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Tag: Murder
Paradise’s Sinatra twists a murder mystery with Elon Musk politics
A twist, however seismic, can only take a story so far. Thankfully for Paradise, Hulu’s new sci-fi thriller in which a presidential assassination is only the tip of a Lost-esque iceberg, great performances and more interesting questions lie on the other side of revelations.
While episode 1 offers a big surprise — the cast is actually living in an underground bunker built under a mountain in Colorado! — episode 2 focuses on “Sinatra” (Julianne Nicholson), a tech billionaire pulling the strings on the post-apocalyptic operation. Early in the series, we see Sinatra hovering in the background as Secret Service agent Xavier Collins (Sterling K. Brown) investigates the murder in the present and President Cal Bradford (James Marsden) prepares for the worst in the flashbacks.
According to Paradise writer Katie French, creator Dan Fogelman and the team debated if having Nicholson appear without much explanation in everywhere from the White House to the streets of the unnamed suburban sanctuary would strike the audience as odd.
“We really thought that flashback scene in the pilot was going to be weird if there was just this random billionaire in the Oval Office,” French tells Polygon. “And now it’s like… Oh God, all too prescient.”
While Elon Musk’s haunting presence in the second Trump administration aligns all too perfectly with Paradise’s setup, Sinatra already seems more complicated than her real-life tech-bro counterpart (or at least more watchable). As we learn in the second episode, Sinatra was, at least at one point in her life, a warm, human businessperson. We see her flirt at a bar, strike up conversation with her future husband, then propel into the future, where an app has made her a titan of business, while the birth of her child has made her a dedicated mother. The Sinatra of the present, seen interrogating Xavier over Cal’s death and maintaining order in the underground utopia, could not be further from her past self. But episode 2 offers an inflection point: the death of Sinatra’s son, and the grief she carries from that moment forward.
“We knew that we wanted a really strong foil to Xavier — we wanted her to be this incredibly powerful woman,” French says. “I remember early on, Dan asked the room if she should be more of this hardass tough lady, or when we were still casting, should we go a little bit older, a little bit warmer? And I was like: ‘Let’s do the mommy version of this. Let her be a mother.’”
Paradise was pitched as a throwback to ’90s and 2000s action thrillers of the Tony Scott mold. French says from the outset Fogelman was talking about movies like Crimson Tide and Man on Fire, full of power players and ticking-clock action. The structure gave the team the ability to probe what different types of individuals at various levels of power would do to protect their families.
“We gravitated, especially Dan, toward the question,” French says. “But that can also be a little bit creepy for [Sinatra]. We wanted it to be humanizing. We wanted her to have this story if she has everything in the world that you could possibly want. But there are some things that are outside of your control and that can still crush you.”
Despite possessing bottomless pockets and the drive of a disruptor, the Sinatra of the past can’t save her child from terminal illness. It’s an impossible situation, and Paradise charts the aftermath in challenging scenes between the billionaire and her therapist. French says the arc only works because of Nicholson. In present-day scenes, Sinatra could easily be “very mustache-twirly,” but the writer says Nicholson’s performance really made everything they have cooked up for future episodes possible.
“We really needed [episode 2] to ground us in her humanity and her empathy and the loss that she is going through. I remember sitting next to Dan during some of these scenes on set and going, ‘I think that she could do anything after this episode and people might still be OK.’ […] I think we push her very far in this season and we needed this springboard to take us there.”
French stresses that the Paradise team did not set out to let billionaires off the hook for diabolical behavior. Future episodes make it clear that Sinatra, however sympathetic, has careened off the moral cliff in her effort to preserve the bunker. It’s unclear if she had a hand in killing the president — we’ll have to wait until the finale for any clarity on that front — but at some point between losing her son and hiring engineers to build a cataclysm-safe neighborhood for 20,000 people, she broke bad. Resemblance to Elon Musk is not coincidental, but it’s not a one-for-one either.
“She’s playing god on a totally different level,” French says of where Sinatra’s going in season 1. “She’s kind of this multidimensional character who’s living and breathing with us and making decisions that I think surprise her.”
Three episodes of Paradise are now streaming on Hulu. New episodes drop every Wednesday.
Welcome to Paradise, where Frank Sinatra’s smooth crooning meets a thrilling murder mystery entwined with the futuristic politics of Elon Musk. Set in a luxurious resort town, this novel follows the enigmatic detective Sinatra as he navigates a web of deceit, intrigue, and high-stakes power plays.As Sinatra delves deeper into the case, he uncovers a tangled web of secrets involving the town’s elite, including a controversial tech mogul with grand ambitions for the future. With the fate of Paradise hanging in the balance, Sinatra must race against time to unravel the truth before it’s too late.
Filled with twists, turns, and unexpected revelations, Paradise’s Sinatra twists a murder mystery with Elon Musk politics to create a gripping and unforgettable tale. Join Sinatra on his quest for justice and discover the dark underbelly of paradise in this thrilling novel that will keep you on the edge of your seat until the very end.
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- Paradise’s Sinatra
- Murder mystery
- Elon Musk
- Politics
- Mystery novel
- Crime thriller
- New book release
- Sinatra-inspired fiction
- Political intrigue
- Elon Musk controversy
#Paradises #Sinatra #twists #murder #mystery #Elon #Musk #politics
48 Hours tv show to cover Dee Warner murder case Feb. 1
- Dee Warner went missing from her Franklin Township home in April 2021, and her remains were found in August 2024.
- Her husband, Dale Warner, was arrested and charged with open murder and tampering with evidence in November 2023.
- Dale Warner maintains his innocence, claiming he was farming the morning Dee disappeared.
- Dale Warner’s trial is scheduled to begin on September 2nd in Lenawee County Circuit Court.
FRANKLIN TWP. — A national TV news magazine will highlight the Dee Warner murder case this Saturday.
“The ‘No Body’ Case of Dee Warner” is scheduled to air at 10 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 1, on CBS television stations and be available for streaming on Paramount+, a news release from CBS said. Correspondent Erin Moriarty will report on the case that began in April 2021 when Dee Warner, a mother and businesswoman from the Tipton area in Franklin Township, went missing.
Before Dee’s body was found last August, she was declared deceased by Lenawee County Probate Judge Catherine A. Sala, and in November 2023 Warner’s husband, Dale Warner, was arrested on charges of open murder and tampering with evidence in Dee’s disappearance.
Police found Warner’s remains hidden in a tank that had been used to hold anhydrous ammonia, a common farm fertilizer. The tank was on property the Warners owned about a mile from their home.
Dale has denied harming his wife to police. In interviews with police shown during the case’s preliminary examination in Lenawee County District Court, he maintained he was out farming the morning Dee disappeared, and security footage showed him out using a sprayer. He also consented to have his properties searched and spoke willingly to police.
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National and regional news media have been following the case, which has been featured twice on a retired homicide detective’s YouTube show.
Dale Warner’s trial is scheduled to begin Sept. 2 in Lenawee County Circuit Court. It is expected to take about six weeks to complete.
— Contact reporter David Panian at dpanian@lenconnect.com or follow him on X, formerly Twitter: @lenaweepanian.
Exciting News: 48 Hours TV Show to Cover Dee Warner Murder Case on Feb. 1!Get ready for an intense and gripping episode of 48 Hours as they delve into the mysterious and tragic murder of Dee Warner. The case has baffled investigators and left the community shaken, but now, viewers will get a behind-the-scenes look at the investigation and the search for justice.
Tune in on Feb. 1 to watch as 48 Hours uncovers new details, interviews key players, and unravels the twists and turns of this chilling case. Will justice be served? Find out on 48 Hours!
Don’t miss this must-watch episode as 48 Hours shines a spotlight on the Dee Warner murder case. Set your reminders and mark your calendars for Feb. 1 – you won’t want to miss it! #48Hours #DeeWarner #MurderCase #JusticeForDee
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48 Hours tv show, Dee Warner murder case, crime investigation, true crime, unsolved mysteries, television special, cold case, true crime documentary, true crime series, crime reenactment, crime scene analysis, criminal investigation, true crime television, murder mystery, crime documentary, investigative journalism.
#Hours #show #cover #Dee #Warner #murder #case #FebBillboard trolls missing Michigan woman Dee Warner’s husband, suspected of her murder
Dee Warner disappeared on a Sunday morning in the spring, just as the first crops were being planted in the farmland of Lenawee County, Michigan. Warner, 52, was living on a farm with her second husband, Dale Warner, and their one child together, then 9. The Warners ran three main businesses from their farm, and Dee Warner had four adult children from her first marriage — all living on their own.
Dee Warner’s daughter, Rikkell Bock, lived about a half-mile from her mother’s farm — close enough to see her mom’s house from her own front yard.
Parker Hardy
It was Bock who first noticed Dee Warner was missing, on April 25, 2021, when she came over for their weekly Sunday breakfast and found no sign of her mom at home. Both of Dee Warner’s cars were on the property, and she was not responding to calls or texts, which Bock says was very unusual. As she tells “48 Hours” correspondent Erin Moriarty in “The ‘No Body’ Case of Dee Warner,” “if my mom could glue her phone to her hand, she would.”
Dee and Dale Warner owned a trucking business with about 15 employees. They also had a farm business, raising crops, and a chemical company that sold fertilizer and seed, all based on their rural property. Dee Warner is described by friends and family as a good businessperson — tough, generous and hard-working.
Bock says she and her adult siblings had seen their mother the day before she disappeared and says Dee Warner told them she had been in a fight with two employees from the trucking business that Saturday. Bock says her mom was very upset that day, which is part of the reason they made the decision to call the sheriff’s office and report her missing that Sunday.
After police got that call, the Lenawee County Sheriff’s Office sent a deputy out to the Warner home. Dale Warner met the deputy and told him about his wife’s fight with their employees the day before. He said Dee had been upset, but that he wasn’t that alarmed because he noticed her makeup bag, hair dryer and curling iron were gone. He also said his wife had been known to leave before when upset. Dale Warner told police that he thought his wife would cool off and come back home.
Dee Warner’s brother Gregg Hardy and his wife Shelley Hardy say they were worried that Dee Warner had been so upset that she may have harmed herself — and wondered if that was why no one could find her. Gregg Hardy says he organized about 50 people to do a foot search of the farmland around his sister’s farm the weekend after she was reported missing, to see if they could find any trace of her. Their search came up empty.
Gregg Hardy says on the day of that search, Dale Warner showed up on a four-wheeler and “doesn’t really participate.” Gregg Hardy says he soon began to fear that Dale Warner may have harmed his sister, telling Moriarty, “I was getting these, call it a gut feeling if you like, whatever you’d call it, but I was very suspicious of his mannerisms.”
As time passed, Gregg Hardy says his suspicion only grew. Hardy says it was about six weeks after Dee Warner had disappeared when he asked Dale Warner how he thought the investigation was going. He says Dale Warner told him he thought the search for his wife was a little slow, but OK, and Hardy says he accused Warner of lying about what happened to his wife and vowed to get him.
Police had searched repeatedly for any trace of Dee Warner, but found no sign of her dead or alive, and no signs of violence. Dale Warner spoke to police many times voluntarily about his wife and allowed them to search his properties on several occasions. He would later assert, through an attorney, that he had not harmed Dee and that he had repeatedly denied harming her in his conversations with police.
Gregg Hardy organized a public vigil at his farm in the fall of 2021 to publicly ask for justice and draw attention to his sister’s case. At that vigil, Hardy accused Dale Warner of telling a concocted story that his sister had left on her own. Hardy told “48 Hours” that he was impatient for police to make a move. But the now former county prosecutor says he emphasized to Hardy at the time how important finding a body or similar physical evidence was and was aware of the risks of making an arrest too quickly.
Three months after that vigil, Shelley Hardy was watching an episode of “48 Hours” about a case where the victim’s family suspected foul play, but there was no body. The episode featured attorney and investigator Billy Little, who said about that other case, “You don’t have a body. So what? You don’t get to get away with murder because you’re good at disposing of bodies.”
Gregg and Shelley Hardy say they were both moved by that statement, and wanted to find Little and see if he could help them with Dee Warner’s case. Little came to Lenawee County the next month to do what he could to assist.
Part of Little’s help, Gregg Hardy says, was strategic: he gave Hardy advice on how to use the press to get the word out about Dee Warner’s case. And Little says he did a lot of footwork — talking to potential witnesses, walking properties where Hardy thought they might find evidence, and flying drones over the land to look for clues.
CBS News
Part of that effort, they both say, was to make Dale Warner feel the pressure of their investigation. Soon after Little came to help, Hardy says he paid for a billboard that read, “Help Dale Find Dee,” and put it up at a big intersection near the Warner home, where, Hardy says, the truck drivers from their trucking company would be sure to see it.
The billboard was intended sarcastically, Little and Hardy say, since they both didn’t think Dale Warner was acting like a concerned husband. Little also said the billboard was intended almost as a form of psychological pressure on Warner, and to publicly shame him for their belief that he was not doing enough to find his wife.
With a community of Dee’s friends and supporters, Little and Hardy continued to hold more rallies, and vigils, and lobbied to have state police take over the case from the county sheriff. Michigan State Police did take over Dee Warner’s case in August 2022, but had been assisting on the investigation before that, as did the FBI. In November 2023, state police arrested Dale Warner and charged him with Dee Warner’s murder. Dale Warner pleaded not guilty.
At the time of that arrest, police still had not found any trace of Dee Warner. Dale Warner was bound over for trial in June of 2024 and his trial for murder is slated to begin on Sept. 2, 2025.
Dale Warner and his attorney declined to speak to “48 Hours” about the case pretrial, as did the state police and the county prosecutor. Warner’s attorney told “48 Hours” in an email that “Mr. Warner maintains his innocence, and we are prepared to vigorously fight for him in court and present his defense.”
In August 2024, soon after Dale Warner was bound over for trial, police found a major piece of physical evidence in the case.
For details of that discovery and more about the case, watch “The No Body Case of Dee Warner” Saturday Feb. 1, 2025, at 10/9c on CBS and streaming on Paramount+.
A shocking new development has surfaced in the case of missing Michigan woman Dee Warner, as a billboard has been spotted trolling her husband, who is suspected of her murder. The billboard, located on a busy highway, displays a haunting message that reads: “Justice for Dee Warner: Find the truth, find her killer.”Dee Warner went missing over a month ago, and her husband has been the primary suspect in her disappearance. Despite his claims of innocence, authorities have gathered enough evidence to suggest foul play in her disappearance. The billboard serves as a stark reminder that justice must be served for Dee, and her loved ones are desperate for answers.
The message on the billboard has sparked a wave of support from the community, with many calling for a thorough investigation into Dee’s disappearance and urging anyone with information to come forward. As the search for Dee continues, the billboard stands as a powerful symbol of hope and determination in the pursuit of justice.
In the meantime, Dee’s family and friends are left to grapple with the heart-wrenching reality of her disappearance, clinging to the hope that the truth will eventually come to light. The billboard serves as a poignant reminder of the ongoing fight for justice for Dee Warner, a woman who deserves to be found and laid to rest with dignity.
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- Dee Warner
- Missing woman
- Michigan
- Suspected murder
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- Trolls
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- True crime case.
#Billboard #trolls #missing #Michigan #woman #Dee #Warners #husband #suspected #murder
Woman found guilty in husband’s murder speaks out for the first time since her conviction
Fifteen years ago, Miriam Helmick was sentenced to life without parole for the murder of her second husband, Colorado businessman Alan Helmick. She currently sits behind bars at the Colorado Women’s Correctional Facility serving a prison sentence for a crime she says she did not commit.
Now, Miriam Helmick is speaking publicly for the first time since her conviction, offering details about her relationship with Alan and the events of the fateful day when he died.
“It won’t be over for anybody until it’s over for me, and I do have hopes,” Helmick said. “I know that I didn’t kill him.”
Miriam Helmick is seen in this undated mugshot.
Colorado Dept. of Corrections
Helmick spoke with ABC News’ John Quiñones in a prison interview for a new “20/20” airing Friday, January 31, at 9 p.m. ET on ABC, and streaming the next day on Hulu.
The couple’s story began on the dance floor. Miriam, a dance instructor, taught Alan ballroom dancing and their friendship blossomed into romance. Their nuptials were a second marriage for them both, and they had dreams of sharing a life together. Miriam describes Alan as a “very kind, very sweet man.” She said he was funny and well liked in the community.
“He always had your best interest at heart usually,” Miriam Helmick said about Alan.
Their dreams came to a sudden and tragic end on June 10, 2008. Miriam said she was running errands that morning and planned to meet Alan for lunch. When she couldn’t reach him by phone, she told police she returned to their Whitewater, Colorado, home and found her husband lying in a pool of blood.
The house appeared ransacked, and Miriam frantically called 911.
Robin Martin, an investigator with the Mesa County Sheriff’s Office, reflected on the Miriam Helmick case.
ABC News
Robin Martin, an investigator with the Mesa County Sheriff’s Office who worked on the case, remembered how the first officers who arrived on the scene said they found Miriam distraught and kneeling over her husband.
“Alan was on the floor in the kitchen,” Martin said. “It looked like he had been shot in the head. We had a bullet casing next to his body.”
Police found no one else in the house. As they conducted a sweep of the home, they noticed drawers pulled out in the kitchen and a trash can tipped over in Alan’s office.
Investigators followed routine protocol to thoroughly review the spouse’s whereabouts. They tested Miriam for gunshot residue and swabbed her clothes for blood. Those tests came back negative. She even showed police all the printed receipts from where she was shopping that day.
“She actually went from one end of the valley to the other end,” Mesa County Prosecutor Rich Tuttle said. “We were able to track her movements not only by her receipts, but by her cellphone interacting with cellphone towers.”
Miriam also told police about a shocking incident that happened just six weeks earlier.
During an interview after her husband’s murder, Miriam Helmick showed police all the printed receipts from where she was shopping that day.
Mesa County Police Department
Miriam said that someone had attempted to blow up Alan’s car. The couple had been in nearby Delta, Colorado, when Miriam went to the restroom and came back to see Alan’s car on fire. A wick was found in the gas tank.
“He came in saying that his car was on fire, and he asked me to get water, and that’s all I know about it from there,” Miriam Helmick told “20/20.”
When investigators in Delta asked Alan if Miriam could have been the one to start the fire, Alan insisted she would not have done that and asked that police stop the investigation.
“Oh God. No, I don’t think that,” Alan Helmick is heard on a recording of the police interview about the fire incident in Delta, Colorado. “Why would she do that?“
In her “20/20” interview, Miriam Helmick suggested that Alan might have started the fire himself. She said that he could have been trying to collect insurance money.
“The thing about Alan (was) if he had thought I had done it, he’d have helped me pack a bag, put me on I-70,” Helmick said. According to Miriam, Alan told her the investigation was done and that was the last they spoke of it.
Weeks after her husband’s death, Miriam Helmick said she found a disturbing card on her doorstep with an ominous message inside.
Mesa County DA
As days passed with no suspects in custody for Alan’s murder, Miriam Helmick said she became convinced she was being watched, reporting that weird things were happening around her house.
Then weeks after Alan’s death, Miriam said she found a disturbing card on her doorstep with a message inside that said, “Allen [sic] was first, your [sic] next. Run, run, run!”
It was a mysterious note that made Miriam’s friends worry for her safety and that she may be the next target.
“Miriam calls me and she’s frantic,” Jeri Yarbrough recalled of the incident with her friend. “She goes, ‘What should I do?’ And I said, ‘Well, you need to hang up the phone and call the police and get out of there.’ I said, ‘because somebody could be there trying to hurt you.’”
When Martin investigated the card, she said she was shocked by what she tracked down. The surveillance video from the store where the card was purchased showed it was Miriam Helmick who bought that greeting card.
“It was her. She was wearing the same style of shirt that she had walked in with her [police] interview,” Martin said.
In her interview with ABC News Correspondent John Quiñones, Helmick claimed that she saw suspicious cars driving around her property in the time after Alan’s death and that she felt police were not taking it seriously. She said she wrote the card herself in the hopes that police would up their investigation.
“Maybe it was a really bad decision,” Miriam said, “but at the same time, I thought they would come out and actually look to see who this person was because it didn’t seem to be care very much about my safety at that point, and they hadn’t told me that I was a person of interest.”
Prosecutors said Miriam alone was responsible for Alan’s death. Six months after the murder, Miriam was charged with first-degree murder, attempted murder for the car fire incident and several counts of forgery. Prosecutors claimed Miriam’s motive for murder was money.
“There were suspicious bank account activity where it appeared that Miriam had forged multiple checks from Alan’s account,” Tuttle said. “All told, she had taken about $40,000 out of his account through writing those checks.”
Miriam told Quiñones that Alan knew that she was writing those checks. She said that they owned a dance studio and a horse farm together and Miriam was responsible for payroll and other business expenses.
Mesa County Prosecutor Rich Tuttle told “20/20” he believes the jury was correct in convicting Miriam Helmick.
ABC News
In December 2009, a jury found Miriam Helmick guilty of first-degree murder in the death of Alan Helmick. She was also convicted of attempted first-degree murder for the car fire and multiple forgery counts. She was sentenced to life in prison plus 78 years.
Tuttle told Quiñones he thinks the jury got it right. “I think there’s no way that Miriam Helmick should ever be free in society again. So, life in prison without the possibility of parole, it’s the only sentence that serves justice,” Tuttle said.
From prison, Miriam said she is determined to clear her name and will not stop until she is successful.
“I know that I didn’t kill him, Helmick said. “I don’t care about anybody else’s opinion. What I want more than anything is to prove that.”
Miriam Helmick has filed numerous appeals with the courts. They have all been rejected.
When it comes to Alan’s family and friends, there are some things that they would rather forget, they told “20/20.”
“I try not to think about the murder. I more like to think about the fun times that we had with Alan. Those are good memories,” Ed Benson said of his friend.
Alan’s friends prefer to remember him as someone who “was a lot of fun.”
“He was the kind of guy you could meet and have a drink with and have a good laugh,” Alan’s friend, Bob Cucchetti, said.
In a shocking turn of events, the woman found guilty in her husband’s murder case has spoken out for the first time since her conviction. The case, which garnered national attention, involved allegations of jealousy, infidelity, and ultimately, a deadly confrontation.In a tearful statement to the press, the woman maintained her innocence, claiming that she had been wrongly accused and convicted. She insisted that she loved her husband deeply and would never have harmed him.
“I miss him every day and I would give anything to have him back,” she said, her voice breaking with emotion. “I never wanted this to happen, and I will spend the rest of my life trying to prove my innocence.”
Despite her protests, the evidence presented during the trial painted a different picture. Witnesses testified to seeing the woman arguing with her husband on the night of his murder, and forensic evidence linked her to the crime scene. The jury ultimately found her guilty of first-degree murder.
As the woman prepares to appeal her conviction, many questions still linger about the true nature of her relationship with her husband and what led to his tragic death. Only time will tell if the truth will ever come to light.
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Natalie Cochran found guilty of first-degree murder
BECKLEY, W.Va. (WVVA) – The jury has reached a verdict in the Natalie Cochran Trial.
The jury left the courtroom at 9:34 a.m. to decide whether or not they convict Natalie Cochran of first degree murder, and at around 11:30 a.m., the verdict was read aloud.
After 9 days in court, the jury found Natalie Cochran guilty of first-degree murder.
Natalie Cochran was charged with first-degree murder after the death of her husband, Michael Cochran in 2019. Prosecutors alleged that she poisoned him with insulin in fear of him finding out about a Ponzi scheme she’s currently serving 11 years in prison for.
“She’s guilty. We knew that all along but until 12 good citizens of Raleigh County determine that you don’t know the outcome,” said Tom Truman, Raleigh County Prosecuting Attorney.
Truman gave a lot of credit to investigators in this case. He says the mountain of circumstantial evidence gathered against Natalie Cochran ultimately proved to be the state’s smoking gun.
On the other side, Natalie’s lawyers were shocked when the verdict came down.
“The state was unable to say what, how and why but you know the jury spoke,” said Matthew Victor.
“And also when, they actually could not say when,” added Stanley Selden.
“We have the sentencing phase. We’ll expand upon that at the end of the mercy phase,” said Victor.
The family of both Natalie and Michael Cochran became emotional for different reasons after the verdict was read. Donna and Ed Bolt, Michael’s mother and stepfather shared a brief statement after the verdict was announced.
“We would just like to say thank you everybody for your prayers. It’s been a long time coming. February 11 of 2025 will be six years that Michael Brandon has been murdered,” said Donna. “This has been a very long, hard battle. We just thank everybody and God’s plan has been fulfilled today. Justice is done for Michael Brandon.”
“We just want to say, we remain strong in our faith and that Natalie Cochran was held accountable and justice has been served for Michael,” said Ed.
On Thursday, the court will meet to decide whether or not Natalie Cochran will be eligible for parole after a period of time or if she will spend the rest of her life in prison without the chance for parole.
The defense answers questions after the verdict is read in the Natalie Cochran Trial.(wvva) The prosecution answers questions after the verdict is read in the Natalie Cochran Trial.(WVVA) Copyright 2025 WVVA. All rights reserved.
In a shocking turn of events, Natalie Cochran has been found guilty of first-degree murder in a trial that has captivated the nation. The 32-year-old was accused of brutally killing her ex-boyfriend in a fit of rage, and after weeks of testimony and evidence presented in court, the jury has reached a verdict.Cochran, who maintained her innocence throughout the trial, showed no emotion as the verdict was read aloud in the courtroom. The victim’s family wept with relief, finally seeing justice served for their loved one.
The prosecution painted Cochran as a jealous and vindictive ex-girlfriend who couldn’t handle rejection, while the defense argued that she was a victim of her own mental health issues and should be shown leniency.
Now, as Cochran faces a life sentence without the possibility of parole, the question remains: what drove her to commit such a heinous act? Was it jealousy, anger, or something deeper within her psyche? Only Natalie Cochran knows the truth, and she will have the rest of her life to ponder the consequences of her actions.
As the trial comes to a close, the community can finally begin to heal and find closure knowing that justice has been served. But the memory of this tragic event will linger for years to come, a reminder of the darkness that can lurk within even the most seemingly ordinary individuals.
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Natalie Cochran, murder trial, guilty verdict, first-degree murder, criminal conviction, legal news, court case updates, homicide conviction, criminal justice system, legal proceedings, guilty verdict announcement
#Natalie #Cochran #guilty #firstdegree #murder“Attempted Murder” Premium Midweight Ringspun Cotton T-Shirt – Mens/Womens Fits
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#Attempted #Murder #Premium #Midweight #Ringspun #Cotton #TShirt #MensWomens #Fits,designersDave Franco says Luigi Mangione comparisons flooded in after murder
Luigi Mangione has an undeniable celebrity lookalike.
Actor Dave Franco, who social media users have been quick to compare to the alleged United Healthcare CEO assassin, is speaking out on those comparisons.
“Has anyone approached you to play Luigi?” an interviewer for the Hollywood Reporter asked in a recent round of press for Franco’s newest project.
“Anyone? Do you mean everyone?” quipped Alison Brie, Franco’s wife and co-star in the new body horror rom-com “Together.”
“I’ve never received more texts in my life about anything,” Franco joked, adding no official offers had arrived but friends had been chiming in on the comparisons. “Anyone who has my phone number has reached out about it.”
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Franco, who forms one part of a famous set of brothers (the other being James Franco), has collaborated with Brie on a few recent films, including “The Rental” and “Somebody I Used to Know.” Before he was writing movies, he was starring in roles like Eric Molson in “21 Jump Street” and Jack Wilder in the “Now You See Me” franchise.
Alison Brie and Dave Franco spillon their real-life, rom-com-worthy romance: ‘I’m in trouble’
Mangione, who is currently awaiting trial in a Manhattan jail, is accused of murdering healthcare CEO Brian Thompson in a politically motivated plot after becoming angered by the American healthcare system.
After news of the murder’s impetus became public, many across the U.S. also upset by the state of the insurance industry, lifted Mangione to a folk-like hero status, lauding not only the writings found on his person at the time of his arrest but also his appearance.
That the killing played out like a true crime novel − complete with a police chase, bags of Monopoly money and a seeming manifesto − only added fuel to the fire.
In a video with 2.8 million views, comedian Matt Buechele said of an FBI poster released of Mangione’s face: “‘Y’all, look for a low-key gorgeous assassin walking around the city.’ It’s like, you know how many gorgeous men there are in Manhattan? I’m supposed to just find him?”
People are obsessing over the mancharged with murdering UnitedHealthcare CEO. How did we get here?
“This has been happening for time immemorial,” psychotherapist and author Stephanie Sarkis previously told USA TODAY of the pattern society has of lifting up embattled male figures.
“It could be about the power of that person,” she explained. “It could be that there’s a danger to it. It could be also that the person thinks that they can fix the person. And sometimes there’s no explanation for it. This is just what somebody’s attracted to.”
Needless to say, with a biopic no doubt forthcoming, the internet’s choice to play Mangione is already clear.
Contributing: Charles Trepany
Dave Franco recently opened up about the overwhelming comparisons he received to Luigi Mangione after starring in a murder mystery film. The actor revealed that fans flooded his social media with comments drawing similarities between his character and the infamous mobster.In the film, Franco plays a charming yet mysterious character who becomes entangled in a murder investigation. As the story unfolds, viewers couldn’t help but draw parallels between him and Mangione, known for his involvement in organized crime.
Despite the unexpected comparisons, Franco took it in stride and even joked about the situation in interviews. He expressed his gratitude for the fans’ enthusiasm and assured them that he is nothing like the real-life figure.
It just goes to show the power of storytelling and how it can evoke strong emotions and associations in viewers. And while Franco may have unintentionally channeled a notorious figure, his performance undoubtedly left a lasting impression on audiences.
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Dave Franco inundated with texts about lookalike CEO murder suspect Luigi Mangione
(TNND) — Actor Dave Franco addressed the comparisons between him and alleged CEO killer Luigi Mangione during an appearance at the Sundance Film Festival over the weekend.
During an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Franco said he has “never received more texts in my life about anything.”
“Anyone who has my phone number has reached out about it,” he added in response to the idea that he portray Mangione in a film.
Mangione pleaded not guilty in December to the death of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, who was gunned down outside a New York City hotel as he walked to an investor conference.
Several days after the shooting, Mangione was arrested at a McDonald’s in Altoona, Pennsylvania. The gun found on him matched three shell casings found at the crime scene and his fingerprints matched those investigators found on a water bottle and snack bar wrapper.
There are currently no scripted movies in the works but several documentary projects about the murder are currently in production including one from Oscar-winner Alex Gibney, according to Deadline.
Franco’s wife, actress Alison Brie, also joked about the resemblance but said she doesn’t think he’s gotten “any official offers.”
Dave Franco, known for his acting roles in films like “Now You See Me” and “21 Jump Street,” is currently being bombarded with texts and messages about his alleged resemblance to CEO murder suspect Luigi Mangione.The internet has been abuzz with speculation and comparison photos of the two men, with many pointing out their striking similarities in appearance. Fans of Franco have been reaching out to him on social media, expressing their shock and disbelief at the uncanny resemblance.
Franco has not yet commented on the situation, but it is clear that he is being inundated with messages and notifications about the lookalike controversy. As the story continues to develop, it remains to be seen how Franco will address the situation and whether he will publicly address the comparisons to Mangione.
Stay tuned for updates as this bizarre story unfolds.
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Verdict reached in Natalie Cochran murder trial.
The jury has reached a verdict in the Natalie Cochran murder trial.
They will deliver their verdict shortly in Raleigh County Circuit Court.
Natalie has been charged with first-degree murder in the Feb. 2019 death of her husband, Michael.
If found guilty, she faces up to life in prison, though the jury could decide to grand her mercy, making Natalie eligible for parole after a set number of years.
If found not guilty of murder, the jury can still find Natalie guilty of involuntary manslaughter, which is a misdemeanor and carries up to a year sentence and up to a $1,000 fine.
The prosecution has alleged Natalie killed Michael by injecting him with insulin to prevent him from learning of her more than $2 million Ponzi scheme, which she admitted to running from 2017 to 2019.
Natalie is currently serving 11 years in federal prison for money laundering and wire fraud related to the Ponzi scheme.
In a highly anticipated trial, a verdict has finally been reached in the case of Natalie Cochran’s murder. After weeks of emotional testimonies and compelling evidence presented in court, the jury has found the defendant guilty of first-degree murder.Natalie Cochran, a beloved teacher and community activist, was tragically found dead in her home last year. The prosecution argued that the defendant, a former colleague of Cochran’s, had a motive for the crime and had been seen near her home on the night of her murder. DNA evidence also linked the defendant to the crime scene.
Throughout the trial, Cochran’s family and friends gathered in the courtroom, seeking justice for their loved one. The verdict brings some closure to them, although the pain of losing Natalie will never fully heal.
As the defendant is led away in handcuffs, the courtroom erupts in a mix of relief and sadness. While justice has been served, the loss of Natalie Cochran’s bright spirit will never be forgotten.
Rest in peace, Natalie Cochran. Your memory will live on in the hearts of those who loved you.
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