Suspect in Reno casino triple shooting had no known connection to victimsNew Foto - Suspect in Reno casino triple shooting had no known connection to victims

The suspect alleged to haveopened fire at a Reno, Nevada, casinoMonday was identified as a local man with no known connections to his victims, police said Tuesday. Sparks police identified the dead as Southern California residents Andrew Canepa and Justin Aguila, both 33, and northwest Nevada resident Angel Martinez, 66. Aguila and Canepa were in Sparks for a bachelor party, police said in a statement. They were both shot from behind at Grand Sierra Resort while they were waiting in the valet area for a ride to Reno-Tahoe International Airport, the police department said. Jeff Gorell, a Ventura County, California, supervisor and former deputy mayor of Los Angeles,said on Facebookthat Canepa was a co-owner of Side Street Café in the Newbury Park community, about 40 miles west-northwest of downtown Los Angeles. Gorell described Canepa as the father of a young son and a "kind soul." "We will miss seeing his warm presence at the restaurant and are deeply saddened by this loss," he said. Martinez was ambushed in the parking lot as he drove away from the casino, Sparks police said. The gunman was hiding behind a vehicle before he emerged to open fire, it said. Three other people were injured in the shooting, with one treated at a hospital and released and two remaining under medical care Tuesday but expected to recover, the police department said. The suspect was identified as Dakota Hawver, 26, from adjacent Reno, with no criminal or mental history of note, police said. "Investigators have not found any connections to the Grand Sierra Resort or any of the victims, and his motive is unknown," police said. The attack, reported just before 7:30 a.m. Monday, unfolded as a gunman on foot and armed with a legally purchased 9 mm semiautomatic handgun opened fire on people gathered near the valet stand, police said. The weapon apparently jammed, but only briefly, Sparks Police Chief Chris Crawforth said Monday. As the gunman left, he shot at a security guard, who returned fire, police said. When officers arrived, he exchanged gunfire with them and was critically injured, police said. The suspect remained hospitalized Tuesday, Sparks police said. The police department has launched an investigation into the attack and any possible motive. Grand Sierra Resort, a high-rise hotel and casino that often books top touring music and comedy acts, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Suspect in Reno casino triple shooting had no known connection to victims

Suspect in Reno casino triple shooting had no known connection to victims The suspect alleged to haveopened fire at a Reno, Nevada, casinoMo...
NYC gunman worked in Las Vegas casino surveillance and was once licensed as a private security guardNew Foto - NYC gunman worked in Las Vegas casino surveillance and was once licensed as a private security guard

LAS VEGAS (AP) — The man who stormed a Manhattan office tower with a gun,killing four peoplebefore killing himself, worked in the surveillance department of a Las Vegas casino, part of an industry built on watching for threats before they unfold. Shane Tamura, 27, didn't show up to work his usual shift Sunday at the Horseshoe Las Vegas. Instead, authorities say, he got in his car and drove across the country to carry out a mass shooting inside the skyscraper that houses the National Football League's headquarters. A fifth person, an NFL employee, was wounded in the Monday attack. As investigators work to uncover a motive, questions are being raised about how a man with a documented history of mental health problems — and a recent arrest for erratic behavior at another casino — ended up working in one of the most security-sensitive jobs in Las Vegas. Caesars Entertainment, which owns the Horseshoe, confirmed Tamura's employment but has yet to disclose the nature of his role or whether he was authorized to carry a weapon. A spokesperson didn't respond to emails asking whether Tamura's job required him to hold a valid work card from the state Private Investigator's Licensing Board, which is needed to work as a private security officer in Nevada. State licensing records show Tamura previously held a state-issued license as a private security officer, though it had expired in December. While he held that license, Tamura was arrested at a casino in suburban Las Vegas. A report on the September 2023 arrest says he was asked to leave after he became agitated with casino security and employees who asked him for his ID, and he was arrested on a misdemeanor trespassing charge. Prosecutors later dismissed the case. Tamura left a note saying he had CTE Tamura had a history of mental illness, police said without giving details. Authorities have not provided more specific information about Tamura's psychiatric history but are investigating claims he included in ahandwritten notehe left behind, in which he said he had chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE, a degenerative brain disease linked to repeated head trauma. Officials said he had intended to target the offices of the NFL, which he accused of hiding the dangers of brain injuries linked to contact sports, but he took the wrong elevator. Tamura's family members did not respond to messages seeking comment. No one answered a knock at the door of his family's Las Vegas home on Monday. Tamura didn't play professional football but was a standout running back during his high school years in southern California, where he was born, according to local news accounts at the time, including one that described his abilities as "lightning in a bottle." One of his former coaches, Walter Roby, said he did not remember Tamura sustaining any head injuries in his playing days. He recalled an ankle injury, "but that was the extent of it." "He was a quiet dude, soft spoken, humble and led by his work ethic more than anything else," Roby told The Associated Press. "His actions on the field were dynamic." Former classmates and neighbors say he didn't stand out Some of Tamura's former classmates seemed stunned by the shooting, and several said they had lost contact with him. But numerous others who say they were in Tamura's grade at Golden Valley, which has over 2,000 students, weren't familiar with him. Some of Tamura's neighbors in Las Vegas also said they didn't recognize him after seeing his photo shared in news reports about the shooting. "They were so unremarkable, or maybe they were never home when I was home," neighbor Wendy Malnak said about Tamura and his family. Malnak, whose house is diagonal across from Tamura's, has lived in the neighborhood since 2022. She said many of the residents on what she described as a quiet street keep in touch regularly and look out for each other, and yet none of them seemed to notice Tamura or his family before police officers showed up Monday night and surrounded their house. Authorities work to piece together Tamura's steps Las Vegas police said Tuesday they were "supporting the NYPD with their investigation" but have not released details about the police activity Monday at Tamura's home. Two groups of New York City detectives were on their way to Las Vegas to conduct interviews and search the home, New York City Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch said. Authorities said they were also questioning an associate of Tamura who bought a component of the AR-15-style assault rifle used in the attack. Tisch said Tamura had "assembled" the weapon and used his concealed carry permit to purchase another firearm, a revolver, last month. "This is part of a larger effort to trace Mr. Tamura's steps from Las Vegas to New York City," she said. ___ Mustian reported from New York. Associated Press journalist Safiyah Riddle contributed from Montgomery, Alabama.

NYC gunman worked in Las Vegas casino surveillance and was once licensed as a private security guard

NYC gunman worked in Las Vegas casino surveillance and was once licensed as a private security guard LAS VEGAS (AP) — The man who stormed a ...
Trump says US will partner with Israel to run additional food centers in Gaza, but details are scantNew Foto - Trump says US will partner with Israel to run additional food centers in Gaza, but details are scant

WASHINGTON (AP) — PresidentDonald Trumpsaid Tuesday that the U.S. will partner with Israel to run new food centers inGazato address theworsening humanitarian crisis there, but he and U.S. officials offered few additional details about the plan or how it would differ from existing food distribution centers. Donald Trumptold reporters aboard Air Force One as he returned from a trip to Scotland that Israel would preside over the new food centers "to make sure the distribution is proper." "We're going to be dealing with Israel, and we think they can do a good job of it," Trump said. The opaque details come as the Trump administration isfacing calls at homeand abroad to do more to addressthe hunger crisis in Gaza. The U.S.'s close ally, Israel, is at the center of an international outcry as more images of emaciated children continue to emerge. That pressure comes after the U.S. pulled out of talks last week to try to broker a ceasefire in the 21-month Israel-Hamas war, accusing Hamas of acting in bad faith. But Trump this weekbroke with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, disagreeing publicly with him about starvation in Gaza and citing the pictures of hungry people. The White House described it as "a new aid plan" to help people in Gaza obtain access to food and promised that details would emerge. It did not elaborate. State Department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce said Tuesday that she didn't know "the framework" of how the new aid distribution would work. "I'm waiting for the president to return. I don't want to get ahead of him," Bruce said. Democrats in Congresshave implored the Trump administration to step up its role in addressing the suffering and starvation in Gaza. More than 40 senators signed a letter Tuesday urging the Trump administration to resume ceasefire talks and sharply criticizing the Israeli-backed American organization that had already been created to distribute food aid. Sen. Tim Kaine, a Virginia Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, questioned why the U.S. was not allowing long-standing aid groups to run food centers. "I'm glad that the president is saying that this is a problem. But if we want to solve the problem, turn to the folks who have been doing this for decades," Kaine said. The few details Trump provided about the new food centers appeared similar to a program that was already rolled out in May, after Israel had blocked all food, medicine and other imports for 2½ months. The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, an Israeli-backed American contractor, opened four food distribution sites that month. Israel and GHF said that system was needed to prevent Hamas from siphoning off aid. The United Nations, which has been distributing food in Gaza throughout the war when allowed, denies any significant diversion of aid by Hamas. Hundreds of Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces while heading to the GHF sites, according to witnesses, health officials and the U.N. human rights office. Israel says its forces have only fired warning shots at people who approach its forces, and GHF says its armed contractors have only used pepper spray and fired occasional shots in the air to prevent dangerous crowding. The aid sites are in Israeli military zones, which is off limits to independent media. The U.N. refuses to cooperate with GHF, saying its model violates humanitarian principles by forcing Palestinians to travel long distances and risk their lives for food and because it allows Israel to control aid and use it to further mass displacement. Trump said Tuesday that he last spoke to Netanyahu two days earlier and that the Israeli leader wants to distribute food "in a proper manner." "I think Israel wants to do it," Trump said. "And they'll be good at doing it." The president, for the second day in a row, remarked on the images of starving people and kids in Gaza, which seemed to prompt him this week to announce the new plan and his break with Netanyahu. Trump said Tuesday that everyone who saw the images coming out of Gaza would declare it terrible "unless they're pretty cold-hearted or, worse than that, nuts." "Those are kids that are starving. They are starving," Trump said. "They've got to get them food. And we're going to get them food." The shift brings Trump closer to some in his MAGA base, who have rejected the Republican Party's long-standing, unequivocal support for Israel and see aid money flowing to the country as yet another misguided foreign intervention. They include Georgia Rep.Marjorie Taylor Greene, a staunch Trump ally, who has echoed the rhetoric of progressive Democrats in recent days. "I can unequivocally say that what happened to innocent people in Israel on Oct. 7th was horrific. Just as I can unequivocally say that what has been happening to innocent people and children in Gaza is horrific. This war and humanitarian crisis must end!" she wrote on Sunday on X. On Monday night, she went further, calling what is happening in Gaza "genocide." But Greene's comments do not represent MAGA as a whole. On Monday, podcaster Charlie Kirk, who leads the powerful Turning Point network, railed against what he deemed a "propaganda campaign trying to make it seem as if Israel is intentionally starving the people of Gaza." ___ Associated Press writers Stephen Groves and Joey Cappelletti in Washington, Jill Colvin in New York and Joseph Krauss in Ottawa, Ontario, contributed to this report.

Trump says US will partner with Israel to run additional food centers in Gaza, but details are scant

Trump says US will partner with Israel to run additional food centers in Gaza, but details are scant WASHINGTON (AP) — PresidentDonald Trump...
Melissa Gilbert Reveals Why She Wanted Her Breast Implants 'Permanently' RemovedNew Foto - Melissa Gilbert Reveals Why She Wanted Her Breast Implants 'Permanently' Removed

VALERY HACHE/AFP via Getty Melissa Gilbert revealed that moving to Michigan kickstarted a self-discovery journey that led to her getting her breast implants permanently removed Before moving, theLittle House on the Prairiewas shocked to see how she looked in a paparazzi photo and was inspired to "figure out" who she was without cosmetic treatments Removing her breast implants led to the actress wearing more comfortable clothes and letting her hair go gray Melissa Gilbertleft Hollywood after marrying her husband, Tim Busfield, in 2013. In the time since,theLittle House on the Prairieactresshas stopped getting cosmetic work done, and even got her breast implants removed so she can be "strong and healthy." The actress, 61, appeared on the Tuesday, July 29, episode of theI Choose Mepodcast with Jennie Garthand opened up about her marriage leading her down a path of self-discovery. Gilbert explained that she was excited to leave Los Angeles after meeting Busfield, who "had moved back to his home state of Michigan." Her excitement, she recalled, stemmed from her being able to let go of the pressures related to her physical appearance. "I said, 'That's great. Please get me out of L.A. I have to go somewhere I can age,'" she joked. Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. The move to the Midwest was an "amazing" experience for Gilbert. "It was so different and peaceful," she told Garth. "It was a really great kind of honeymoon period, but it was also a really great time for me to land into my own skin." Before getting married and moving to Michigan, theDiary of Anne Frankstar noted that she was "at peak filler, Botox, big boobs." But after seeing a paparazzi photo of herself, she began having second thoughts about her appearance. "It startled me and I thought, 'Oh my God, that's not who I am or who I wanted to be.' I made a decision to back off all of that to see what was underneath it and to figure out who I was," she explained. "And then I met Tim a while after that and I started expressing this to him and he was all for it." Bob Riha, Jr./Getty She continued, "I went to him and I said, 'I really wanna take out my breast implants permanently...I don't want them anymore." Her husband was "all for it." Gilbert's decision stemmed from her not wanting to "make a decision in my 80s to have them replaced" and wanting "my body back to what it was." She added, "I want to feel strong and healthy as I age now." https://people-app.onelink.me/HNIa/kz7l4cuf The breast implant decision led her to make several other positive changes in her life pertaining to her appearance. "I stopped coloring my hair," Gilbert said. "And then I stopped dressing for other people and dressing for myself." Gilbert's comments about her breast implants come amidcelebrities being more transparent about their cosmetic procedures. Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Sami Sheen, daughter of Denise Richards and Charlie Sheen, opened up aboutwanting her breast implants removed in Junedue to her belief that she has breast implant illness.Kylie Jenneris one of the biggest celebrities who has been transparent about her plastic surgery recently. At the beginning of the summer, she responded to a fanon TikTokwho requested the details of her breast augmentation. Jenner wrote in the comments section of the TikToker's post, "445 cc, moderate profile, half under the muscle!!!!! Silicone!!!" She even name-dropped Beverly Hills, Calif.-based plastic surgeonDr. Garth Fisher, who performed the procedure on her, and concluded the post by adding, "Hope this helps lol." Read the original article onPeople

Melissa Gilbert Reveals Why She Wanted Her Breast Implants ‘Permanently’ Removed

Melissa Gilbert Reveals Why She Wanted Her Breast Implants 'Permanently' Removed VALERY HACHE/AFP via Getty Melissa Gilbert revealed...
6 Times It Should Have Been Obvious That Pamela Anderson and Liam Neeson Were More Than FriendsNew Foto - 6 Times It Should Have Been Obvious That Pamela Anderson and Liam Neeson Were More Than Friends

TOBIAS SCHWARZ/AFP via Getty TheNakedtruth:Liam Neeson and Pamela Andersonare an item! After romance rumors began to swirl earlier this summer, a source confirmed to PEOPLE on July 29 thatThe Naked Guncostars are dating. "it's a budding romance in the early stages," the source said. "It's sincere, and it's clear they're smitten with each other." From red carpet canoodling to bringing their sons together at the New York City premiere, see all the moments leading up to their relationship reveal that should have confirmed the two were more than friends. Nils Jorgensen/Shutterstock Buzz began about the two Hollywood legends earlier this summer as they kicked offThe Naked Gunpress tour. While they play love interests in the movie, their chemistry while not in character had fans speculating whether there was more going on between them. Dia Dipasupil/Getty The day before news broke that Neeson and Anderson were in fact more than just costars with killer chemistry, theBaywatchalumna looked up with stars in her eyes at the Oscar nominee. And it stands to reason: WhenAccess Hollywoodasked about their first impressions of each other, Anderson declared he was "very tall," while Neeson arched an eyebrow and mouthed, "hot." TOBIAS SCHWARZ/AFP via Getty When the tour took them overseas to Berlin on July 24, Anderson was all decked out in her Old Hollywood glam as Neeson looked over at her with a smitten smile on his face. Gavin Bond/Paramount Pictures During a press shoot for their film, Anderson smiled up at Neeson as he rested his hands on her shoulders. Speaking to PEOPLE in October 2024, Neeson had praise for his costar that possibly foreshadowed their future connection. "With Pamela, first off, I'm madly in love with her. She's just terrific to work with,"he said at the time. "I can't compliment her enough, I'll be honest with you. No huge ego. She just comes in to do the work. She's funny and so easy to work with." NBC The two took it to the next level during their appearance on theTodayshow on July 29 when they pretended to make out — andplayed coy when asked directlyby co-hostCraig Melvinif the two were "an item." "What?! I don't understand the question," Anderson replied, before Neeson chimed in with a playfully chiding "Craig, Craig." Kristina Bumphrey/Variety via Getty At the July 28 premiere in New York City, Neeson and Anderson were joined by their sons:Dylan Jagger Lee and Brandon Thomas Lee, whom Anderson shares with ex Tommy Lee, andDaniel Neeson and Micheál Neeson, whom he shares with his late wifeNatasha Richardson. Read the original article onPeople

6 Times It Should Have Been Obvious That Pamela Anderson and Liam Neeson Were More Than Friends

6 Times It Should Have Been Obvious That Pamela Anderson and Liam Neeson Were More Than Friends TOBIAS SCHWARZ/AFP via Getty TheNakedtruth:L...

 

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