
Wild horse killed by vehicle driving in dark on Outer Banks beach, NC cops say
A wild stallion wandering the northern Outer Banks was fatally struck by a vehicle in the dark, according to investigators in North Carolina.
The 26-year-old Chevy Tahoe driver was arrested and charged with driving under the influence, the Outer Banks Voice reports. She lives in the coastal Carova community, the new site says.
It happened around 12 a.m. Saturday, June 14, and the horse was identified as a 5-year-old named Alexander, the Corolla Wild Horse Fund reported in a Facebook post.
'What we can say for sure right now is that this is a tremendous loss for the herd and for those of us who are close to these horses and work so hard to protect them,' herd manager Meg Puckett wrote in the June 14 post.
'Alex was a very special young horse, and a lot of extra effort went into keeping him wild and free. He survived the first couple years of his life despite some extraordinary challenges, grew up into a beautiful young stallion, and had a bright future ahead of him. He was the last of his mother's offspring and we had high hopes that he would carry on the family line. Alex's genetics can never be replaced, and in a critically endangered population that is a devastating blow.'
Off-road vehicles are welcomed on designated Outer Banks beaches, including in the Corolla/Carova area where the paved end of NC 12 ends, OBX Beach Access reports. Guidelines include a 35-mph speed limit that drops to 15 mph when people are within 300 feet, the site says.
The popular practice has resulted in multiple horses being killed over the years, many of them part of the Corolla herd.
'Please let this tragedy serve as a reminder to be extremely cautious when driving on the 4x4. Be aware of your surroundings and drive slowly and carefully — especially at night,' Puckett wrote.
Corolla, on the northernmost part of the Outer Banks, hosts a herd of about 110 horses that have adapted over the centuries to a unique island diet. The free-roaming herd is tended by the nonprofit Corolla Wild Horse Fund, including all their medical needs and maintaining a farm to keep those removed from the wild.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Chicago Tribune
3 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Bryan Kohberger to plead guilty to killing 4 University of Idaho students, multiple media report
BOISE, Idaho — Bryan Kohberger has agreed to plead guilty to murdering four University of Idaho students as part of a deal with prosecutors to avoid the death penalty, multiple media outlets reported Monday. The news was delivered to families of the victims in a letter from prosecutors, according to ABC News. Kohberger, 30, is accused in the stabbing deaths of Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle, Madison Mogen and Kaylee Goncalves at a rental home near campus in Moscow, Idaho, in November 2022. Autopsies showed the four were all likely asleep when they were attacked, some had defensive wounds and each was stabbed multiple times. Goncalves' family expressed outrage in a Facebook post: 'We are beyond furious at the State of Idaho. They have failed us. Please give us some time. This was very unexpected.' Kohberger, then a criminal justice graduate student at Washington State University, was arrested in Pennsylvania weeks after the killings. Investigators said they matched his DNA to genetic material recovered from a knife sheath found at the crime scene. In a court filing, his lawyers said Kohberger was on a long drive by himself around the time the four were killed. The killings shook the small farming community of about 25,000 people, which hadn't had a homicide in about five years. The trial, which was scheduled to begin in August, was moved from rural northern Idaho to Boise after the defense expressed concerns that Kohberger couldn't get a fair trial in the county where the killings occurred. In Idaho, judges may reject plea agreements, though such moves are rare. If a judge rejects a plea agreement, the defendant is allowed to withdraw the guilty plea. Earlier Monday, a Pennsylvania judge had ordered that three people whose testimony was requested by defense attorneys would have to travel to Idaho to appear at Kohberger's trial. The defense subpoenas were granted regarding a boxing trainer who knew Kohberger as a teenager, a childhood acquaintance of Kohberger's and a third man whose significance was not explained. A gag order has largely kept attorneys, investigators and others from speaking publicly about the investigation or trial.


San Francisco Chronicle
4 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Husband of Suzanne Morphew back in Colorado to face murder charge for a second time
DENVER (AP) — The husband of a woman whose remains were discovered over three years after she was reported missing on Mother's Day 2020 has arrived in Colorado to face a first-degree murder charge in her death for a second time. Barry Morphew was being held in the small city of Alamosa on Monday, 12th Judicial District Attorney Anne E. Kelly said in a statement. Morphew was arrested June 20 in Arizona after being newly indicted in the death of Suzanne Morphew, three years after the initial case against him was dropped because of prosecutorial issues with evidence. He waived his right to challenge his extradition and has been waiting to be transported from a jail in Phoenix to Colorado. Morphew is scheduled to make his first court appearance in Colorado in the new case on Tuesday afternoon, Kelly said. A 2024 autopsy report said Suzanne Morphew died of 'unspecified means' but ruled her death a homicide. While her remains showed no signs of trauma, investigators found in her bone marrow a drug cocktail used to tranquilize wildlife that her husband had a prescription for, according to the indictment. Barry Morphew has maintained his innocence since his wife disappeared, and his attorney David Beller blasted the new indictment. 'Yet again, the government allows their predetermined conclusion to lead their search for evidence,' Beller said in a statement last week. 'Barry maintains his innocence. The case has not changed, and the outcome will not either.' The first case was dropped in 2022 The mystery surrounding Suzanne Morphew began when the 49-year-old mother of two daughters, who lived near the small mountain community of Salida, Colorado, was reported missing on Mother's Day 2020. Her mountain bike and helmet were found in separate spots not far from her home, but investigators suspected the bike was purposefully thrown into a ravine because there were no indications of a crash. A week after his wife went missing, Barry Morphew posted a video on Facebook pleading for her safe return and the case quickly drew attention. In May 2021, prosecutors charged him with murder. They dropped the case the following year just as Morphew was about to stand trial. A judge had barred prosecutors from calling key witnesses after the attorneys repeatedly failed to follow rules for turning over evidence in Morphew's favor. The judge allowed prosecutors the option of filing charges against Morphew later. Barry Morphew had filed a $15 million lawsuit against county officials, accusing them of violating his constitutional rights. His lawyers also filed a complaint asking that the prosecutors be disciplined for allegedly intentionally withholding evidence. The district attorney who prosecuted him the first time, Linda Stanley, was later ordered disbarred by regulators who found she mismanaged the case and made unethical comments to the media about it and other cases. Suzanne Morphew's body was not found until September 2023, when Colorado Bureau of Investigation agents stumbled upon her skeletal remains in a shallow grave during an unrelated search near the small southern Colorado town of Moffat, about 40 miles (65 kilometers) south of the Morphews' home. The majority of Suzanne Morphew's bones were recovered and many were significantly bleached, according to the indictment. Investigators found at the site a port through which Suzanne Morphew could receive medicine to treat follicular lymphoma, a type of blood cancer that she had. They also found biking clothes similar to what she was known to wear. Based on the condition of the remains and clothes, a forensic anthropologist theorized that the body likely decomposed elsewhere, the indictment said, before being moved to the site. Investigators linked Barry Morphew to wildlife sedative Toxicology testing revealed that three drugs found in a sedative used for wildlife called 'BAM' were in her bone marrow. The coroner's office determined the cause of death was 'homicide by unspecified means' through intoxication of the three drugs, butorphanol, azaperone and medetomidine. Barry Morphew obtained and filled several prescriptions for BAM while living in Indiana, shortly before the Morphews moved to Colorado in 2018. He was a deer farmer in Indiana and allegedly told investigators he used BAM to tranquilize deer in Indiana and Colorado, according to the indictment. In the area surrounding their home, no private citizens or businesses, only Colorado Parks and Wildlife and National Park Service officials, had obtained BAM between 2017 and 2020, records show. No government officials reported missing BAM supplies. 'The prescription records show that when Suzanne Morphew disappeared, only one private citizen living in that entire area of the state had access to BAM: Barry Morphew,' the indictment concluded.


Miami Herald
5 hours ago
- Miami Herald
19-year-old falls from cliff at swimming hole and disappears, Oregon cops say
A 19-year-old drowned after falling from a cliff at a swimming hole in Oregon, deputies said. The man was at a rock quarry reservoir near Ashland on the evening of Thursday, June 26, when he 'reportedly fell from a cliff at the water's edge and disappeared into the deep water,' the Jackson County Sheriff's Office said in a June 27 Facebook post. His name wasn't released. Deputies said 'no suspicious circumstances were observed on scene,' and search and rescue officials recovered the body at the quarry reservoir several hours after their arrival, authorities said. 'Our condolences go out to his family and friends,' deputies said. Ashland is about 285-mile drive south from Portland.