I wanted to go to the other side of the world to a place where the people are kind. The Philippines has a gentler way of life. I never expected to meet Rio and have my life changed in such a wonderful way."

Thomas had his left leg removed below the knee on Dec. 3, 2025, after a blood clot in his thigh reportedly cut off circulation. The three-hour procedure took place in the Philippines, where the retired lighting director relocated with his son, Thomas Markle, Jr., earlier that year.

Meghan Markle in New York City on April 23, 2025Credit: Craig Barritt/Getty

Can't get enough of PEOPLE's Royals coverage?Sign up for our free Royals newsletterto get the latest updates on Kate Middleton, Meghan Markle and more!

Although Meghan and Thomas have been estranged for years, the Duchess of Sussexreached out to her fatherafter learning about his leg amputation. A spokesperson for Meghan previously said she attempted to contact him the same day she learned about his health ordeal.

The Mail on Sundayreported that Thomas said he had not heard from Meghan. After that, a spokesperson for Meghan confirmed that a letter written by her was"safely" in the hands of her father.

Meghan has been estranged from her father since her 2018wedding to Prince Harry.

Their relationship fractured after Thomas admitted to staging paparazzi photos ahead of the wedding and, according to Meghan, was not truthful with her about his communications with the press. She later spoke about the fallout during her and Harry's2021 interview with Oprah Winfrey, saying at the time, "I've lost my father."

Read the original article onPeople

Meghan Markle's Dad Thomas Markle, 81, Reveals Relationship with Nurse, 46, After Leg Amputation

Thomas Markle says he is in a relationship with a nurse 35 years his junior whom he met after his leg amputation ...
Former vice chair of China's securities regulator prosecuted for bribery

BEIJING, March 31 (Reuters) - China ‌has prosecuted ‌the former ​vice chair of its securities regulator ‌on ⁠charges of bribery, state ⁠news agency Xinhua ​said ​on ​Tuesday.

Reuters

Advertisement

After investigations, ‌Wang Jianjun was found to have abused the ‌advantages ​of ​his ​authority ‌to "secure benefits", Xinhua ​said.

(Reporting ​by Liz Lee ​and ‌Beijing newsroom; Editing ​by Christian ​Schmollinger)

Former vice chair of China's securities regulator prosecuted for bribery

BEIJING, March 31 (Reuters) - China ‌has prosecuted ‌the former ​vice chair of its securities regulator ‌on ⁠charges of b...
Killer cop or the wrong man? DNA halts Florida execution. For now.

When 11-year-old Teresa Mae McAbee was kidnapped, raped, strangled and drowned in the small Florida city of Mascotte nearly 40 years ago, a surprising suspect emerged: a rookie cop namedJames Duckett.

USA TODAY

The one undisputed fact of the case is that Duckett was on duty on May 11, 1987, when he encountered Teresa at a convenience store. The little girl had walked there to buy a pencil.

Duckett maintainsthat he told Teresa that she needed to go home, and that's the last time he saw her. Prosecutors argue that Duckett was a monster in disguise who abused the badge and brutally raped and killed Teresa before dumping her body in a lake.

Jurors accepted the state's narrative, convicting Duckett of murder largely based on circumstantial evidence and recommending the death penalty.

Now nearly 40 years later, DNA in the case stands to either save Duckett's life or seal his fate.

Duckett, 68, had been set to die by lethal injection at a Florida state prison on Tuesday, March 31. But with less than a week to go, the Florida Supreme Court issued a rare stay of execution pending the results of the DNA testing. And on Monday, March 30, the court upheld the stay, effectively stopping any chance that the execution would happen as scheduled.

Though the execution is on hold for now, it's not on hold for good.

As Duckett awaits his fate, USA TODAY is looking deeper at the case, the recent court actions and why the DNA hasn't been tested until now.

James Duckett had been scheduled to be executed on March 31 for the 1987 rape and murder of 11-year-old Teresa Mae McAbee.

What happened to Teresa Mae McAbee?

On May 11, 1987, the fates of 29-year-old rookie cop James "Jimmy" Duckett and 11-year-old Teresa Mae McAbee became intertwined.

Teresa had walked to her local Circle K convenience store to buy a pencil around 10 p.m. in Mascotte, Florida, a rural city just west of Orlando that had fewer than 2,000 residents at the time.

Duckett was on patrol for the Mascotte Police Department. The married father of two sons, who had been on the force for seven months, was making his regular rounds and stopped at Circle K, spotting Teresa talking with a 16-year-old boy outside the store, according to court records.

Duckett has always maintained that he talked to Teresa and the teen, telling each to go home. But the boy and his uncle later said that Duckett put Teresa in his patrol car and drove off.

Teresa's mother arrived at the Circle K around 11 p.m. looking for her daughter. The store clerk told her that Teresa may have gone with Duckett, and the mother began searching the area. When she couldn't find Teresa, she contacted police and later filed a missing persons report with Duckett, the only officer on patrol at the time.

The next morning, less than a mile from the Circle K, a fisherman found Teresa's body in Knight Lake. A medical examiner later found that she had been raped, strangled and was still alive when her attacker drowned her. Bodily fluid, presumably from the killer, was found on her underwear − DNA that was saved.

Duckett became a suspect when a sheriff's investigator, Sgt. Chuck Johnson, thought the officer was acting nervous at the scene of the body recovery, "was not curious about the death," and told a "rehearsed-sounding story" about his interaction with Teresa and the events of the night before. Duckett was charged with murder five months later.

What happened at James Duckett's trial?

At trial, prosecutors called James Duckett a "cold-blooded killer" and said that unlike him, Teresa didn't have a judge or jury.

"She had a police officer named Duckett pick her up and put her in the car and take her down to Knight Lake, and he sentenced her to be raped, and he sentenced her for threatening to tell on him and taking away his power, his almighty power of the badge," they told jurors, according to court records. "She threatened to tell when she was hurt … so he sentenced her to die. He served as executioner."

Among the state's evidence: a pubic hair found on Teresa that an FBI analyst said was consistent with Duckett's, Teresa's fingerprints on the hood of Duckett's car, tire tracks at the scene of the murder that police say matched Duckett's patrol car, and a key witness who testified that she saw Duckett drive off with a small person in his patrol car shortly after he spoke with Teresa.

Prosecutors also put three young women on the stand who testified that they were underage when Duckett sexually harassed or abused them.

Duckett's attorneys have been working to poke holes in the trial evidence, saying that Teresa's fingerprints were on the car hood because she sat on it at the Circle K, that a second hair found on the girl's body was inconsistent with Duckett's, and that Duckett's tire tracks were at the scene because drove there after the body was found.

Advertisement

They also argue that the state's key witness agreed to give bogus testimony in exchange for getting out of jail early and that there was no evidence to corroborate the stories of the three young women who testified that Duckett had been inappropriate with them.

Duckett's attorneys also argue that there were far likelier suspects in the case, including the teen Teresa was talking to before she vanished and various men who were boyfriends or friends of her mother's.

"For reasons beyond his control, James Duckett was chosen as the suspect, and other more likely suspects were allowed to walk away," his attorneys argue in court records. "Rather than find the real perpetrator, the state chose to proceed with a circumstantial evidence case against Mr. Duckett."

Just before he was sentenced to death, Duckett pleaded with the judge in the case to spare his life.

"I did not do this," he said, according to court records. "When the person who did this repeats it, I want to see the face of the person telling the victim's mother, father, sister or brother, 'I am sorry. We thought we had the right one before.'"

An execution scheduled, then stopped

After spending nearly 40 years on death row, James Duckett's execution was scheduled for March 31 after Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed his death warrant last month.

Duckett's attorneys fought to stop the execution so that DNA testing could be conducted on the semen collected from the crime scene. On March 26, the Florida Supreme Court agreed to issue a stay of execution pending results from the testing.

The results, which came in on March 27, were inconclusive, possibly because so little of the DNA collected was left to be analyzed. But Duckett's attorneys had argued that a different lab would be more likely to extract useable results.

The Florida Supreme Court could have lifted its stay because the initial results were inconclusive. Instead,the court decided to uphold it on March 30in a 6-1 ruling, stopping Duckett's execution for now.

The Florida Supreme Court heas oral arguments on March 4, 2026.

Duckett's attorney, Mary Wells, told USA TODAY that the stay was "a significant step toward preventing the irreversible harm that will result if the State of Florida executes an innocent man."

"DNA testing ... has the potential to conclusively establish Mr. Duckett's innocence," she said. "When the outcome of the results is whether a man lives or dies, there is no valid scientific basis for prohibiting a second examiner to analyze the results."

The state's Attorney General's Officehad argued in court thatthe stay should be lifted because the DNA results were inconclusive and that Duckett sought DNA testing far too late.

"Duckett waited until after a warrant was signed to seek DNA testing for a murder he committed over 38 years ago where he knew about the (DNA) slide at least since the relinquishment in 2003," they wrote. "But he did not seek DNA testing as soon as the science was sufficiently advanced. A truly innocent man would have sought ... DNA testing as soon as it was available."

More:Tennessee plans rare execution of a woman. She's fighting back.

What happens now?

In its orderupholding the execution stay, the Florida Supreme Court ordered Lake County Circuit Judge Brian Welke to provide the higher court with a status report by the end of day on April 2

Welke is expected to decide whether there should be further testing of the DNA. Welke is the judge who initially granted Duckett's request to test the DNA.

In his dissenting opinion to uphold the stay, Florida Supreme Court Justice Adam Tanenbaum wrote that Duckett's DNA fight amounts to "a Hail Mary pass" and that given the inconclusive test results, there is "nothing further for (Welke) to do at this point."

"Indeed, as has been the case for decades, there is no exonerating evidence at all to justify any further delay in the defendant's execution, which has been a long time coming," Tanenbaum wrote. "Justice for the victim and her family has been delayed far too long. The defendant's time is up."

Amanda Lee Myers is a senior crime reporter who covers cold case investigations and the death penalty for USA TODAY. Follow her on X at @amandaleeusat.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Killer cop or the wrong man? DNA halts James Duckett's execution

Killer cop or the wrong man? DNA halts Florida execution. For now.

When 11-year-old Teresa Mae McAbee was kidnapped, raped, strangled and drowned in the small Florida city of Mascotte near...

 

FORTE MAG © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com