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EXCLUSIVE Inside California's castle of horrors: Millionaire owners' twisted baby factory finally exposed as shocked neighbors break silence

EXCLUSIVE Inside California's castle of horrors: Millionaire owners' twisted baby factory finally exposed as shocked neighbors break silence

Daily Mail​2 days ago
From the outside, the imposing castle-like design and gated exterior made the $4.1 million mansion appear like a fortress.
Residents admired it as they walked their dogs through the ritzy Californi a neighborhood of Arcadia - and assumed the family living just enjoyed their privacy.
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US airline pilot makes ‘aggressive maneuver' to avoid colliding with air force bomber
US airline pilot makes ‘aggressive maneuver' to avoid colliding with air force bomber

The Guardian

time11 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

US airline pilot makes ‘aggressive maneuver' to avoid colliding with air force bomber

The pilot of a commercial airliner has said he needed to make an 'aggressive maneuver' to avoid colliding with a US air force B-52 bomber as it landed in Minot, North Dakota, on Friday. The SkyWest airlines pilot said he had been cleared to land on a trip from Minneapolis-Saint Paul (MSP) to Minot when he spotted the vast nuclear-capable bomber on his right side and was told to go around. 'Nobody told us about it,' the pilot told passengers over the plane's loudspeaker later, according to a video posted on social media. 'I thought it was a small airplane, like the ones you see at the airport right now doing touch and go's. And he said 'turn right,' and I said, 'There's an airplane over there,' and he says 'turn left,' and by the time we read back the clearance, we looked over and saw the airplane that was kind of coming on a convergent course with us.' The pilot told the passengers that the safest thing to do was turn behind the other airplane, given its speed, according to the Minot Daily News. 'So, sorry for the aggressive maneuver,' the pilot said. 'It caught me by surprise, and it's not normal at all. I don't know why they didn't give us a heads up, because the air base does have radar, and nobody said, 'Hey there's also a B-52 in the pattern.'' The pilot described the experience as 'not a fun day at work'. A B-52H with the Fifth Bomb Wing based at Minot air force base had been conducting a flyover of the North Dakota state fair held around the same time, according to military officials. The SkyWest flight, on an Embraer E175 operating as a Delta connection, landed at approximately 8pm. Flight tracking data showed the flight on descent before making a sharp right turn while also showing the B-52 performing ellipses in the area. Monica Green described the atmosphere on board as 'weirdly calm' despite the unexpected evasive maneuvers. 'Honestly, everyone was weirdly calm. I felt like I was gaslighting myself, like maybe I was being crazy, because no one else was reacting,' Green told local news station KFYR. 'We took a really hard turn, and that's when the pilot got on the intercom and said, 'Sorry, everybody, I'll explain everything when we land safely.' The way he said it, it almost sounded like he was insinuating that landing safely might not be an option for a moment. We all just kind of looked at each other and stayed quiet.' Green also said the pilot was 'very casual, if you can be casual about something like that, but you could tell he was stressed'. 'He was almost shaking, trying to find the right words, but he was nice and detailed,' Green said. 'It felt good that they weren't just going to brush it off.' When the plane landed, she added, 'It was really quiet. No one stood up right away like people normally do. At the airport, I heard some people saying their friends saw it from the ground. The other plane nearly hit us, and it went so low it passed under us.' SkyWest said in a statement that the plane was cleared to land, but the pilot 'performed a go-around when another aircraft became visible in their flight path'. The airline said it is investigating the incident. The air force told the Washington Post it was 'aware of the recent reporting regarding commercial and air force aircraft operating in airspace around Minot international airport. We are currently looking into the matter'. The incident comes amid increased anxiety over communications between commercial and military flights after an army helicopter collided with a passenger jet in January near Reagan national airport outside Washington DC, killing all 67 people aboard both aircraft. Another incident involving a SkyWest flight also made national headlines recently. SkyWest flight 3612 was headed to Detroit on Thursday when it made an emergency landing in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, after a passenger fought with a flight attendant and tried to open an exit door midair, according to the Associated Press. Local police boarded and arrested the passenger – of Omaha, Nebraska – after the flight landed, the AP reported.

Delta pilot makes 'aggressive manoeuvre' to avoid midair collision with fighter jet
Delta pilot makes 'aggressive manoeuvre' to avoid midair collision with fighter jet

BBC News

time41 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Delta pilot makes 'aggressive manoeuvre' to avoid midair collision with fighter jet

A Delta airlines pilot was forced to make an "aggressive" evasive manoeuvre to avoid a potential mid-air collision with a US fighter jet before landing in North pilot, who identified the aircraft as a B-52 bomber, is heard in video recordings shared on social media saying it was "kind of, sort of coming at us". "So, sorry about the aggressive manoeuvre," he Air Lines regional jet SkyWest Flight 3788 was en route from Minneapolis, Minnesota, to Minot, North Dakota on Friday, the airline said. The aircraft landed safely "after being cleared for approach" but "performed a go-around when another aircraft became visible in their flight path", the SkyWest statement read. The incident on Friday is under investigation by SkyWest audio recording of the unidentified pilot explaining what happened to passengers of the plane has been shared widely on social media. After the incident, the pilot walked passengers through exactly what audio recording shared online was posted by a woman named Monica Green, who the BBC verified was on the flight. The pilot told the plane that the tower instructed him to turn right but that when he looked over, he saw a B-52 that point he was instructed to turn left but said he looked over and "saw the airplane that was kind of coming on a converging course with us".The pilot told the passengers that the other aircraft was moving faster than the SkyWest plane, so he made the decision to turn behind it. "It caught me by surprise," he said. "This is not normal at all. I don't know why they didn't give us a heads up."He concluded his message with an apology: "Long story short, it was not fun, but I do apologize for it - and thank you for understanding." Passengers responded with applause, the video Federal Aviation Administration will not submit a report as the tower involved in the incident was not an FAA building, the agency told US media.

Psychologist who worked with the Radfords reveals early trauma led to brood of 22… & how it became their secret weapon
Psychologist who worked with the Radfords reveals early trauma led to brood of 22… & how it became their secret weapon

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Psychologist who worked with the Radfords reveals early trauma led to brood of 22… & how it became their secret weapon

WITH 22 kids the biggest question many people want to ask the Radfords is, 'why?' The huge brood is an eye-watering thought for most, but Sue and Noel, who were childhood sweethearts, were determined to have as big a family as possible. 10 10 10 And, in a rare twist, both were adopted as babies, leading many to wonder if that was the reasoning behind their decision to create Britain's biggest brood. The couple have always denied that their own adoptions had anything to do with their wish to have two football teams of children. But psychologist Jo Hemmings, who worked with the family on their show 22 Kids and Counting, says that there could be deep-rooted reasons linked to their adoption journeys that may have had a subconscious influence. She says people who have been adopted often feel a great sense of comfort when they have a child of their own, to finally have a connection with a blood relative. 'That is quite important,' she explains. 'Because they are both adopted I think that sense of having their own children together would have had much more significance, but not necessarily 22 of them. 'There isn't any science to back it up and say that either one or both parents that come from adoptive families are more likely each to have more birth children of their own. 'What there is some evidence of is that adopted children tend to be brought up in better socio-economic circumstances by their adoptive parents, so they are given a really stable upbringing, perhaps better education. "A lot is put into their upbringing partly because their parents have chosen them rather than given birth to them. 'So there is something in that. If they both grew up in good, stable adoptive families, they feel they have got as much to give back as they had in their own childhoods.' Despite this, Noel, 54, dismissed links between their adoptions and their huge brood in the couple's book, The Radfords: Making Life Count. Mum-of-22 Sue Radford says she'll NEVER meet her birth mum & it's caused 'disagreements' with Noel, who's also adopted He wrote in one chapter: "A lot of amateur psychologists may think the reason me and Sue have had lots of kids must be linked to the fact we were both adopted, but I don't think there is any connection. "Unless someone comes along and sticks some electrodes on our heads, and says after doing some tests, 'Oh, this is why you've got so many kids,' we're just not going to believe any of those theories.' And wife Sue, 50, agreed, saying: 'No, there is nothing in that - because I don't even think about my birth parents. I don't give the fact that I was adopted any thought at all, and never have.' While Sue has always said she has no desire to find her birth parents, Noel met his birth mother earlier this year, with their reunion televised in the latest series of their TV show. Sense of connection 10 10 Noel and Sue are childhood sweethearts, having met when she was just seven and he was 11. Sue fell pregnant with first child Christopher when she was 13 years old. The couple married three years later and then the children kept on coming. Jo says the couple share a deep bond and work together as a team. 'When you speak to them, they say no it is nothing to do with the psychology of us being adopted, it absolutely is because we felt we have a lot to give, we adore children - Sue especially adores babies," she says. "I don't think their intention was to have so many children, but it worked out for them. 'When I have talked to them one thing that comes across is how incredibly gentle and calm they are. You don't see that in many parents who have three, four or five kids, never mind 22 of them. 'There is just that feeling that they had so much to give, they love bringing up children. "They don't claim benefits. They have made money over the years with Noel's successful bakery business and because their TV series have become so successful they have become influencers, in a way. 'I just think they are a remarkable family who have this presence about them. I'm sure there is chaos at times, but when you see them with their children, you don't see it. "They are good, solid, stable, parents, which is amazing. 'They are very straight-talking, they are very resilient. So when there have been problems, you feel that they are a very strong couple together. "Also they are talkers. They sit down and say, 'What are we going to do about this?' They are very open and candid with their children and will talk everything over with them. "They always bounce back and they have this lovely soft energy about them which makes them work brilliantly together as parents.' Driving force Jo believes the Radfords' incredible parenting skills stem from their own upbringings in their loving, adoptive families. She says: 'Sue was very young when she had her first child. I think their driving force is that they badly wanted to be parents. "I know they are at pains to deny that it is anything to do with the adoptions, and I don't want to go against what they say, but knowing that you can give a large number of children a very stable, productive and healthy upbringing would probably have come from the upbringings they had. 'Often adoptive parents put the extra mile in, they over-compensate for the sadness that they didn't grow up with their birth families. "I think a lot of it comes from the happiness and security that they had when they were growing up.' For years, both Noel and Sue had been adamant that they didn't want to trace their birth families, saying they regarded their adoptive parents as their mums and dads and had idyllic upbringings. But Jo says their background of both being adopted will have made them kindred spirits. 'I don't know how rare it is for two adopted people to get married, but it would have been one of the early conversations they had when they first met,' she explains. 'It would have been one of those bonding things, those shared values, that make relationships solid. "I think having that in common would have been a really important thing for them as they both knew implicitly how the other one might have felt growing up. "I think they were very similar in their views. I think they had all agreed at the time that they had both had such wonderful childhoods, there was no need or drive to seek where they were from.' Meet the Radford children Christopher, 36 The oldest Radford child, Chris works as a glazier and is married to Nicole Spencer. They have three children: Maise-Paige, eight, Jacob, five, and Oakland, three. Sophie Rose, 31 Sophie has her own cleaning company, Time for Sparkle, and shares three children with husband Joseph Bradley: Daisy, 12, Ayprill, 10, and Leo, nine. Chloe Anne, 29 Chloe's a make-up artist and is mum to daughter Milla, two, and son Bodhi, three months, with her boyfriend, Jake Wallace. Jack Richard, 28 Publicity-shy Jack prefers to stay out of the limelight, and hasn't publicly shared his relationship status or career. Daniel Leon, 26 After training to be in the RAF, Daniel had a near-fatal car crash in Bristol, which played out on his parents' TV show. He overcame his subsequent fear of driving in order to emigrate to Australia. Luke James, 24 Luke came out to his parents as bisexual in 2021 - warming viewers' hearts after Sue and Noel attended a Pride festival with him that summer. He works for the family's pie business. Millie Jo, 23 Millie is married to Harley Passmore and is mum to three children: Ophelia, four (from a previous relationship), and Chester, three, and Elodie, one (whom she shares with Harley). Katie Louise, 22 Katie works at a nursery and shares one nine-month-old son, Ronnie, with her boyfriend Connor Carter. James Edward, 21 James is busy working in the family's pie shop and hopes to run it someday. Ellie May, 20 Ellie's training to be a hairdresser, and has also worked part-time in a hotel housekeeping job. Aimee Elizabeth, 19 Aimee's also qualified to be a hairstylist and has famously practised her skills on family members in video clips. Josh Benjamin, 18 According to his parents, Josh was a 'nightmare' at school and he didn't commit to his studies - but that all changed when he found his passion as a sports coach. Max Joseph, 16 Max was diagnosed with autism in 2021, and has since struggled with socialising. Working in the pie shop has apparently helped him. Tillie May, 15 One of Tillie's legs stopped growing when she was just 18 months old, due to an infection. In 2019, she was fitted with a frame to help strengthen the limb, but - last year - it was revealed she'd need further treatment and potential surgery. Oscar Will, 13 Oscar has been described as having 'incredible initiative' at school. Casper Theo, 12 Casper always dreamt of being a footballer, but was gutted on his family's show when he didn't make it into a Premier League club's youth team. Alfie Thomas Alfie would have been the Radfords' 17th child, but he was tragically stillborn at three months. The Radfords refer to him as their 'missing heartbeat'. Hallie Alphia Beau, 10 Hallie's middle name was given in tribute to her late brother, who died just a year before her birth. Phoebe Willow, eight Phoebe has been awarded prizes at school for her achievements, much to her parents' pride. Archie Rowan, seven As the 20th Radford baby, Archie was expected to be the last - marking 'a nice, even number' in Sue's words. Bonnie Raye, six Again, Bonnie was expected to 'finish' the brood, but plans changed. Heidie Rose, five The youngest Radford child, mum Sue has since insisted: 'No, that's it now!' Tragic discovery Things changed for Noel in 2023 when the couple's teenage daughter Ellie was found to have the hereditary liver disorder Gilbert's Syndrome. The couple were tested and Noel was found to be a carrier. He said at the time: 'It's got me thinking, we're both adopted and we know absolutely nothing about our medical history at all. 'I'd quite like to find out more about my family, where I'm from, just anything about myself. 'It might tell me a bit more about who I am, where I'm from, possibly my birth parents. Now, as I'm getting older, I do think about it a bit more often.' Fighting back tears he added: 'I don't even know why I don't like talking about it. I just don't like it. "I have a lot of respect for my mum and dad.' In the opening episode of the latest series of 22 Kids and Counting, Noel reveals he met his birth mother for the first time - and she was shocked by the news of his huge family. He told The Sun: 'It was emotional meeting her and I was nervous beforehand. "You don't know what she is going to look or sound like, and how she will react. "A lot was going through my head, but she was so lovely and so glad to see me. We were with each other for a couple of hours.' His mum, who chose to stay anonymous in the show, told him she was forced to give him up at 17 after she split from his birth father. He added: 'As I have got older, I have been curious to find her,' Noel explains. 'I'm only ever going to have one chance and I've got no regrets that I have.' 10 10 10

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