Northeast
Rachel Morin murder: Open border 'allowed' illegal immigrant to kill mom of 5, Maryland sheriff says
A Maryland sheriff has ripped America’s open southern border after an illegal immigrant – who was already wanted for the slaying of a woman in his native El Salvador – was arrested Friday and charged with the rape and murder of Rachel Morin, a mother of five who was killed while on a hiking trail last year.
Sheriff Jeffrey Gahler of Harford County said illegal immigrant Victor Antonio Martinez Hernandez, 23, should not have been in the country in the first place to carry out the horrific crime.
He was nabbed “casually sitting” at a bar Friday night in Tulsa, Oklahoma with investigators saying a police tip and DNA evidence allowed them to crack the case and track him down.
“He killed a woman in El Salvador and that’s why he fled there, to come here through our open border,” Gahler told America’s Newsroom Monday.
RACHEL MORIN MURDER: ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT FROM EL SALVADOR CHARGED WITH RAPE, KILLING OF MARYLAND MOM OF 5
Illegal immigrant Victor Antonio Martinez Hernandez, left; Sheriff Jeffrey Gahler of Harford County, top right; Rachel Morin with her boyfriend Richard Tobin, bottom right. (Tulsa Police Department, Fox News, Facebook)
“He tried to come in legally and he was turned away. And yeah, that didn’t deter him because we have such a porous border and he came right through… and this is the result.”
Morin’s naked and beaten body was found in a culvert on Aug. 6 after the 37-year-old had gone missing the day before while out on the Ma and Pa Trail in Bel Air, a quiet and typically safe town about 28 miles northeast of Baltimore.
Gahler said that Martinez Hernandez was free to roam all over the U.S. having entered the country illegally in February 2023, about a month after he was wanted in El Salvador for homicide. Police linked Martinez Hernandez’s DNA to a March home invasion in Los Angeles where a mother and her 9-year-old daughter were assaulted.
“To my citizens here in Harford County, to every citizen in this country, this is a public safety crisis and one that we can so easily fix by really coming up with a workable immigration policy for our country. It’s just insane that we would allow things like Rachel’s murder to happen, and when I say ‘allow it,’ we allowed it by letting him into this country unchallenged.”
“That shouldn’t happen to families in our country. This is preventable.”
RACHEL MORIN MURDER: FORMER FBI AGENT REVEALS HOW CAPTURE OF ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT SUSPECT IN KILLING WENT DOWN
The Harford County Sheriff’s Office in Maryland posted signs at Ma & Pa Trail heads on June 17, 2024 announcing the arrest in the August 2023 murder of Rachel Morin. (Harford County Sheriff’s Office/Facebook)
Gahler said there is no death penalty in Maryland but he hopes Martinez Hernandez will rot in jail for his alleged crimes. The sheriff went on to say that a bipartisan effort is needed to address border issues that have been raging for decades.
“The border was never more secure than when President Trump was in office, but it has been an issue dating way back in my 40 years in law enforcement.”
Trump, meanwhile, weighed in on Morin’s death on Monday, likening it to that of Georgia student Laken Riley’s death and pointing the blame at President Biden.
“Rachel Morin was on a run in Maryland, just like Laken Riley was in Georgia, when she was brutally killed by an illegal monster who was wanted for murder in El Salvador and fled to the USA because he knew Crooked Joe would let him in,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “Now Rachel Morin’s 5 young children will grow up without their mother because Crooked Joe refuses to shut down the border.”
Video: Attorney Randolph Rice reacts to arrest of illegal immigrant in Rachel Morin case
Randolph Rice, an attorney for Morin’s family, said it’s astounding that someone like Martinez Hernandez, who was already wanted for murder in his home country, could gain entry to America.
“This is an American problem and you would think that Border Patrol would be able to stop people and say, ‘Hey are you wanted for murder back in your country? If so you can’t come in here,’” Rice told Fox and Friends First on Monday.
“And so that’s certainly a big problem and Maryland is a long way from the southern border, so clearly it’s not something just affecting the southern states. It’s making its way all the way up to Maryland, and Harford County, which is a very rural, small county. It can happen anywhere in America and it’s something Washington really has to fix.”
MARYLAND SHERIFF’S ‘GUT’ SAYS RACHEL MORIN WAS ‘STALKED’ BY SUSPECT BEFORE HER MURDER
Victor Martinez Hernandez, 23, right, was arrested in the murder of Rachel Morin, left.
Rice later on Monday revealed to Fox News that Martinez Hernandez waived extradition and will soon be sent back to Maryland.
A DNA tip on May 20, what would have been Morin’s 38th birthday, helped uncover the lead that ultimately led to Martinez Hernandez’s arrest.
“That DNA hit out in Los Angeles was a big break in the investigation,” Gahler said. “So working hand in hand on a planet of billions of people we were able to find the one individual, identify him, and find him on a barstool sitting in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and bring him into custody.”
Surveillance footage of the suspect leaving the Los Angeles home was released to the public in February, showing a shirtless man fleeing the home. The suspect allegedly broke into the home in the middle of the night and assaulted the family inside before he was chased out, but he left a hat behind at the scene.
Gahler said the intensive investigation was aided by multiple agencies, including the FBI and law enforcement officials in Los Angeles and Tulsa.
RACHEL MORIN MURDER: MARYLAND POLICE TIE CRIME SCENE DNA TO LOS ANGELES ASSAULT, HOME INVASION
A photo of Rachel Morin is posted to a tree by her family last night along the Ma and Pa Trail in Bel Air, Maryland, on Aug. 10, 2023. (Mega for Fox News Digital)
Bill DelBango, of the FBI Baltimore Field Office, said at a Saturday press conference that FBI investigators even traveled to El Salvador as part of their efforts to identify Morin’s alleged killer.
“Our investigative genetic genealogy team in Baltimore worked countless hours to identify the suspect by using crime scene DNA and tracing that DNA to potential family members,” DelBango said.
“To find the suspect, we’ve provided technical assistance helping to pinpoint his location. That brings us to (Friday night), where Tulsa police and FBI agents were able to successfully apprehend and arrest the suspect in Oklahoma.”
Police at the Williams Street section of Ma and Pa Trail in Bel Air, Maryland, on Aug. 8, 2023. (Mega for Fox News Digital)
Morin’s mother, Patricia, at the press conference praised the efforts of law enforcement.
“At one point, when things seemed like really bleak and hopeless, the lead detective said to me, he said, ‘Patience will win in the end.’ And that’s what (investigators have) been doing,” she said.
“They’ve been diligently working very hard, and they’ve been patiently working through all the leads. And it’s because of that we have an arrest today, so I’m very thankful and just very grateful to these men.”
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New York
With Homicides and Other Violent Crimes at Record Lows, Funding for Prevention Falls
Derrick Sanders feared that if he did not return to the corners of Atlanta’s English Avenue neighborhood, more bodies would drop.
Mr. Sanders had been a street outreach worker for the Offender Alumni Association. But he was laid off in late 2025 after the organization lost $1.5 million in federal funds and was disbanded. Then, murders surged.
There were four killings the next month, Mr. Sanders said — all deaths he believes were preventable. One of the victims had been a participant in the Offender Alumni Association, the program where Mr. Sanders worked to de-escalate conflicts and mentor people at risk of committing violence. He had engaged regularly with two of the other victims in the community.
“When we were there to mediate situations, they would listen — we come to an agreement,” he said. “But when we left, that agreement left with us.”
After violent crime worsened alongside Covid-19, the federal government passed legislation including hundreds of millions of dollars in funding for community violence interventions. Community leaders and experts on crime nationwide gave some credit to these programs for helping bring homicides to historic lows in the years since. But the Trump administration withheld much of this funding upon taking office in 2025, leaving many programs scrambling to find alternative sources of support and community leaders uncertain if they can sustain the progress.
Violence prevention programs began taking root in America after lethal violence skyrocketed in the early 1990s. A new idea began to take shape in cities around the country: Treat violence like a disease, and combat it with public health techniques.
“The first step is to interrupt the transmission,” said Kwame Thompson, a violence interrupter with Stand Up to Violence in the Bronx for 11 years. Then, intervene with people in the community who are at high risk of perpetuating violence. “We identify them,” Mr. Thompson said, “and we work to help change their norms.”
Local governments and philanthropists funded pilots in cities such as Chicago and Boston, which were largely led by grass-roots organizations focused on providing resources to vulnerable individuals.
Throughout the 2000s and 2010s, homicide rates nationwide gradually but significantly fell from their heights in the 1990s.
Then, violence surged again during the Covid-19 pandemic. Community groups pushed to get relief funds for violence prevention and intervention strategies. With the passage of the American Rescue Plan and the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, programs around the country could apply for federal funds. By 2023, the Biden administration had created a national Office of Gun Violence Prevention and invested more than $42 billion, according to Gregory Jackson, a former deputy director of the office.
With the federal support, states and municipalities established violence prevention offices, augmenting the work of police departments with programs focused on street outreach, hospitals, schools and other community pillars.
“The goal was truly to build out the prevention work,” said Rob Wilcox, a former deputy director of the White House’s now-shuttered Office of Gun Violence Prevention, adding that the funds would also help law enforcement personnel solve homicides and provide support for victim services. “That’s such a new and expansive way to think about how we address this crisis.”
Since 2022, the steep drop in homicides across the country gave credence to the effectiveness of the newly robust violence prevention paradigm. In 2025, Baltimore experienced its lowest homicide rate in 50 years. Los Angeles experienced a nearly 20 percent drop in homicides, which Mayor Karen Bass said was driven by the city’s “comprehensive approach to public safety.”
But researchers have struggled to empirically tie these improvements directly to the programs.
“The community violence intervention is so much about developing relationships with people who understandably distrust almost anybody coming to knock at the door,” said Shani A.L. Buggs, advisory chair at the Black & Brown Collective for Community Solutions to Gun Violence. “How you measure that kind of change is challenging, and that’s something that the field is still figuring out.”
Despite the constraints, some research supports the idea that these approaches can be cost-effective. A study by the University of California, Berkeley, found that for every dollar a prevention program called Advance Peace spent on intervention, cities in California that implemented the program saved more than $18 in spending on law enforcement, emergency services and other shooting-related costs. Another study produced by the Center for Gun Violence Solutions and the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health linked Baltimore’s Safe Streets program to a 32 percent reduction in homicides, finding that every dollar invested in the program had averted $7 to $19 in costs.
“I do believe that a lot of these programs have an effect, but we have to contend with the fact that the evidence is really weak for these programs on their own,” said Ben Struhl, executive director of the Crime and Justice Policy Lab at the University of Pennsylvania. “The evidence is strong for citywide strategies that contain these programs.”
Interventions can also be victims of their own success — less violence can mean less urgency to spend money on preventing it.
“You got to have support from local officials,” said Rodney McIntosh, a violence prevention worker in Fort Worth. “We know we save lives, but yet we have to fight every year just to be a part of the public safety ecosystem.”
Now, sweeping funding cuts at the federal level are hindering support for community violence interventions. A spokeswoman for the Department of Justice said the department is “committed to directly supporting law enforcement and victims to improve public safety and ensure the efficient use of taxpayer dollars.”
Some federal funds are still available, but they are scarce and require recipients to work with immigration enforcement officers, conditions that are deal breakers for some.
“Programs that were actively preventing shootings are now paused or dismantled,” said Monique Williams, chief executive officer of Cure Violence Global. “You have trained staff who are now laid off and trusted relationships in neighborhoods that are now broken.”
Programs that have managed to overcome cuts are leaning more heavily on local resources for support. Some cities and states have stepped in to make up for the shortfall, but the amount of federal funding that was lost is difficult to match.
With the funding cuts have come fears that violence could surge again.
“Violence prevention is important because of the human costs,” said Elinore Kaufman, a professor of surgery at the University of Pennsylvania and the medical director of a hospital-based violence intervention program. “I do expect that we’ll see increases in harm, increase in injury, increase in death, because we are taking away these essential supports that have proven beneficial.”
In Atlanta, Mr. Sanders and his team used to be a visible force in the English Avenue neighborhood, easily spotted in their purple T-shirts.
After the spate of violence that followed his program’s closure, Mr. Sanders stopped searching for another full-time job, took on part-time work and spent his free time with one of his former co-workers, trying to prevent more fighting. He said he would rather continue his intervention work unpaid than step away from the neighborhood.
“We were a daily reminder of ‘Hey, man, you don’t got to do it like that’ — it don’t take a gun to settle every situation,” Mr. Sanders said. “But now that reminder is gone.”
The Headway initiative is funded through grants from the Ford Foundation, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and the Stavros Niarchos Foundation (SNF), with Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors serving as a fiscal sponsor. The Woodcock Foundation is a funder of Headway’s public square. Funders have no control over the selection, focus of stories or the editing process and do not review stories before publication. The Times retains full editorial control of the Headway initiative.
Boston, MA
PICK IS IN: WR Lewis Bond from Boston College drafted at No. 204 overall
Two offensive picks bookend a linebacker and a safety on Day 3 as the Texans selected WR Lewis Bond out of Boston College with pick No. 204 in the 6th round of the draft.
At just over 5-10 and 190 pounds, Bond hauled in 213 receptions during his time at BC.
In 2025 he was fourth in the nation with 7.3 receptions per game and finished with 993 yards.
Former BC QB Thomas Castellanos called Bond an unbelievable receiver who can do it all. Castellanos described Bond as a very physical receiver who can make plays in space and break tackles, adding that he was open a lot and could have been targeted even more.
Pittsburg, PA
Pittsburgh Steelers 2026 NFL Draft grades: TE Riley Nowakowski
The Pittsburgh Steelers selected Indiana tight end Riley Nowakowski in the fifth round of the 2026 NFL Draft. Our staff weighs in with their thoughts on the pick.
Ryland Bickley: Here’s your TE3/FB for Mike McCarthy. Nowakowski probably would’ve been a “my guy” in this draft class if I had been able to watch him more. He’s an extremely high-effort run blocker with solid mobility who should be able to find a role on offense right away. Nowakowski is a bit undersized for a tight end and his testing is just OK, but as a fullback I like the pick. We can quibble a bit with taking a returner and fullback with the team’s latest two picks, but in the fifth round you can’t complain about good football players. Grade: B+
Mike Nicastro: Nowakowski is a perfect replacement for Connor Heyward because of his versatility. He’ll play tight end, fullback, and can contribute on special teams. He played a pivotal role on Indiana’s National Championship run – the guy just feels like a winner. Although it still feels like a pick based more on need opposed to value, I like this one much better than Wetjen. Grade: B+
Alex Hanczar: Pittsburgh adds yet another big school player in the form of 2026 National Champion Riley Nowakowski. The departures of Jonnu Smith and Connor Heyward led many to believe the Steelers would add depth at the position and here it is. Aside from solely playing TE, Nowakowksi will likely fill the Heyward role at the FB position. At 6-foot-two 250 pounds, I would not be surprised to see the former Hoosier lineup under center for the ‘tush push’ for the black and gold. Grade: B
Joey Bray: Welcome back Connor Heyward. In all seriousness, Riley Nowakowski is an interesting pick for the Steelers. They needed to take another tight end, but Nowakowski is more of a fullback type. He played a blocking role for Indiana last year when he did line up a tight end, although he’s 32 catches last season were more than he had in his previous four collegiate seasons combined. Nowakowski isn’t particularly fast or dynamic and doesn’t have the size to be a legit receiving threat. He is a good football player and it makes sense that Mike McCarthy would take a fullback, but taking a return man and fullback back-to-back in the mid rounds is an curious use of resources. Grade: C-
Ryan Parish: As harsh as I was on using a 4th rounder on a kick returner-only player, I’m to the moon for this selection. I highlighted Nowakowski in my Tight End draft gems list as a perfect fit for the John Kuhn/Hunter Luepke FB role in Mike McCarthy’s offense. Nowakowski is short for a tight end but perfect for a blocker for a power run scheme. He’s also gotta decent hands and tackle-breaking ability for underneath routes that should make Aaron Rodgers happy. This was a meat and potatoes pick, and yet another sign that the Steelers are veering into a gap/power running scheme. Phenomenal fit. Grade: A++
Jarrett Bailey: The Steelers were always going to take a tight end, being that they released Jonnu Smith and didn’t bring back Connor Heyward. Nowakowski will play that Heyward role. Special teams and No. 3 tight end/fullback. Not great. Not abysmal. Fine. Grade: C
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