logo
Meharry dental college evacuated after CoreCivic officer leaves gun on restroom

Meharry dental college evacuated after CoreCivic officer leaves gun on restroom

Yahoo23-04-2025
The Meharry Medical College of Dentistry was evacuated on the afternoon of April 22 when a CoreCivic correctional officer accidentally left his loaded gun in a campus restroom, officials said.
CoreCivic in a statement on April 23 said the guard was transporting an inmate to the Nashville dental college when he reported leaving his firearm in the restroom.
Campus security staff evacuated the building and conducted a thorough search but did not find the weapon, officials said. A note from the college to the campus community said the officer was from Trousdale Turner Correctional Center.
CoreCivic, the Brentwood-based private prison giant, said the officer was placed on administrative leave while the incident was being investigated.
This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: Meharry evacuated after CoreCivic officer leaves gun on restroom
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New York realtor gets banned from Columbia for 10 years after violent airport tirade
New York realtor gets banned from Columbia for 10 years after violent airport tirade

New York Post

time3 hours ago

  • New York Post

New York realtor gets banned from Columbia for 10 years after violent airport tirade

A New York realtor has been banned from traveling to Columbia for a decade after his violent airport tirade in the South American country was caught on video — but claims he is the victim, not the agitator. Emmanuel Hernandez was waiting in line at an immigration checkpoint when he removed his shirt and launched his physical and verbal attack on agents inside Rafael Núñez International Airport on July 16, Colombia's ministry of external relations alleged. Hernandez, a New York native living in Tampa, Florida, had traveled to the Columbia for his father's 84th birthday when he became disruptive inside the airport. 5 Emmanuel Hernandez speaks out after his viral meltdown at a Colombian airport on July 16, 2025. Impacto News The shirtless traveler directed expletives at officials, tearing apart one of the security booths, knocking off several panels and punching the plexiglass dividers, according to video posted to social media. 'F–k you. You think you can f–k around with the wrong motherf–ker,' Hernandez can be heard shouting. Hernandez claims he became ill after traveling for two days, staying overnight in hotels, traveling to Peru for two hours and then landing at the Cartagena airport. 'I had just returned from a long trip from Orlando. The trip was postponed for two days and from one day to the next I had to stay in the hotel,' he told Colombia-based outlet Impacto News. 'Upon arriving in Cartagena there was a very long line, I felt bad and it was very hot. I took off my shirt,' he explained. 5 A shirtless Hernandez causing damage to an immigration booth at the Rafael Núñez International Airport in Cartagena, Colombia on July 16, 2025. X Hernandez claims airport officials began recording him instead of offering assistance, aggravating him. 'When I took off my shirt, there was an immigration officer or people at the airport who started to record me and I told them to please stop, that 'this was part of my privacy and that they shouldn't record me,'' he told the outlet. Hernandez said he began laughing at one official because he wasn't providing assistance despite the agent working for the Colombian government. 'Instead of helping me and asking me how I was, they started recording me and that was my reaction because it was my privacy and it broke my heart,' he said. 5 Hernandez shouts at an airport law enforcement officer before his arrest. X 5 Hernandez slams an item down during his outburst. X Several law enforcement officers took down Hernandez and detained him. Hernandez allegedly assaulted officers and damaged an immigration control module during his public eruption, Colombia's ministry of external relations stated. He was charged with property damage and eventually expelled from the country for his outburst. Hernandez, who identifies as Colombian having lived in the country between the ages of 9 and 14, says it will hurt not being allowed to return to the country for a decade. 5 Hernandez was charged with property damage and eventually expelled from the country for his outburst. X 'Not being able to return to Colombia to hug your parents or perhaps receive forgiveness for your aggressive behavior. What hurts me the most is not seeing my parents in Colombia for 10 years. That really hurts me,' Hernandez said. The realtor revealed he won't be able to travel back to Colombia for 10 years because of his July 16 arrest. Hernandez maintained his actions inside the airport was a natural human response and shouldn't be penalized for it. 'These things happpen and they were out of my control as a human being,' he said. 'We make mistakes, I am very ashamed. 'I made a mistake and I paid for it with all my soul. Colombia is here,' he added. Hernandez apologized to the authorities and vowed to pay for the damages he caused.

The True Story Behind Trainwreck: P.I. Moms
The True Story Behind Trainwreck: P.I. Moms

Time​ Magazine

time10 hours ago

  • Time​ Magazine

The True Story Behind Trainwreck: P.I. Moms

On August 24, 2010, Pete Crooks, a senior writer at Diablo magazine, received a call from a Los Angeles-based publicist representing Chris Butler's private investigation firm. The pitch he got was intriguing: Butler had hired a group of local mothers to run surveillance on cheating husbands, and business was beginning to boom. The firm was featured in People, The Today Show, and Dr. Phil—and most recently, Lifetime Television had just greenlit a new reality show called P.I. Moms San Francisco about its East Bay operation. Butler had a proposal for Crooks: Take part in a ride-along with one of the mothers, watch them catch a philanderous man in the act, and write about it. It smelled like a great story and Crooks eventually hopped in a car with Denise Antoon, one of four moms Butler had employed. The mission went like clockwork. The man they were following met up with a young woman and began kissing her in a parking lot, all while Denise grabbed photos and video. Crooks understood why Lifetime was eager to turn this into a series. But did everything go down a little too perfectly? Soon after returning home, Crooks got an email from someone named Ronald Rutherford that made him question everything. 'It would be a mistake to write a story on the P.I. moms and Chris Butler,' the email stated. 'Chris totally played you. The case that you sat in on was totally scripted. All the participants or employees are paid actors. I hope that publishing it is not in your plans.' As chronicled in Netflix's new documentary Trainwreck: P.I. Moms, that mysterious message was just the beginning of a scandal that involved lying, cheating, wire-tapping, methamphetamines, and jail time, and would ultimately kill the Lifetime reality series before it ever aired. In this retelling, director Phil Bowman interviews a couple of the moms, Lifetime producers, and several others involved with the show to paint a better picture of how Butler's enterprise wasn't everything it seemed to be. Reality show origins When Butler started his investigation firm around 2000, the former police officer hired a lot of off-duty, law enforcement officers to work on cases, but he found that the men were all too competitive and impatient to be good investigators. 'Then, I hired a mom, and she was the best investigator I had worked with,' he told Crooks. 'She was patient and a good team player, and she could multitask." Eventually, he hired moms Michelle Allen, Charmagne Peters, Denise Antoon, and Ami Wilt to fill out a team. Butler used their skills and inconspicuousness to perform undercover operations, stings, and other kinds of investigative work, which secretly included a 'Dirty DUIs' scheme in which they'd encourage men to drink alcohol, encourage them to drive, and then alert the police. (The doc doesn't interrogate this aspect of the business.) As the moms started getting media attention throughout the reality TV boom, Lifetime saw potential for a show—along with spin-offs in other cities—centered around them. The network soon reached out to Lucas Platt about showrunning the series. The TV veteran liked the general concept of 'showing this group of women busting criminals together,' he says in the doc, but he also wanted to explore their lives outside the job. As Denise and Ami attest, the moms didn't want to be treated like a group on Real Housewives and create fake drama, so Platt agreed to share more personal and meaningful anecdotes about their lives. Lifetime eventually gave Platt three camera crews and a four-million budget to produce eight episodes with Butler's group, which also included Carl Marino, a former law enforcement agent who helped with cases that needed a male presence. But Platt and the moms could tell there was something off about him—that he was eager to be a television star at any cost. 'It felt like egotism run amok,' Platt says. 'Its called P.I. Moms, and he's not a mom.' Repeated sabotage After Crooks received the anonymous tip about the staged ride-along, he reached out to Platt to share the information. 'If Chris did this to me, how could he not do it for TV?' he thought. The showrunner was confident in the veracity of the women and the cases they were pursuing, until their next sting operation, when their target told Denise that he'd been tipped off. Now Platt was curious. He began investigating and soon discovered the tipster (and the man responsible behind the Rutherford email) was actually Marino. The show wouldn't work if employees were breaking up operations out of spite and jealousy, so Platt told Butler that his employee had been sabotaging the show. But instead of firing Marino, Butler told Platt not to worry about it—an odd reaction, especially for someone hoping to make bank from a reality series. 'Clearly he had other things that were happening that were taking precedence,' Denise says. Marino knew all about those other things, and was willing to spill the information. He continued corresponding with Crooks and explained that Butler was involved in serious criminal activity, selling marijuana, prescription Xanax, and steroids that had been confiscated by a Contra Costa Country Task Force commander. Once in possession of the drugs, Butler would then give them to Marino inside the office. 'I have not sold any and don't want to,' Marino messaged Crooks. 'I don't want anything to do with this.' At the same time, Marino continued to scheme, eventually using insider case files to solve a missing person's case that Platt and the P.I. Moms had hoped would be their opportunity to save the series. As both Ami and Denise remember, Marino was determined to have his 15 minutes of fame, even if that meant continuing to sabotage the show he was so desperate to be on. 'How dumb are you that they're going to push this out and you're going to be the star of the show?' Ami says. The final sting After Crooks reached out to Contra Costa D.A. Daryl Jackson with his information, Marino ultimately came forward and agreed to wear a wire for law enforcement, who was ready to bust Butler after discovering he had planned to sell three pounds of methamphetamines. They arranged a buy at the P.I. firm between the corrupt officer, Butler, and Marino, and as soon as the sale went through, authorities quickly arrested Butler. The news officially sealed the show's fate. Lifetime cancelled P.I. Moms San Francisco and forced Platt to break the bad news to the women and crew. It was an emotional moment, especially for Ami, who had opened up over the course of the show's production and shared intimate details about losing her son at an early age. She hoped her testimony would help other women struggling with something similar. Instead, it would never air. On May 4th, 2012, nearly two years after telling Crooks to write a story about him, Butler pleaded guilty to selling drugs, extortion, robbery and planting illegal wiretaps, and was later sentenced to eight years in prison. The fallout also impacted the P.I. moms themselves—they were called frauds and took heat from their community for collaborating with Butler. (Crooks eventually did write a 10,000-word story about his experience.) Marino eventually got his moment in the sun, playing lead Detective Lt. Joe Kenda, on the Investigation Discovery TV show Homicide Hunter. But to everyone involved with P.I. Moms, he and Butler will always be known as the ultimate schemers that killed their TV careers. 'Chris and Carl just took it away from everybody,' Denise says. 'They put their desires above everyone else's.'

NJ law banning immigration detention contracts overturned by US appeals court
NJ law banning immigration detention contracts overturned by US appeals court

Associated Press

time10 hours ago

  • Associated Press

NJ law banning immigration detention contracts overturned by US appeals court

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A U.S. appeals court on Tuesday struck down a New Jersey law that bans operators from contracting with the federal government to run immigration detention centers in the state. The 2-1 ruling means the private prison firm CoreCivic Corp. can continue to operate the Elizabeth Detention Center. The ruling marked a victory for President Donald Trump's administration as it continues a crackdown on immigration around the country that has included efforts to expand a network of detention centers in a bid to ramp up deporations of certain immigrants. 'Just as states cannot regulate the federal government itself, they cannot regulate private parties in a way that severely undercuts a federal function,' U.S. Circuit Judge Stephanos Bibas, an appointee of President Trump, wrote. The law, he said, 'interferes with the federal government's core power to enforce immigration laws.' The 2021 law signed by New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy barred CoreCivic from renewing its contract with Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The company sued, and a district judge sided with the firm before the state appealed the ruling to the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court. Attorney General Matthew Platkin, in a social media post, called Tuesday's ruling disappointing and said states have the right to protect people within their borders. He said the office is considering its next steps. 'As recent events at Delaney Hall underscore, entrusting detention to for-profit companies poses grave risks to health and safety,' he said, referring to recent turmoil over conditions at a 1,000-bed private prison facility that opened in May in Newark. U.S. Rep. LaMonica McIver, a Democrat, was charged by Trump's Justice Department with assaulting immigration officers at a May 9 visit to the Newark facility. McIver has pleaded not guilty to the charges. Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, who was also arrested on a trespassing charge at Delaney Hall that was later dropped, has filed a malicious prosecution lawsuit. CoreCivic, in a statement Tuesday, said that it does not make arrests or enforce immigration laws. 'Our responsibility is to care for each person respectfully and humanely while they receive the legal due process that they are entitled to,' spokesman Ryan Gustin said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store