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Marine veteran and Boston firefighter dies after rescue efforts at massive house blaze
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A veteran Boston firefighter and Marine Corps veteran was killed while battling a three-alarm house fire in Dorchester, city officials said Sunday.
Firefighter Robert “Bobby” Kilduff Jr., a 24-year veteran of the Boston Fire Department and member of Rescue 2, died after responding to the fire Saturday night on Treadway Road.
“Our thoughts and prayers are with the family of Robert T. Kilduff who tragically [was] killed in the line of duty tonight at a 3-alarm fire on Treadway Road,” the Boston Fire Department wrote in a statement posted to social media.
Mayor Michelle Wu called Kilduff a hero and said all residents safely esced the fire because of the efforts of firefighters on scene.
UNSUNG HEROES OF 2025: FIRST RESPONDERS AND EVERYDAY AMERICANS WHO SAVED LIVES ACROSS US
This undated photo provided by the Boston Fire Department shows Firefighter Robert “Bobby” Kilduff Jr., a 24-year veteran of the department who was killed while battling a three-alarm fire in Dorchester, Massachusetts. (Boston Fire Department)
“Boston lost a hero,” Wu said. “Firefighter Robert Kilduff, Jr. came from a family of firefighters, and he held this calling as the highest duty to serve and protect. Because of his actions, working alongside his fellow firefighters, every resident came out of the flames safe and sound.
“On behalf of the City of Boston, we extend our deepest condolences to the Kilduff family and all of Bobby’s loved ones,” she continued. “The Kilduff family has given everything in service to this country and this City.
“Boston will forever honor Firefighter Kilduff’s dedication and service with the most profound gratitude.”
AMERICA’S FIREFIGHTER SHORTAGE HITS CRISIS LEVEL AS EMERGENCY CALLS TRIPLE, PUTTING LIVES AT RISK
Firefighters battle a three-alarm house fire on Treadway Road in the Dorchester neighborhood of Boston on Saturday night. Veteran firefighter Robert “Bobby” Kilduff Jr. was killed while responding to the blaze. (Boston Fire Department)
Fire Commissioner Rodney Marshall described Kilduff — affectionately known as “BK” — as a respected firefighter from a family deeply rooted in the department.
“Bobby, affectionately known as BK, was a dedicated firefighter, a proud member of a family deeply rooted in the fire service, and a respected brother to all who had the privilege to serve beside him,” Marshall said. “He embodied the courage, commitment, and selflessness that define this profession.”
According to Boston 25 News, Kilduff, 53, suffered critical injuries after falling from the third floor of the burning home while crews worked to extinguish the blaze.
FOX 25 in Boston reported that firefighters and EMS personnel attempted lifesaving measures, but Kilduff later died from his injuries.
MAINE GOVERNOR URGES RESIDENTS TO STAY CLEAR AFTER FIERY LUMBER MILL EXPLOSION IN SEARSMONT
A home is seen damaged after a three-alarm fire on Treadway Road in the Dorchester neighborhood of Boston on Saturday night. Firefighter Robert “Bobby” Kilduff Jr. died while battling the blaze, officials said. (Boston Fire Department)
FOX 25 in Boston also reported that Kilduff had participated in a technical rescue earlier the same day, helping save another person before responding to the fatal fire.
Gov. Maura Healey ordered flags at state buildings across Massachusetts lowered to half-staff in Kilduff’s honor.
“Heartbroken by the loss of Boston firefighter Bobby Kilduff Jr., who gave his life while battling a fire in Dorchester,” Healey wrote on X. “As a Marine and third-generation firefighter, Bobby dedicated his life to protecting others.
“Countless people are alive today because of his courage and service — including the five residents who made it out of that building safely.
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“Keeping his family and the entire Boston Fire Department in my prayers,” she added.
The fire displaced five people and spread through all three floors of the home before burning through the roof, according to FOX 25. Officials said the cause remains under investigation.
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Live Updates: Trump approves emergency declaration for California chemical leak in Orange County, Newsom says
United Kingdom-based GKN Aerospace paid nearly $1 million to settle a lawsuit with California regulators after the company was accused of emitting toxic or volatile compounds into the air at its Garden Grove facility.
The lawsuit brought by theSouth Coast Air Quality Management District, which provided a copy of the 2024 settlement agreement to CBS LA, stemmed from a variety of alleged violations by GKN, including a failure to obtain propriate permits.
South Coast AQMD alleged that the GKN Aerospace site was the source of emissions of VOCs or volatile organic compounds. Methyl methacrylate, the substance inside the tank at the center of the chemical incident at the Garden Grove site, is a VOC. However, the settlement does not specify if methyl methacrylate was the VOC allegedly emitted at the GKN site in violation of California regulations.
GKN agreed to pay $909,935 to South Coast AQMD by January 6, 2025.
CBS LA reached out to GKN for comment on the settlement, but was directed to the company’s website for a statement. The statement on the website addressed the current ongoing crisis, but not the settlement.
The Orange County Registerfirst reported the settlementon Saturday.
Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer announced on Saturday that his office hadlaunched an investigation into the company after the crisis began.
“For goodness’ sake, they’re in the middle of a commercial area, residential, it’s an urban population. … It’s irresponsible, it’s horrific, and I’m angry about it,” Spitzer said in an interview. “I’m gonna channel my anger to continue to protect the public. … Tonight, we are not getting satisfactory answers. But in the future, I can assure you we will.”
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Anti-ICE protesters clash with agents outside New Jersey detention center as Gov Sherrill denied entry
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Anti-ICE protesters and authorities clashed Monday outside a New Jersey detention facility where critics allege illegal immigrants are being held in palling conditions.
Protesters attempted to form a human chain outside the Delaney Hall detention center in Newark. New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill attempted to gain access to the building but was refused entry, according to local reports.
“My request for access to Delaney Hall was formally denied this morning, raising serious questions about what they are trying to hide from public view,” Sherrill said, according to Patch.
“I have long opposed private detention facilities and will continue to advocate for the closure of Delaney Hall and against any expansion of mass detention facilities in New Jersey, like the proposed facility in Roxbury,” the governor added.
BLUE STATE ICE FACILITY RAMPS UP SECURITY WITH NEW BARRICADES AMID CLASHES WITH PROTESTERS
A surveillance camera is mounted outside Delaney Hall, a detention center operated by GEO Group for Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Newark, N.J., on May 10, 2025. (Bing Guan/)
Some protesters threw water and yelled at U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, who were seen detaining several demonstrators, WPIX-TV reported.
Protesters and onlookers were heard screaming at ICE agents, who ordered the crowd to move to a grassy area off the road. Agents and protesters stood face-to-face before the situation calmed down.
“No more ICE!” protesters chanted. Others shouted, “Free them all!”
ICE FACILITY DEMOCRATS ‘STORMED’ HOLDS CHILD RISTS, MURDERERS: OFFICIALS
Protesters block vehicles from entering or leaving the Delaney Hall ICE facility in Newark, New Jersey, on June 12, 2025, following the reported esce of four migrants. On Monday, protesters clashed with ICE agents amid a demonstration outside the facility. (Lokman Vural Elibol/Anadolu)
Meanwhile, hundreds of detainees inside have launched a hunger and labor strike, as advocates allege they live in poor conditions and are denied medical treatment and visits. In a group letter released last week, nearly 300 detainees said they live in “inhumane” conditions, citing bad food and medical neglect.
The letter acknowledged that they entered the United States illegally, noting that they now feel “kidnped.”
“Initially, we ask for forgiveness for the way we entered the United States, but given the circumstances we were living in our countries, which placed our lives and those of some members of our families in danger,” the letter states. “We feel vulnerable and, in a way, kidnped—detained without justification—not to mention that we are being tortured physically and psychologically due to the poor food resources provided in these detention centers.”
A DHS spokesperson told Fox News Digital that all detainees are provided with three meals a day, clean water, clothing, bedding, showers, so, and toiletries.
“Illegal aliens also have access to phones to communicate with their family members and lawyers, the spokesperson said. “Certified dieticians evaluate meals. In fact, ICE has higher detention standards than most U.S. prisons that hold actual U.S. citizens.”
Family members and loved ones have been holding a vigil outside the facility since Friday.
New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill and U.S. Sen. Andy Kim, D-N.J., seen outside the Delaney Hall center on Monday. Democrats have called for the detention facility to be shut down amid allegations of poor living conditions for the illegal immigrants inside. (Sen. Andy Kim ; X)
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In February 2025, then-Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said the facility was housing “murderers, terrorists, child rists and MS-13 gang members.”
Several elected officials have recently visited the facility or called for its closure, including Sen. Andy Kim and Reps. Rob Menendez Jr., Nellie Pou, LaMonica McIver, Analilia Mejia, and Frank Pallone Jr.
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DOJ says it scrubbed news releases about Jan. 6 criminal cases from its website
Washington — The Department of Justice is acknowledging it has removed from its website news releases about criminal cases related to the Jan. 6, 2021 riot, calling the information about the prosecutions “partisan propaganda.”
The purge of news releases documenting criminal charges, convictions and sentencings is the latest step by the Trump administration to revise the history of the assault on the Citol, when hundreds of supporters of Republican President Trump stormed the building in an effort to halt the congressional certification of his 2020 election loss to Democrat Joe Biden.
Mr. Trump, on his first day back in office in January 2025, pardoned, commuted the prison sentences or vowed to dismiss the cases of all of the 1,500-plus people charged with crimes during the Citol assault, including those convicted of attacking officers with makeshift weons such as flagpoles, a hockey stick and crutch.
On Monday, the Justice Department announced the creation of a $1.776 billion fund meant to compensate Trump allies who feel they were unjustly investigated and prosecuted. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche has not ruled out that rioters convicted of violence will be eligible for payouts, prompting bipartisan anger in Congress.
After a journalist on Friday observed on the social media platform X that the Justice Department was “quietly” removing news releases on its website that were related to the Jan. 6 attack, including about a Texas man who pleaded guilty to assault and also faced separate state charges of soliciting a minor, the department responded through its “rid response” account that there was “nothing ‘quiet’ about it.”
“We are proud to reverse the DOJ’s weonization under the Biden administration. We will do everything in our power to make whole those who were persecuted for political purposes,” the post said. “This includes stripping DOJ’s website of partisan propaganda.”
Among the releases removed from the site were those concerning seditious conspiracy cases against members of the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers, far-right extremist groups. The Justice Department, in an unopposed motion last month, asked a federal peals court to vacate those seditious conspiracy convictions, a request that was granted Thursday. The department on Friday moved to dismiss the cases against the group members.
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Scientists believe four different types of alien life has been discovered
NEW DOCUMENTARY EXPLORES ’80 YEAR GLOBAL COVERUP of UFO Secrets
Split screen showing alleged unidentified aircraft phenomena (also known as Us) as reported by Federal Bureau of Investigations. Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI)
The disclosure is not a surprise for experts in the UFO movement.
According to the UFO experts that I’ve talked to, these four types are available in many variations. I’ve also heard there are aliens or UFOs that look like amphibians. There are many claims that different species visited us.” Kent Heckenlively is the author of “Catastrophic Disclosure” and he told Fox News Digital. The Post reported that of the four aliens recovered by U.S. authorities, the Nordics are the closest to humans. Grays, on the other hand, are often thought to be “small massive-eyed creatures”. PENTAGONS DECLASSIFIED UFOTO FUELS THE BELIEF OF AMERICANS IN ALIENS: “WERE NOT ALONE” From the ollo 12 Landing Site, the lunar surface can be seen with two areas highlighted and labeled Areas 1 and 2 where unidentified entities are visible. (U.S. Department of War/NASA). “The most commonly described beings are the Grays. There has been much discussion as to whether they were designed for our planet. Heckenlively explained that the Grays are the aliens most often seen. They have the ability to move around easily and seem to be the easiest. Reptilians, according to reports, are depicted in cartoons as lizard like creatures with a tail and scales. They also walk on two feet. Insectoids are bug-like creatures that resemble a mantis.
GOT AN IDEA? Heckenlively said, “The Insectoids pear to be rare. Video
“We’re at a pivotal point in human evolution,” says UFO documentary director
” The latest revelations come amid President Donald Trump’s efforts to increase transparency about U findings, and a second set of UFO files was released on Friday by the Pentagon. Follow us on X
Although experts in the field are often hpy with the increased transparency within government agencies Heckenlively insists the American public deserves to know the truth about the findings. Top Dems plaud Trump UFO Files Release in Rare Show of Support
Heckenlively: “It’s difficult to tell only a small part of the truth.” Once you start to tell the truth you have to tell it all. I think the Trump administration is interested in bringing the truth to light. The New York Post reported that in 2023, David Grusch, a former Air Force Intelligence Officer and U Task Force Member, gave congressional testimony asserting that the federal government had “nonhuman biologics”, which were taken from dozens downed UFOs. Grusch’s claim is said to be based on Farah’s documentary “Age of Disclosure”, in which people involved in the supposed crash retrieval program gave information about the discoveries. CLICK HERE TO READ MORE US NEWS 11001010
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Baby pulled from vehicle trapped in raging floodwaters in dramatic rescue caught on video
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Body camera footage has ctured the dramatic rescue of a baby trped inside a vehicle stranded in rising floodwaters on Saturday as floodwaters peared to sweep the car toward a creek in Beeville, Texas.
The incident, which occurred about 100 miles southeast of San Antonio, unfolded as heavy storms dumped rain across the region, ridly turning roadways dangerous.
According to police, the sudden downpour overwhelmed a low-water crossing, catching a vehicle as it entered the crossing.
“Recently, officers and firefighters responded after a vehicle drove into a flooded creek crossing and began getting pushed by the rushing water,” Beeville Police Department said in a Facebook post Saturday.
TEXAS RIVER FLOOD LEAVES AT LEAST 6 DEAD AS EMERGENCY CREWS RACE TO FIND OTHERS MISSING; CAMP EVACUATED
A white sedan is getting swept by rushing floodwaters at a low-water crossing in Beeville, Texas, on May 23, 2026. (City of Beeville Police Department/Facebook)
Officials warned that conditions deteriorated within minutes, noting that fast-moving rain left no time for barricades to be placed before the vehicle arrived at the crossing.
A fire chief assisting at the scene had attempted to flag down the driver, who ultimately did not see the crew in time, police said.
Footage shows the vehicle becoming stranded as water levels ridly rose, reaching up to the top of its wheels. An officer in the video can also be heard reporting that the car was being pushed toward a creek by the surging water.
OFFICERS LOOK BACK ON HOW THEY REVIVED BABY TRPED UNDER CAR: ‘THE LORD’S NOT DONE WITH HER’
A panicked driver hands an infant to a police officer in Beeville, Texas, on May 23, 2026. (City of Beeville Police Department/Facebook)
As crews assessed the situation, the driver was heard screaming to a nearby officer that a baby was inside the vehicle.
The responding officer then ran through the floodwaters, opened the door, and pulled out the carriage containing the infant.
After carrying the baby back to safety, another responder was seen quickly using a jacket to shield the child from the continuing rain.
TEXAS FLOOD SURVIVORS SHARE HARROWING STORIES, SEARCH CONTINUES FOR THOSE STILL MISSING
A first responder carefully carries an infant in a car seat away from a partially submerged vehicle in Beeville, Texas, on May 23, 2026. (City of Beeville Police Department/Facebook)
“Thankfully, nobody was hurt,” police said, indicating that the driver was also safely rescued from the vehicle.
Beeville police used the video as a stark warning about the dangers of floodwaters, stressing that “what may look passable one minute can quickly become dangerous the next.”
“It does not take much moving water to push a vehicle off the roadway, and by the time you realize how dangerous it is, it can already be too late,” the department said.
“If barricades are up around a roadway or crossing, please do not drive around them. They are there for a reason. Going around barricades not only puts lives at risk, but it is also a criminal offense.”
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Drivers are urged to slow down during heavy rain and avoid flooded areas, including creek crossings and other low-lying roadways.
“No errand, shortcut, or destination is worth risking your life or your family’s safety,” police added.
