Home destroyed by human-caused wildfire in Duchesne County, officials say
A new wildfire destroyed a home in Duchesne County on Friday evening, firefighters said.
The blaze, dubbed the Hanna Fire, was burning 1½ acre near Hanna and believed to be human-caused. As of 9 p.m., fire officials said it was contained to the one home.
A photo of the fire showed the home in flames near a wooded area.
Additional information was not immediately available.
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Yahoo
25 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Deadly downtown Myrtle Beach shooting between customer, employee. 1 arrested
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Fox News
an hour ago
- Fox News
Diddy 'might be cooked' on key sex crime as jury prepares to deliberate, expert says
Sean "Diddy Combs' sex trafficking and racketeering trial came to a close after seven weeks on Friday as the rapper's defense team and prosecution completed closing arguments. Both sides saw wins and losses throughout the trial, but experts claimed Diddy "might be cooked" on one specific charge as the jury prepares to deliberate. After his arrest in September 2024, the "Last Night" singer was charged with sex trafficking, racketeering and transportation to engage in prostitution. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges. Former Danity Kane singer and Diddy protégé, Aubrey O'Day, has been following the trial and isn't sure what the outcome will be. While she personally believes the rapper is "guilty of all the charges," the musician isn't sold on the prosecution's case in court. "The rational, justice side of me that leads a good amount of what I do nowadays says the answer should be what was proven by the prosecution, the law, and that's conflicting to what I want personally," she told Extra. She noted: "I don't know if the prosecution proved [Diddy's crimes] without a doubt, though." During closing arguments, prosecutors argued that Diddy ran an alleged criminal enterprise with full control. They pointed out that the jury heard testimony, saw texts, viewed bank records and heard audio showing the rapper committing crime after crime for decades. According to the prosecution, the government showed that Diddy didn't take no for an answer. Up until today, Diddy was able to get away with crime because of his money and power, Assistant U.S. Attorney Christine Slavik said. "That stops now." Here's where experts say things stand for each charge against Diddy with the jury about to deliberate. 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Day told Fox News Digital. "The only thing Diddy and his team can hope for is a miracle where the jurors don't buy the government's claim that this was racketeering and that Diddy was the head of a criminal empire dedicated to fulfilling his desires," the founder of New Mexico-based law practice, John Day Law, explained. "A defense win is more likely if the jurors are conflicted on the racketeering charges and can't reach a unanimous verdict. That could lead to a hung jury on one or more of the charges. But the jurors spent the entire trial waiting to see how Diddy's lawyers rebutted the massive case against him, and they merely rested without putting on any witnesses. That leaves the jury picking through the government's case to see if this really rises to racketeering, and if not, they may hang or acquit on some of the charges – but it's unlikely." 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Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
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