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Killer mom Andrea Yates speaks with ex-husband about murdered children on regular basis: report

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Killer mom Andrea Yates speaks with ex-husband about murdered children on regular basis: report

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Rusty Yates, whose ex-wife Andrea Yates drowned their five children one by one in 2001, has reportedly forgiven the notorious killer mom and even speaks with her on a monthly basis.

Yates, 59, regularly calls Kerrville State Hospital in Texas – a facility for criminals who are deemed incompetent to stand trial or found “not guilty by reason of insanity” – to speak to his 60-year-old ex-wife, who was deemed mentally incompetent to stand trial, the New York Post reported.

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According to the newspaper, the former couple talks about their slain children – Noah, 7, John, 5, Paul, 3, Luke, 2, and Mary, 6 months. Were it not for their mother’s actions, all five would be adults now.

Rusty Yates could not be reached for comment.

MASSACHUSETTS CLANCY KILLINGS: MOTHERS’ MURDERS ‘UNLIKE ANY OTHER TYPE OF HOMICIDE,’ ANDREA YATES’ LAWYER SAYS

This undated family photo shows four of the five children of Andrea Yates, 36, who confessed on June 20, 2001, to murdering her children by drowning them in their home in Clear Lake, a suburb of south Houston, Texas. The children shown are, from left, John, Luke, Paul and Noah.  (Yates Family/Getty Images)

Rusty Yates divorced Andrea Yates in March 2005, three years after she was sentenced to life in prison on two murder convictions for drowning her children in a bathtub in the Houston neighborhood of Clear Lake.

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An appeals court later overturned those convictions based on mistaken testimony by a psychiatrist – she was found not guilty by reason of insanity at her 2006 retrial.

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Rusty Yates had another child, but that marriage also ended in divorce. He is still employed as a NASA engineer – the job he held when his then-wife chased their children down and drowned them systematically. 

“Andrea was a wonderful mother,” he told NewsNation in an interview last year. “When someone acts so out of character like that, it’s a flag that something else is going on. As far as forgiveness goes, it’s kind of a start.”

ANDREA YATES: A TROUBLED HISTORY

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Russel Yates

Rusty Yates photographed on Jan. 5, 2002 in Houston, Texas, before his divorce from Andrea Yates. (Pam Francis/Getty Images)

“If I were driving our Suburban down the street and had a heart attack and swerved into oncoming traffic and everyone in the car died but me, would they prosecute me for capital murder and rub my face in crime scene photos? Of my children?” he rhetorically asked in the interview. “I don’t think so. But to me, it’s 100% exactly the same.”

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Andrea Yates attempted suicide at least four times before taking her children’s lives. After the birth of her fourth child in June 1999, she tried to overdose on pills, then held a knife up to her neck and begged her then-husband to let her die shortly after her hospital release. 

After attempting suicide two more times that summer, she was diagnosed with post-partum psychosis.

Her first psychiatrist, Dr. Eileen Starbranch, testified in court that she urged Andrea and Rusty to stop having children – regardless, they conceived their fifth and final child seven weeks after that discharge, Fox News previously reported.

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ANDREA YATES CRIES IN COURT AFTER SEEING VIDEO OF DEAD CHILDREN

Mary Yates

This undated family photo shows Mary, the youngest of the five children of Andrea Yates. (Phillippe Diederich/Getty Images)

Rusty Yates was also advised not to leave the children alone with his wife. 

Andrea Yates’ family also previously told Fox News that Rusty didn’t do enough to help his spouse or their children. Her mother, Karin Kennedy, said her son-in-law told her after the birth of their fourth child that he had never changed a diaper.

“When they came to my house, that was the first time I told Rusty, ‘Luke needs changing,’” Kennedy said. “He says, ‘Well that’d be a first. I have never changed a diaper before.’”

After the children’s murders on June 20, 2001, Andrea Yates would tell her prison psychologist that she had considered killing her children in a delusional bid to save them from eternal damnation.

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Andrea Yates

Andrea Yates sits with her attorney, George Parnham, after the not guilty by reason of insanity verdict was read in her retrial on July 26, 2006, in Houston. (Brett Coomer-Pool/Getty Images)

“My children weren’t righteous,” she told her prison psychiatrist, according to court documents obtained by The Post. “They stumbled because I was evil. The way I was raising them, they could never be saved. They were doomed to perish in the fires of hell.”

Last month, Yates declined a hearing that would have determined whether she was competent to be released from the mental hospital, the New York Post reported. She is eligible to undergo a review for release each year, but has repeatedly declined.



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Los Angeles, Ca

Hit-and-run driver leaves trail of devastation on Southern California street

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Hit-and-run driver leaves trail of devastation on Southern California street

Residents in an Encino neighborhood are hoping for justice after the driver of a pickup truck crashed into a half dozen parked cars over the weekend and then fled the scene, leaving behind heavily damaged vehicles and big repair bills for the car owners.  

The Aug. 10 incident unfolded at around 5 a.m. on Killion Street between Zelzah and Newcastle avenues.  

In surveillance footage of the incident, the driver can be seen barreling down Killion Street when he collides with the first parked car, the impact lifting the passenger side wheels of the truck off the ground as it violently grinds down the row of cars.  

As the truck continues, the driver’s side wheels also bounce off the ground, the vehicle eventually coming to a stop after impact with yet another parked car.  

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  • Encino hit-and-run
  • Encino hit-and-run
  • Encino hit-and-run
  • Encino hit-and-run
  • Encino hit-and-run
  • Encino hit-and-run
  • Encino hit-and-run
  • Encino hit-and-run
  • Encino hit-and-run

“We’re not sure if it’s an F150 or an F250, but one of the two came down this street,” one of the vehicle’s owners, who did not want to be identified, told KTLA’s Mary Beth McDade. “At a certain point, the driver seemed to lose control from the footage we’ve seen, and he started bouncing off the row of cars.”  

It was only three weeks ago that he and his wife purchased their red SUV, which sustained considerable damage in the hit-and-run crash.  

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“He hit about five cars before he crashed on this red SUV over here and that’s when he just stopped bouncing,” he said. “He pushed that [car] kind of into the sidewalk and into the gray sedan in front of it.”  

In the footage, the driver, who is wearing long shorts and has what appears to be a ponytail, exits the vehicle and walks around the front of the truck to get a look at the damage before jumping back behind the wheel and leaving the area.  

“All five cars are heavily damaged,” the SUV owner added. “I don’t know if they’ve officially ruled them totaled yet, but they’re not drivable.”  

The couple lives down the street from where the crash occurred and were unaware that their SUV had been hit until several hours after the hit-and-run, when the wife had plans to go somewhere.  

“It was very upsetting,” she said. “It was devastating to come out here and see my car like that. It’s one of my worst nightmares, honestly, to lose my vehicle.”  

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The couple filed a police report and placed flyers around the neighborhood in hopes that someone can identify the driver who caused the costly mayhem.  

“If anybody recognizes this person from the footage, contact somebody,” the man said. “If you see one of the flyers, contact the number or email address on that or the police.”  

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Southwest

Uvalde school shooter’s uncle tried to intervene, but his call came 10 minutes after gunman was dead

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Uvalde school shooter’s uncle tried to intervene, but his call came 10 minutes after gunman was dead

As shots rang out in the hallways and classrooms of Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, one of the terrified teachers who frantically dialed 911 described “a lot, a whole lot of gunshots,” while another sobbed into the phone as a dispatcher urged her to stay quiet.

“Hurry, hurry, hurry, hurry!” the first teacher cried before hanging up.

UVALDE MASS SHOOTING VICTIMS’ FAMILIES SUING META, GUN MANUFACTURER AND VIDEO GAME MAKER

Those calls, along with bodycam footage and surveillance videos, were included in a massive collection of audio and video recordings released by officials of the city of Uvalde on Saturday after a prolonged legal fight. The Associated Press and other news organizations brought a lawsuit after the officials initially refused to publicly release the information from one of the worst school shootings in U.S. history.

One of the first calls police received on the morning of May 24, 2022, came from a woman who called 911 to report that a pickup truck had crashed into a ditch and that the occupant had run onto the school campus.

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A woman cries as she leaves the Uvalde Civic Center after a shooting was reported earlier in the day at Robb Elementary School, Tuesday, May 24, 2022, in Uvalde, Texas.  (William Luther/The San Antonio Express-News via AP)

“Oh my God, they have a gun,” she said.

In a 911 call a few minutes later, a man screams: “He’s shooting at the kids! Get back!”

“He’s inside the school! He’s inside the school,” he yells as the screams of others can also be heard.

“Oh my God in the name of Jesus. He’s inside the school shooting at the kids,” he says.

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The delayed law enforcement response to the shooting — nearly 400 officers waited more than 70 minutes before confronting the gunman in a classroom filled with dead and wounded children and teachers — has been widely condemned as a massive failure.

The gunman, 18-year-old Salvador Ramos, was fatally shot by authorities at 12:50 p.m. He had entered the school at 11:33 a.m., officials said.

Just before arriving at the school, Ramos shot and wounded his grandmother at her home. He then took a pickup from the home and drove to the school.

Ramos’ distraught uncle made several 911 calls begging to be put through so he could try to get his nephew to stop shooting.

Uvalde Robb elementary banner

A banner hangs at a memorial outside Robb Elementary School, the site of a May mass shooting that killed 19 students and two teachers. (AP/Eric Gay)

“Maybe he could listen to me because he does listen to me, everything I tell him he does listen to me,” the man, who identified himself as Armando Ramos, said on the 911 call. “Maybe he could stand down or do something to turn himself in,” Ramos said, his voice cracking.

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He said his nephew, who had been with him at his house the night before, stayed with him in his bedroom all night, and told him that he was upset because his grandmother was “bugging” him.

“Oh my God, please, please, don’t do nothing stupid,” the man says on the call. “I think he’s shooting kids.”

But the offer arrived too late, coming just around the time that the shooting had ended and law enforcement officers killed Salvador Ramos.

Multiple federal and state investigations into the slow law enforcement response laid bare cascading problems in training, communication, leadership and technology, and questioned whether officers prioritized their own lives over those of children and teachers in the South Texas city of about 15,000 people 80 miles (130 kilometers) west of San Antonio. Families of the victims have long sought accountability for the slow police response.

Brett Cross’ 10-year-old nephew, Uziyah Garcia, was among those killed. Cross, who was raising the boy as a son, was angered relatives weren’t told the records were being released and that it took so long for them to be made public.

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Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas

Hearts on a banner hanging on a fence in front of Robb Elementary School. (AP/Eric Gay)

“If we thought we could get anything we wanted, we’d ask for a time machine to go back in time and save our children but we can’t, so all we are asking for is for justice, accountability and transparency, and they refuse to give this to us,” he said. “This small, simple ask that I feel that we are due.”

Two of the responding officers now face criminal charges: Former Uvalde school Police Chief Pete Arredondo and former school officer Adrian Gonzales have pleaded not guilty to multiple charges of child abandonment and endangerment. A Texas state trooper in Uvalde who had been suspended was reinstated to his job earlier this month.

In an interview this week with CNN, Arredondo said he thinks he’s been “scapegoated” as the one to blame for the botched law enforcement response.

Some of the families have called for more officers to be charged and filed federal and state lawsuits against law enforcement, social media, online gaming companies, and the gun manufacturer that made the rifle the gunman used.

Just before officers finally breached the classroom, one officer can be heard on a body camera expressing concern about friendly fire.

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“I’m kind of worried about blue on blue,” an officer said. “There are so many rifles in here.”

Law enforcement personnel stand outside Robb Elementary School following a shooting, Tuesday, May 24, 2022, in Uvalde, Texas.

Law enforcement officials outside the Robb Elementary School following a shooting, May 24, 2022, in Uvalde, Texas. (AP Photo/Dario Lopez-Mills)

The classroom breach was followed by about five to six seconds of gunfire. Officers rushed forward as someone shouted, “Watch the kids! Watch the kids! Watch the kids!”

Less than a minute into the chaos, someone shouted, “”Where’s the suspect?” Someone else immediately answered, “He’s dead!”

The police response included nearly 150 U.S. Border Patrol agents and 91 state police officials, as well as school and city police. While dozens of officers stood in the hallway trying to figure out what to do, students inside the classroom called 911 on cellphones, begging for help, and desperate parents who had gathered outside the building pleaded with officers to go in. A tactical team eventually entered the classroom and killed the shooter.

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Previously released video from school cameras showed police officers, some armed with rifles and bulletproof shields, waiting in the hallway.

A report commissioned by the city, however, defended the actions of local police, saying officers showed “immeasurable strength” and “level-headed thinking” as they faced fire from the shooter and refrained from firing into a darkened classroom.

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Los Angeles, Ca

Pasadena City Hall sustains broken pipe during 4.4 magnitude quake

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Pasadena City Hall sustains broken pipe during 4.4 magnitude quake

While Monday’s 4.4. magnitude earthquake rattled the nerves of millions of people in Southern California, damage was thankfully minimal.

According to the U.S. Geological Survey, the quake struck at 12:20 p.m. about 2.5 miles south of Highland Park and just west of Pasadena, where city officials said the historic city hall building sustained a broken pipe.

Water was seen cascading off the City Hall’s roof as people evacuated the building. Employees were eventually allowed back into the building just over an hour after the quake initially struck, the City of Pasadena said.

Pasadena Fire Department crews surveyed the city and found no additional damage other than the burst pipe.

There were no reports of damage or injuries elsewhere in SoCal immediately following the earthquake.

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