Tag Archives: attorney says – CNN

Uvalde shooting: Robb Elementary school principal allowed to return to work after brief suspension, attorney says

Cedillo provided CNN with a copy of the letter Gutierrez received Thursday from the division superintendent stating she could return to work on July 28, 2022, in an administrative capacity, which means as a principal.

“Thank you for responding to our request for information by submitting your response to the House Investigative Report. As a result of our review, you will be allowed to return to work on this date (July 28, 2022),” wrote Hal Harrell, the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District superintendent.

“As we discussed today, with mutual agreement, you will continue to serve the District in an administrative capacity. Thank you for helping us as we work through the transition,” Harrell wrote.

CNN has reached to the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District for comment.

Javier Cazares, whose daughter was killed in the mass shooting, called the principal’s return to work a “slap to our faces,” referring to the victims and their parents.

“Being the person in charge, she should’ve made sure that school was safe, and she failed at her job, bottom line,” said Cazares, whose daughter Jacklyn was 9.

“It goes to show you how Uvalde works. They will do anything to protect themselves and forget the children,” Cazares told CNN. “No one wants to be responsible for their actions and inaction, and it makes me sick.”

Cedillo said his client was not looking for vindication.

“She sought merely to be allowed to continue her efforts to assist in the healing process for the families in the community she loves,” Cedillo said Friday.

“She understands and respects that the grieving process might involve anger. That is a natural reaction and she respects and empathizes with everything those affected are going through. She prays for the strength to focus on the healing process that will be prolonged and probably never-ending,” Cedillo said.

The principal’s reinstatement comes after an exclusive interview with CNN Wednesday in which Gutierrez defended her actions during the May 24 shooting.

“I feel that I followed the training that I was provided with to the best of my abilities,” she said when asked whether she felt she should lose her job. “And I will second-guess myself for the rest of my life.”

During the interview, she disputed the criticisms made against her in the Texas House Investigative committee report — which alleged that the school had a culture of noncompliance with safety policies, that spotty Wi-Fi could have delayed the active shooter lockdown, and that she failed to use the intercom system to alert the campus.

Gutierrez wrote a letter to the Texas House Investigative Committee and to the district Wednesday defending her actions, saying that the allegations against her were “unfair and inaccurate.” Gutierrez also stated that she followed her training on that ill-fated day and she wanted her job back. CNN obtained a copy of the letter from Cedillo.

CNN’s Jeremy Harlan and Ray Sanchez contributed to this report.

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Alex Murdaugh: Disgraced South Carolina attorney could face murder charges this week, attorney says

“I am aware that SLED (South Carolina Law Enforcement Division) advised the family that they intend to seek murder indictments from a grand jury later this week,” attorney Jim Griffin told CNN. “We won’t have any comment until charges are actually brought against Alex.”

“SLED’s investigation into the murders of Maggie and Paul Murdaugh is still active and ongoing,” Wunderlich said. “Agents are committed to the integrity of the investigation, thus no additional information from SLED will be provided at this time.”

A spokesperson from the South Carolina Attorney General’s office told CNN they have no comment at this time about possible charges against Murdaugh.

The potential indictments would further a remarkable fall from grace for Murdaugh, the 64-year-old scion of a powerful political family in South Carolina’s Lowcountry.

The news of the possible indictments being presented was first reported by FITSNews.com on Tuesday.
Last June, Murdaugh called 911 to report that his wife Margaret, 52, and son Paul, 22, had been shot dead outside of their home in Islandton, according to SLED.
The investigation into those deaths has led to a series of events full of unexpected twists: the reopening of an investigation into a 19-year-old’s unsolved 2015 death; Murdaugh’s resignation as an attorney for a prominent legal group; an admission that he struggled with opioid abuse; and dozens of charges accusing him of stealing money from clients.
In one particularly bizarre incident, Murdaugh in September called police to report he had been wounded by a gunshot to the head. He soon admitted that he had conspired with another man to fatally shoot him so that his surviving son would collect a $10 million life insurance payout, according to authorities.

Since then, he has been indicted on a total of 71 charges accusing him of defrauding clients out of nearly $8.5 million in various schemes.

Several charges relate to the death of Gloria Satterfield, his family’s longtime housekeeper who died in a fall at the Murdaugh home in 2018. According to SLED, Murdaugh coordinated with her family to sue himself and reach an insurance settlement, saying he would give the family the proceeds. However, he secretly deposited about $3 million of that money into an account he owned, according to affidavits released by SLED.

In another development Tuesday, the South Carolina Supreme Court issued an order disbarring Murdaugh, having suspended his license to practice law in the state in 2021.

“Respondent concedes that disbarment is warranted in light of his admitted professional misconduct,” the order read. “However, our decision today turns not on Respondent’s concession, but rather derives from our constitutional authority and duty to protect the public from attorneys who are not fit to practice law.”
Murdaugh has been jailed in Columbia, South Carolina, with bond set at $7 million.
He has denied any involvement in his wife and son’s deaths. In a statement through his lawyers last September, he said their deaths had exacerbated his issues with opioid addiction.

“The murders of my wife and son have caused an incredibly difficult time in my life,” Murdaugh said at the time. “I have made a lot of decisions that I truly regret.”

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Rapper Kodak Black shot near LA restaurant holding Justin Bieber after-party, attorney says

Attorney Bradford Cohen posted about the shooting near The Nice Guy restaurant and lounge on his verified Instagram account Saturday.

“There was an unprovoked attack on an individual (K)odak was with, when security and (K)odak came to his aid, several shots were fired at them by an unidentified assailant. Luckily, this was all caught on video. Kodak was struck in the leg. It was not life threatening, he will make a full recovery and he is in stable condition,” the statement from Cohen read.

The statement included a screengrab of the shooting reported by TMZ.

Cohen did not respond to a CNN request for additional information, instead pointing to his posted statement.

The Los Angeles Police Department earlier said an altercation took place around 2:45 a.m. on the 400 block of N La Cienega Boulevard.

Bieber was hosting an after-party at The Nice Guy restaurant and lounge, following a concert, and “the shooting occurred … near The Nice Guy, but it was not directly in front,” a source familiar with the event told CNN.

The source said Bieber was inside the venue when the shooting took place, and he decided to leave once he learned of the incident.

Police said there was a “physical altercation” between several people and gunshots were fired by a suspect who then fled the scene. In a news release Saturday afternoon, the LAPD asked for the public’s assistance in identifying the suspect.

Two of the victims were taken to nearby hospitals by paramedics while the other two self-transported to hospitals, police said. They said the incident was not gang-related.



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Brian Laundrie’s family didn’t want to set off a public ‘frenzy’ by revealing gun was missing, attorney says

Laundrie’s parents, Chris and Roberta Laundrie, were surrendering their guns to law enforcement on September 17 — the same day they reported their son missing — when they discovered one handgun was not in its case, Bertolino told CNN Friday. The family immediately consulted law enforcement, he said, including the FBI and North Port, Florida, police.

Asked why information about the missing gun was not publicly shared, Bertolino told CNN he and law enforcement agreed “it was best for that information to not be public.”

“Imagine, with the frenzied atmosphere at the time, if the public thought Brian had a gun,” Bertolino said. “I cannot speak to why (law enforcement) did not reveal the info but we spoke about it at the time and I believe they felt as I did.”

CNN has reached out to the FBI for comment. North Port Police did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday.

Laundrie vanished from his parents’ home in North Port just days after Petito had been reported missing. The couple had been traveling across the country over the summer in a converted van before Laundrie returned home without Petito on September 1.

Laundrie vanished days after Petito was reported missing, sparking a multistate investigation and capturing the attention of social media sleuths. Petito’s remains were found in Wyoming on September 19, and her death was ruled a homicide by manual strangulation.

In the meantime, authorities focused their search for Laundrie on the vast Florida nature reserve where his remains were eventually found October 20. On Friday, Bertolino said he did not know whether a gun was found near Brian’s remains or possessions.

While the Florida District Twelve medical examiner’s office confirmed Laundrie had died of suicide, the office said it would not make the autopsy report public “until the law enforcement investigation is complete,” the office said in a release.

The circumstances that led to Petito’s death remain a mystery. The FBI described her fiancé as a “person of interest” in her murder, but he did not face charges in her death. A federal grand jury had indicted him for allegedly using two accounts that belonged to someone else in the days after Petito died.

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‘Rust’ shooting: Checking Alec Baldwin’s gun was not the assistant director’s responsibility, attorney says

“He’s not responsible for checking it,” attorney Lisa Torraco said in an interview on Fox News on Monday. “That’s not the assistant director’s job. If he chooses to check the firearm because he wants to make sure that everyone’s safe, he can do that, but that’s not his responsibility.”

According to a detective’s search warrant affidavit filed last week, Halls acknowledged to investigators he should have checked all the rounds loaded in the weapon and “couldn’t recall if he spun the drum” before the fatal shooting October 21 that killed cinematographer Halyna Hutchins and injured director Joel Souza.

“David advised the incident was not a deliberate act,” the detective writes.

Torraco said Halls wasn’t required to check the gun.

“Expecting an assistant director to check a firearm is like telling the assistant director to check the camera angle or telling the assistant director to check sound or lighting,” Torraco said.

According to the New York Post, Halls, in his first public statement since the shooting, spoke of his relationship with Hutchins.

“Halyna Hutchins was not just one of the most talented people I’ve worked with, but also a friend,” he said in the statement. “I’m shocked and saddened by her death.”

Although Halls didn’t address details of the investigation, he did comment on changes he would like to see within the industry.

“It’s my hope that this tragedy prompts the industry to reevaluate its values and practices to ensure no one is harmed through the creative process again,” his statement read.

According to the Post, Halls said he has been “overwhelmed by the love and support” and that his “thoughts are with all who knew and loved Halyna.”

CNN has made repeated attempts to reach out to Halls and he has not responded. His attorney declined to comment to CNN on Monday.

How gun with live round got to Baldwin still a question

Torraco said witnesses have told her team that the armorer or the armorer’s assistant brought the gun on set.

Attorneys for Hannah Gutierrez Reed, the gun supervisor for the film, said her priority is safety.

“Ultimately this set would never have been compromised if live ammo were not introduced,” attorneys Jason Bowles and Robert Gorence said in a statement. “Hannah has no idea where the live rounds came from.”

Torraco said some witnesses told her team the armorer handed the gun directly to Baldwin and then Baldwin put it inside a holster. Some witnesses also said Baldwin wanted to adjust his holster and handed the firearm to Halls, who immediately handed the firearm back after the actor adjusted his holster, Torraco added.

According to Torraco, other witnesses have said the armorer brought the firearm in, another crew member checked the firearm, and then Halls checked the firearm “like a pass-through” and handed it to Baldwin “because he was between the two,” Torraco said.

But she said one thing has been erroneously reported about what Halls did that day.

“In the affidavits, it states that my client grabbed the gun off of a prop cart and handed it to Baldwin. That absolutely did not happen,” Torraco said.

Sante Fe County Sheriff Adan Mendoza said investigators used different statements in the affidavits.

“Those aren’t all inclusive of all the statements, obviously, in the investigation,” he told CNN’s “Erin Burnett OutFront.” “So there are statements that Mr. Halls either inspected or handled the firearm prior to giving it to Mr. Baldwin.”

Mendoza said that it’s important for Halls and others to cooperate with investigators and come in for follow-up interviews.

“If Mr. Halls sees what happened on the set that day different then come and explain to us how it happened,” the sheriff said.

The sheriff added that some of the people they want to speak with again have not agreed to, on advice of their attorneys.

Torraco said whether her client handed the gun to Baldwin isn’t important.

“My client didn’t load the firearm. My client didn’t point the firearm at anyone. And my client didn’t pull the trigger,” Torraco said. “The armorer comes in, the armorer opens the firearm, my client looks at it and one of the other crew members also checks it. Whether or not he handed the firearm directly to Alec Baldwin at that moment or whether the armorer handed it directly to Alec Baldwin at that moment doesn’t really matter because he didn’t load it.”

An earlier affidavit says Halls yelled, “Cold gun,” which means the firearms didn’t have live rounds, before handing the gun to Baldwin.

CNN has reached out to Torraco for comment.

Baldwin ‘extremely interested’ in future gun safety

Baldwin said this weekend he talks to the detectives every day.

“We are eagerly awaiting the Sheriff’s Department telling us what their investigation has yielded,” Baldwin told members of the paparazzi who were following him and his wife in Manchester, Vermont.

He told them he couldn’t comment on what happened because there is an ongoing investigation.

Baldwin said he couldn’t answer whether he would ever work on another film set that involved firearms like those used on the set of “Rust.”

“I do know that an ongoing effort to limit the use of firearms on film sets is something I’m extremely interested in,” Baldwin said. “But remember, something that I think is important, and that is how many bullets have been fired in films and TV shows in the last 75 years? This is America. How many bullets have gone off in movies and on TV sets … and nearly all of them without incident.”

In the case of something going wrong and in the wake of “this horrible catastrophic thing, some new measures have to take place,” he said, including the possibility of using rubber guns or plastic guns.

“That’s not for me to decide,” Baldwin stated.

No criminal charges have been filed, but the district attorney for Santa Fe County said recently she has not ruled any out.

CNN’s Steve Almasy, Amanda Watts and Lisa Respers France contributed to this report.

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