Virginia
Husband shot dead by wife in Virginia domestic dispute: police
Latoya Christine Crabbe, 34, of Manassas, Va. Photo via Manassas City Police Department.
MANASSAS, Va. – A Virginia woman is facing second-degree murder charges after police say she shot and killed her husband in their home on Monday.
On the afternoon of Oct. 21 at around 2:29 p.m., officers from the Manassas City Police Department responded to a 911 call about a shooting at the couple’s residence off Brinkley Lane in Manassas.
When officers arrived, they found a man suffering from a gunshot wound. Emergency responders pronounced him dead at the scene.
Police identified the victim as 36-year-old Curtis Bryant Crabbe, the husband of the accused. Authorities say the shooting was the result of a domestic dispute between the couple, who lived together at the residence.
The suspect, 34-year-old Latoya Christine Crabbe, was immediately detained by officers at the scene. She has since been charged with second-degree murder and the use of a firearm in the commission of a felony.
She is being held without bond at the Prince William County Adult Detention Center.
Police do not believe anyone else was involved in the incident, which they say was contained entirely within the home.
Anyone with information about the case is encouraged to contact Manassas City police.
Virginia
West Virginia could be getting bigger
West Virginia could soon see its borders shift for the first time in more than a century, as lawmakers weigh a proposal that would formally add new territory to the Mountain State.
State Senator Chris Rose said he is introducing a resolution to adopt several counties in neighboring Maryland and Virginia, including Amherst, Bedford, Botetourt, Floyd, Pulaski, and Rockbridge.
“Exciting update on our Appeal to Heaven movement for freedom in Appalachia! Due to overwhelming interest and support, I’m thrilled to announce we’ve expanded our Senate resolution inviting even more Virginia counties, along with counties from Maryland, to join West Virginia,” he wrote on X.
“Now including Amherst, Bedford, Botetourt, Floyd, Pulaski, and Rockbridge, counties that share our values of freedom, Second Amendment rights, and rural prosperity. Let those country roads take you home. Break free from out of touch policies and unite for a stronger future.”
Altogether, the resolution invites 27 Virginia counties to join the state of West Virginia, as well as three Maryland counties.
The initiative originally targeted only a handful of neighboring counties, but Rose says the scope widened after residents from deeper inside Virginia reached out, urging him to add their communities to the plan.
The proposal mirrors growing movements in other states, including California, Illinois and Oregon, for independent or merged states.
In California, organizers of the New California movement want to split the state, they say has become a “totalitarian one-party system” in two and create a new state. In Illinois, organizers of the New Illinois campaign want to do broadly the same thing.
Meanwhile, in Oregon, organizers behind the Greater Idaho campaign say they want to transfer more than a dozen rural Oregon counties into neighboring Idaho, arguing that their communities have little in common with the state’s liberal, urbanized western half.
Rural–Urban Divide Driving the Campaign
The same rural–urban divide underpins the push in West Virginia, where advocates say cultural and political differences have grown too wide to ignore.
A statement published by Senator Rose said the counties were selected based on their “geographic, economic, cultural, and historical connections with West Virginia, including a strong Appalachian heritage, rural lifestyles, and a focus on individual liberties.”
“This resolution is about empowering communities to choose governance that truly reflects their values and needs,” he added. “West Virginia was born from the spirit of self-determination, and we’re extending that invitation to our neighbors who share our way of life. By uniting, we can foster economic growth, better infrastructure, and a stronger voice for Appalachia.”
In an interview with ABC 13, Rose added that the movement is about residents in those counties, which lean Republican, having their voices heard.
“We want our voices to be heard, we want our vote in elections to matter,” he said.
Unlike Maryland, West Virginia is a solidly Republican state. As of August 2025, Republicans outnumber Democrats in registered voters by a significant margin. There are over 170,000 more registered Republicans than Democrats in the state. And the state has voted Republican in every presidential election since 2000.
Nonetheless, campaign organizers say politicians from Democrat leaning areas in the two states have too much influence.
“For too long, rural communities in Western Virginia and Western Maryland have been ruled by distant politicians in Richmond and Annapolis who don’t share our values,” campaign organizers said on their website.
In the 2024 presidential election, the Richmond metro area in Virginia voted decisively for the Democratic ticket. Richmond city itself gave 82 percent of its vote to the Democratic candidate. And Annapolis, Maryland, is strongly Democratic; in the 2025 mayoral election, Democrat Jared Littmann won with 74 percent of the vote.
For campaign organizers, that is a problem. “They restrict your Second Amendment rights, raise your taxes, indoctrinate your children, and funnel your hard-earned dollars into radical green experiments and government waste. Meanwhile, just across the border, West Virginia stands strong—defending freedom, faith, family, and the Constitution,” they said.
A Nearly Impossible Path Ahead
But the hurdle is steep. For any county to shift into West Virginia, lawmakers in each affected state would have to pass authorizing legislation, and Congress would then need to sign off on the boundary change.
For that reason, some lawmakers doubt that the campaign’s aims are realistic. “I wasn’t aware of it and it’s not going to happen,” Virginia Senator Tim Kaine told ABC13.
But Senator Rose is still optimistic. “If that would happen, West Virginia would be more than happy, willing and able to take the counties in and provide the freedom and representation they so much deserve,” he told ABC13.
“I would definitely take the frustration of your constituents seriously, because they feel like they are not being heard in their states,” he added.
Virginia
Penn State staff members to leave and join James Franklin at Virginia Tech before regular season ends
Multiple members of James Franklin’s original Penn State staff are leaving State College before the regular season ends to join their old boss at Virginia Tech. The Nittany Lions no longer list Associate Athletic Director – Chief of Staff Kevin Threlkel or General Manager of Personnel and Recruitment Andy Frank on their online athletics staff directory. BWI’s Sean Fitz first reported their departures on The Lions Den message board Wednesday morning. Both were anticipated departures as soon as Franklin took the Hokies job. But, they will not finish out the season under interim head coach Terry Smith.
Both Threlkel and Frank came to Penn State with Franklin back in 2014. At the time, Threlkel was the Director of Football Administration and Frank the Director of Player Personnel. Each has earned new titles over the last decade. But what hasn’t changed is their loyalty to Franklin and inclusion in his inner circle. For Threlkel, that dates back to the mid-2000s when he worked with Franklin at Kansas State and then Maryland before Vanderbilt. Frank, meanwhile, was on Franklin’s first Vanderbilt staff. Both left Nashville to come to State College when Franklin did. Now, both will follow him to Blacksburg.
The duo is the first but hardly the last members of the Penn State football program who will join Franklin at Virginia Tech. It will be interesting to follow Franklin’s first staff buildout at the ACC program. He will bring some more former Nittany Lions on- and off-field staff members with him, without question. Which ones, though, will likely be unclear until after the regular season ends.
Other former Penn State staff members no longer in the directory include:
Brett Arnold, Assistant Director of Player Relations
Chris Mahon, Recruiting Coordinator for Personnel
Rashad Elby, Assistant Recruiting Coordinator for Personnel
Aeneas Hawkins, Assistant Director of Player Advancement & Revenue Sharing Strategy
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Virginia
What James Franklin to Virginia Tech means for FSU, Mike Norvell
Florida State football historically has been a program of stability and continuity. In the last 59 years of FSU football, there’s been only one coach (Willie Taggart) who was fired less than five years tenured with the program.
Including Bobby Bowden, who took over the program in 1976, there have only been four individuals hired as the head ball coach at Florida State. That’s a staggering number in comparison to the rival Florida Gators, who’ve had 10, and the Miami Hurricanes, who’ve had 12.
READ MORE: Three honest thoughts after FSU football’s win over Virginia Tech
Although it seems like Tallahassee has been the epicenter of the coaching carousel since the start of Mike Norvell’s run with the Seminoles (for reasons good and bad), FSU and its fanbase historically are not used to their coach’s name being on the chopping block.
So what does Virginia Tech’s hiring of James Franklin mean for Florida State?
With VT officially hiring Franklin, FSU will miss out on potentially the best fit for the program should they move in another direction after this season.
James Franklin is a great recruiter, known for taking programs that are either in the dumps or wading in mediocrity to consistent winners. His biggest flaw, of course, was not being able to win the big games.
However, would he face that problem at a school like Florida State, which currently resides in the ACC? Would the “big game” curse follow him to Tallahassee? One thing that is certain is that we’ll never know, at least for the near future.
As for FSU and its potential coaching search, the market will largely be between successful Group of 5 coaches and overachieving (but not competing for a national championship) Power 5 coaches.
This is because schools like Florida, LSU, Penn State (and potentially Auburn) will likely get their pick of the litter before the Seminoles, as much as FSU fans don’t want to admit it.
Names to look out for should FSU move on include Eli Drinkwitz (Missouri), Kenny Dillingham (Arizona State), Jon Sumrall (Tulane), Alex Golesh (USF), and even Jimbo Fisher (former FSU, Texas A&M).
The Seminoles currently sit at a 5-5 record with two more opportunities to reach a bowl game. They face NC State on Friday night in Raleigh, and UF in Gainesville two weeks.
READ MORE: Former players, fans eager for FSU to get back on track after win over Virginia Tech
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