North Carolina
NC chef named finalist for James Beard Award
A North Carolina chef has been named a finalist for a regional James Beard Award.
The annual awards honor the best in the culinary industry and are often referred to as “The Oscars of Food.” The Triangle has a legacy of taking home honors.
The finalists were announced Wednesday and despite many North Carolina chefs being named semifinalists in national and regional categories, only one chef moved ahead as a finalist.
Silver Iocovozzi of Neng Jr.’s in Asheville was named one of five finalists for the best chef in the southeast award.
The winners will be announced at the 2025 James Beard Restaurant and Chef Awards ceremony on Monday, June 16 at the Lyric Opera of Chicago.
North Carolina chefs have a history of winning James Beard Awards. Lantern’s Andrea Reusing won best chef in the southeast in 2011. Ben Barker of Magnolia Grill won the same honor in 2000. Karen and Ben Barker of Magnolia Grill won outstanding pastry chef in 2003.
Raleigh’s Ashley Christensen, who won the James Beard Award for Outstanding Chef in 2019, won the award for best chef in the southeast in 2014.
Ricky Moore of Saltbox Seafood in Durham won the James Beard Award for Best Chef: Southeast in 2022.
North Carolina
Judge sentences teen to life without parole for fatally shooting 5 in North Carolina
RALEIGH, N.C. — A judge sentenced an 18-year-old who acknowledged killing five people in a North Carolina mass shooting to life in prison without parole Friday, rejecting arguments that he deserved the chance for release decades from now.
Austin David Thompson was 15 during the Oct. 13, 2022, attack that began at his Raleigh home when he shot and repeatedly stabbed his 16-year-old brother, James.
Equipped with firearms and wearing camouflage, Thompson then fatally shot four others — including an off-duty city police officer — in his neighborhood and along a greenway. He was arrested in a shed after a self-inflicted gunshot wound to his head.
Thompson pleaded guilty last month to five counts of first-degree murder and five other counts less than two weeks before his scheduled trial.
Thompson, who did not speak in court, was led away in handcuffs after the sentencing. Family members of the shooting victims cried as the sentence was handed down. Thompson’s attorneys announced plans to appeal the sentence.
Superior Court Judge Paul Ridgeway judge had the option to sentence him to life in prison with the chance for parole after at least 25 years, but Thompson did not face the death penalty given his age at the time of the crimes.
“It’s hard to conceive of a greater display of malice,” Ridgeway said, adding that months of planning and fantasizing by Thompson to carry out the rampage also confirmed that Thompson is the rare juvenile offender “whose crimes reflect irreparable corruption.”
Austin Thompson signs documents pleading guilty to five counts of murder in Wake County Superior Court on Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Raleigh, N.C. Credit: AP/Allen G. Breed
During the sentencing hearing that began last week, prosecutors revealed the previously confidential contents of a handwritten note with Thompson’s name and the shooting date found at his family’s house in the Hedingham subdivision.
The note said the “reason I did this is because I hate humans they are destroying the planet/earth,” adding that he killed James Thompson ”because he would get in my way.”
Thompson “cannot tell you why he wrote that note the way that he did,” defense lawyer Deonte’ Thomas said, noting that he had no history of ecological-based anger. “And he cannot tell you why he ran down the streets of Hedingham terrorizing people that day.”
But “he is not unredeemable, he is not incorrigible,” Thomas added in asking Ridgeway to give him the opportunity one day to tell parole commissioners he could “still be a productive person in society.”
Thomas argued that the rampage happened during a behavioral episode caused by medicine he regularly took for acne which dissociated the youth from reality. A psychiatrist who interviewed Thompson and a geneticist testified to bolster the explanation.
Ridgeway decided the evidence did not support the conclusion that Thompson’s acts happened while he entered an altered mental state induced by the medication and a genetic abnormality.
Prosecutors dismissed the medication argument as weak and highlighted Thompson’s internet search history on his phone and computer leading up to the attack. They said it included school shootings and were related to guns, assaults and bomb-making materials.
Nicole Connors, 52; Raleigh police Officer Gabriel Torres, 29; Mary Marshall, 34; and Susan Karnatz, 49, also were killed in the rampage. Two other people were wounded, including another police officer involved in the search for Thompson.
“In the blink of an eye, everything changed for those people and for the people that they left behind,” Wake County assistant prosecutor Patrick Latour said Thursday while urging a sentence with no potential parole. “And the thing that made it change was not some acne medication. It was the defendant’s knowing, researched, well thought out, planned, decisive actions.”
The judge heard from people like Jasmin Torres, the widow of Gabriel Torres and the mother of their 5-year-old daughter. She asked Ridgeway to sentence Thompson to life without parole, calling him a “monster.”
“Not one of us surviving victims, our families, our friends, our community should ever have to worry about a future where his barbaric self is set free,” Torres said last week.
Thompson’s parents testified they couldn’t explain why their son committed the violence, calling him a normal, happy kid who did well in school and showed no signs of destruction.
Thompson’s father pleaded guilty to improperly storing his handgun that authorities said was found when his son was arrested. He received a suspended sentence and probation.
“We both lost our children, one at the hand of the other. We never saw this coming and still cannot make sense of it,” mother Elise Thompson said last week while telling the families of shooting victims she will “forever be sorry for the pain that this has caused you.”
North Carolina
Rutherfordton roadway closed as disabled tanker offloads sodium phosphate
RUTHERFORD COUNTY, N.C. (WLOS) — A roadway in Rutherfordton is closed after a tractor-trailer was disabled, leading to the sodium phosphate it was hauling to be unloaded, according to the North Carolina State Highway Patrol.
Around 2:13 p.m., NCSHP senior trooper Cody Childress said he responded to a disabled tractor-trailer at the Union Road and Baber Road intersection.
LOCAL NEWS
According to an Alert Rutherford notification, emergency personnel were on the scene.
Childress said the tractor-trailer tried to make a right turn from Union Road to Baber Road when it became disabled on Baber Road.
A wrecker was called for the tractor-trailer.
CLAYTON ROAD IN SOUTH BUNCOMBE COUNTY TO CLOSE FRIDAY FOR ROADWORK; DETOURS SET
The tractor-trailer’s tanker was hauling sodium phosphate and because of how the tractor-trailer was stuck, the material had to be offloaded, Childress said.
Childress said Baber Road will be closed for an unknown period of time while the situation is being solved. Alert Rutherford said the Union Road/Baber Road area could be closed for several hours while the truck is unloaded.
NCSHP and Alert Rutherford suggest avoiding the area and finding an alternative route.
North Carolina
“We Built This”: New exhibit at NC Central profiles the Black architects, builders of North Carolina
A new history exhibit showcasing the Black men and women who built and designed some of North Carolina’s iconic buildings launched recently at N.C. Central University’s James E. Shepard Memorial Library.
The exhibit is part of the university’s Black History Month event series.
It was created by Preservation North Carolina and presented by the Hayti Promise Community Development Corporation and Preservation Durham. It’s the first time NCCU has hosted the exhibit, titled “We Built This”.
The self-guided exhibit will be on display through March.
It features the profiles of the Black architects and builders going back 200 years – from enslaved people whose African construction knowledge was preserved in the South, to post-Civil War men who braved adversity to build their communities, to Durham’s Black Wall Street and the present day.
NCCU students who visited the exhibit, like sophomore history student Whitaker Antoine, say it opened their eyes about who built the places they’ve seen.
“Seeing these small little facts, it’ll take you a long way so you can teach other people,” said Antoine, 19. “Go out there, educate yourself, grow more in your mind so you can see the great things people of our color are doing.”
For instance, he says he didn’t know about William H. Houser, a formerly enslaved man from South Carolina who would go on to build facilities like Carter Hall at Johnson C. Smith University, an HBCU in Charlotte.
“So, you know, I can go home and be like, ‘Mom, you know who Mr. William H. Houser is? You know that Carter Hall we saw at Johnson C. Smith? It was built by this man.’ Now, I’m glad that I know this,” Antoine said.
The exhibit features historic people such as John Winters, a home builder who was the first African American on Raleigh’s City Council; Bishop Henry Beard Delany, who oversaw the building of Saint Augustine’s University campus in Raleigh; John Merrick of Durham’s Black Wall Street, who created the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company; and Julian Francis Abele, the chief designer of Duke University’s West Campus and Duke Chapel.
Fredrick Davis, a Black architect and builder of Durham public school facilities, said this history is essential for the American public.
“It brings me great joy to see the pioneers who came before me and it encourage me to continue in that effort,” said Davis. “For centuries, as architects and builders, we have been responsible for highlighting and improving the built environment.”
Cheryl Brown, board chair of the Hayti Promise Community Development Corporation, said she grew up around Black history in North Carolina, but has already learned new details at the exhibit.
“It kind of gives me chill bumps to understand the gravity of what we contribute to this community and North Carolina,” Brown said.
“We Built This” is making sure history is not forgotten, she said.
“In this current environment, our history is trying to be rewritten and it’s trying to be erased,” said Brown. “I encourage everybody to come by, learn from it, because this is how we keep this information moving forward.”
A calendar of other upcoming Black History Month events at NCCU is available on its website at this link.
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