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Brooklyn residents outraged over migrant shelter located feet away from elementary school: 'None of us knew'

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Brooklyn residents outraged over migrant shelter located feet away from elementary school: 'None of us knew'

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As New York City students prepare to return to class, residents in Brooklyn are infuriated by city officials’ decision to open an all-male migrant shelter just feet away from an elementary school. 

“I try not to worry about this too much,” Brooklyn mom Irina Edelstein said on “Fox & Friends First” Thursday. “There’s enough running around and getting ready for school as it is. And, trying not to let anxiety get to me.”

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The 400-bed migrant shelter opened in Gowanus in April, roughly 1,000 feet from City Life Academy, a private Christian K-12 school. 

NYC WOMAN RAPED BY MIGRANT AT KNIFEPOINT NEAR POPULAR BEACH BOARDWALK, POLICE AND SOURCES SAY

School leaders and residents in the Brooklyn neighborhood were left outraged over an alleged lack of transparency from city leaders, as well as the proximity of the shelter to the school. 

“No one told us from the city side about the shelter’s coming up,” the mother of three said. “We found out from local residents when they stopped us at the pickup and they said, did you guys know right around the corner here, the shelter’s opening up for 400 men. None of us knew. Even the principal didn’t know.”

City officials did not follow environmental testing protocols and violated other building codes to accelerate the shelter’s opening, according to an investigation by the International Women’s Forum (IWF).

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“Our school hosted the meeting where council members said that ‘we reached out to all the schools, we spoke to all the principals,’ which is absolutely not true,” Edelstein said. 

The NYC Mayor’s Office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

MIGRANTS AS YOUNG AS 11 BEHIND CENTRAL PARK ROBBERY SPIKE: POLICE FORCED TO DEPLOY DRONES, BEEF UP PATROLS

While Brooklyn is thousands of miles from the southern border, the borough, like the rest of New York City, is facing an overwhelming surge of migrants. According to city officials, over 200,000 migrants have descended on New York City since the spring of 2022.

The migrant surge has prompted the city to cut budgets and allocate more spending for sanctuary city services. New York City is soon projected to have spent more than $5 billion over the last two years on the migrant crisis – an estimate that is expected to double by 2025. 

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Along with expenses, the migrant surge has also led to a rise in crime, including high-profile crimes like the attack on NYPD officers earlier this year and a migrant accused of raping a woman at knifepoint earlier this month. 

Edelstein recounted one time when an alleged migrant was spotted trying to break into her car while she was picking up her children from school. 

“I was walking back to my car and one parent stopped me and she said, there are two guys [that] just walked by your car and tried to open it while you were inside the school. And she said that looked like the guys who were residents of the nearby shelter,” she told host Todd Piro.

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Northeast

Judge reveals earliest potential start times for Luigi Mangione’s federal murder trial

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Judge reveals earliest potential start times for Luigi Mangione’s federal murder trial

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Luigi Mangione returned to court Friday in a bid to have the most serious charges he faces thrown out of his federal case — as supporters gathered outside of the courthouse for a hearing that could determine whether the potential death penalty remains in play.

The motion to drop two of the four federal charges against Mangione, including the most serious, murder through use of a firearm, would eliminate the potential death penalty if granted.

While the judge did not issue a ruling after attorneys presented arguments on both sides of the issue, she did set a tentative timeline for Mangione’s federal trial. No definitive date was set, however.

Judge Margaret Garnett said jury selection could begin in the week of Sept. 8. If it’s a capital case, opening statements would likely be in January 2027. If she grants the defense motion and removes capital charges, opening statements would begin in October.

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POLICE SERGEANT DENIES HEARING LUIGI MANGIONE MOTHER’S ALLEGED DAMNING STATEMENT ABOUT CEO KILLING

Luigi Mangione appears in Manhattan Supreme Court for a suppression hearing as both sides prepare to wrap up arguments on Dec. 18, 2025. (Curtis Means for Daily Mail via Pool)

Earlier this week, federal public defender Paresh Patel joined Mangione’s legal team as a special counsel for the Friday hearing. Patel is a Maryland-based appellate attorney and made the defense’s arguments against the charges in court.

Patel argued that the federal stalking charges against Mangione don’t meet the requirements to justify the more serious charge of murder through use of a firearm because stalking, on its own, isn’t a violent crime. 

Assistant U.S. Attorney Jun Xiang, giving oral arguments on behalf of the prosecution, countered that the victim’s death is an appropriate element to justify the charge.

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An electronic advertising truck in support of Luigi Mangione drives past Federal Court where a suppression hearing is underway, Friday, January 9, 2026. (Rashid Umar Abbasi for Fox News Digital)

UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was shot in the back multiple times, on video, by a man prosecutors allege is Mangione.

In one example given by Xiang, he described a gang hit on a house, in which a member tossed a grenade in to kill one person. Additional victims inside died. He argued that the defendant needs to know that his conduct places the victim in fear of reasonable bodily injury.

When the hearing wrapped up around 1:30 p.m., the judge said she would issue a ruling later.

She told the parties to aim for jury selection at the beginning of September, with the trial starting later that fall or early winter, with a January start at the latest.

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An electronic advertising truck in support of Luigi Mangione drives past Federal Court where a suppression hearing is underway, Friday, January 9, 2026. (Rashid Umar Abbasi for Fox News Digital)

Separately, federal prosecutors have rejected “meritless” arguments from accused assassin and former Ivy Leaguer Mangione’s legal team claiming Attorney General Pam Bondi has a conflict of interest and should have recused herself due to prior ties to a lobbying firm, ahead of a key hearing in his federal case.

The defense, in previous filings, has accused Bondi of “prejudice” against the defendant and claimed that her former position as a partner at Ballard Partners, a lobbying firm with ties to UnitedHealthcare, should lead to her recusal.

WATCH: Luigi Mangione supporters arrive before key hearing in assassination case

“When Ms. Bondi left Ballard Partners to become the Attorney General in 2025, the very first defendant she personally selected to be executed was the man accused of killing the CEO of her former client,” defense attorney Karen Friedman Agnifilo wrote in a December filing.

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Prosecutors, however, called her claims “incomplete and misleading.”

Luigi Mangione supporters outside Federal Court in Manhattan, N.Y., January 9, 2026 where a suppression hearing is underway. (Rashid Umar Abbasi for Fox News Digital)

Bondi no longer works there, they wrote, is not being paid by the firm or its clients and was not influenced by any “corporate interests” when the DOJ decided to seek the death penalty against Mangione if he is convicted.

Although his lawyers have dropped their motion to suppress statements he made to police before and after his arrest at a Pennsylvania McDonald’s, the defense is still hoping to suppress damning evidence recovered from Mangione’s backpack without a search warrant.

Luigi Mangione supporters outside Federal Court in Manhattan, N.Y., January 9, 2026 where a suppression hearing is underway. Rashid Umar Abbasi for Fox News Digital (Rashid Umar Abbasi for Fox News Digital)

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Federal prosecutors have countered that the suspected murder weapon and allegedly incriminating journals inside would have inevitably been discovered later — even if Altoona police hadn’t searched it at the scene.

The judge said she did not see the need for an evidentiary hearing that the defense requested on the matter.

UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson is pictured in an undated portrait provided by UnitedHealth. The executive was shot from behind and killed on his way to an investor conference in New York City in what prosecutors have described as a politically motivated assassination. (AP Photo/UnitedHealth Group via AP)

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Federal prosecutors had opposed the idea of holding one.

Legal experts have said police do not typically need one when they search a bag as part of the arrest process, and prosecutors said everything in the bag would have been inevitably obtained later when they obtained their search warrants.

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A member of the NYPD Crime Scene Unit takes a picture of a shell casing found at the scene where UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was shot and killed in Midtown Manhattan in New York City on Dec. 4, 2024. (REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton)

Luigi Mangione pictured in a Pennsylvania booking photo. (Pennsylvania Department of Corrections)

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Surveillance video shows a man approach the 50-year-old Thompson from behind and gun him down outside a Manhattan hotel that was supposed to host a shareholder conference later that morning.

The Minnesota resident was a married father of two.

Fox News’ Brendan McDonald contributed to this report.



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Boston, MA

Red Sox shed light on plans for outfield, including Ceddanne Rafaela’s role

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Red Sox shed light on plans for outfield, including Ceddanne Rafaela’s role


Last year the Red Sox had a unique and enviable problem, which was that at full strength the club had more starting-caliber outfielders than it had available lineup spots.

Injuries kept that from being an issue most of the season, but for some stretches the only way the club could accommodate everyone was by playing Gold Glove center fielder Ceddanne Rafaela at second base.



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Pittsburg, PA

Masontown Borough unanimously votes to reinstate police department

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Masontown Borough unanimously votes to reinstate police department


During an emergency meeting on Saturday night, Masontown borough council voted 6-0 to reinstate its police department after council initially voted on Monday to lay off the entire department, citing budgetary reasons as the leading factor for the decision.



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