As Immigrant Deaths In Custody Rise, ICE Releases Fewer Details

April 17, 2026
While ICE recently reported the 16th immigrant detainee death of the year, the number of people in ICE detention centers has dropped by 11% since February.
There was a time when Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials released three-page reports on what happened following the death of immigrant detainees in custody.
But as the number of deaths has gone up, NBC News reports, the details have decreased to a few paragraphs.
The agency once required ICE to give notice to the public and Congress within two days of a detainee’s death. The next step was submitting reports within 90 days to be posted on the ICE website with details surrounding the death: timelines, timestamps of medical observations, regular medications, administered emergency medications, and times and causes of death.
Since mid-December 2025, released reports have only included a brief synopsis of the circumstances surrounding these deaths as lawmakers grow increasingly almarmed over the increase in detainee deaths under Department of Homeland Security (DHS) custody.  The ICE website that posts investigations has not been updated since mid-February, with DHS blaming the delay on the ongoing department shutdown
“Under these conditions, certain administrative and public-facing updates are not fully operational. In a shutdown driven by Democrats’ failure to fund the government, non-essential reporting functions can be slowed even as ICE continues its core mission,” DHS said in a statement.
ICE recently reported the 16th immigrant detainee death of the year. In addition, the number of people in ICE detention centers has dropped by 11% since February, and arrests are down by 21%. But there are still more than 60,000 people in custody, close to double the number prior to President Donald Trump’s second term in office. 
Under the Trump administration, DHS has committed to detaining and deporting as many immigrants as possible. However, lawmakers have focused on deaths in facilities like Camp East Montana in El Paso, Texas, which has more immigrants than any other facility.
As U.S. leaders like Democratic Rep. Veronica Escobar of Texas have called for Montana’s closure due to its conditions, world leaders like Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum have criticized immigrant deaths while in U.S. custody, including those with Mexican backgrounds.
According to PBS, Sheinbaum claimed, “There are many Mexicans whose only crime is not having papers.”
She’s not alone. A poll from AP-NORC found six in 10 U.S. adults feel the Trump administration has “gone too far” in sending federal immigration agents into American cities, as the disapproval of immigration enforcement increases.
“Growing dissatisfaction around ICE activities in the United States creates a more comfortable platform for members of the Mexican government to raise concerns about the fate of Mexican citizens,” vice president of content strategy for the Council of the Americas, Carin Zissis, said.
DHS defended the reported increase in death rates, calling them a small percentage of the overall detainee population.
“All detainees are provided with proper meals, water, medical treatment, and have opportunities to communicate with their family members and lawyers,” the agency said. “In fact, ICE has higher detention standards than most U.S. prisons that hold actual U.S. citizens.”
RELATED CONTENT:

© 2026 Black Enterprise. All Rights Reserved.

source

Black Woman On FBI’s Top 10 Most Wanted List Found And Detained In Florida

April 16, 2026
Ahead of her arrest, KaShawn Nicola Roper was on the FBI’s high priority tasks, with the federal agency initially telling the public to remain alert for the armed and dangerous woman.
A Black woman on the FBI’s Top Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list has been found and arrested in Florida.
Ahead of her arrest, KaShawn Nicola Roper was on the FBI’s watchlist, with the federal agency telling the public to remain alert for the armed and dangerous woman. She is currently a suspect in a 2020 shooting in Kansas City, Missouri.
According to reports obtained by 11Alive, Roper allegedly fired multiple shots at a car, hitting two women. One of the shooting victims died from the gunshots.
Authorities charged Roper with second-degree murder, armed criminal action, and unlawful use of a weapon. However, she managed to escape police custody for years until now.
In 2021, law enforcement issued a federal arrest warrant for Roper on another charge, listed as unlawful flight to avoid prosecution. Investigators uncovered the 50-year-old’s ties to Georgia, encouraging the state’s residents to disclose any information if spotted.
As she remained unaccounted for, the FBI’s Most Wanted team established a reward of up to $1,000,000 for information leading to her arrest. According to her FBI Most Wanted poster, Roper used various aliases and maintained connections across multiple states.
Alongside her given name, the former fugitive also changed her middle name to Nicole or Nicola and adopted another last name, Shaw. As for where agents believed she would escape to, they listed other states, including Kansas, Nebraska, Texas, Colorado, and even South Dakota.
Police eventually captured her, but in an entirely different state than expected. On April 10, FBI agents stationed in Jacksonville detained Roper in High Springs, Florida. The federal agents worked with local officers and U.S. Marshals to finally locate the wanted individual after the years-long evasion.
Now, Roper may finally face prosecution for the alleged crime, putting an end to the long-distance pursuit.
RELATED CONTENT: DOJ OIG Report Criticizes FBI Response To Jan. 6 Insurrection

© 2026 Black Enterprise. All Rights Reserved.

source

‘It’s the second hardest thing I’ve ever done’: Michael B. Jordan to star and direct new ‘Thomas Crown Affair’

Michael B. Jordan leads on-screen and behind the scenes of the new “The Thomas Crown Affair,” a cultural reimagination of a 1968 thriller.
For his first appearance since winning an Oscar for his role in “Sinners,” Michael B. Jordan attended CinemaCon to tease the next project on his roster. During the conference, Amazon MGM premiered a first look at its latest adaptation of “The Thomas Crown Affair,” a thriller first released in 1968, and again in 1999. Now, in the film set to release in March 2027, Jordan will be leading on camera and behind the scenes as director.
“I’ve been daydreaming of making this movie for years,” Jordan told attendees, per Hollywood Reporter. “I saw the ’99 Thomas Crown Affair when I was around 9 years old. It was a guy that was smart, sophisticated, and always three steps ahead.”
“After ‘Creed,’ MGM asked what I wanted to do next. I said, ‘Thomas Crown Affair. I need that,’” he told Variety in November. “It was just enough time and a gap between generations that I felt like it was almost an original story without its IP, but it’s not James Bond with crazy expectations, where no matter what I do, people are going to criticize it.”
Jordan was reportedly in London for a year filming the project, which he describes as “the second hardest thing” he’s ever done outside of “Sinners.” 
“Directing, producing, writing, acting. It was a lot,” he added. 
In addition to Jordan’s leadership, Grammy-award-winning artist Jon Batiste will be composing the film’s score. To share the news, Batiste began the CinemaCon screening with a live piano performance of “The Windmills of Your Mind,” the Academy Award-winning song featured in the score of the 1968 film. 
A post shared by Jon Batiste (@jonbatiste)
This film marks Jordan’s second time in the director’s chair. In 2023, he made his directorial debut with “Creed III,” which he also starred in. Though details about the storyline of Jordan’s “Thomas Crown Affair” remain unknown, the actor and director have a history of working on reimaginings of classic projects, as seen in the “Creed” franchise, a spin-off/continuation of the “Rocky” films. And just as he did in the boxing franchise, Jordan says he brought his own flair to “The Thomas Crown Affair.”
“I didn’t want a reboot. I wanted a reimagination. The first two films were about rich white guys stealing for fun. That doesn’t land today,” Jordan previously shared. “Ours is more personal. The stakes are higher. Still got the fashion, romance.”
To help bring the sartorial vision to life, Jordan tapped award-winning costume designer Ruth E. Carter, whom he worked with on “Sinners” and “Black Panther,” and describes as “queen.” In addition to Carter, Jordan’s “Thomas Crown Affair” features fellow Black Panther star Danai Gurira. 
“We’ve got an incredible cast — Adria [Arjona], Kenneth [Branagh], Pilou [Asbæk], Danai [Gurira],” he shared. 
And for Jordan, those details were particularly important when building out the story. 
“[Thomas Crown] didn’t just steal, he was making a statement,” he explained. “I knew I wanted to bring that all together — the style, the sophistication, the rebellion —  but also give him a real mission. So I needed somebody who could keep him on his toes. An actress who can portray strength and vulnerability. She understands his game but falls in love with him.”
Jordan’s “The Thomas Crown Affair” is slated to premiere on March 5, 2027.
More About:
Weekly New Episodes
Stream Now

source

Marcel Duchamp at MoMA, Dorothea Tanning book, Leonora Carrington at the Freud Museum, London—podcast

Duchamp’s famous (and much reproduced) signed urinal, Fountain (1917)
Courtesy of Philadelphia Museum of Art
From breaking news and insider insights to exhibitions and events around the world, the team at The Art Newspaper picks apart the art world’s big stories with the help of special guests. An award-winning podcast hosted by Ben Luke.
Three artists who in different ways connect to the Surrealist movement are the subject of this week’s podcast. At the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the first major US survey of the full career of Marcel Duchamp since 1973 opens this weekend, before travelling later in the year to Philadelphia. Ben Luke talks to its curators at MoMA, Ann Temkin and Michelle Kuo.
Dorothea Tanning, Max in a Blue Boat (1947)
© Dorothea TANNING/ADGAP, Paris and DACS, London, 2025
A new book, Dorothea Tanning: A Surrealist World, exploring the extraordinary life and work of the Surrealist artist, is published this week by Yale University Press and Ben speaks to its author, Alyce Mahon.
Leonora Carrington, Down Below (1940)
© 2026 Estate of Leonora Carrington / ARS, NY and DACS, London.
And this episode’s Work of the Week is Down Below (1940), a painting by another of the great women artists of Surrealism, the British Mexican painter Leonora Carrington. It was made while she was hospitalised in Santander in Spain in the early stages of the Second World War, before her pivotal journey to Latin America. The picture is part of an exhibition at the Freud Museum in London, The Symptomatic Surreal, which also features drawings from Carrington’s sketchbooks. We speak to Vanessa Boni, the curator of special projects at the museum, about the work and the show.

In this week’s episode, Ben Luke talks to the curator of a landmark new Matisse exhibition in Paris, discusses the art market in Hong Kong with our chief contributing editor Gareth Harris, and takes a closer look at a Dali painting that inspired Elsa Schiaparelli, as a show devoted to the designer opens at London’s V&A
In this week’s episode of The Week in Art, Ben Luke discusses the newly-enlarged New Museum, talks to Georgina Adam about her new book on the latest generation of art collectors, and hears from the curator of a new exhibition on botany at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford
Ben Luke talks to Sarvy Geranpayeh about the continuing violence in the Middle East, discusses the new Art Basel and UBS Global Art Market Report with its author Clare McAndrew, and speaks to our reporter in Australia, Elizabeth Fortescue, about a new installation at the Sydney Biennale.

source

Android Users Might Qualify For Google’s $135M Settlement: Here’s How

April 16, 2026
Anyone in the U.S. who used an Android device with a cellular data plan anytime since November 12, 2017, might qualify.
People who have used an Android phone since 2017 may be eligible for a share of a $135 million Google settlement—here’s how to find out if you qualify.
Google recently settled a lawsuit alleging its Android system transmitted user data without consent, The Independent reports. While the company denied any wrongdoing, it agreed to pay $135 million.
“We are pleased to resolve this case, which mischaracterized standard industry practices that keep Android safe,” said José Castaneda, a Google spokesperson. “We’re providing additional disclosures to give people more information about how our services work.”
Roughly 100 million people could qualify for the settlement. According to the administrator, a final approval hearing is set for June 23. Eligible claimants must be U.S. residents who used an Android device with a cellular data plan anytime since November 12, 2017. Those included in a prior California case tied to a $350 million settlement are not eligible. If approved, the $135 million fund will be distributed to qualifying users after attorney fees and court costs are deducted.
Individual payouts are expected to be modest, roughly $1 to $1.50 per person and capped at $100. U.S. Android users may be eligible, with key deadlines set for May 29 (objections) and June 23 (final approval hearing). Eligible Android users have been notified by mail or email, according to the settlement administrator, with payments to be issued electronically. Individual payout amounts have not yet been determined.
Users can contact the settlement administrator or visit the official website to verify their eligibility. Those unsure of their eligibility can contact the settlement administrator at 1-844-655-4255.
The lawsuit alleges that data transfers on Google’s Android system occurred in the background without user notice—even when devices were idle. It also claims these transfers could happen over cellular networks, potentially consuming users’ data plans.
RELATED CONTENT: Instagram for Android Now Available

© 2026 Black Enterprise. All Rights Reserved.

source

Trending on the Timeline: Ye’s Latest Legal Battle

Copyright © 2026 Interactive One, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Rapper Ye, formerly Kanye West, finds himself embroiled in yet another high-profile legal battle, captivating online discussions.
Who did it, who done it, and who needs to quit it? If you missed the latest drop from DJ Misses on her “Trending on the Timeline” segment, grab your cup because the tea is piping hot. From a messy lawsuit to wild podcast rumors we break down the Kanye West drama. Stay culturally connected and get the latest updates from DJ Misses.
Kanye West finds himself back in the spotlight, and the situation is getting incredibly messy. A fresh lawsuit just hit the public records, bringing serious allegations against the artist. A man claims Ye punched him in the face at the famous Chateau Marmont in Los Angeles last year. According to the detailed breakdown from DJ Misses, the encounter escalated violently and quickly. The plaintiff states Kanye knocked him completely unconscious and continued to strike him while he was down on the ground. Now, the man is officially suing the hip-hop mogul for battery and severe emotional distress. Our community knows Ye often attracts controversy, but these physical allegations take things to a much more serious level.
The physical altercation only tells half of this complex story. The drama thickens significantly with accusations of inappropriate behavior behind the scenes. The man filing the lawsuit says Kanye accused him of acting out of line around a woman in Ye’s inner circle. Kanye did not keep these thoughts private or handle them quietly. He allegedly repeated these heavy claims later on a widely heard podcast. The plaintiff argues this public broadcast severely damaged his personal and professional reputation. DJ Misses highlighted how words can hit just as hard as physical blows. When high-profile celebrities speak on massive open platforms, the fallout ripples through the culture and impacts real lives.

RELATED STORY: Drake vs. Kanye: A Timeline of Beef, Betrayals, and Brief Peace
RELATED STORY: Black Celebrity Birthdays in April: Icons You Should Know
Everyone is watching closely to see how Kanye handles this mounting legal pressure. Right now, Ye remains completely silent on the matter. He has not issued any public response to the lawsuit or the specific claims made against him. Meanwhile, the plaintiff wants major financial compensation for the physical and emotional toll of the incident. We do not know the exact dollar amount he is demanding just yet, but the damages could easily reach the millions.
Related Tags
Rest In Power: Notable Black Folks Who We’ve Lost In 2026
COMMENTARY: 5 Reasons Why Obama Will Beat Romney
The 30 Most Beautiful Black Women In Hollywood
Iranian President Pens Letter To US Questioning If Trump Is Putting ‘America 1st’
We care about your data. See our privacy policy.

source

Former Virginia Lt. Governor Justin Fairfax and wife found dead in reported murder-suicide

The Fairfax County Police Chief Kevin Davis said that Fairfax, 47, shot his wife and then himself.
Former Virginia Lieutenant Governor Justin Fairfax and his wife, Dr. Cerina Fairfax, were found dead in their home in what police are reporting as a murder-suicide, the New York Times reports.
The Fairfax County Police Chief Kevin Davis said that Fairfax, 47, shot his wife and then himself.
Fairfax, a Democrat, served as the lieutenant governor from 2018 to 2022, serving under former Governor Ralph Northam. He notably faced accusations of sexual assault by two women in 2019, dating back to 2000. The accusations prompted calls for his resignation; however, Fairfax denied the allegations and finished out his term.
Fairfax went on to run for governor in 2021, but lost the Democratic primary to former Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe.
According to court documents filed in the Fairfax County Courthouse, Justin and Cerina Fairfax were in the middle of divorce proceedings. Cerina Fairfax filed for divorce in 2025, citing that the couple had separated in 2024. Justin Fairfax claimed his wife did not express her intent to permanently separate from him when she left.
The judge in the case, David Oblon, ruled in favor of Justin Fairfax, ordering that Cerina Fairfax “failed to plead her intent.”
Police Chief Davis acknowledged that the Fairfaxes were involved in an ongoing dispute as part of a “complicated or messy divorce.” He said police determined the nature of the murder-suicide through the use of cameras in the home, which were installed as a part of their divorce proceedings.
The couple’s two teenage children were inside the home at the time of the shootings, Davis said. Their son placed the 911 call.
“So tragic for the children to lose both parents, extra tragic for them to actually be in the home when it occurred,” Davis said. “Certainly a fall from grace for a relatively high-profile family that seemingly had a lot of things going in their favor.”
After serving as lieutenant governor, Justin Fairfax returned to practice law. Dr. Cerina Fairfax, a graduate of Duke University, worked as a dentist at her own private practice.

More About:
Weekly New Episodes
Stream Now

source

This African Nation Says Its Time For World Map To Reflect The Continent’s True Size

April 16, 2026
The initiative seeks to move international organizations, governments and educational institutions away from the 16th-century Mercator projection.
The government of Togo has formally petitioned the United Nations to adopt a world map that accurately reflects Africa’s true land area.
Togo officials argue that the widely used projections are geographically misleading and downplay the continent’s global significance. Togo’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Robert Dussey, confirmed that the resolution will soon be ready for a vote at the UN General Assembly in September 2026, Africa News reported. The initiative seeks to move international organizations, governments, and educational institutions away from the 16th-century Mercator projection in favor of alternatives such as the Equal Earth projection.
Foreign Minister Dussey stated that the current visual representation of the globe is a matter of scientific inaccuracy rather than preference. He noted that the size seen on most maps is geographically false and that the time has come for the international community to embrace scientific truth. The move is part of a broader “Correct the Map” campaign.
This is the true size of Africa pic.twitter.com/UC2xee22R2
Proponents of the change argue that map distortions are not merely academic errors but carry profound psychological and political consequences. Moky Makura, executive director of Africa No Filter, described the persistence of the Mercator map as a long-standing misinformation campaign that has marginalized Africa’s identity and influenced global perceptions in media, policy, and education.
“Accurate representation is not just about maps — it is about agency, progress, and ensuring the world sees Africa as it truly is,” Makura told Reuters.
The African Union’s 55 member states adopted a resolution to stop using the Mercator projection within their own borders, Macao News reported. The AU has tasked Togo with leading the diplomatic effort to elevate this policy to a global standard. While the United Nations currently uses various projections, including the Robinson projection, it does not mandate a specific world map for its member states.
The Mercator projection, created in 1569 for nautical navigation, preserves the shapes of countries but significantly distorts their relative sizes. Because the map enlarges landmasses farther from the equator, regions like Greenland and North America appear disproportionately large, while the African continent appears visually shrunken. In reality, Africa covers approximately 30 million square kilometers and is 14 times the size of Greenland, yet the two often appear similar in size on standard maps. 
The upcoming September vote is being framed by African diplomats as a test of global commitment to equity and decolonization. Dussey suggested that the international response to the proposal will reveal the true intentions of world powers regarding African representation.
RELATED CONTENT: Almost All Refugees Who Entered the US In 2026 Are From South Africa As Trump Prioritizes White Afrikaners

© 2026 Black Enterprise. All Rights Reserved.

source

Journalist Mimi Brown Documents Devastation and Resilience in “To Altadena with Love”

Copyright © 2026 Interactive One, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
In her latest work, journalist Mimi Brown shines a light on the profound impact of hardship and resilience within the Altadena community.
Award-winning journalist Mimi Brown recently joined Jasmine Sanders on the D.L. Hughley Show to discuss her new five-part docuseries podcast, “To Altadena with Love.” The series explores the severe devastation caused by the recent Los Angeles fires in the historically rich community of Altadena. During the interview, Brown highlighted the deep emotional toll of the disaster and the enduring resilience of the local residents.

RELATED STORY: Black Architects, Student Leaders Unite To Rebuild Altadena
RELATED STORY: The Eaton Fire: 1 Year Later 
As Brown spoke with residents, she realized the fires threatened to erase a vital piece of modern history. Altadena represents a deeply connected community that historically fought against systemic barriers, such as redlining, to establish their presence and build wealth. The podcast captures firsthand accounts of the residents. It serves as a crucial audio archive that preserves the legacy of a neighborhood built on mutual love and shared struggles.
Sanders and Brown discussed the importance of humanizing the victims beyond the rapid news cycle. Walking the streets and listening to personal stories allowed Brown to connect with the emotional turmoil of the residents. She noted the pain of looking at empty lots where meaningful family landmarks once stood. The docuseries aims to cultivate compassion, ensuring the public remembers that these lives are forever changed.
The interview also shed light on the severe post-fire challenges currently facing Altadena residents. Many individuals are still waiting for insurance payouts or lack the funds necessary to rebuild their family homes. Sanders pointed out the predatory behavior of outside buyers, describing them as vultures swooping in to purchase damaged properties for significantly less than their true value. This predatory behavior further compounds the community’s emotional and financial distress.
“To Altadena with Love” is currently available on all major podcast platforms. Listeners should tune into the five-part series to hear this vital piece of modern history. By engaging with these powerful stories, the public can help ensure the Altadena community receives the resources, visibility, and compassion needed to rebuild and thrive once again.
READ MORE STORIES
Related Tags

Rest In Power: Notable Black Folks Who We’ve Lost In 2026
COMMENTARY: 5 Reasons Why Obama Will Beat Romney
The 30 Most Beautiful Black Women In Hollywood
Iranian President Pens Letter To US Questioning If Trump Is Putting ‘America 1st’
We care about your data. See our privacy policy.

source

White woman denied acceptance into Black infant health program is suing for racial discrimination

Erica Jimenez is claiming racial discrimination after being denied access to a California Black infant program.

A woman described in reports as white and or Latina was denied acceptance into a Black infant health program in Pasadena, California, is suing the program on the grounds of racial discrimination. Yes, you read that correctly.
Erica Jimenez, 33, filed a federal class action lawsuit on Thursday, April 2, in the United States District Court for the Central District of California against the Pasadena Public Health Department and its Director of Public Health, Manuel Carmona, over her rejection from its Black Infant Health Program.
The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health and the California Department of Public Health are also named as defendants.
Speaking to Pasadena Now, Pasadena Chief Communications Officer Lisa Derderian said, “We have been served and are reviewing the lawsuit.”
According to her attorneys at the Pacific Legal Foundation, Jimenez alleges that weeks before her due date, she was informed she was not eligible for the program because she did not meet the racial requirement. She gave birth to her first child, a baby boy, in mid-March.
In the lawsuit, she further alleges that the Black Infant Health (BIH) program, which bases enrollment on race and the age of the infant, violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
“California’s program treats race as a stand-in for need — assuming that only mothers of one race deserve or require the help this program offers,” Andrew Quinio, an attorney with Pacific Legal Foundation, said in a release. “Drawing a line around a public benefit program and saying only certain races may enter is precisely the kind of discrimination the Equal Protection Clause forbids.”
However, that isn’t exactly the case here. The Black Infant Health program, which serves women who are Black (or carrying a future Black child) and pregnant or up to six months postpartum, was established in 1989 to address the disproportionately high rate of infant mortality among Black families, and more than 30 years later, as Black infants continue to have the highest rates of mortality, low birth weight, and prematurity of any group in this country, it remains as necessary as ever.
“The BIH Program focuses exclusively on empowering Black/African American women by connecting them with the vital care and support needed to promote healthy behaviors during pregnancy and continuing after her baby is born,” reads the program’s official site.
Presently, Black babies have a mortality rate of 10.93 deaths per 1,000 live births, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The odds of survival and long-term health for Black infants can be shaped by systemic barriers that can begin in the womb, including unequal access to quality prenatal care, higher rates of being dismissed or undertreated by medical providers, chronic stress tied to racism, and environmental conditions that impact maternal health. Programs like this are designed to close those gaps and give Black infants equal footing, not a leg up.
The program is funded in part through federal maternal and child health funding, and for the 2024–2025 and 2025–2026 fiscal years, the California Department of Public Health allocated more than $5.5 million to Los Angeles County for related services, including roughly $902,405 in federal Title V Maternal and Child Health block grant funds, according to the complaint.
In the release from Jimenez’s attorneys, they noted that the program operates with no income requirement, but research has consistently shown that income alone does not account for the disparities in outcomes for Black mothers and infants. Systemic racism does.
The lawsuit asks the court to end the program’s racial eligibility requirements and open enrollment to all mothers in need.
“A victory would ensure that California’s maternal support resources are distributed based on need — not race,” they wrote.
What the suit fails to address is that this program exists to ensure the very thing they claim it does not, which is why this lawsuit is hard to ignore as an isolated incident. Since Donald Trump took office again in 2025 and began dismantling diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts across the federal government, there has been a ripple effect, with DEI rolled back across corporations, schools, and public institutions, and has even included white Americans filing lawsuits to either end or gain access to programs originally designed to support marginalized communities, including Black Americans.
This has included the U.S. Department of Education moving to roll back equity-focused guidance and programs that supported Black students and the cancellation of a $300 million federal grant program specifically for Black farmers and other underserved producers. Even before 2025, legal attacks a year prior forced the Fearless Fund to end its $20,000 grant program for Black women entrepreneurs, after a lawsuit filed in August 2023 led to the program being blocked in June 2024 and shut down in September 2024. Student organizations and scholarships centered on Black identity have also increasingly come under attack in this current new reality.
More About:
Weekly New Episodes
Stream Now

source

Toronto Biennial takes waterways as inspiration for its fourth edition

Opening day of the 2024 Toronto Biennial of Art Photo: Rebecca Tisdelle-Macias, courtesy the Toronto Biennial of Art
The Toronto Biennial of Art (TBA) will return this autumn for its fourth iteration, Things Fall Apart (26 September-20 December), with works by 30 artists and collectives from around the world—17 of them new commissions. And for the first time this year, the biennial is expanding beyond Toronto.
Among the artists whose work will be featured this year are Kent Monkman, Rebecca Belmore, Bonnie Devine, Dawoud Bey, Coco Fusco, Nani Chacon, Julien Creuzet, Brendan Fernandes, Dala Nasser, Antonio Obá, Solange Pessoa, Dawit L. Petros and Charisse Pearlina Weston.
“We are living in a moment of intense rupture, and this title encompasses both the historical usage of this phrase and the contemporary moment,” Allison Glenn, the biennial’s curator, tells The Art Newspaper, “learning from artists who explore rupture as an ontological tool, or way of understanding. Many of them are making work at an extremely difficult time, during wars and escalating conflicts in their home countries, including Lebanon and Iran.”
Glenn hails from Detroit, only a couple hours’ drive west of Toronto across the US border. The two cities are linked in many ways, perhaps most notably by their location on the Great Lakes. Detroit is close to Lake Erie, and Toronto sits on the northwestern shore of Lake Ontario. As a result, water once again figures prominently in the biennial.
Glenn calls the biennial “an invitation to view the Great Lakes, and global waterways, as a confluence”. She says she was initially inspired by the Great Loop—a 6,000-mile system of waterways that encircles the eastern portion of the US and part of Canada via the Great Lakes, Mississippi River, through the Gulf of Mexico and along the Atlantic coast.
Opening day of the 2024 Toronto Biennial of Art Photo: Rebecca Tisdelle-Macias, courtesy the Toronto Biennial of Art
“Growing up in nearby Detroit deeply informed my understanding of how water, as both a physical resource and a historical witness, connects distant geographies through shared, fluid systems,” she adds, noting that the biennial has sought to expand its international footprint via “a cohort of artists and collaborators whose work is profoundly site-responsive, connecting to histories and moments of rupture across vast waterways”.
This marks the first year TBA will extend beyond the Greater Toronto Area, which itself is quite expansive. “We are proud to facilitate dialogue at a time when so much feels uncertain,” TBA director Patrizia Libralato said in a statement, “reaffirming our shared commitment to access, cultural vitality and a recognition that contemporary art is not peripheral to public life but central to it.”
As in the past, the bulk of TBA will take place at cultural institutions, public spaces and non-traditional sites throughout Toronto. The main exhibition will be at the Art Museum at the University of Toronto, with programming also scheduled for the Royal Ontario Museum, Aga Khan Museum and Art Gallery of Ontario, among many other spaces. Even the Toronto Pearson Airport will take part, as will Scarborough Gurdwara, a Sikh place of worship dating from 1979.
Beyond Toronto, programming partners include the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia in Halifax, the Musée des Beaux-arts de Montréal, Saskatoon’s Remai Modern, the University of Victoria and the Vancouver Art Gallery. Across the border in the US, Alaska’s Anchorage Museum is also taking part. And in New York City, Times Square Arts’ Midnight Moment programme will turn the famed tourist spot into a splashy, open-air showcase for TBA artists every evening.
“We are still a young biennial but came out of the gates in 2019 very strong with worldwide attention for the model we created,” Libralato says. “We could never be a Venice, but we can strive to keep leading something important and impactful in Toronto that continues to grow its reach while staying rooted in local contexts.” (She does note, however, that five of the 2026 TBA participants are involved in this year’s Venice Biennale.)
The biennial’s third edition, organised by co-curators Dominique Fontaine and Miguel A. López under the theme “Precarious Joys”, spans artist-run spaces, major museums and the airport
The artist has been researching flatbreads and tandoors, the community ovens where they are often baked, in countries around the world since 2020
Among the highlights of the city-wide exhibition is a “panoramic pantomime” of Cook’s Pacific expeditions by the New Zealand artist Lisa Reihana

source

#FarmingWithFear Colorado Ranchers Say They Fear For Their Lives After Easter Shooting At Their Ranch, Reported Racism To Police For Years

Black ranchers Courtney “CW” Mallery and Nicole Mallery say they are now fighting for their lives after shots were fired at their Colorado property during Easter weekend. As previously reported by BOSSIP, this marks the latest escalation in a years-long dispute tied to allegations of racism, harassment, and law enforcement inaction.
According to Capital B, the couple, who own Freedom Acres Ranch in Yoder, Colorado, say the shooting was not random but the result of “sustained, repeated, and documented inaction” by the El Paso County Sheriff’s Office.
“We are no longer speaking about harassment. We are no longer speaking about intimidation. We are speaking about survival,” the couple said in a statement to Capital B. “All we want to do is farm and feed our community. How much terror must a family endure before it is taken seriously?”
Capital B reports that the Mallerys say they have endured years of harassment since relocating to the predominantly white rural community, including doxxing, surveillance, trespassing, vandalism, and finding their animals dead on their property.
The couple also reported that guns were pointed at them and that they were subjected to racial slurs.
“We’re not just making this stuff up in 2020. Y’all been doing this stuff. This is part of y’all game,” said CW Mallery. “The sheriff’s has been part of y’all weapon. He’s been weaponized against us for a long time, and to see it play out in real time; it really makes my blood boil.”

The El Paso County Sheriff’s Office has denied allegations of discrimination and previously stated that it responded to more than 170 calls for service and investigated numerous complaints tied to the situation.

From Hurricane Survival To Land Ownership Battle
The couple’s journey began after they were displaced by Hurricane Harvey in 2017, which led them to rethink food access and ultimately pursue farming.
“I had never experienced a hurricane in my life, and being on a roof and not being able to drink water. No food being accessible. The highway being underwater. It really was at that time where I started to think about how fractured the food system was,” Nicole Mallery told Capital B. “Depending on what side of the tracks you stayed on, that was your access to food.”
The Mallerys stated that they later purchased more than 1,000 acres in Colorado to launch Freedom Acres Ranch, with a mission centered on food access and community health.
The Mallerys are now calling for an investigation and urging officials, including Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser and Gov. Jared Polis, to intervene and provide emergency protection.
According to Capital B, the couple has also gained national attention, including features in the documentary High Horse: The Black Cowboy by Jordan Peele and rallies at the state Capitol.
“There are so many other Black people that are dealing with this that don’t know what to do. I hope that maybe following our journey gives them some hope, and maybe some kind of outline as to how they can overcome it,” said Nicole Mallery. “Go down to the legislature and get some laws passed so they know they can’t stop you.”
Standing Their Ground
Despite ongoing threats, the Mallerys say they are not leaving their land and remain committed to their mission.
“We got the future behind us, looking at us, so packing up and running is not an option,” CW Mallery said. “We ain’t doing nothing illegal here. We’re trying to feed America. It’s my mission to get fresh food into the Black communities.”
For Black families carving out space in rural America, the fight to simply live and work in peace is still ongoing. 
#FarmingWithFear Colorado Ranchers Say They Fear For Their Lives After Easter Shooting At Their Ranch, Reported Racism To Police For Years was originally published on bossip.com

Rest In Power: Notable Black Folks Who We’ve Lost In 2026
COMMENTARY: 5 Reasons Why Obama Will Beat Romney
The 30 Most Beautiful Black Women In Hollywood
Kristi Noem’s Husband Goes Viral For Crossdressing In Fetish Forums, And…You Know What?
We care about your data. See our privacy policy.
An Urban One Brand
Copyright © 2026 Interactive One, LLC. All Rights Reserved.

source

Los Angeles County Museum of Art’s new David Geffen Galleries reframe 6,000 years of history

The David Geffen Galleries building at a first-look reception in June 2025 Photo: Stefanie Keenan/Getty Images; © Museum Associates/Lacma
The eastward-facing windows at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art’s new David Geffen Galleries look out over the La Brea Tar Pits. This active palaeontological site has preserved prehistoric fossils across the last 50,000 years. In a city long linked to sleek cars, Hollywood special effects and science fiction—at least in the country’s popular imagination—the tar pits remind museum visitors of the land and cultures that predate the current sprawling metropolis.
The new Peter Zumthor-designed galleries embrace this past while looking towards the future. They extend across Wilshire Boulevard, one of the busiest thoroughfares in Los Angeles, as they engage directly with the city’s infrastructure and offer a metaphor for overarching connection. The new spaces honour both modern architecture and the rich histories contained in the museum’s permanent collection, which will return to public view after seven years. Through creative new exhibition strategies, public programming and a building with an enormous footprint, the David Geffen Galleries aim to transform LACMA into a global museum that traverses continents and eras.
The new building is an enormous, undulating concrete expanse that curves dramatically to arc over Wilshire Boulevard and bend towards and away from other parts of the LACMA campus Photo: © Iwan Baan
It has been an odyssey to get to the opening day. Michael Govan, LACMA Chief Executive and Wallis Annenberg Director, came on board in 2006, and was attracted to the specific brief of overhauling the institution. “It was a once-in-a-century opportunity,” he says. Govan had previously steered the 2003 opening of the Dia Beacon complex in the Hudson Valley, Upstate New York.
The largest and final element of the 20-plus year capital project is the $720m David Geffen Galleries building, which will be owned by Los Angeles County. The namesake record and film executive, David Geffen, announced his $150m pledge in 2017, and major contributions from collector-philanthropists including Elaine Wynn and Steve Tisch followed.
While plenty of funding came locally, says Govan, “The goal was to find supporters from around the world and position the metropolis as a global nexus for art.” Genesis, the luxury arm of South Korean car company Hyundai, established a multi-year partnership with the museum, and Qatar Museums has also provided support.
The building adds 110,000 sq. ft of gallery space, and a 3.5-acre public park Courtesy of LACMA
Govan has seen this level of financial underwriting, unprecedented within the Los Angeles art world, reverberate across the city. Success for such an enormous project, he says, allows “small institutions to benefit as well”. He notes that the Hammer Museum, five and a half miles west on Wilshire Boulevard, was also successful in the $180m capital campaign it launched in 2018. According to Govan, the novelty of the David Geffen Galleries project in a relatively young city also offered freedom.
That is borne out in the new building, an enormous, undulating concrete expanse that adds 110,000 sq. ft of gallery space to the museum, as well as 3.5 acres of public park space. It curves dramatically to arc over Wilshire Boulevard and bend towards and away from other parts of the campus. The galleries are concrete, with a large overhang that juts past the floor-to-ceiling glass windows. Works will hang directly onto the concrete walls. “Concrete is a millennia old,” Govan says. “Old art doesn’t look good on [plasterboard].”
The expansion has added half a city block to the museum’s campus, and will support new outdoor installations, restaurants and green spaces aimed at enticing visitors to extend their stays. Jeff Koons’s 37ft-tall living sculpture,
Split-Rocker (2000), will anchor a series of large-scale works around the park. The museum is also planning a “sound garden” featuring readings by eight poets from Southern California. The Mexican artist Mariana Castillo Deball worked directly with Zumthor on Feathered Changes, the poured concrete plaza that surrounds the building. It is brushed to evoke a Zen garden and imprinted with fragmented, feathered serpent drawings based on ancient Mexican murals.
This leads into the 90 or so new exhibition galleries, spread across the building’s upper level. Govan and his team have reconceived their strategies for the collection, which includes more than 150,000 objects from around 6,000 years of human history. The museum will rotate these objects in order to forge new connections across place and time. “Curators are showing people things they haven’t seen before,” Govan says. “Everything will be so visible on one floor. Things we’ve had forever jump out at you. It’s refreshing.”
A December 2025 event celebrating NexGenLA, LACMA’s free membership programme for Los Angeles County youth, 17 and under Photo: Monica Orozco, © Museum Associates/Lacma
Notions of cross-cultural influence across the bodies of water that unite different locales will serve as an organising principle. “Our muses were the oceans,” says Diana Magaloni, senior deputy director of conservation, curatorial and exhibitions. “This is all about conversations and connections.”
Magaloni previously served as the director of Mexico City’s Museo Nacional de Antropología and she distinguishes between this background and her work at LACMA. Anthropology, she notes, asks how different societies cultivate their own values and relate to the world. Art, she believes, “expands those sociological, political, anthropological questions to something more universal that has to do with feelings, emotions and humanity at large”. The reinstallation argues that “the works aren’t pieces of history, but stand by themselves and create a continuous ripple in time”.
In Govan’s words, the pathways through the objects traverse “Guadalajara to Seoul” and unite, for example, “Japanese prints and drawings and lacquered LA surfboards that owe a great debt to Asian craftsmanship”. An accompanying book, which is titled Wander: Exploring LACMA’s David Geffen Galleries and is out in April, will detail these routes, which break down the collection into sections that will evolve over time. “It’s like wandering through a park with no linear path,” Govan says. “You go left, you go right, you end up in the same place.”
The museum asked Zumthor to create a unique environment to present these works.The Pritzker Prize-winning Swiss architect, who began his career in furniture-making, designed the vitrines. Yet they have been fabricated using local materials and craftsmanship, featuring varnished, walnut-tinted wood.
Downstairs from the permanent collection, on the public plaza level, the W.M.
Keck Education Center will offer programming and events.
“It’s front and centre,” says Naima Keith, LACMA’s senior vice president of education, public programmes and regional partnerships. “It’s visible from Wilshire. It makes a very clear statement of where we’re positioning arts education and family engagement in the new building.” She used to call the children’s gallery a “hidden gem”. Now, more families and kids will be able to “really see themselves in the gallery space”.
Keith is a native Angeleno whose great-uncle worked as a security guard at LACMA. She feels deep ties to the city and the museum, which has encouraged her to make the institution “as welcoming and open to everyone as possible”. She thinks about programming as an “olive branch” to audiences who may not know the names Todd Gray (a local artist with a major new installation for the galleries) or LA stalwart Mark Bradford, but are curious about what LACMA has to offer.
Govan could not have predicted, back in 2006, all that would befall the city by April 2026. While he acknowledges that the building is opening this spring simply because it is finally ready, he also believes that the timing is good. The LA Metro’s major D Line subway extension along Wilshire will be available to use within weeks of the Geffen opening and Govan notes that “public transit can get you downtown, to LACMA, to the airport. That’s a big shift for LA.” This will support the local and international attention and foot traffic that will descend on the city for this summer’s Fifa World Cup and the 2028 Olympics.
Govan hopes that, after all Los Angeles has weathered in the past few years, the museum will serve its local community. “After the fires, LA will have this gathering place,” he says. “We’re rebuilding and bringing people of many origins and ancestries together. We’re helping to continue to heal LA and make a statement about bringing people together in an integrated way.”
One of twelve benches created by artist Alfonso Gonzalez Jr. as part of his In Between Stops project Photo: Charlie Powers, © Museum Associates/Lacma, © the artist
As well as the new collection displays in the David Geffen Galleries, LACMA has a busy programme of temporary exhibitions and displays visitors can see at the same time.
Grounded invites visitors to see land not just as terrain, but as a foundation for exploring ecology, sovereignty, memory and home. Featuring 35 artists, including Lisa Reihana, Ana Mendieta, Rose B. Simpson and Abraham Cruzvillegas.
Nearly 50 paintings, sculptures and works on paper from the Henry and Rose Pearlman Collection, including works by Cézanne, Degas, Manet, Modigliani, Sisley, Soutine, Toulouse-Lautrec and others.
An international survey of Buddhist art, from its origins in India to its spread across Asia. The exhibition includes 180 pieces of art, drawn from LACMA’s holdings plus significant loans from private collections.
Celebrating the arrival of the World Cup in Los Angeles, Fútbol Is Life presents works by the award‑winning animator and visual effects artist Lyndon J. Barrois, Sr. Crafted from gum wrappers, glue, paint and other materials, his miniature ‘sportraits’ capture famous moments in women’s and men’s football matches.
A multi-sensory exhibition celebrating the 25th anniversary of Oscar-winning director Alejandro G. Iñárritu’s debut film Amores Perros. An assemblage of 35mm projectors shows some of the million feet of film that was cut from the film.
This exhibition explores the world’s oldest and most versatile method of making multiple images. More than 150 works from Asia, Europe and the Americas show how block prints have been used, from German Expressionism to contemporary art.
Twelve benches (see picture above) designed by the Los Angeles–based artist have been installed along LACMA’s Kendall Concourse. Gonzalez draws on the tradition of Mexican hand-painted signage to continue a craft that has been increasingly displaced by digital graphics and urban clean-up efforts.
Why is French Impressionism so central in our conception of the period? This exhibition offers a surprising narrative about the people and artists who shaped LACMA, interrogating how trends in ‘taste’ inform the museum’s collection.
Virginia Vezzi’s “Self-Portrait as Saint Catherine of Alexandria” is one of the 112 pieces acquired during the museum’s annual Collectors Committee Weekend
The artist’s 37ft-tall “Split-Rocker” was donated to the museum by collectors Lynda and Stewart Resnick
Random International’s Rain Room and Mapplethorpe show boost attendance to 1.4 million <br>
The design spans Wilshire Boulevard and replaces four extant buildings

source

What’s Trending: When Leadership Fails, Communities Suffer

Copyright © 2026 Interactive One, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
When government leaders falter, the consequences ripple through the people they serve.

Jasmine Sanders and DL Hughley are back at it on The DL Hughley Show, serving up the latest “What’s Trending” with the kind of raw honesty and wit about the dangerous of President Donald Trump and his leadership. From the physical decline of political figures to the strategic distractions aimed at dividing voters. Let us dive into the key takeaways from their empowering voices and what it means for our community.
Hughley and Sanders opened the floor by addressing the elephant in the room: the physical and mental state of Donald Trump. They highlighted reports of his swollen hands, hospital visits, and habit of falling asleep during crucial moments. Hughley made a relatable comparison, noting that if your 80-year-old father exhibited the same erratic behavior and sent similar unhinged social media posts, you would step in to protect him. Yet, this individual is fighting to run the military and speak for the nation. It is a stark reminder that we must demand accountability and competence from those asking for our votes.
STAY INFORMED! CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTER!

 
The conversation shifted to the deeply offensive and erratic rhetoric coming from the top. Hughley pointed out the blatant disrespect shown toward a former Vice President and First Lady, who were subjected to racist tropes. Beyond the insults, the segment highlighted bizarre religious pandering and dangerous “holy war” narratives designed to confuse and divide. For a community that values respect and inclusive representation, these divisive tactics serve as a loud warning about the lack of cultural sensitivity in current political strategies.
RELATED STORY: Calls For Donald Trump’s Impeachment Pick Up Following Report His Administration Will Pocket $10 Billion From TikTok Deal
RELATED STORY: When Did Stephen A. Smith Get So Political? Here’s A Timeline
We care about your data. See our privacy policy.
Hughley noted the firing of key generals, specifically pointing out that some were removed because they supported the well-deserved promotions of Black women and other people of color. Furthermore, while the country faces a war on four fronts, requests for congressional funding focus entirely on political follies rather than genuine community relief. This highlights a clear disconnect between the administration’s goals and the daily needs of our neighborhoods.
Hughley addressed the role of public figures like Stephen A. Smith in the political arena. He compared Smith to a food critic who cannot cook—someone full of opinions but lacking the track record to do the actual work. Hughley warned that these celebrity-led political maneuvers are not designed to win. Instead, much like previous campaigns by Kanye West or Cornel West, they exist to distract, siphon votes, and create chaos. Backed by strategic conservative interests, these figures aim to disrupt our unified voice.
To protect our future, we must look past the noise, celebrate diversity, and support leaders who genuinely uplift our communities. Stay informed, stay engaged, and keep empowering the voices that speak the truth.
READ MORE STORIES ON THEDLHUGHLEYSHOW.COM:

Related Tags

Rest In Power: Notable Black Folks Who We’ve Lost In 2026
COMMENTARY: 5 Reasons Why Obama Will Beat Romney
The 30 Most Beautiful Black Women In Hollywood
Kristi Noem’s Husband Goes Viral For Crossdressing In Fetish Forums, And…You Know What?
We care about your data. See our privacy policy.

source

Ashlee Jenae and the ways in which Black women continue to be vulnerable to violence

The discourse around Ashlee Jenae speaks to something much deeper about how prevalent violence is against Black women. 

As more details emerge surrounding the mysterious death of Ashlee Jenae, including the update that her fiancé has been brought in for questioning, it is becoming increasingly clear how her case underscores some rather unsettling truths about how vulnerable Black women remain in the pursuit of love.
On Tuesday, April 14, five days after the 31-year-old influencer, born Ashely Robinson, was found dead while traveling in Zanzibar with her fiancé, Joe McCann, police confirmed in a statement that his travel documents had been withheld and that he continues to be questioned by authorities.
Earlier this month, the Portland-based influencer was updating her social media as usual, sharing glimpses of what appeared to be a whirlwind destination birthday trip that turned into an engagement. On April 3, she posted video footage of the proposal on Instagram. By April 9, she was found unconscious in her hotel room and rushed to the hospital, where she was pronounced dead. Authorities initially suggested the death was a suicide. In a statement announcing her death on April 12, her family described the confusion and heartbreak surrounding the situation.
“The suddenness, the unanswered questions, and the distance from home have made this tragedy even more overwhelming for our family. At this time, there is an active investigation into the circumstances surrounding Ashly’s suspicious passing,” they wrote. “Although we have many questions, we are placing our trust in the officials in Zanzibar and are working closely with them as we seek clarity and answers.”
Even with this latest development, much remains unknown. What has been reported is that Robinson traveled to celebrate her birthday, was surprised with a proposal during a photoshoot with lions, and may have had an argument with her fiancé that led hotel staff to place them in separate rooms. The lack of confirmed details has not stopped speculation online. Even Cardi B weighed in, writing, “That girl did not off herself,” in apparent reference to the case.
Beyond the speculation, a complex discourse has begun to take shape. Some are calling out patterns of violence involving non-Black partners and Black women, raising questions about power in interracial relationships. Others have taken a more reactionary stance, suggesting Black women should avoid certain types of partners altogether. At the same time, many are pushing back, noting that Black women face significant risk from partners across the board, including within their own communities.
In many ways, the conversation is circling around a much deeper truth. It has been this easy for people to draw conclusions because, as suicide rates among Black women have risen over the past two decades, intimate partner violence continues to stand as one of the most pressing health crises affecting Black women in the United States today.
More than 40% of Black women will experience intimate partner violence in their lifetime, compared to 31% of white women, according to the Institute for Women’s Policy Research. Meanwhile, the National Center for Victims of Crime reports that 53.8% of Black women experience psychological or emotional abuse.
“Black women are at an especially high risk of homicide by men compared with all women,” authors of an Institute for Women’s Policy Research report wrote.
Research from Columbia University Irving Medical Center and Columbia Mailman School of Public Health found that between 1999 and 2020, Black women in the U.S. were, on average, six times more likely to be murdered than their white counterparts. In roughly nine out of ten cases, the victim knew her killer. Black women are also more likely to be killed at younger ages and in more violent ways, including by gunfire.
“As a scholar whose research examines intimate partner violence, I have long known that there were disparities in homicide rates between Black and white women,” said Bernadine Waller, PhD, lead author of the study and a postdoctoral research fellow in psychiatry at Columbia.
“To uncover the fact that Black women are murdered at rates as high as 20 to 1 is heartbreaking and underscores the urgent need to make substantive structural shifts,” she added.
Some of those shifts have come through awareness campaigns, advocacy networks, and survivor support systems specifically built for Black women. In 2023, Minnesota established the nation’s first Office for Missing and Murdered Black Women and Girls. Two years later, Missouri signed a new law into place aimed at tackling the crisis of missing Black women and girls.  Organizations like Ujima work to address violence through culturally specific approaches, while policy efforts such as the Violence Against Women Act have attempted to provide broader protections, though some critics argue it still falls short in addressing racial disparities. Despite all of this, the cases unfortunately keep arriving. 
As the investigation continues, Robinson’s family remains focused on finding answers. They have also launched a GoFundMe to support efforts to bring her home and cover related expenses.
“Ashly was deeply loved. She was vibrant, full of life, and had so much ahead of her. Our family is completely devastated, and we appreciate the prayers and compassion we have received as we navigate this unimaginable loss. We respectfully ask that any information not directly provided by our family be treated as unverified and not considered factual at this time,” they shared.
More About:
Weekly New Episodes
Stream Now

source