Southeast
Man who attempted to murder ex-girlfriend’s father bonds out of jail, kills her mother: police
Months after his arrest for allegedly attempting to murder his ex-girlfriend’s father this summer, police say a North Carolina man bonded out of jail and killed her mother.
Michael Steven Ricker, 36, faces a first-degree murder charge in the death of 63-year-old Lesa Armstrong Rose, per the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office.
Ricker was free at the time while facing charges for allegedly shooting Armstrong Rose’s husband in June, which hit him with counts of attempted first-degree murder, shooting into an occupied dwelling and possession of a firearm by felon.
Ricker was initially denied bond on the attempted murder charge but had his bond set at $55,000 for the two additional charges, according to the Hickory Daily Record. WSOC-TV reported, though, that Ricker was released on $25,000 bond 12 days after that arrest.
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“I’m very angry at the justice system, especially since they were out there sooner that day [that her mother was killed] and [police] they didn’t do a whole lot to help, which allowed him to still be out there,” Armstrong Rose’s daughter, Amber Rose, told Fox News Digital.
“I think we have a failed justice system – they worry more about the wrong things,” said Rose, who was in a relationship with Ricker for about seven years before things ended. “There’s people in jail for getting caught with meth that have a million dollar bond. But a bond on attempted murder being that low just… makes you question… what goes through their head when they set the bonds, how they feel at night knowing someone’s life could be on the line because they didn’t do what they needed to do.”
Armstrong Rose’s body was recovered on the bathroom floor of her home on Ginger Lane in the town of Maiden on Saturday, Oct. 21.
Lincoln County emergency services, who initially received reports of a cardiac arrest, contacted police after finding that woman had “wounds not consistent with a natural death.”
Rose said that her 17-year-old daughter – who had previously seen Ricker as a father figure before his relationship with her mother deteriorated – was the first to find her grandmother’s badly beaten body in their shared kitchen.
“My parents loved him, my daughter loved him, she was part of our family,” Rose said of her now-incarcerated former boyfriend, who she said she knew since third grade and only became violent within the past three years. “Now, [my daughter] has seen things that nobody should ever see – she walked into a violent crime scene… My mom was basically like a second mom to her – 1698604579 she’s seen the horrors of somebody taking a loved one away.”
“I didn’t know of him being like this. Like I said, the first couple years it was great, we got along great,” she continued. “He got along with my family great. My family treated him as one of the family members, they treated him no different. A lot of times he told us we treated him better than his own family did.”
Rose said her mother was a “caring” and “feisty” woman who “would do anything for her friends and family” and loved country music like Alan Jackson.
The next day, police apprehended Ricker in a shed on the same property, WSOC-TV reported. Somehow, Rose told Fox News Digital, he became trapped inside the structure in the backyard after allegedly killing her mother.
Although Armstrong Rose’s cause of death has yet to be determined, Rose said that pronounced injuries could be clearly seen on her mother’s head. She has already begun the difficult process of reviewing the “very detailed descriptions and timelines” of what happened to her mother at the hands of the man she once trusted.
“I feel we need to hear what happened to start moving forward… [and] just for the simple fact that we plan to be in court and need to prepare ourselves so it’s not a shock,” Rose said. “I’ve informed detectives I would like to know when every court date is – as hard as it’s going to be, I want to be there and confront [Ricker], to see him pay for what he’s done.”
“I feel that if I did not go and stand up in these trials that… I don’t want him to see me weak,” Rose continued, emotional. “This is my last chance to stand up to him and I want to have that.”
Three days before the fatal attack, Rose said in an account confirmed by the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office, someone “lit [her] car on fire.”
“We don’t have evidence and [Ricker] won’t admit to it. But we know it was him – the car was burned to the ground,” Rose said. “If you light someone’s car on fire at three o’clock in the morning, what’s stopping you from lighting their house on fire?”
Earlier on Oct. 21, before her mother died in the home she shared with her daughter and granddaughter, Rose said Ricker came to the property.
“He ran into me, we got into an argument and he hit me in the back of the head with brass knuckles,” Rose alleged. “I was able to get away and the police couldn’t find him. They told me the best thing I could do would be not to be at home – [Ricker] was obviously after me, they said. So I got my stuff and left… I expected him to hurt me, not my mother.”
Rose said she is still handling “should’ve’s” and “what-ifs” after that night. Her father, Teddy Rose, is also feeling the survivor’s guilty – he was supposed to take Rose’s mother to the store, but instead packed up his daughter and moved her to his house.
“Me and him both have a lot of guilty in our hearts… what if we stayed?” Rose said. “We didn’t expect [Ricker] to escalate to this.”
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Rose accused Ricker of beating her in June. After Teddy Rose got wind of it, she said, he called Ricker and the two fought – Rose said her former boyfriend even “bragged” about the attack.
At that point, she said, Ricker drove to her father’s house in Sherrills Ford in Catawba County. Ricker allegedly shot Teddy, who survived.
Ricker was arrested two days later at the Maiden property where he allegedly killed Rose’s mother last week, and where he formerly lived. He was charged with attempted murder, shooting in an occupied dwelling, and criminal possession of a firearm by a felon.
Fox News Digital was unable to determine what Ricker’s former convictions were, though Rose said on Friday that he had previously been arrested for growing marijuana. Although she began her campaign to try to leave Ricker well before the June attack, she said, she never filed charges against him.
The Lincoln County District Attorney’s office would not disclose the magistrate judge who lowered Ricker’s bail to Fox News Digital. A representative from the office said that the Lincoln County DA was not involved in setting the earlier bond amount.
This time, Ricker is being held at Lincoln County Jail without bond, and is scheduled to appear in court on Nov. 9, per online jail records. It is unclear whether he has retained an attorney.
Meanwhile, Rose buried her mother on Friday. A GoFundMe effort was started to help her family.
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Rose implores other women in abusive relationships not to “overlook red flags” earlier on.
“Don’t think it’s just one time… don’t make excuses for them. Don’t make them think you did anything wrong… No matter what they say, no matter how much they beg and say they’re sorry and cry or how good you think it will be, if somebody cares and loves you they would never put their hands on you.”
“Keep you family safe, with you,” Rose continued. “They’re not always just going to attack you.”
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Southeast
Laken Riley Act roils NJ governor’s race as 2 Dems skip roll: ‘The more someone campaigns the less they vote'
Two Democrats in the 2025 race to succeed term-limited New Jersey Gov. Philip Murphy did not cast votes this week in Congress on the Laken Riley Act, leading them to be lambasted by gubernatorial candidates from both parties.
The House Clerk’s office recorded Reps. Mikie Sherrill of Essex and Josh Gottheimer of Bergen County recorded as “not voting” on the landmark bill, which would require illegal immigrants convicted of theft-related crimes be detained by municipal and state authorities.
The bill takes its name from a young woman murdered by an illegal immigrant in Georgia who had been previously arrested and released on lesser charges.
Jersey City Mayor Steve Fulop exclaimed, “This is cowardly,” in an X post.
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“We lose elections when we don’t have any core convictions… when we can’t explain why we have a view and why we believe in it. Hiding is not an answer that wins elections,” the Democrat said.
“Mikie and Josh are the same again – If you don’t have the courage to vote for a bill then what does that say about your courage to lead as Governor?” Fulop added.
Meanwhile, former Republican Assemblyman Jack Ciattarelli slammed the two lawmakers from their right.
“Shame on [Josh and Mikie] for gutlessly ducking a vote on the Laken Riley Act today,” said Ciattarelli.
On X, Ciattarelli said Riley “fought till her last breath against a murderous illegal immigrant, but Josh/Mikie didn’t have the courage to stand up to their extreme far left base.”
Ciattarelli ran against Murphy in 2021 and nearly defeated him by Garden State standards, losing by less than three points. In November, President-elect Trump only lost the state by four points, leading the GOP to signal their optimism about flipping Trenton red this fall.
When the bill last came up for a vote, Gottheimer voted “yea,” and a spokesman told the Philadelphia Inquirer he would have supported the bill this week if he had voted.
New Jersey’s three Republican congressmen – Reps. Christopher Smith, Jeff Van Drew and Tom Kean Jr. – all voted for the Laken Riley Act.
Democratic Reps. Nellie Pou, Frank Pallone, Herbert Conaway, LaMonica McIver, Donald Norcross and Rob Menendez Jr. all voted against it.
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Republican Assemblywoman Dawn Fantasia – who is not running for governor – torched the pair on Wednesday with a quip:
“The Road to Drumthwacket is paved with flat squirrels who couldn’t make a decision,” she said, referring to the historic governor’s mansion near Princeton.
State Sen. Jon Bramnick, a GOP gubernatorial candidate, told Fox News Digital on Thursday that a lawmaker’s first responsibility is to their constituents, not their next campaign.
“I think you have to have campaign activities come secondary to your responsibility,” Bramnick said when asked about Gottheimer’s and Sherrill’s non-votes.
“The key question is – if you’re going to run – campaign activities must be secondary to your voting,” adding that systemically it seems “the more [someone] campaigns the less they vote.”
Bramnick, who is also an attorney in Plainfield, added that he couldn’t assume what was on the two Democrats’ minds in terms of their vote, but that immigration is a hot issue and often difficult to navigate.
With the Laken Riley Act scoring 48 Democratic “yea’s,” Bramnick said immigration is a bipartisan issue.
If elected governor, he said he would “follow the law” when asked how he would approach President-elect Trump or border czar-designate Tom Homan.
“Unfortunately, the Congress hasn’t done anything to [create] a path to citizenship for people who may have an opportunity to stay here,” he said, discussing those who have lived in the U.S. for many years as otherwise law-abiding members of their communities.
“If America doesn’t like the law, change it, but state-by-state shouldn’t change the law based on how they feel on the issue.”
Sherrill and Gottheimer did not immediately respond to inquiries made via their campaigns.
Another Democrat in the race, Ras Baraka – mayor of the state’s largest city, Newark – also did not respond.
Baraka, however, separately indicated he would have voted against the Laken Riley Act if he were in Congress.
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Southeast
Apalachee High School student arrested for allegedly bringing gun to campus months after deadly mass shooting
The Barrow County Sheriff’s Office said a 14-year-old student was arrested Wednesday after he allegedly brought a gun to Apalachee High School, the same Georgia school where two students and two teachers were killed in a mass shooting in September.
At approximately 2:02 p.m., school resource officers arrested the student without incident.
“The student was cooperative and compliant when encountered by law enforcement officers, and there have been no reports of the student threatening anyone with the gun,” the sheriff’s office said.
The boy, who was not named due to his age, has since been transported to a youth detention center.
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The boy was charged with theft, being a minor in possession of a gun and possessing a weapon on school grounds.
Officials didn’t say what type of gun was seized or how the child acquired the gun.
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In response to the incident, the Barrow County School System canceled Thursday’s classes at the high school and called for a meeting to discuss immediate safety enhancement options.
“We understand this brings up many different feelings in each of us,” the school system said. “We will update you all following the board meeting tomorrow with any changes regarding school procedures.”
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On Sept. 4, 14-year-old student Colt Gray allegedly opened fire at Apalachee High School, killing two teachers and two students.
Teachers Richard Aspinwall, 39, and Cristina Irimie, 53, and students Mason Schermerhorn and Christian Angulo, both 14, were killed.
Gray has since been indicted on 55 counts as an adult, including 25 counts of aggravated assault. He has pleaded not guilty and faces a maximum penalty of life in prison without parole or life with the possibility of parole if convicted.
His father, Colin Gray, who was arrested and charged with buying the semiautomatic AR-15-style rifle used in the shooting and giving it to Colt for Christmas, is facing 29 counts, including two counts of second-degree murder and two counts of involuntary manslaughter. He has also pleaded not guilty.
Georgia is one of 42 states in the U.S. that holds parents criminally responsible for their children.
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Southeast
I know Pam Bondi personally and she will make an amazing attorney general
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
As someone deeply invested in the safety of our communities – as someone who’s lost a baby brother to senseless murder – I’m asking you to join me in full support of Pam Bondi as our next attorney general of the United States.
For the past four years, the U.S. Attorney General’s Office has been plagued by partisanship, inconsistent justice enforcement and prioritizing political agendas over public good. From selective prosecutions to eroding public trust, its failure to act independently has undermined the rule of law, creating a perception of bias and deepening divisions within the country.
With Bondi at the helm, I have no doubt the Department of Justice will usher in a new period of genuine integrity and rise to meet our time’s challenges. Admittedly, one of the reasons I’m so enthusiastic about Bondi’s potential as our next attorney general is her work with the Caldwell Institute for Public Safety.
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Bondi, who’s been on our advisory board since our launch, has been an active mentor and ally of mine. So, I’ve gotten a front-row seat to how she’ll handle the challenges America faces in combating violent crime and gang violence, addressing the opioid epidemic and safeguarding victims of human trafficking.
Our organization is focused on reducing violent crime through innovative strategies and evidence-based policies, and Bondi’s expertise and commitment to real solutions, and real justice, have made her an invaluable advisor in this effort.
Bondi’s record speaks for itself. During her tenure as Florida’s attorney general from 2011 to 2019, she transformed the office into a powerhouse for consumer protection, crime prevention and justice reform. She took on powerful interests, negotiating billions of dollars for the economic damages suffered by the State of Florida due to the BP oil spill, including lost tax revenues. In addition, she negotiated settlements to hold pharmaceutical companies accountable for the opioid crisis and worked tirelessly to dismantle human trafficking networks.
For example, Bondi’s leadership in holding pharmaceutical companies accountable was groundbreaking as she secured significant financial settlements that funded treatment and prevention programs, saving lives and giving hope to those struggling with addiction. Bondi also pushed for stronger laws to curb the spread of synthetic opioids, ensuring that Florida was at the forefront of the fight against this deadly scourge. Imagine what she could achieve on a national level with the resources of the Department of Justice at her disposal.
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She’s been a relentless advocate for crime victims, championing measures like Marsy’s Law to ensure their voices are heard, and their rights are protected. And under her leadership, Florida became a national leader in anti-trafficking efforts, setting an example for other states to follow. Her experience tackling complex issues — from gang violence to synthetic drugs — aligns perfectly with our mission to address the root causes of crime and foster safer communities.
With Bondi at the helm, I have no doubt the Department of Justice will usher in a new period of genuine integrity and rise to meet our time’s challenges. Admittedly, one of the reasons I’m so enthusiastic about Bondi’s potential as our next attorney general is her work with the Caldwell Institute for Public Safety.
What really sets Bondi apart may be her ability to now lead on a national stage. As a former president of the National Association of Attorneys General, she’s already demonstrated her skill in building coalitions and working across state lines to address pressing issues like cybercrime and drug trafficking. She has consistently defended state sovereignty while respecting the balance of power between state and federal governments. This collaborative approach to governance is exactly what we need in an attorney general.
As someone who has worked closely with her through the Caldwell Institute, I can attest to her passion for justice and her relentless drive to make our communities safer.
America stands at a crossroads. The challenges we face are immense, but they are not insurmountable. We need leaders who are not only qualified but who also possess the moral clarity and determination to guide us forward. The Honorable Pam Bondi is such a leader.
Join me in urging the Senate to confirm Bondi without delay. Our nation needs her leadership, experience and unwavering commitment to the principles of justice. We deserve, and clearly require, no less.
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