Tag Archives: grisly

Alex Murdaugh trial – updates: Court hears grisly autopsy details after bodycam from night murders revealed – The Independent

  1. Alex Murdaugh trial – updates: Court hears grisly autopsy details after bodycam from night murders revealed The Independent
  2. Bodycam footage released in Murdaugh trial shows grisly crime scene Fox News
  3. As Alex Murdaugh trial shifts to autopsy evidence, law enforcement body camera shows attorney’s encounter with first deputy on scene CNN
  4. Video shows Alex Murdaugh next to bodies of wife and son — while pointing blame elsewhere New York Post
  5. Alex Murdaugh trial live, updates: What’s happening at start of week 4 Greenville News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Giancarlo Esposito Explained Premiere’s Grisly Scene to Kids

  • Warning: There are spoilers ahead for the season six premiere of “Better Call Saul.”
  • A moment near the episode’s start involving Lalo may have left you confused until a second watch.
  • Giancarlo Esposito told Insider he had to explain it to his daughters, who “were mortified.”

The season six premiere of “Better Call Saul” contains a grisly detail you may overlook the first time you watch. 

When Lalo Salamanca (Tony Dalton) visits a couple at the episode’s start, the man tells Lalo he’ll clean up and shave his overgrown beard.

Lalo tells him to keep the mustache and soul patch, something you may not think twice about at first.

As the wife prepares coffee for Lalo, he removes a blade from a pair of scissors and heads to the bathroom where the man is shaving with the intent to kill him.

Lalo executes a plan on the season six premiere of “Better Call Saul.”

AMC


But why?

If the moment confused you, you weren’t alone. Even star Giancarlo Esposito’s adult daughters, Kale and Ruby, needed the scene explained to them.

“They were confused at a moment where Lalo gets the knife and he’s in that beautiful Mexican casita with people that are his friends. And I said, ‘Well, you know what happens to them,'” Esposito told Insider over


Zoom

earlier this month.

On the season five finale, which aired about two years ago, Gus Fring (Esposito) sent a group of assassins to Mexico to kill Lalo. They failed, but Lalo cleverly faked his own death. 

Needing a body to make his death look believable to Gus and the world, Lalo finds a man who closely resembles himself. He then encourages this man to shave his facial hair in a way that makes him look like Lalo’s double.

Moments before Lalo kills the man off-screen, there’s a shot where the man looks up at Lalo and you’re supposed to notice that the two look very similar.



The man’s reflection in the mirror shows that he resembles Lalo after a quick shave.

AMC, composite by Kirsten Acuna/Insider


When Esposito’s daughters put two and two together, he said they were shocked.

“They hadn’t put that together,” Esposito said, recounting how he explained the scene to them. “And I said, ‘When the guy shaved, who did he look like?’ They were mortified. They thought it was horrible.”

“They’re so galvanized to this show and in such wonder,” Esposito added of his daughters, who accompanied their father to the show’s season six premiere on April 7. 



Kale (left) and Ruby (right) Esposito are seen with their father, Giancarlo Esposito, at the season six premiere of “Better Call Saul” in Hollywood on April 7.

Steve Granitz/FilmMagic


The star, who plays the fearsome and calculating restaurateur on the “Breaking Bad” prequel series, added that Kale, one of Esposito’s four daughters, is a huge fan of both series. As a result, they try and get spoilers about the final season out of him.

“Mainly, they’re teasing me. They really wanna know specifically what I’m gonna do to Lalo,” Esposito said, hinting that things may not go as fans expect.

He added: “It’s gonna be a surprise to the audience what Lalo does to me and it’s gonna be a surprise to the audience what Gus’s final endgame in this particular season is.”

New episodes of “Better Call Saul” air on AMC on Mondays at 9 p.m. ET. The first two episodes are currently streaming on AMC+.

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Bird flu’s grisly question: how to kill millions of poultry

OMAHA, Neb. — The spread of a bird flu that is deadly to poultry raises the grisly question of how farms manage to quickly kill and dispose of millions of chickens and turkeys.

It’s a chore that farms across the country are increasingly facing as the number of poultry killed in the past two months has climbed to more than 24 million, with outbreaks reported nearly every day. Some farms have had to kill more than 5 million chickens at a single site with a goal of destroying the birds within 24 hours to limit the spread of the disease and prevent animals from suffering.

“The faster we can get on site and depopulate the birds that remain on site, the better,” Minnesota State Veterinarian Beth Thompson said.

The outbreak is the biggest since 2015, when producers had to kill more than 50 million birds. So far this year, there have been cases in 24 states, with Iowa the hardest hit with about 13 million chickens and turkeys killed. Other states with sizable outbreaks include Minnesota, Wisconsin, South Dakota and Indiana.

Farms faced with the need to kill so many birds turn to recommendations by the American Veterinary Medical Association. Even as it has developed methods to kill the poultry quickly, the association acknowledges its techniques “may not guarantee that the deaths the animals face are painless and distress free.” Veterinarians and U.S. Department of Agriculture officials also typically oversee the process.

One of the preferred methods is to spray water-based firefighting foam over birds as they roam around the ground inside a barn. That foam kills the animals by cutting off their air supply.

When foam won’t work because birds are in cages above the ground or it’s too cold, the USDA recommends sealing up barns and piping carbon dioxide inside, first rendering the birds unconscious and ultimately killing them.

If one those methods won’t work because equipment or workers aren’t available, or when the size of a flock is too large, the association said a last resort is a technique called ventilation shutdown. In that scenario, farmers stop airflow into barns, which raises temperatures to levels at which the animals die. The USDA and the veterinary association recommend that farmers add additional heat or carbon dioxide to barns to speed up the process and limit suffering by the animals.

Mike Stepien, a spokesman for the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, said the techniques are the best options when it’s necessary to quickly kill so many birds.

Not everyone agrees.

Animal welfare groups argue that all these methods for quickly killing birds are inhumane, though they are particularly opposed to ventilation shutdown, which they note can take hours and is akin to leaving a dog in a hot car. Animal rights groups delivered a petition last year signed by 3,577 people involved in caring for animals, including nearly 1,600 veterinarians, that urged the veterinary association to stop recommending ventilation shutdown as an option.

“We have to do better. None of these are acceptable in any way,” said Sara Shields, director of farm animal welfare science at Humane Society International.

Opponents of the standard techniques said firefighting foam uses harmful chemicals and it essentially drowns birds, causing chickens and turkeys to suffer convulsions and cardiac arrest as they die. They say carbon dioxide is painful to inhale and detectible by the birds, prompting them to try to flee the gas.

Karen Davis, of the nonprofit group United Poultry Concerns, urged the veterinary association to stop recommending all of its three main options.

“They’re all ways that I would not choose to die, and I would not choose anybody else to die regardless of what species they belong to,” Davis said.

Shields said there are more humane alternatives, such as using nitrogen gas but those options tend to be more expensive and could have logistical challenges.

Sam Krouse, vice president of Indiana-based MPS Egg Farms, said farmers feel miserable about using any of the options.

“We pour our lives and livelihoods into taking care of those birds, and it’s just devastating when we lose any of those birds,” Krouse said. “Everything that we’re doing every day is focused on keeping the disease out and making sure that we’re keeping our hens as safe as possible.”

Once poultry are dead, farmers must quickly dispose of the birds. They usually don’t want to risk the chance of spreading the virus by transporting the carcasses to landfills, so crews typically pile the birds up into huge rows inside barns and combine them with other materials, such as ground up corn stalks and sawdust to create a compost pile.

After a couple weeks of decomposition, the carcasses are converted into a material that can be spread on cropland to help fertilize crops. In some cases, carcasses are buried in trenches on the farm or incinerated.

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North Dakota man convicted in grisly deaths sentenced to life in prison

A man convicted of stabbing and shooting four people at a North Dakota property management firm was sentenced Tuesday to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

A jury in August found Chad Isaak guilty in the grisly deaths of RJR Maintenance and Management co-owner Robert Fakler, 52; and employees Adam Fuehrer, 42; Bill Cobb, 50; and his wife, Lois Cobb, 45.

The four were shot and stabbed April 1, 2019, in the RJR building in Mandan, a city of about 20,000 people across the Missouri River from Bismarck. Investigators said the victims suffered more than 100 stab wounds.

Isaak was also found guilty of burglary, unlawful entry into a vehicle, and a misdemeanor count of unauthorized use of a vehicle.

Prosecutors recommended four consecutive life sentences without parole for each murder, along with nearly 16 years in prison for the other charges. An attorney for Isaak asked for life with the possibility of parole.

South Central District Judge David E. Reich accepted the state’s recommendation, saying “the evidence is clear in this case that Mr. Isaak took the lives of four innocent people with a senseless act of extreme brutal violence.”

Prior to the sentencing, family members of the victims read impact statements.

Fakler’s daughter cried as she recalled her father. “My dad was a loving person who wanted to teach life lessons and help people grow as individuals,” she said, telling Isaak that he is a danger to the public.

“I don’t want another family to experience what we have,” she continued. “The brutality and extremity of the actions you carried out are enough for you to be locked away. You have taken entire lifetimes away, and I hope you have nightmares.”

The daughter of Bill Cobb, stepdaughter of Lois Cobb, said her life has never been the same since their murders.

The stepmother of Fuehrer told Isaak that he was a “monster” for what he did. “That hurts a lot,” she said. “What you did to Adam was brutal, horrible.”

Isaak also briefly addressed the court, saying: “I can honestly tell you I am not a murderer and that’s all I have to say.”

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Isaak, a chiropractor and Navy veteran, lived at a Washburn property managed by RJR, but a motive for the slayings was never established. Washburn is located about 40 miles north of Mandan.

Chad Isaak, appears in court in Mandan, N.D., on April 5, 2019.James MacPherson / AP file

It was one of the most heinous crimes in North Dakota history, defense attorney Bruce Quick acknowledged in his opening statement. But he maintained during the nearly three-week trial that investigators didn’t seriously consider other possible suspects, including people who have either been evicted or sued by RJR, as well as a long list of disgruntled RJR employees who were fired.

The defense also maintained police failed to check out the ex-husband of a woman who allegedly had an affair with Fakler.

Prosecutors showed security camera footage from numerous businesses that authorities said tracked Isaak’s white pickup from Mandan to Washburn on the day of the slayings, along with footage from a week earlier that they said indicated the killer planned out the attack.

Forensic experts testified that fibers on the clothing of the slain workers matched fibers taken from Isaak’s clothing, and that DNA evidence found in Isaak’s pickup truck was linked to Fakler and possibly Lois Cobb.

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