West
Hydeia Broadbent, activist known for childhood AIDS advocacy, dead at 39
Hydeia Broadbent, a prominent HIV/AIDS activist known for her inspirational talks in the 1990s as a young child to reduce the stigma surrounding the virus she was born with, has died. She was 39.
Broadbent’s father announced her death in a Facebook post, saying she had died unexpectedly “after living with Aids since birth,” but did not provide more details.
“Despite facing numerous challenges throughout her life,” Loren Broadbent wrote, ‘Hydeia remained determined to spread hope and positivity through education around Hiv/AIDS.” HIV, or human immunodeficiency virus, attacks the body’s immune system and is the virus that causes AIDS.
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The Clark County coroner’s office said Broadbent died Tuesday in Las Vegas. Her cause and manner of death has not yet been determined.
Broadbent was adopted in Las Vegas by her parents Patricia and Loren Broadbent as a baby, but her health condition wasn’t known until she became seriously ill at 3. By age 5, Broadbent had developed full-blown AIDS.
The late Hydeia Broadbent, then 14, speaks at the 1999 Essence Awards in New York on April 30, 1999. (AP Photo/Stuart Ramson, File)
Patricia Broadbent began giving talks to local groups about the hardship of raising a child with AIDS, and little Hydeia listened, soaking in all she heard.
Soon, Hydeia Broadbent was speaking before the crowds.
She made the talk show circuit as a child, met the president and first lady, spoke at the 1996 Republican National Convention, starred in a television special on Nickelodeon with Magic Johnson, and was featured on a segment on ABC’s “20/20.”
A 7-year-old Broadbent became a national symbol of HIV when she joined Johnson on the 1992 Nickelodeon special, where the basketball legend talked about his own HIV diagnosis. The teary-eyed girl pleaded that all she wanted was for “people (to) know that we’re just normal people.”
In a post on X, formerly Twitter, Johnson said he was devastated by news of her death and remembered Broadbent as an activist and hero who “changed the world with her bravery.”
“By speaking out at such a young age, she helped so many people, young and old, because she wasn’t afraid to share her story and allowed everyone to see that those living with HIV and AIDS were everyday people and should be treated with respect,” Johnson wrote. “Cookie and I are praying for the Broadbent family and everyone that knew and loved Hydeia.”
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Utah
Utah Republicans head to competitive June primaries after convention
SALT LAKE CITY (KUTV) — Utah Republicans are heading toward several competitive June primaries following the state party convention.
Rep. Blake Moore will advance to a Republican primary after falling short of the threshold needed to secure the nomination.
“I have always been a convention-supported candidate, but today I’m asking you to make me the outright winner so that I will go spend the next six months making sure every American knows the difference between common sense and crazy,” Moore said, pointing to tax cuts and endorsements.
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Delegates instead backed challenger Karianne Lisonbee, who won more than 60% of the vote, sending Moore into a primary despite his signature-gathering effort to also secure a place on the ballot.
“There are always going to be results that you don’t anticipate,” Utah Republican Party Chair Rob Axson said.
In Utah’s 3rd Congressional District, Rep. Celeste Maloy and challenger Phil Lyman also advanced to a June primary after a tightly contested convention vote. Maloy received 51% support, while Lyman received 49%.
Maloy emphasized her legislative experience and accomplishments in office.
“Experience and know-how really matter in this job,” Maloy said. “I’ve been doing the job for just a little more than two years. I’m passing bills that fix problems in Utah.”
“The stakes are high,” Lyman said. “I’m telling you, there is a game that’s being played, and we need to understand that the stakes are very high for our children.”
Axson said the close results are likely to energize voters ahead of the primary.
“I think it will keep people engaged,” Axson said. “We’re going to have a lot of people who are interested, and they’ll be leaning into these races and their preferred candidates.”
The Republican primaries are scheduled for June, when voters across Utah will make the final decision on the party’s nominees.
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Washington
Trump, first lady evacuated after security incident at Washington dinner
Merve Berker
26 April 2026•Update: 26 April 2026
US President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump were evacuated Saturday night from the annual White House Correspondents’ dinner in Washington, DC, after a security-related incident at the event.
Trump and top-level administration officials seated by him at the head table were escorted out by Secret Service agents as part of heightened security measures, while other guests remained inside the Washington Hilton ballroom.
The president and Vice President JD Vance were later reported to be “safe and secure.”
Witnesses reported hearing loud noises during the event.
“We were sitting here, and we just heard a loud ‘pop, pop, pop.’ Everybody just went under the table, and we didn’t know what was happening,” broadcaster NewsNation quoted its White House correspondent Kellie Meyer as saying.
The head table was rushed off the stage as part of security measures, while other guests remained inside the ballroom.
Meyer said she observed Cabinet members being escorted out of the venue.
Further details were not immediately available regarding the nature of the incident or any injuries.
Host Weija Jiang later informed guests that the event would resume at a later time.
Wyoming
Scientists Keep Location Of Prehistoric Squid Found In Eastern Wyoming A Secret
The Tate Geological Museum at Casper College is showcasing a first-of-its-kind fossil from Niobrara County.
The 2-foot-long bladed structure belonged to one of Wyoming’s extremely elusive giant squids.
According to J.P. Cavigelli, the museum’s collections specialist, this “big chunk of calamari” has tentatively been identified as part of the internal shell of a Niobrarateuthis, a giant squid that lived in Wyoming’s last ocean around 80 million years ago.
“We found it last year,” he said. “If I told you any more, I’d have to kill you and all your readers.”
Cavigelli is very protective of this squid and the spot where it was found because it’s a rare and unique find for Wyoming.
There could be more giant squid and other prehistoric monsters of the deep waiting to be found there.
“It’s the last time the ocean was here, according to traditional dogma,” he said.
Monster Of The Not Too Deep
The fossil recovered by the Tate is a partial gladius, the hard bone-like structure inside the otherwise soft bodies of squid.
It’s the same as a cuttlebone in a cuttlefish, itself a modern relative of this prehistoric squid.
“We call it the squid pen,” Cavigelli said. “It’s not bone, but I guess you could call it a skeleton, of some sort.”
Cavigelli said this giant squid was found in the Sharon Springs member of the Pierre Shale, a rock layer from the Late Cretaceous Period.
It preserves the inhabitants of the Western Interior Seaway, an inland sea that stretched from the Gulf of Mexico to the Arctic Ocean.
“It’s a black shale from the bottom of the ocean that split North America in half,” he said. “It wasn’t a very deep ocean but pretty expansive.”
The prehistoric squid pen is incomplete, but still over two feet long. That’s enough to quantify it as a truly giant squid.
“We saw (a squid pen) in a North Dakota museum that was five or six feet long and really thick, which would have been a really big animal,” Cavigelli said. “Ours is large, so still from a big animal, but not that huge.”
How big? It’s hard to say.
Paleontologists believe Niobrarateuthis and contemporaneous cephalopods could grow up to 10 feet long, and possibly much larger depending on the length of their tentacles.
“They could have been long or very short,” he said. “All we know is that it was much bigger than your average squid.”
Secretive Squids
Modern-day scientists are struggling to learn much about today’s giant squids. Paleontologists have an even harder time trying to understand prehistoric giant squids, especially given the rarity of their fossils.
Not much is known about North America’s prehistoric giant squids.
Just like today’s squid and octopuses, most of their bodies were composed of soft tissue rather than hard parts, meaning they usually decomposed before they could be buried and fossilized.
Did Niobrarateuthis have long, terrifying tentacles like the modern-day colossal squid, or several smaller tentacles like today’s cuttlefish and Humboldt squid?
According to Cavigelli, either is possible.
“We don’t know enough about it to give it long tentacles,” he said. “I’m sure it had tentacles, because all squids do, but we wouldn’t be able to say how long they were, because that’s quite variable in squids.”
A squid might not even be the best modern analogy for Niobrarateuthis.
Although they outwardly resembled squids, paleontologists believe the Pierre Shale’s cephalopods are more closely related to modern-day octopuses.
The Tate’s fossilized gladius came from the back end of the giant squid. In life, the gladius was surrounded by a large, fleshy mass containing all the internal organs called the mantle.
A giant, squishy squid would have been appetizing dinner option for many of Wyoming’s sea monsters.

It’s What’s For Dinner
From what paleontologists can determine, Niobrarateuthis and the giant squids of the Western Interior Seaway would have had a healthy seafood diet of everything from plants and algae to crabs, fish, and each other.
They would have processed this varied diet with an extremely strong beak, the only other hard part in modern and prehistoric cephalopods.
Meanwhile, even a fully-grown, 10-foot-long giant squid might not have been big enough to stay off the menu of the Western Interior Seaway’s biggest sea monsters.
Giant marine reptiles were at the top of the Pierre Shale’s food chain. One of the largest of these, the mosasaur Tylosaurus, might have grown over 50 feet long, with a 5.6-foot skull.
With such a big head, full of dozens of serrated teeth, a Niobrarateuthis would have made a soft, substantive meal for a fully-grown Tylosaurus. Fortunately, there’s fossilized evidence supporting this predator-prey interaction.
A large squid pen at the Museum of Natural History at the University of Colorado Boulder was found with a huge kink in the middle.
It belonged to Tusoteuthis, another species of giant squid that lived in the Western Interior Seaway.
Multiple grooves found on this Tusoteuthis specimen matched the size and shape of mosasaur teeth. That suggests the giant squid might have survived a failed predation attempt by a large Tylosaurus.
Cephalopods of all sizes were extremely abundant in prehistoric seas.
Smaller squid pens are among the most common fossils found in many marine deposits from the Mesozoic Era and often turn up in the stomachs of marine reptiles.
“I think mosasaurs would have had a great time with them,” Cavigelli said.
Searching for Sea Monsters
Niobrarateuthis and the other denizens of the Pierre Shale went extinct when the Western Interior Seaway disappeared.
The Tate’s Niobrarateuthis gladius was prepared by fossil preparator Bryan Aivazian. It’s currently on display in the museum’s lobby.
Cavigelli said giant squid fossils are an incredible find anywhere in Wyoming.
In addition to their inherent rarity, there aren’t many spots in the state where the Sharon Springs member of the Pierre Shale is exposed and accessible.
“You can find fossils in it, but there aren’t many spots where you’d expect to find these things, and the preservation is typically pretty lousy,” he said.
Other rare specimens from Wyoming’s Pierre Shale exposures include the huge-eyed Unktaheela and the long-snouted Serpentisuchops.
These are both polycotylid plesiosaurs, a family of marine reptiles that probably would have enjoyed feeding on Niobrarateuthis while the giant squid was young and bite-sized.
Notable specimens from the same formation include the 15-foot-long, three-ton sea turtle Archelon, the 34-foot-long plesiosaur Elasmosaurus, 20-foot-long cannibalistic fish, and the famous flying reptile Pteranodon.
The Tate’s squid pen was found during a field trip for participants of the museum’s annual paleontological conference in May 2025.
That’s why Cavigelli will continue to be excited and secretive about the spot where this squid surfaced.
“We collected the squid and the first Cretaceous marine bird bones from Wyoming in about three hours on the same trip,” he said. “I’d say it was a pretty good field trip.”
Andrew Rossi can be reached at arossi@cowboystatedaily.com.
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