Virginia
Virginia football coach Travis Turner wanted for child sex charges was on paid leave days after he fled police
Fugitive football coach Travis Turner was still being paid by his Virginia high school employer days after he fled from cops seeking to question him over alleged child sex crimes.
The alarming news comes as it becomes clear Turner also taught classes at Union High School in Big Stone Gap, and would have had regular access to the student body.
Turner, 46, was on “paid administrative leave” as of Monday — at least four days after he apparently split town while cops were on the way to question him over accusations he possessed child porn and tried to have sex with a minor.
It’s unclear when his paid leave actually began, but Wise County Public Schools said Monday it was spurred by an “allegation that was reported to the division.”
That means Turner was being paid while the school district was aware allegations of child sex crimes had been made against its star football coach — who had also gone missing in the thick of a police investigation into those same allegations days earlier.
Turner — longtime coach for Union High, and a local celebrity in the football-loving community of Big Stone Gap — seemingly vanished without a trace and authorities have released little information on the investigation or updates on the search.
Even less is known about the charges against him, and in the absence of official information, some in the tight-knit community have begun to whisper that claims of misconduct about Turner have swirled for years.
The alleged sex offender and dad of three wasn’t just a coach spending his days with a small group of football players.
Turner was also a physical education teacher at the school of about 600 students, which requires most of its coaches to also teach.
That means he would have had regular contact with kids from across the student body on a daily basis.
Turner’s family has strongly denied the allegations against him, saying that he is a good family man and that they only want to see him safely back home.
His charges were announced by Virginia State Police late Monday after his paid leave was confirmed. The school district later updated its statement to acknowledge charges against “a staff member who has been on administrative leave.”
But his place at the center of an alarming investigation was public knowledge by Saturday — two days after he’d gone missing and two days after the school confirmed he was on paid leave.
“The individual remains on leave and is not permitted on school property or to have contact with students,” the district reiterated Tuesday, declining to clarify whether he was being paid.
Wise County also declined to provide a timeline of when it knew about the allegations against Turner, the nature of the investigation into him, or his flight.
Virginia
Navy sailor sentenced to 44 years for killing fellow service member Angelina Resendiz in his Virginia barracks room
A US Navy sailor was sentenced to 44 years in prison for strangling his fellow service member, whose body was later found in a wooded area of Virginia.
Petty Officer Jermiah Copeland pleaded guilty Tuesday in connection with the death of Petty Officer Angelina Resendiz at a general court-martial in Norfolk, Va., the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) announced Tuesday.
“Petty Officer Copeland deserves to be held fully accountable for his heinous actions that resulted in the tragic murder of Petty Officer Resendiz,” Special Agent in Charge Emily Schmid said.
Copeland told investigators that Resendiz, 21, was in his barracks in Miller Hall on Naval Station Norfolk, Virginia, hanging out, drinking, and kissing on May 29, 2025, when she got upset about something on his phone, according to USNI News.
He admitted that he jumped on top of Resendiz and strangled her when she “started freaking out” and he tried to quiet her down.
“I killed CS3 Resendiz on May 29, 2025… I strangled her with my hands,” Copeland told the judge on Monday, according to the outlet.
Resendiz, 21, was last seen on May 29 at her barracks in Miller Hall around 10 p.m., NCIS said.
Officials had questioned Copeland over Resendiz’s whereabouts on June 1, while her body was inside his closet.
Copeland admitted that he lied to investigators and said he had taken her back to her barracks.
Resendiz’s body was discovered in a wooded area in Norfolk, about 10 miles off base, on June 9 — 12 days after her disappearance.
He then said he dumped her body inside a Navy-issued black wheeled duffel bag, according to USNI News.
“I knew people were looking for her and if she was found in my closet, I would be in trouble,” Copeland told the court.
Prosecutors presented cell phone data at a pre-trial hearing showing Copeland’s watch tracked him descending stairs around 4 a.m. on June 2, the outlet reported.
His GPS also placed him driving off base, and at 4:47 a.m. he dropped a Google Maps pin — and screenshotted it — near where Resendiz’s body was later found.
An NCIS forensics team went to the location of the pin, where they ultimately found Resendiz’s body.
Under the plea deal, Copeland was found guilty of five of the seven charges against him — aggravated assault by strangulation, indecent recording, obstruction of justice and false official statement — with his premeditated murder charge reduced to unpremeditated murder.
Among the charges, Copeland admitted to strangling another woman aboard the USS Harry S. Truman on July 24, 2024, as well as secretly recording a woman in a bathroom stall and filming another woman during sex without her consent, USNI News reported.
In addition to his decades-long sentence, Copeland will also receive a dishonorable discharge, forfeit all his pay, have his rank reduced to the lowest for a Navy enlisted — Seaman Apprentice — and will be required to register as a sex offender upon his release.
The plea agreement also required Copeland to sit down face-to-face with Resendiz’s mother, Esmeralda Castle, 13News Now reported.
Castle said the conversation was brief — but she made sure Copeland knew that despite the devastation he caused, he could still work on becoming a better person.
“You still have life,” she recalled telling Copeland to 13News Now. “I’m sorry it’s going to be behind these walls, but you still have life, and even behind these walls, you can still do good things.”
Copeland will serve his sentence at the US Disciplinary Barracks in Leavenworth, Kansas.
Virginia
Virginia Beach city leaders vote to address dome humidity
Governor Abigail Spanberger says conversations about creating a legal recreational marijuana market in Virginia remain ongoing. More information: https://www.wavy.com/news/spanberger-says-conversations-are-ongoing-about-creating-a-legal-recreational-marijuana-market/
Virginia
Virginia man caught after alleged abduction, carjacking and multi-state police chase
HERNDON, Va. (7News) — A man has finally been caught by police after allegedly abducting someone, stealing their car and leading officers on a chase through Virginia, D.C. and Maryland.
The Herndon Police Department (HPD) said Cristian Vasquez Alvarenga, 25, faces at least nine charges including robbery, carjacking, abduction, assault and reckless driving.
Alvarenga was “considered armed and dangerous” ever since he evaded police on June 6.
PREVIOUS | Man accused of abduction, carjacking after chase through Virginia, DC, and Maryland
On that Saturday, Herndon police officers responded around 9:30 p.m. to the 1000 block of Knight Lane for a domestic situation. Alvarenga was allegedly fighting with someone inside a house, then jacked their car and took off with them trapped inside.
The Fairfax County Police Department (FCPD) said they were notified around 9:56 p.m. that Herndon police were investigating an abduction involving Alvarenga and the other person.
After receiving information about the car, a FCPD officer spotted it on Interstate 495 near Route 50. Police started to chase after the car.
The pursuit went through Fairfax County and outside Virginia. The U.S. Park Police (USPP) confirmed its officers helped in response to the incident as well.
SEE ALSO | Bus driver accused in deadly I-95 Stafford Co. crash released from hospital, now in jail
HPD said Alvarenga eventually abandoned the car and the person he’d abducted in Maryland. The person was safe.
On Tuesday morning, Alvarenga was arrested in the area of Elden Street and Alabama Drive.
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Herndon police said “multiple community members” spotted him and called police.
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