Mar. 15, 2025
Jeriline Brady-McGinnis.Photo:Jeriline Brady/Facebook
Jeriline Brady/Facebook
The three children of Jeriline Brady-McGinnis, of Boston, released a statement following her death.
“Our mother was a loving and caring mother,” the statement said. “The heart and soul of our family is gone.”
According to the statement, Brady-McGinnis cooked dinner for her dogs every night.
But on Monday, Nov. 18, at around 4:30 p.m., one of her dogs attacked her and her husband. When two police officers arrived, that dog wasn’t on the property.
Mar. 15, 2025
When a golden retriever named Tristan spotted a tiny black kitten in his owner’s backyard, he was excited to let her know.
Conyers went out to see why Tristan was trying to get her attention and found him “whining and barking, and staring at this little bitty bundle stuck in the grass.”
“He was just going wild,” she recalls of the soon-to-be 4-year-old dog.
Conyers hoped to return the kitten to his mom, but when she didn’t turn up, she began caring for the small feline.
Mar. 15, 2025
Nadya Sulemanis a grandmother!
Suleman was already a mom of six kids — Amerah, Calyssa, Elijah, Caleb, Joshua and Aidan — when she gave birth to her octuplets Noah, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Jonah, Josiah, Makai, Maliyah and Nariyah 15 years ago.
Nadya Suleman/Instagram
“I am so proud of the man you are becoming. You are smart, funny, hard working, loyal, humble, and now a devoted husband and soon to be father,” she wrote.
Mar. 15, 2025
Aranda Briones; Owen Skyler Shover.Photo:Facebook
Facebook
A California man who blamed his former classmate for getting him expelled from school and then killed her was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole on Friday, Oct. 25.
Owen Skyler Shover, 23, was found guilty of murder in August in connection with the 2019 slaying of 16-year-old Aranda Briones, his former Moreno Valley High School classmate.
Her body has never been found.
Mar. 15, 2025
Hvladimir in the sea.Photo:Alamy
Alamy
The white beluga whale suspected of being a Russian “spy whale” has died in Norway.
This discovery led to the belief that the whale was a Russian spy — although the Russian navy denied the claims at the time,explaining in a statementto a Russian broadcaster in 2019, “We have military dolphins for combat roles, we don’t cover that up,” reported BBC News.“If we were using this animal for spying do you really think we’d attach a mobile number with the message ‘please call this number?