Connect with us

News

Parents of two men who died in separate encounters with Memphis-area law enforcement call for transparency and justice | CNN

Published

on

Parents of two men who died in separate encounters with Memphis-area law enforcement call for transparency and justice | CNN



CNN
 — 

The parents of two Black men who died in unrelated in-custody encounters with law enforcement in Shelby County, Tennessee, this summer said they are seeking transparency.

Jarveon Hudspeth, 21, died following a traffic stop with a Shelby County sheriff’s deputy on June 24.

Courtney Ross died after he was detained by Memphis police in August.

In an emotionally charged news conference on Friday, Hudspeth’s mother, Charlotte Haggett, said the college student was missing for two days before she was told by the sheriff’s office he died in a car accident.

Advertisement

She said he actually died after a deputy shot him.

Edited video released on Thursday – two months after Hudspeth’s death – by the Shelby County District Attorney’s Office shows a deputy pulling over Hudspeth. The 21-year-old followed the deputy’s instructions and got out of the car.

The deputy patted him down and checked his pockets before asking him to get in the back of the patrol vehicle.

Hudspeth got back into his car behind the wheel, despite the deputy ordering him not to get back in, the edited video shows.

As Hudspeth attempted to drive away, the sheriff’s deputy jumped into the front driver’s side with Hudspeth.

Advertisement

“For reasons still under investigation, the situation escalated, resulting in the man driving off and dragging the deputy approximately 100 yards. At some point, the deputy fired his service weapon at least once, striking the driver, who drove about a half mile further before stopping, and subsequently died on the way to the hospital,” the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation said in a news release on June 25.

It is not clear why the Shelby County sheriff’s deputy stopped Hudspeth.

According to video obtained by CNN affiliate KHBQ, the deputy appears to fall from the car after the shooting and Hudspeth eventually crashed.

The district attorney’s office said the deputy had critical injuries following the encounter.

A spokesperson for the Shelby County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement at the time of the shooting “the deputy involved in the incident has been relieved of duty pending the outcome of the investigation.”

Advertisement

On Friday, the spokesperson said the deputy “is currently receiving treatment following a number of surgeries sustained in the line of duty.”

The spokesperson declined to answer further questions about the shooting, saying TBI is handling the investigation.

CNN has reached out to the medical examiner’s office for a copy of the autopsy report.

Civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who represents both the families of Hudspeth and Ross, said “How does this keep happening?”

“Unarmed Black men have interactions with police and they end up dead,” he said.

Advertisement

“It is a concern of trust. We can’t trust the police narrative,” Crump added.

“A trained police officer jumped into the car with both feet on a routine traffic stop, created a life or death situation, shoots a young 21-year-old Black male,” Crump said.

The attorney said he knows people will want to blame Hudspeth for driving off, but said Tyre Nichols’ death has made a lot of young Black men fear law enforcement.

Nichols died after he was repeatedly punched and kicked by Memphis police officers following a traffic stop and brief foot chase earlier this year.

Hudspeth’s mother said her son’s encounter happened in their subdivision, seven houses from his home, which is where she says he was trying to go so she could protect him.

Advertisement

“Jarveon wanted to get to me, I know that. Jarveon wanted to get home,” she said. “I know that Jarveon knew once he was in front of the house, that I was going to protect him by any means necessary.”

She cried as she showed her necklace, filled with her son’s cremated ashes.

“I wear my son’s body around my neck today. Nobody should have to do that,” she said, adding she wants justice for her son.

She says the deputy never called the traffic stop in, and when she called them looking for him, the sheriff’s office said he had been in a car accident and they couldn’t identify him.

“They never – not one time – told me that he was shot by a deputy and died,” Haggett said.

Advertisement

She says after his death, she slept on the couch in the living room to be close to the door in case he came home and she would watch the doorbell video of him leaving home for the last time.

The footage released by the district attorney’s office was from the deputy’s vehicle camera, his body-worn camera and a neighbor’s doorbell camera.

The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation is conducting an investigation into Hudspeth’s death as well as the death of Courtney Ross.

“Our investigations remain active and ongoing in both incidents,” Tennessee Bureau of Investigation spokesperson Keli McAlister said in an email to CNN.

Ross, 19, died earlier this month, according to the Memphis Police Department.

Advertisement

Police responding to reports of a man rooting around in boxes containing rat poison and going through residents’ mailboxes approached Ross, the Memphis police department said in a news release posted to their Facebook page on August 11.

Police say the 19-year-old “walked away from the officers and began running.”

When the officers caught up to Ross, they say he “began to resist being handcuffed” and when they placed him in the police car, Ross “appeared to be out of breath and exhausted from running,” the news release said.

Ross was transported to a hospital via ambulance in critical condition and later died, according to police.

The Memphis Police Department said in the statement the officers “will be relieved of duty pending the outcome of the investigation.”

Advertisement

Ross’ father, Courtney Allen, said his son, who shares his first name, looked like him and reminds him of himself so much. The two men worked together.

Allen said Ross was a hardworking, talented and well-mannered young man who was familiar to people in the community.

Crump said the teen had “mental health challenges,” and Allen said he was working with him on those challenges.

“We just want to know what happened. We just want to know the truth,” Allen said, adding he believes his son ran from the police because he was scared.

A spokesperson for the Memphis Police Department referred CNN to the district attorney’s office and the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation.

Advertisement

CNN has not yet heard back from the Shelby County District Attorney’s Office.

News

Video: How Trump Is Getting Some Workers Paid Despite the Shutdown

Published

on

Video: How Trump Is Getting Some Workers Paid Despite the Shutdown

new video loaded: How Trump Is Getting Some Workers Paid Despite the Shutdown

President Trump has been reprogramming funds to pay workers during the shutdown who are essential to his political agenda. Tony Romm, a New York Times reporter covering economic policy, explains the moves, and the questions they’ve raised.

By Tony Romm, Alexandra Ostasiewicz, June Kim and Pierre Kattar

October 25, 2025

Continue Reading

News

It’s been a rollercoaster few years for Six Flags. Can Travis Kelce help?

Published

on

It’s been a rollercoaster few years for Six Flags. Can Travis Kelce help?

Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce says he grew up going to Six Flags parks and wants to help make them special for the next generation of families.

Reed Hoffmann/AP


hide caption

toggle caption

Advertisement

Reed Hoffmann/AP

Travis Kelce, the Kansas City Chiefs tight end and fiance of Taylor Swift, sparked jokes and hopes this week when he announced his investment in the embattled amusement park company Six Flags Entertainment.

The football star, alongside two corporate executives, teamed up with JANA Partners to purchase a combined stake of about 9% of Six Flags’ shares, making them one of its largest shareholders, according to Tuesday’s news release.

JANA Partners is an activist investment firm, meaning it buys a substantial stake in a company’s equity in order to push for changes — both operational and managerial — it believes will benefit that company.

Advertisement

“Couldn’t pass up the opportunity to continue the tradition and make Cedar Point and Six Flags even more special for the next generation of families!” Kelce wrote on Instagram. “So crazy to even imagine this is real, but you gotta love it when life comes full circle.”

Kelce also shared home video clips of himself as a child enjoying the rides at Cedar Point, the 364-acre amusement park in Sandusky, Ohio, that he and his brother (and retired pro footballer) Jason grew up going to every year, as the two enthusiastically reminisced in an episode of their New Heights podcast. Kelce, who grew up in a suburb of Cleveland, calls himself a “lifelong Six Flags fan.”

Cedar Point’s former operator, Cedar Fair, merged with Six Flags in 2024 to become the largest amusement park operator in North America, touting 42 parks across the U.S., Canada and Mexico.

At the time, many amusement parks — and Six Flags especially — were struggling to increase attendance in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. Park analysts and enthusiasts hoped the merger would lower ticket costs, raise revenue and make it more competitive against industry heavyweights like Disney and Universal.

But that hasn’t been the case, says Dennis Speigel, CEO of the consulting firm International Theme Park Services.

Advertisement

“As this merger occurred, I think the due diligence was probably done a little too quickly and it had a lot of flaws in it,” he told NPR. “And then it was also impacted by what I call the external factors: weather, economy, uncertainty of what’s happening in geopolitical areas.”

Six Flags now has $5.3 billion in debt. Its CEO, Richard Zimmerman, is set to step down by the end of the year, after it reported a net loss of $100 million for the second quarter of 2025 and combined attendance down 9% year-over-year. It is shuttering one of its parks — Six Flags America in Bowie, Md. — in early November and is expected to close another in Santa Clara, Calif., in 2027.

Speigel is hopeful the new shareholders will get Six Flags back on track. And while he was initially surprised to learn of Kelce’s involvement, he says it makes sense because “he’s at the zenith of his career in football … and in love.”

“Having a name like that be associated with Six Flags at this point in time, when they’ve gone through quite a few years recently of negativity, speaks well to their future and what they’re looking to do,” he says. “Obviously, he’s a younger person. He speaks to the teens, the young adults and the young adults with families. And that’s the Six Flags audience.”

Kelce’s fame — and high-profile love story — have boosted businesses before. Swift is credited with increasing female NFL viewership and ticket sales as their relationship unfolded. And, in recent days, his social media announcement has been flooded with fans’ pleas for a Swift-themed park, or at least a rollercoaster.

Advertisement

Six Flags’ rocky ride 

Six Flags opened with the “Six Flags Over Texas” park in 1961, and for years was one of America’s most iconic theme park companies (along with Disney). But for the last decade, Speigel says, it has been “a ship at sea without a captain.”

“I would have to say [out of] the top five or six operators during the last couple of years, Six Flags has suffered the most,” he says.

Six Flags has had four CEOs since 2015.

It shifted its pricing strategy in 2022 to target a more affluent demographic, confusing and alienating core customers in the process. And in recent years, a number of high-profile ride malfunctions have stranded and even injured visitors. This year, extreme temperatures and economic uncertainty drove attendance down even further.

“To see Six Flags have fallen off the precipice and down to where it is now, it’s sad,” Speigel says. “And everybody in the industry, competitors and alike, are all rooting for their return and their comeback.”

Advertisement
Visitors dance under a "Welcome Back" sign at Six Flags Magic Mountain in Valencia, Calif. in 2021.

Visitors arrived to a “Welcome Back” sign at Six Flags Magic Mountain in Valencia, Calif., when it reopened after the COVID-19 pandemic in April 2021.

Jae C. Hong/AP


hide caption

toggle caption

Jae C. Hong/AP

Advertisement

What might change? 

JANA Partners said in its announcement that it plans to engage with Six Flags’ management and board of directors “regarding opportunities to enhance shareholder value and improve the guest experience.”

NPR has reached out to Jana Partners for more information about its goals but did not hear back by publication time.

The Wall Street Journal reports that the investment firm wants to “modernize technology, refresh leadership and evaluate a potential sale as ways to boost the company’s share price.”

In a statement shared with NPR, a Six Flags spokesperson said it appreciates the perspectives of shareholders and takes their feedback seriously.

Advertisement

Speigel says Six Flags’ debt could force the new investors to take “some drastic measures,” like selling some of its parks, either to commercial real estate or even private equity groups. And he stresses that foot traffic is key in the industry.

“We live on repeat visitation, and repeat visitation is driven by capital improvements, new rides and attractions, dark rides, the new technologies,” he says. “So we have to hopefully see the growth from that.”

Speigel says even though U.S. amusement parks may not be experiencing the same rate of growth that they did several decades ago, they still attract some 400 million visitors each year — most of whom don’t care who owns a park as long as their experience is clean, fun and safe.

He hopes JANA recognizes Six Flags, and the industry in general, as “the last real bastion of family fun in the United States, in fact globally, where a family can go as a total unit. And I hope they put their capital behind that and lift it out of the ashes where it is now.”

Advertisement
Continue Reading

News

Map: Minor Earthquake Strikes Southern California

Published

on

Map: Minor Earthquake Strikes Southern California

Note: Map shows the area with a shake intensity of 4 or greater, which U.S.G.S. defines as “light,” though the earthquake may be felt outside the areas shown.  All times on the map are Pacific time. The New York Times

A minor earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 3.3 struck in Southern California on Thursday, according to the United States Geological Survey.

The temblor happened at 8:12 p.m. Pacific time about 6 miles northeast of Yucaipa, Calif., data from the agency shows.

As seismologists review available data, they may revise the earthquake’s reported magnitude. Additional information collected about the earthquake may also prompt U.S.G.S. scientists to update the shake-severity map.

Aftershocks in the region

An aftershock is usually a smaller earthquake that follows a larger one in the same general area. Aftershocks are typically minor adjustments along the portion of a fault that slipped at the time of the initial earthquake.

Advertisement

Quakes and aftershocks within 100 miles

Aftershocks can occur days, weeks or even years after the first earthquake. These events can be of equal or larger magnitude to the initial earthquake, and they can continue to affect already damaged locations.

When quakes and aftershocks occurred

Advertisement

Source: United States Geological Survey | Notes: Shaking categories are based on the Modified Mercalli Intensity scale. When aftershock data is available, the corresponding maps and charts include earthquakes within 100 miles and seven days of the initial quake. All times above are Pacific time. Shake data is as of Thursday, Oct. 23 at 11:16 p.m. Eastern. Aftershocks data is as of Friday, Oct. 24 at 1:12 a.m. Eastern.

Maps: Daylight (urban areas); MapLibre (map rendering); Natural Earth (roads, labels, terrain); Protomaps (map tiles)

Continue Reading

Trending