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Member of trans vegan cult pleads not guilty to killing Border Patrol agent in first hearing on murder charge

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Member of trans vegan cult pleads not guilty to killing Border Patrol agent in first hearing on murder charge

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A woman accused of shooting and killing a U.S. Border Patrol agent pleaded not guilty to murder and other charges Friday, marking her first court appearance since prosecutors said they would seek the death penalty for the suspect linked to a transgender vegan cult that has been tied to multiple killings across the country.

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Teresa Youngblut, 21, pleaded not guilty in federal court in Burlington, Vermont, to the shooting, which happened during a traffic stop in January. The superseding indictment, returned by a federal grand jury last month, charged Youngblut with the murder of Agent David Maland, the assault of two other agents with a deadly weapon and related gun offenses.

Attorney General Pamela Bondi has formally authorized the pursuit of capital punishment in the case, and the acting U.S. attorney for the District of Vermont has filed a notice of intent to seek the death penalty, the agency said last month.

SUSPECT IN BORDER AGENT KILLING FACES DEATH PENALTY: DOJ

Teresa Youngblut in the office at the Newport City Inn Jan. 14, 2025, in Newport, Vt. (Newport City Inn photograph via AP)

Investigators have linked Youngblut to the “Zizians,” a self-described vegan, anti-government, transgender rights collective that authorities say has been tied to six killings across three states, The Associated Press reported.

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TEXAS BORDER PATROL SHOOTER DETAILS REMAIN SCANT AS VIOLENCE AGAINST ICE, CBP AGENTS SURGES

During the Jan. 20 traffic stop along Interstate 91 in Coventry, Vermont, prosecutors allege that Youngblut exited a Toyota Prius with companion Felix Bauckholt before shooting at the law enforcement officers without warning, killing Maland and endangering two other Border Patrol agents. 

An agent returned fire, and Bauckholt was killed and Youngblut was wounded.

U.S. Border Patrol Agent David Maland is recognized with military honors before his burial at Fort Snelling National Cemetery in Minneapolis Feb. 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Abbie Parr)

During the court appearance Friday, Youngblut’s hair was styled in braided pigtails. Youngblut wore an oversized sweatshirt, a mask and baggy pants, according to the AP. Youngblut’s parents watched the defendant enter the courtroom, where Youngblut’s mother smiled and waved as Youngblut was handcuffed and escorted out, the AP reported.

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Following Youngblut’s not guilty plea, Judge Christina Reiss turned to matters of pretrial discovery. The defense wanted to make sure that the accused killer’s medical records remain confidential, noting they are extensive. Reiss affirmed that medical and mental health records are considered privileged material, the AP reported.

Youngblut, who is being held in federal custody, also has new legal representation. The defense is being led by Christine Lehmann, a senior capital attorney with the Louisiana Crisis Assistance Center, according to NBC5.

4 ARRESTED IN ALLEGED BORDER PATROL OPERATION SABOTAGE ATTEMPT NEAR LA AS ATTACKS ON IMMIGRATION AGENTS SURGE

This undated image, courtesy of Joan Maland, shows U.S. Border Patrol Agent David Maland, who was killed Monday, Jan. 20, 2025, after a traffic stop in Vermont.  (David Maland/Joan Maland via AP)

A status conference originally scheduled for Nov. 5 has also been postponed, and no new date has been scheduled yet, NBC5 reported.

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The U.S. Attorney’s Office and Lehmann and Steven Barth, who has been representing Youngblut, did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

Fox News Digital’s Sarah Rumpf-Whitten contributed to this report.

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Northeast

Family rift: Top Democrat’s own daughter publicly opposes her on shutdown deal

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Family rift: Top Democrat’s own daughter publicly opposes her on shutdown deal

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The Senate deal to end the longest federal government shutdown in the nation’s history is not only dividing Democrats, it’s also causing a split in one well-known political family.

Democratic congressional candidate Stefany Shaheen, who’s running in a crowded primary for a Democrat-controlled open House seat in swing state New Hampshire, says she “cannot support” the agreement, which was brokered in part by her mother, Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen.

The elder Shaheen, a former governor who is retiring next year rather than seek re-election to a fourth six-year term in the Senate, was one of seven Democrats who voted with Republicans on Monday evening to end the shutdown.

The split between the mother and daughter underscores the divide in their party over ending the shutdown without firmer commitments from the Republicans who control Congress.

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SHUTDOWN SHOWDOWN: DEMOCRATIC SENATOR STANDS FIRM AFTER DEFYING PARTY 

Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., was one of seven Senate Democrats that broke with their party to support a deal with Republicans to end the federal government shutdown. (Getty Images)

Stefany Shaheen, in a social media post on Monday, said she would only support a deal if it included extending the expiring subsidies that make health insurance coverage through the Affordable Care Act, known as the ACA or Obamacare, more affordable to millions of Americans.

The deal to end the shutdown does not include such a provision, but only a promise by the majority Republicans to hold an upcoming vote on extending the subsidies.

SCHUMER FACES FURY FROM THE LEFT OVER DEAL TO END SHUTDOWN

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“We need to both end this shutdown and extend the ACA tax credits,” Stefany Shaheen wrote. “Otherwise, no deal. It’s essential to ensure people have access to healthcare and it’s past time to put paychecks back into people’s pockets and food back on families’ tables.”

The younger Shaheen, whose eldest daughter Elle nearly lost her life after being diagnosed at the age of 8 with Type 1 diabetes, emphasized, “Improving health care has been the cause of my life. It’s why I am running for congress.”

Stefany Shaheen, the daughter of longtime Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, announced her candidacy for Congress in New Hampshire’s 1st District on May 28, 2025 (Stefany Shaheen campaign)

And pointing to a lack of commitment from Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson to hold any vote on extending the ACA subsidies, Shaheen added, “I cannot support this deal when Speaker Johnson refuses to even allow a vote to extend health care tax credits.”

The ACA subsidies expire at the end of the year, with health insurance premiums set to surge if there’s no extension.

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Sen. Shaheen, who previously supported a bill to extend the subsidies, on Monday defended breaking with her party to support the deal, which has been heavily criticized not only by the progressive wing of the party but also by center-left Democrats.

“We’re making sure that the people of America can get the food benefits that they need, that air traffic controllers can get paid, that federal workers are able to come back, the ones who were let go, that they get paid, that contractors get paid, that aviation moves forward,” Shaheen said in a “Fox and Friends” interview.

Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., speaks at a press conference with other Senate Democrats who voted to restore government funding, in Washington, D.C., on Nov. 9, 2025. (Nathan Posner/Anadolu via Getty Images)

And she pledged that “we are going to be able to continue to fight about healthcare because we’re going to have a vote in December.”

Asked about her split with her mother over the shutdown deal, Stefany Shaheen told WMUR in New Hampshire that “every family has differences of opinion and views, and here, we just have very different views about the best way to approach this.”

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“I think my mom and Senator Hassan did what they believe was right,” she said. She also pointed to New Hampshire’s other Democrat in the Senate, Sen. Maggie Hassan, who also supported the deal.

The senator told WMUR that she and her daughter “talk every day. So, she knew where I was, and I knew where she was.”

And the senator, who is a top supporter of her daughter’s bid for Congress, added, “Stefany is very independent. That’s what’s going to make her an excellent congresswoman.”

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The younger Shaheen is one of seven Democrats running in New Hampshire’s First Congressional District, in the race to succeed Democratic Rep. Chris Pappas.

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Pappas is running for the Senate in the race to succeed the elder Shaheen.

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Boston, MA

AI is widespread in higher ed, but is it helping or hurting student learning?

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AI is widespread in higher ed, but is it helping or hurting student learning?


Last February, Northeastern University student Ella Stapleton was struggling through her organizational behavior class. She began reviewing the notes her professor created outside of class early in the semester to see if it could guide her through the course content. But there was a problem: Stapleton said the notes were incomprehensible. 

“It was basically like just word vomit,” said Stapleton.

While scrolling through a document her professor created, Stapleton said she found a ChatGPT inquiry had been accidentally copied and pasted into the document. A section of notes also contained a ChatGPT-generated content disclaimer.

Stapleton believes her adjunct professor was overworked, teaching too many courses at once, and was therefore forced to sacrifice his quality of teaching with a shortcut from artificial intelligence. 

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“I personally do not blame the professor, I blame the system,” said Stapleton. 


NBC10 Boston

NBC10 Boston

Ella Stapleton

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Stapleton said she printed 60 pages worth of AI-generated content she believed her professor utilized for the class and brought it to a Northeastern staff member to lodge a complaint. She also made a bold demand: a refund for her and each of her classmates for the cost of the class.

“If I buy something for $8,000 and it’s faulty, I should get a refund,” said Stapleton, who has since graduated. “So why doesn’t that logic apply to this?”

Stapleton’s request made national headlines after she shared her story with The New York Times.

The moment on Northeastern’s campus encapsulates a larger issue that higher education institutions are grappling with across the country: how much AI use is ethical in the classroom?

NBC10 Boston collaborated with journalism students at Boston University’s College of Communication who are taking an in-depth reporting class taught by investigative reporter Ryan Kath.

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We took a deep dive into how generative AI is changing the approach of higher education, from how students apply it to their everyday work to how universities are responding with academic programs and institutional studies. 

With its widespread use, we also explored this question: what is AI doing to students’ critical thinking skills?

A degree in AI? 

While driving along a highway in rural New Hampshire, a billboard caught our attention.

The message advertised a Bachelor of Science degree in artificial intelligence being offered at Rivier University in Nashua. We decided to visit the campus to learn more about the new program.  

“The mission of Rivier is transforming hearts and minds to serve the world, and that transformation means to change,” said President of Rivier University Sister Paula Marie Buley. 

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Sister Paul Marie Buley


NBC10 Boston

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Sister Paul Marie Buley

At Rivier University, students pay almost $40,000 for a bachelor’s degree in artificial AI, which will prepare them for a field with a median salary of roughly $145,000, according to the institution.

Upon graduating, the aim of Rivier’s undergraduate program in AI is for students to hold professional practices that allow them to strengthen their skills in the dynamic field. 

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Master’s degree programs in artificial intelligence have begun to pop up in universities across New England including Northeastern University, Boston University, and New England College. The first bachelor’s degree in AI was created in 2018 by Carnegie Mellon University, according to Master’s in AI. 

“We want students to enter the mindset of a software engineer or a programmer and really haven’t an idea of what it feels like to work in a particular industry,” said Buley. “The future is here.”

In a 2024 survey from EDUCAUSE, a higher education advocacy nonprofit, 73% of higher education professionals said their institutions’ AI-related planning was driven by the growing use of these tools among students.

At Boston University, students can complete a self-paced, four-hour online course to earn an “AI at BU” student certificate. The course introduces the fundamentals of AI, with modules focused on responsible use, university-wide policies, and practical applications in both academic and professional settings, according to the certificate website.   

Students are also encouraged to reflect on the ethical boundaries of AI tools and how to critically assess their use in coursework.

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BU student Lauren McLeod said she doesn’t understand the resistance to AI in education. She believes schools should focus on teaching students to use it strategically. In lieu of clear institution-wide policies, AI usage policies differ from professor to professor.

“Are you using [AI] in a productive way, or using it to cut corners? They just need to change the framework on it and use it as a tool to help you,” said McLeod. “If you don’t use AI, you’re gonna fall behind.”

Despite rising awareness, colleges are slow to develop new policies. Only 20% of colleges and universities have published policies regarding AI use, according to Inside Higher Ed. 

AI and critical thinking

AI is becoming an everyday tool for students in the classroom and on homework assignments, according to Pew Research Center.

Earlier this month, we stopped students along Commonwealth Avenue on BU’s campus to ask how much AI they use and if they think it’s affecting their brains. 

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BU student Kelsey Keate said she uses AI in her coding classes and knows she relies on it too much.

Kelsey Keate


NBC10 Boston

NBC10 Boston

Kelsey Keate

“I feel like it’s definitely not helped me learn the code as easily, like I take longer to learn code now,” said Keate. 

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That is what worries researchers like Nataliya Kos’myna.

This June, the MIT Media Lab, an interdisciplinary research laboratory, released a study investigating how students’ critical thinking skills are exercised while writing an essay with or without AI assistance.

Kos’myna, an author of the study, said humans are standing at a technological crossroads—a point where it’s necessary to understand what exactly AI is doing to people’s brains. Three groups of 54 students from the Boston area participated in the study.

MIT researcher Nataliya Kos’myna.


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MIT researcher Nataliya Kos’myna

“This technology had been implemented and I would actually argue pushed in some cases on us, in all of the aspects of our lives, education, workspace, you name it,” said Kos’myna. 

Tasked with writing an SAT-style essay, one student group had access to AI, one could only use non-AI search engines, and the final group had to use their brain alone, according to the project website. 

Recording the participants’ brain activity, Kos’myna was able to see how engaged students were with their task and how much effort they put into the thought process.

The study ultimately concluded the convenience of AI came at a “cognitive cost.” Participants’ ability to critically evaluate the AI answer to their prompt was diminished. All three groups demonstrated different patterns of brain activity, according to the study. 

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Kos’myna found that students in the AI-assisted group didn’t feel much ownership towards their essays and students felt detached from the work they submitted. Graders were able to identify an AI-unique writing structure and noted that the vocabulary and ideas were strikingly similar.

“What we found are some of the things that were actually pretty concerning,” said Kos’myna. 

The paper for the study is awaiting peer review but Kos’myna said the findings were important for them to share. She is urging the scientific community to prioritize more research about AI’s effect on human cognition, especially as it becomes a staple of everyday life. 

After AI discovery, tuition refund rejected 

In the wake of filing a complaint, Stapleton said Northeastern was silent for months. The school eventually put the adjunct professor “on notice” last May after she had graduated.

“Northeastern embraces the responsible use of artificial intelligence to enhance all aspects of its teaching, research, and operations,” said Renata Nyul, vice president for communications at Northeastern University in response to our request for comment. “We have developed an abundance of resources to ensure that both faculty and students use AI as a support system for teaching and learning, not a replacement.” 

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In addition to the AI-generated content being difficult to understand and learn from, Stapleton said it doesn’t justify the cost of tuition. In her complaint, Stapleton asked that she and all of her classmates be reimbursed a quarter of their tuition for the course.

Her refund request did not prevail, but Stapleton hopes the attention her story received will provide a teachable moment for colleges around the country.

“In exchange for tuition, [universities] grant you the transfer of knowledge and good teaching,” said Stapleton. “In this case, that fundamentally wasn’t happening, because the only content that we were being given was al AI-generated.”

Grace, Megan and Dahye


NBC10 Boston

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Grace Sferrazza, Megan Amato and Dahye Kim report from the field.

The story was written by Amato, Kim and Sferrazza and edited by Kath



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Pittsburg, PA

Road closures announced for this week’s Thanksgiving morning Turkey Trot in Pittsburgh

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Road closures announced for this week’s Thanksgiving morning Turkey Trot in Pittsburgh


Several road closures have been announced ahead of this week’s Turkey Trot in Pittsburgh that is held on Thanksgiving morning. 

This week’s YMCA of Greater Pittsburgh Turkey Trot will be the 35th annual event that’s put on by P3R.

P3R says the event is expected to welcome more than 8,000 participants from 38 states and numerous countries, including Great Britain, France, Ireland, Australia, and Canada.

This year’s races include the 5-mile, the 5K, the 1-Mile Family Fun Run, and the Double Gobble, which consists of competing in both the 5K and the 5-mile. 

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All races will kick off along West General Robinson Street and will finish along North Shore Drive near PNC Park. 

Road closures for the races will be in effect starting at 6:30 a.m. on Thanksgiving morning and are expected to be lifted by 11 a.m. that day. 

On the North Shore and on the North Side, roads that will be closed include parts of the course on the Roberto Clemente Bridge, on the Andy Warhol Bridge, on River Avenue, and several areas surrounding Allegheny Commons Park.

Several main roads in on Pittsburgh’s North Shore and North Side will be closed on Thursday morning for the annual Turkey Trot races, which have become a Thanksgiving tradition.

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P3R


In the Downtown Pittsburgh area, roads that will be closed include parts of Fort Duquesne Boulevard, Liberty Avenue, Penn Avenue, Stanwix Street, and the Boulevard of the Allies.

screenshot-2025-11-25-000856.png

Several main roads in Downtown Pittsburgh will be closed on Thursday morning for the annual Turkey Trot races, which have become a Thanksgiving tradition.

P3R


Parking restrictions will begin at 4:30 a.m. on Thanksgiving morning for roads included in the race routes.

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Full course maps and road closure maps can be found online. 



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