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FBI shares details on Texas ICE shooting bullet

admin - Latest News - September 24, 2025
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FBI Director Kash Patel posted a photo of shell casings that he says were found near the suspected Dallas ICE field office shooter, who was dead when police got to the scene. One of the bullets had the words “anti-ICE” written on it.



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Sept. 22, 2025, 11:20 AM EDTBy Edwin Flores, Morgan Radford and Aaron FrancoYou’ve heard of pickleball, the wildly popular sport that’s gone mainstream. But now there’s padel — another racket sport that’s surging in popularity and one that has strong Latino roots.“It’s a sport that always keeps you on your toes,” said Roy Tabet, a professional padel player and a coach at Reserve Padel, one of the biggest luxury padel brands in the U.S., with clubs in Miami and New York. Tabet said he had played tennis his whole life but started finding it repetitive.“I started playing padel and I immediately felt the passion. The hype for the game was real,” he said in an interview with the “TODAY” show’s Morgan Radford.Morgan Radford and Santiago Gomez at Padel Haus in the Dumbo neighborhood of Brooklyn, N.Y.NBC NewsPadel got its start in Acapulco, Mexico, in 1969 when Enrique Corcuera, a Mexican businessman, was trying to build a makeshift tennis court in his backyard. He didn’t have enough space and chose to make a smaller version — the very first padel court — with a distinguishing feature: It was surrounded by an almost 10-foot wall.The sport would eventually grow and spread internationally. It’s now described as the fastest-growing sport worldwide. The International Padel Federation says padel is played in more than 140 countries around the world with about 30 million amateur players.Currently in the U.S., there are over 100,000 amateur players, according to PadelUSA, an online marketplace for padel equipment, but the number of padel courts has been increasing.The sport’s growing popularity has even captured the attention of athletes and celebrities like Eva Longoria, Derek Jeter, Jimmy Butler and Adam Levine.“It’s like pickleball but kind of a little cooler,” Levine told Jimmy Fallon in April on “The Tonight Show.” “It’s super fun,” the singer added, explaining he was first introduced to the sport by Michael Bublé, his fellow coach on “The Voice,” when they were vacationing together in Mexico.Padel differs from other racket sports in that the court is about one-third the size of a tennis court and is typically surrounded by a glass or mesh wall. The ball can be hit off the walls and even from outside the court, as players can exit the court through a door to return the ball. Players must have a teammate, as the sport can only be played in doubles.A big draw, fans say, is the community it fosters as well as the game’s fast pace.“What got me hooked is the community. I feel like I met a lot of my best friends here, so coming to see them specifically turned into my love for playing padel,” Rachel Kuan, who’s now a customer experiences employee at Reserve Padel, told “TODAY.” Santiago Gomez, who fell in love with the game while growing up in Acapulco, founded Padel Haus, a sprawling padel social and cultural hub located in New York City — and among the first dedicated padel courts in the U.S. Padel Haus has since opened more courts across the New York City area as well as in Atlanta, Nashville and Denver.“A lot of Latinos were first — they were the first ones to come because they play the sport at home,” Gomez said.“Americans didn’t know about the sport when we first opened in 2022,” he said. “And then after that, a lot of tennis players, former tennis players, former squash players — Americans — came and tried it for the first time and they fully converted to padel.”Gomez estimates that about 70% of Padel Haus’ members are from the U.S. while the remaining 30% hail from other countries. The growth has increased so significantly that there’s now a waitlist for people looking to sign up.Fast pace ‘keeps you hooked’In addition to the social aspect of the game, Gomez said it’s addictive because of how fast-paced it can get compared to other racket sports.“[In tennis], a ball passes you, your mind is wired to think that the point is over. But here, given the wall’s in the back, you can still save the point. So you feel like a hero when you’re catching a ball that you couldn’t catch in tennis,” Gomez said.“You’re still in the game, and that gives you [a] big dopamine rush and that’s what keeps you hooked.”Mexican tennis player Yola Ramirez competing in the women’s singles tournament at the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London, on July 1,1959.Evening Standard / Hulton Archive/Getty Images fileThe International Padel Federation is working on getting the sport included in the 2032 Olympics. But for some like Marnie Perez-Ochoa, whose grandmother Yola Ramirez was a former professional tennis player from Mexico and grandfather built Padel courts for professional tournaments in Acapulco, the game has also become a point of cultural pride.“The power of sport is so prevalent — it’s just now getting started in the States. You see it in Mexico. It already boomed in Europe — Spain in particular. So I’m really excited to see where it’s going to go in the States. And I think it’s really beautiful that it started in Mexico,” Perez-Ochoa said.Edwin FloresEdwin Flores was a former reporter and video producer based in Anaheim, California. Morgan RadfordAaron Franco
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Sept. 29, 2025, 5:15 AM EDTBy Tim StellohThe trial of a Texas woman with a grim relationship history is set to begin this week in a courtroom near Houston in connection with allegations that she killed her most recent husband with a fatal dose of insulin.Jury selection for Sarah Hartsfield, a former U.S. Army sergeant who has been married five times and whose third husband previously accused her of asking her fourth husband to kill his new wife, is scheduled to begin Monday.She is charged with one count of murder in the January 2023 death of Joseph Hartsfield, 46. She has pleaded not guilty.More on Sarah HartsfieldAfter 5-time bride is charged in husband’s murder, other deaths get a fresh look Sarah Hartsfield’s marriages and romances often ended under grim circumstancesMurder suspect’s son has been waiting for his mom’s arrest his whole lifeHartsfield fatally shot her fiancé in 2018Sarah Hartsfield, 50, has admitted to fatally shooting another romantic partner — a former fiancé — in self-defense in Minnesota in 2018. She was cleared of wrongdoing, but a local prosecutor said he was re-examining the case after she was indicted on the murder charge in Joseph Hartsfield’s death.The status of that inquiry is unclear. The prosecutor, Chad Larson, did not respond to a request for comment.At the time of her indictment in Joseph Hartsfield’s death, the sheriff overseeing the case described Sarah Hartsfield’s past relationships ominously: “Everybody wants out of it because they fear for their life,” he told NBC affiliate KPRC of Houston.The trial in Texas’ Chambers County is expected to take two to three weeks.FULL EPISODE: Along Came Sarah08:31Sarah Hartsfield’s lawyers did not respond to requests for comment. A previous lawyer, Keaton Kirkwood, said she maintains her innocence and planned to assist the investigation into her husband’s “untimely death.”“We adamantly denounce the misinformation that has been provided to the public regarding her past,” the lawyer told KPRC in 2023.Kirkwood withdrew from the case that year over what he described as an irreconcilable conflict of interest with Hartsfield.“She is not wanting to follow the advice of her legal counsel and has taken actions that have precipitated said conflict,” he wrote in a filing.An insulin overdoseJoseph and Sarah Hartsfield had been married for 11 months when he was hospitalized on Jan. 7, 2023, with what a nurse described as a life-threatening illness, according to an affidavit in support of a search warrant.He was diabetic and was admitted to a hospital east of Houston with low blood sugar, but he didn’t respond to glucose and his blood sugar kept crashing, the affidavit states.The nurse suspected insulin — the lifesaving drug that can double as a difficult-to-detect murder weapon — may have been to blame for his condition, according to the affidavit.At the hospital, Joseph Hartsfield’s family told authorities that he’d recently returned to his hometown, opened a new bank account and planned to divorce his wife.“He was concerned for his safety, thinking Sarah might try to kill him,” the affidavit states.Facebook messages that Sarah Hartsfield sent a friend weeks before his hospitalization show her disparaging her husband.“I’ve paid for everything to the point I have nothing left,” she wrote in the messages, which the friend shared with NBC News. “He was just looking for a meal ticket and way back to a lifestyle he could never attain on his own.”Joseph Hartsfield was pronounced dead on Jan. 15, according to the Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences. The nurse’s suspicion was later confirmed by the institute, which concluded that he died from complications of toxic effects of insulin.His manner of death was listed as undetermined.Hartsfield testified at a March 2023 bond hearing that her husband died from a stroke that resulted from a “100 percent clogged artery,” a transcript shows. She attributed that cause of death to the lead neurologist who treated her husband.After Joseph Hartsfield’s death, she wrote on Facebook that she was “numb and lost” without him and listening to old phone messages to hear his voice.“I guess I’m going to try to sleep, I can’t possibly cry and weep anymore than I have this evening,” she wrote on Jan. 27. “I love you Joseph Hartsfield.”She was arrested a week later.Fiancé fatally shotHartsfield testified at the bond hearing that she shot her former partner David Bragg in 2018 after he became upset about her third husband coming to town to see their children.The couple, who were briefly engaged, had moved to Minnesota a few months before after meeting at Fort Hood, according to Hartsfield’s son.David Bragg.KPRCDuring the hearing, Hartsfield testified that she “took the beating of my life for letting my child see her father.”She said she dove to the floor and “blindly fired” after Bragg threatened to shoot her.“I didn’t aim,” she testified. “It was such an automatic response.”The Douglas County attorney who later reopened the investigation into Bragg’s death concluded in 2019 that Sarah Hartsfield had “no reasonable possibility of retreating.” Bragg’s family described the circumstances surrounding his death as “farfetched, and almost made up.”An alleged murder plotTwo years later, the third husband, Christopher Donohue, sought a protection order against Sarah Hartsfield. In an affidavit in support of the order, Donohue alleged that Sarah Hartsfield’s fourth husband told him that she’d been pushing him for months to kill Donohue’s new wife.She’d given her fourth husband, David George, a pistol to carry out the act and wouldn’t let him come home until he’d done so, according to the affidavit.In an interview with “Dateline,” George said he had no intention of following through with the alleged plot. During the bond hearing in her fifth husband’s death, Hartsfield said George made a “full retraction” of the claim that she’d pressured him to carry out the shooting, which she said he made for “retaliation purposes.” She has not been charged with a crime in the alleged plot.Donohue has declined previous interview requests. The two ex-husbands have been subpoenaed to testify at Hartsfield’s trial.Tim StellohTim Stelloh is a breaking news reporter for NBC News Digital.
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