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Judge declares mistrial in Texas ‘antifa’ protest case over attorney’s T-shirt

February 18, 2026
Judge declares mistrial in Texas 'antifa' protest case over attorney's T-shirt

A federal judge in Texas declared a mistrial on Tuesday after a defense lawyer wore a shirt in court with images from the civil rights movement, delayinga closely watchedcase in which the Trump administration is accusing a group of protesters of being terrorists and says they are part of a "North-Texas antifa cell".

The Guardian <span>A protest against Ice outside Dallas city hall.</span><span>Photograph: Chris Rusanowsky/Zuma/Shutterstock</span>

US district judge Mark Pittman, an appointee of Donald Trump, declared a mistrial only hours after jury selection began at the federal courthouse in downtown Fort Worth. He abruptly halted the proceedings after MarQuetta Clayton, an attorney for one of the defendants, had been questioning potential jurors for about 20 minutes, taking issue with a shirt she was wearing underneath a black blazer. The shirt contained images of civil rights movement leaders, including Martin Luther King Jr and Shirley Chisholm, as well as images of protests from that time.

Clayton was present in the courtroom all day with her shirt visible to Pittman, but the judge did not stop the proceedings until Clayton began questioning the approximately 75 potential jurors who had assembled.

Pittman claimed the shirt sent a political message that could bias jurors and equate the actions of the defendants in the case with that of the civil rights movement, adding that the decision to wear the shirt may have been intentional. Pittman also argued that the defense lawyers would be outraged if prosecutors were to wear shirts that showed pro-ICE or pro-Trump imagery in front of a jury.

The mistrial means the trial will start over with a completely new panel of potential jurors. The judge announced the trial would restart on Monday at 9am.

"I don't think I have any choice but to declare a mistrial," said Pittman, who also admonished Clayton for showing a poster to potential jurors that had not been submitted to the court ahead of time. "This has to be a first in the history of American jurisprudence, I would think."

Clayton isrunningfor a county judge position in Texas, where early voting started on Tuesday. She declined to comment as she left the courthouse, only saying that she would continue to represent her client in the case.

The nine defendants whose trial began on Tuesdaywere partof a group of protesters who were criminally charged after a demonstration at an ICE detention facility near Fort Worth on 4 July.

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Demonstrators set off fireworks outside in solidarity with people detained inside, and some of the protesters are accused of spraying graffiti on a guard shack and vehicles in the parking lot, slashing the tires on a government vehicle and destroying a security camera. In court papers, prosecutors described the incident as a coordinated attack, saying the protesters dressed in all black to conceal their identities and were armed. They also alleged one protester shot and wounded a police officer on the scene.

The case is the first time the government has filed terrorism charges against antifa, short for anti-fascist, which is not a defined entity but rather an umbrella of left-leaning ideologies. The Trump administration has vowed to crack down on antifa, andexperts believethe case could set a dangerous precedent for prosecutors to bring criminal charges against protesters who demonstrate against ICE.

Lawyers for the nine defendants unanimously agreed they did not think a mistrial was necessary, questioning whether jurors had even seen Clayton's shirt and saying any potential bias could be rooted out during jury selection by questioning the jurors. Shawn Smith, the lead federal prosecutor in the case, did not take a position, simply saying he had not seen a similar situation before.

Harrison Stables, 23, one of the potential jurors who was dismissed after Pittman declared a mistrial, said in an interview he did not see Clayton's shirt, nor did he think it would have influenced his decision-making in the case at all.

Another dismissed juror who declined to give his name said he recognized the imagery on the shirt as saying something about "the fight", but that it would not have biased his assessment of the case.

"I struggle to understand how this could be fair or reasonable in this judicial environment," Lydia Koza, whose wife, Autumn Hill, is one of the defendants, said in an interview across the street from the courthouse where supporters had gathered with signs, coffee and food. A cadre of family members, attorneys, journalists, observers and supporters also crammed into an overflow room in the federal courthouse to watch jury selection through a simulcast on Tuesday.

Before the mistrial, questions to the potential jurors on Tuesday offered a glimpse into themes that are likely to be key to the strategy on both sides in the case. Smith, the prosecutor, asked potential jurors about bias against ICE and Trump, among other issues. Clayton asked jurors about the difference between a riot, a noise demonstration and a protest, and whether it was ever acceptable to bring a gun to a protest.

Pittman's decision on Tuesday came after a series of pretrial rulings penalizing lawyers for the defense. In December, he ordered three defense attorneys toeach pay a $500 finefor filing aggressive motions for discovery. He also nearly blocked George Lobb, an attorney, from representing one of the defendants, saying he had not met the residency requirements to practice in the district. Lobb eventually withdrew from the federal case and Clayton replaced him.

After declaring the mistrial, Pittman gave a short speech decrying partisan division in the country, saying he was "absolutely disgusted" by it and that "we have to find a way to turn down the anger".

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Wildfires rage in Oklahoma as thousands urged to evacuate a small city

February 18, 2026
Wildfires rage in Oklahoma as thousands urged to evacuate a small city

Warm, dry and windy weather in Oklahoma has fueled multiple wildfires and prompted authorities to urge nearly one-third of the residents of the small city of Woodward to flee.

NBC Universal Forestry wildfires seen in a rural landscape. (Oklahoma Forestry Services)

Matt Lehenbauer, director of emergency management for Woodward and its nearly 12,000 inhabitants, said the evacuation recommendation covers roughly 4,000 people. It is voluntary, he said, because Oklahoma prohibits mandatory evacuations.

The wildfire in Woodward, about 140 miles northwest of Oklahoma City, is approaching a "worst-case scenario," Lehenbauer said, but it hasn't moved into the most populated area of the city.

A blaze in Beaver County at the base of the Oklahoma Panhandle, about 217 miles northwest of Oklahoma City, has consumed an estimated 15,000 acres alone,Oklahoma Forestry Services said.The agencyposted videoof golden farmland set against the backdrop of roiling flames and dark smoke rising and sidestepping like a thunderstorm.

"The fire in Beaver County is continuing to spread," Gov. Kevin Stitt said in a statement. "Winds are gusting over 65 mph."

Stitt said he was being briefed at the State Emergency Operations Center, which was tracking the larger fires, including one in Texas County.

The fires consumed fuel along the western and northwestern areas of the state as unusually warm weather, predicted by the National Weather Service to reach as much as25 degrees above normalduring the day, was joined by gusting winds out of the southwest of more than 60 mph.

It wasn't immediately clear whether anyone has been injured or structures have burned.

The Beaver County fire on Tuesday crossed into Kansas, thatstate's forest service said.The focus of firefighting efforts is in the city of Englewood, the Kansas Forest Service said.

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Gov. Laura Kelly had issuedan emergency proclamationSunday warning of dangerous fire weather through Thursday.

Kansas' emergency operations center was staffed Tuesday with personnel from the State Fire Marshal Office, the Kansas Forest Service, the Kansas Highway Patrol and state Transportation Department, state officials said. Parts of Interstate 70 and U.S. 50 were closed as wind-driven dust creates poor visibility, Kansas officials said in a statement.

The Oklahoma Agriculture Department said temperatures along the western edge of the state could reach as high as 85 degrees Wednesday.

The weather service office in Norman, Oklahoma, said the fire weather could stick around until at least Friday. The state Agriculture Department said in a statement that conditions will start to weaken Thursday as winds shift from the southwest to the northwest, pulling in cooler air.

According to the National Interagency Fire Center, new fires also erupted in Texas, New Mexico and Missouri as the warm, dry air settled into the Central Plains following a storm front over the weekend.

The National Weather Service said Tuesday that more than 21 million people were under fire weather watches, triggered when sustained high winds and dry weather are expected to create extreme fire danger. Another 11 million were under red flag warnings, which warn of imminent critical fire weather, according to the agency.

Late Tuesday, the weather service issued urgent fire weather messages for Wednesday that warns of red flag conditions in the Texas and Oklahoma panhandles from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. CT; red flag conditions in Cheyenne County, Colorado and Greeley County, Kansas, from noon to 6 p.m. CT; and red flag warnings for parts of Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska and South Dakota from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. CT.

Similar warnings for Wednesday extend as far north as North Central Illinois, which has a red flag warning scheduled from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. CT.

Most of the warnings cite low humidity and possible wind gusts of 40 mph or greater. "Any fires that develop may rapidly grow and spread out of control," the weather service said.

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Russia hosts Cuban foreign minister and urges US not to blockade Cuba

February 18, 2026
Russia hosts Cuban foreign minister and urges US not to blockade Cuba

MOSCOW (AP) — The Cuban foreign minister visited Moscow on Wednesday as the island faces blackouts and severe fuel shortages worsened bya U.S oil embargo.

Associated Press Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, left, and Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez enter a hall during their meeting in Moscow, Russia, Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026. (Hector Retamal/Pool Photo via AP) Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, 2nd left, meets with Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez, right, in Moscow, Russia, Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026. (Hector Retamal/Pool Photo via AP) Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, second left, and Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez, front right, enter a hall during their meeting in Moscow, Russia, Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026. (Hector Retamal/Pool Photo via AP) Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov speaks during a meeting with Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez in Moscow, Russia, Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026. (Hector Retamal/Pool Photo via AP) Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez, left, listens to Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov during their meeting in Moscow, Russia, Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026. (Hector Retamal/Pool Photo via AP)

Russia Cuba

Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez held talks with his Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov and was set to meet later in the day with President Vladimir Putin.

Lavrov urged the U.S. to refrain from blockading Cuba, which has struggled to import oil for its power plants and refineries after U.S. President Donald Trump threatened any nation that sold oil to Cubawith tariffs.

"Together with most members of the global community, we are calling on the U.S. to show common sense, take a responsible approach and refrain from its plans of sea blockade," Lavrov said during the talks with Rodriguez.

He promised that Moscow will "continue supporting Cuba and its people in protecting the country's sovereignty and security."

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov also noted that "Russia, like many other countries, has consistently spoken against the blockade of the island."

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"We have our relations with Cuba, and we value these relations very much," Peskov told reporters. "And we intend to further develop them — of course, during difficult times, by providing appropriate assistance to our friends."

Asked whether sending fuel to Cuba could deraila recent warming of tieswith Washington, Peskov responded that "we don't think these issues are linked."

Putin has praised Trump's efforts to mediate an end to the conflict in Ukraine, and Moscow and Washington have discussed ways to revive their economic ties.

Venezuela, one of Cuba's main oil suppliers, stopped selling crude to the island in January after theU.S. captured then-President Nicolás Maduroin a pre-dawn raid and flew him to New York to face drug trafficking charges.

Mexico alsocut off oil shipments to Cubain January, after Trump issued the tariff threat.

Russia's Izvestia news outlet last week cited the Russian embassy in Havana as saying that Moscow was preparing to send humanitarian fuel shipment to Havana in the near future. On Monday, Russian ambassador to Cuba, Viktor Koronelli, said that Moscow was looking into details of organizing assistance to Cuba but offered no specifics.

Cuba's fuel shortages already have forced Russian tourist companies to halt the sales of package tours to the island after the Cuban government said that itwill not provide fuel to planes that landon the island.

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Sharon Stone, 67, Reveals Why She's Not "Afraid of Aging" or "Nudity" in Fiery Video

February 18, 2026
Sharon Stone, 67, Reveals Why She's Not

Getty Images

InStyle Sharon Stone attends the 2026 Annual Movies for Grownups Awards with AARP at Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel on January 10, 2026 Getty Images

The Gist

  • Sharon Stone shared a fiery message revealing why she isn't afraid of aging in a video shared on February 16.

  • The Basic Instinct star also questioned why society has encouraged people to be fearful of the human body, including nudity and basic human functions.

  • Stone previously joked about finding the beauty in the "pleats" in her underarms.

Sharon Stoneisn't holding back her frustration aroundsocietal attitudes towards agingand the human body. In a fiery video shared on February 16, the67-year-old staradvocated for more self-acceptance while urging fans to get more comfortable "living in [their] own selves."

TheBasic Instinctstarrevealed that a reaction to a painting of a nude woman in her art studio set her off in an Instagram Reel shared on Monday. The visibly frustrated artist could be seen wearing a navy blue knit sweater and low-rise blue jeans as she stood in front of some of her colorful artwork pieces. "Are we supposed to be terrified when we look in the mirror?" she asked the camera. "Is it supposed to be a secret when we pee and poo and brush our teeth? Why are we supposed to be afraid of our own human self? It's like the weirdest idea in the world to me."

"Excuse me, I wear it every day," theCasinoactress continued. "I get up in it. I go to sleep in it. I pee in it. I poo in it. It's my apartment. I live here."

Stone also opened up more about her confusion in her caption, querying her followers, "Why in 2026 are we still afraid of aging & living in our own selves. We are more than appearance.. we are artists, mothers, sisters, wives, nurses, teachers… and the list goes on!"

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Sharon Stone attends The Fashion Awards 2025 presented by Pandora at the Royal Albert Hall on December 1, 2025 Getty Images

Getty Images

The star revealed an upsetting incident at her art studio had made her question why society censored the human body, explaining, "I got really fired up about this when I was touring my studio a few weeks back. The filming crew had requested to move a painting out of shot, 'the Goddess,' whom happens to be a naked woman. We are afraid of nudity on our screens, our bodies, our home.. but not violence or every other thing we are constantly bombarded with day in and day out? Get real!"

Sharon Stone attends the 2026 Astra Film Awards presented by The Hollywood Creative Alliance at Sofitel Los Angeles At Beverly Hills on January 9, 2026 Getty Images

Getty Images

Stone previously opened up about her positive approach to aging in a March 2025 interview withThe Times, joking that she's found thebeauty in the "pleats" in her underarms.

Sharon Stone attends the We Do It Together's 10th Anniversary Gala at Mr. Brainwash Art Museum on November 18, 2025 in Beverly Hills Getty Images

Getty Images

"A lot of people give up as they get older," she told the outlet. "They let go of their body because it's collapsing anyway, or it's like, 'I'm not defined by my body any more.' But you still have to love that body. I joke that my underarms have pleats now."

The painter added, "I think, 'Well, I had beautiful arms and now they're strong and painting and like angel wings. So what if they have pleats? Maybe that's what makes them wonderful now."

Read the original article onInStyle

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Daniel Radcliffe urges “Harry Potter” fans to stop asking new cast about original stars

February 18, 2026
Daniel Radcliffe urges

Jon Furniss/WireImage

Entertainment Weekly Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, and Rupert Grint in 2011 Jon Furniss/WireImage

Daniel Radcliffehas one request when it comes to HBO's forthcomingHarry Potterseries: Leave him out of the conversation.

The 36-year-old, London-born actor famously starred in the original, eight-filmHarry Potterfilm series from Warner Bros. Many years and one huge corporate merger later, HBO, a Warners subsidiary, is bringing the first-everseries adaptationof the books by J.K. Rowling to the small screen.

Radcliffe and his fellow stars, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint, have no association with the new series. But Radcliffe wants even less, and not for his own sake.

Pointing toHarry Potterfans "around the world" urging each other to "look after these kids" — that is, the young stars of the newPotterseries — Radcliffe noted in a Tuesday interview withScreenRantthat "if everyone really means that... one of the things you can do for me is not ask about us — me, Emma, Rupert — all the time."

Arabella Stanton, Dominic McLaughlin, and Alastair Stout for HBO's new 'Harry Potter' series Aidan Monaghan/HBO

Aidan Monaghan/HBO

Radcliffe said that he would not like the original Harry, Hermione, and Ron to become "weird spectral phantoms in these children's lives."

After anextensive search, HBO'sHarry Pottercast Dominic McLaughlin, Arabella Stanton, and Alastair Stout in the roles originated by Radcliffe, Watson, and Grint, respectively. Though the series followed the films' lead in packing the supporting cast with veteran talents like John Lithgow and Janet McTeer, McLaughlin, Stanton, and Stout are all relative newcomers.

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Radcliffe expressed his hope that the series is "going to be a new thing," and that the films he helped make memorable can be left in the rear view.

Radcliffe declared further ambivalence toward his role in film history as the original boy with the lightning-bolt scar in a separate interview withThe New York Timesalso published Tuesday.

Anticipating his two-year-old son with partner Erin Darke approaching the age when many kids first discoverPotter, Radcliffe said that "hopefully I can just put [HBO's series] on, and he doesn't have to watch me in it. That'd be, honestly, the ideal."

Daniel Radcliffe in New York City in December 2025 Valerie Terranova/Getty 

Valerie Terranova/Getty

Radcliffe is far from the only originalHarry Potterstar to call for a full embargo on questions related to the new series, or to the franchise at large for that matter.

David Thewlis, who starred as the werewolf wizard Remus Lupin in five of the originalPotterfilms, recently said he's "sick of talking about" a potential return to the magical, multi-media universe.

"I feel like I'd be far too old to play my original character, and, no, I wouldn't want to go back into it," he said. "I've had quite enough of that."

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

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Genetic genealogy that caught notorious killers now used in Nancy Guthrie case

February 18, 2026
Genetic genealogy that caught notorious killers now used in Nancy Guthrie case

Investigators looking to track downNancy Guthrie's suspected kidnappers are turning to a relatively new technology that has been attributed to solving some of the most prolific criminal and cold cases in American history.

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Investigative genetic genealogy (IGG) is defined as "the science of using genetic and genealogical methods to generate leads for law enforcement entities investigating crimes and identifying human remains,"according tothe International Society of Genetic Genealogy.

Investigators use a DNA sample to search for genetic familial matches, ultimately looking to narrow down potential identities by zeroing in on close relatives of the individual.

On Tuesday,the FBIconfirmed to Fox News Digital that IGG was being used to test DNA found on a glove discovered two miles from Nancy Guthrie's home and other DNA samples found inside her house.

Harvey Levin Gives Explosive Update On Purported Nancy Levin Ransom Note On 'Hannity'

Savannah Guthrie stands beside her mother Nancy Guthrie and poses together for a photo.

The move comes after both samples did not find a match in the nationwide law enforcement database, CODIS – which only includes individuals previously known to authorities.

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The technology has been used to solve several high-profile cases in recent years, with the FBI now turning to IGG in hopes of identifying the DNA found on the glove discovered two miles from Nancy Guthrie's home and other samples located inside the house.

Here is a look at previous cases in which IGG helped authorities locate their suspect.

Former Fbi Behavioral Analyst Says Guthrie Suspect Amateur Criminal, Savannah's Latest Message Tailored To Him

A view from a doorbell camera showing an armed individual outside the residence of Nancy Guthrie in Tucson, Arizona

Immediately following the brutal murders of four University of Idaho college students on Nov. 13, 2022, investigators raced to track down the person responsible for killing Madison Mogen, Ethan Chapin, Xana Kernodle and Kaylee Goncalves.

Using DNA found on a Ka-Bar knife sheath left behind at the crime scene, authorities sent samples to forensics lab Othram after coming back empty-handed when using CODIS.

Idaho Killer Left Behind 'Catastrophic' Evidence That Fast-tracked His Capture, Investigators Reveal

Bryan Kohberger during his sentencing hearing

Othram was then able to create a DNA profile that matched items pulled fromBryan Kohberger's familytrash at their Pennsylvania home, leading investigators to "a male as not being excluded as the biological father of Suspect Profile," according to the affidavit.

Kohberger was subsequently taken into custody on Dec. 30, 2022 and pleaded guilty to the quadruple murders last summer as part of a plea deal to escape the potential death penalty.

He is serving four consecutive life sentences, plus another 10 years.

Nancy Guthrie Case Investigators Find Set Of Black Gloves Near Roadside

More than three decades after 13 people were murdered and dozens more raped, IGG led investigators to finally track down one of the most prolific killersin California's history.

Using DNA collected from the crime scene, authorities were able to match a profile created for the Golden State Killer to online genetic profiles. The results pointed investigators toward a relative of former police officer Joseph James DeAngelo, who was arrested in 2018 and later charged with dozens of crimes.

Nancy Guthrie Case: 5 Key Evidence Pieces So Far

"We were confident that he was born between 1940 and 1960," Paul Holes, a former investigator with the Contra Costa County Sheriff's Office, told Fox News during a 2021 interview for the Fox Nation documentary and Fox News Audio Podcast "Grim Tide: Hunting the Long Island Serial Killer."

"The common ancestors that we used were great, great-grandparents. These were people who were born in the 1840s, and we built a family tree that consisted of thousands," Holes said. "And then ultimately, we landed on a California branch with a small number of… males of the right age. And then, at that point, it's just 'Investigation 101.' Who are these men and could any of them be somebody that we need to look at closer to being the person that is responsible?"

Prosecutors previously called DeAngelo's decades of crimes "simply staggering," encompassing 87 victims at 53 separate crime scenes spanning 11 California counties.

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Nancy Guthrie Case: All Of The Properties Searched By Authorities Since Disappearance

DeAngelopleaded guiltyto 13 murders and 13 rapes in 2020, and was later handed multiple life sentences without the possibility of parole.

Nearly 25 years after the body of anunidentified little girlwas discovered in a 55-gallon drum barrel near New Hampshire's Bear Brook State Park, investigators used genetic genealogy to crack the final name included in the infamous Allenstown Four.

Police Id Three Bodies Found Inside Barrels At New Hampshire State Park Nearly Two Decades Later

Terry Rasmussen and Rea Rasmussen

From 1985 to 2000, authorities located four bodies stuffed in barrels in what was later ruled as homicides, with three of the individuals being identified as Marlyse Elizabeth Honeychurch, 24, and her two daughters, Marie Elizabeth Vaughn, 6, and Sarah Lynn McWaters, 1.

However, the identity of the final victim remained unknown until 2025, when authorities used genetic genealogy to determine the young girl was Rea Rassmussen,according tothe National Center for Missing and Endangered Children.

All four victims are believed to have been murdered by serial killer Terry Peder Rasmussen, the biological father of Rea, who was suspected of killing at least six women and two children prior to his death in 2010.

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The break in the case came in 2024, when the New Hampshire State Police partnered with the DNA Doe Project and learned the unidentified child's mother was a woman named Pepper Reed.

Reed's family reportedly told investigators she was last seen inTexas during Christmasof 1975, and later moved to California while pregnant. Her family identified Terry Rasmussen as the father of the child, which was later confirmed by a birth record located in Orange County, California.

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Using DNA samples from Reed's sole surviving sibling, investigators were able to confirm Rea Rassmussen's identity. She is believed to have been between the ages of 2 and 4 when she was killed.

However, Reed remains missing and is believed to have been murdered by Terry Rasmussen, who was later convicted of killing girlfriend Eunsoon Jun in 2002.

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In a first-of-its-kind trial using genetic genealogy testing, William Talbott II was found guilty of murder in the 1987 deaths of a young couple from Canada, Jay Cook, 20, and Tanya Van Cuylenborg, 18.

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Investigators identified Talbott as a suspect after uploadingDNA found at the crime sceneto the public genealogy website GEDMatch. The technology pointed to two second cousins of Talbott, which allowed investigators to construct a family tree and ultimately identify him as their primary suspect.

Detectives used a discarded coffee cup to obtain Talbott's DNA, which matched the evidence found at the crime scene.

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The case was the first time genetic genealogy had been used to put a suspect on trial, with prosecutors reportedly using Talbott as an example showcasing the power of genetic genealogy testing.

"Folks aren't going to get away with murder anymore when we have this information," prosecutor Adam Cornell said,according toFOX 13. "If you're a killer and you're out there, then this office and other law enforcement around the country may be coming for you."

Fox News Digital's Michael Ruiz contributed to this report.

Original article source:Genetic genealogy that caught notorious killers now used in Nancy Guthrie case

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Many Democrats are still down on the Democrats, a new AP-NORC poll finds

February 18, 2026
Many Democrats are still down on the Democrats, a new AP-NORC poll finds

WASHINGTON (AP) — Democratic candidates have notched a series of wins in recent special elections — but a new AP-NORC poll finds views of the Democratic Party among rank-and-file Democrats have not bounced back since President Donald Trump's victory in 2024.

Associated Press FILE - Birds fly near the U.S. Capitol during sunrise, Feb. 13, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Tom Brenner, File) FILE - Part of the stage with the DNC logo is seen at the Democratic National Convention Thursday, Aug. 22, 2024, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson, File) Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., stepped off the Senate floor, Friday evening, Jan. 30, 2026, at the Capitol in Washington. The Senate voted Friday to fund most of the government through the end of September after President Donald Trump made a deal with Democrats to carve out Homeland Security funding and allow Congress to debate new restrictions on federal immigration raids across the country. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana) FILE - A podium is prepared before Democrats hold news conference on the health care funding fight on the steps of the House before votes to end the government shutdown on Capitol Hill, Nov. 12, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mariam Zuhaib, File) FILE - People stand outside the Democratic National Committee headquarters in Washington, June 14, 2016. (AP Photo/Paul Holston, File)

AP Poll Parties

Only about 7 in 10 Democrats have a positive view of the Democratic Party, according to new polling fromThe Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. While the overwhelming majority of Democrats still feel good about their party,they're much less positivethan they've been in the past.

The midterm elections are still many months away, and lackluster favorability doesn't spell electoral doom. Other factors could benefit Democrats this year, including broadly negative views of Trump and other Republicans. Additionally,recent polling has found that independents tend toidentify more with the party that's out of power, which could boost Democrats this year too. Historically, the party not in the White House has picked up seats in Congress in midterm elections.

But the lack of enthusiasm could be a longer-term problem for the party. Democrats' favorability of their party plummeted after the 2024 election, from 85% in September 2024 to 67% in October 2025. And despite overwhelming victories in November's off-season elections and a string of wins since then, those views haven't recovered. Other polling indicates that Democrats are deeply frustrated with their party.

At the same time, there's some potential good news for Democrats in the new poll. Although Republicans are slightly more enthusiastic about their own party, Americans in general don't think highly of either party.Health care is on many Americans' mindsthis year, and it's an issue where Democrats have a large advantage, according to the survey. Meanwhile, Republicans have lost some ground on two of Trump's signature issues, the economy and immigration, although Americans don't necessarily trust Democrats more on those issues as a result.

Many Democrats are frustrated

Other polling suggests that Democrats' post-2024 slump is unusually large.

InGallup's measure of favorability, Democrats' positive views of their own party declined about 12 percentage points in the last year. That marked the lowest measure in that question's history, which dates back to 2001. Notably, Democrats did not see a similar decline after their first loss to Trump in 2016.

That diminished view of the Democratic Party in the AP-NORC polling is consistent regardless of Democrats' age, race, ideology or educational background — suggesting that appealing to a specific group or two won't fix the problem.

A separate survey from thePew Research Centerlast fall found roughly two-thirds of Democrats in September said their own party made them "frustrated" compared to just 4 in 10 Republicans.

Among those frustrated Democrats, about 4 in 10 felt their party was not fighting hard enough against Trump while about 1 in 10 said there was a lack of good leadership or a cohesive agenda.

Many Americans are negative about both parties

It's not just Democrats — Americans aren't thrilled with either party right now.

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Roughly one-quarter of Americans have a negative view of both the Democratic Party and the Republican Party, according to the AP-NORC data. That double-negativity is especially sharp among independents and Americans under 45.

About half of U.S. adults only view one party positively, and only about 1 in 10 feel good about both parties.

But Democrats' loss of goodwill is more recent. Polling over the last 25 years from Gallup shows that Americans used to feel much more positively toward the Democrats. Around 2010,public sentiment turned against the Democrats. Since then, at least half of Americans have held unfavorable views of the party, according to Gallup.

Negative views of the Democrats now rival the most negative points in time for the Republicans.

Democrats hold health care as a strength

With health care at the top of Americans' priority lists as costs and premiums rise, Democrats have a possible advantage going into the midterm year.

About one-third of U.S. adults — 35% — trust the Democrats to do a better job handling health care, compared to 23% for the Republicans. That is broadly in line with the last time the question was asked in October 2025.

At the same time, Republicans have lost some ground on the issues that were key to Trump's reelection — the economy and immigration. But Democrats haven't managed to capitalize on it. Only about 3 in 10 U.S. adults, 31%, say Republicans are the party they trust to handle the economy, down slightly from 36% last year. But Democrats haven't made any gains on this issue; rather, slightly more Americans now say they trust "neither" party to handle the economy.

Neither party has an edge on who is better equipped to manage the cost of living, which was first asked in the most recent poll.

Republicans are also down slightly on handling immigration. Only about one-third of U.S. adults trust them to better handle immigration, an apparent decrease from 39% in October. Democrats didn't appear to benefit from that shift either.

The AP-NORC poll of 1,156 adults was conducted Feb. 5-8 using a sample drawn from NORC's probability-based AmeriSpeak Panel, which is designed to be representative of the U.S. population. The margin of sampling error for adults overall is plus or minus 3.9 percentage points. The margin of sampling error for Democrats overall is plus or minus 6.0 percentage points.

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